Two Political Parties
Similar
Henry George: Political
Dangers (Chapter 2 of Social
Problems, 1883)
[14] The people, of course,
continue to vote; but the people are losing their power.
Money and organization tell more and more in elections.
In some sections bribery has become chronic, and numbers
of voters expect regularly to sell their votes. In some
sections large employers regularly bulldoze their hands
into voting as they wish. In municipal, State and Federal
politics the power of the "machine" is increasing. In
many places it has become so strong that the ordinary
citizen has no more influence in the government under
which he lives than he would have in China. He is, in
reality, not one of the governing classes, but one of the
governed. He occasionally, in disgust, votes for "the
other man," or "the other party;" but, generally, to find
that he has effected only a change of masters, or secured
the same masters under different names. And he is
beginning to accept the situation, and to leave politics
to politicians, as something with which an honest,
self-respecting man cannot afford to meddle.
[18] The people are largely
conscious of all this, and there is among the masses much
dissatisfaction. But there is a lack of that intelligent
interest necessary to adapt political organization to
changing conditions. The popular idea of reform seems to
be merely a change of men or a change of parties, not a
change of system. Political children, we attribute to bad
men or wicked parties what really springs from deep
general causes. Our two great political parties
have really nothing more to propose than the keeping or
the taking of the offices from the other party.
On their outskirts are the Greenbackers, who, with a more
or less definite idea of what they want to do with the
currency, represent vague social dissatisfaction; civil
service reformers, who hope to accomplish a political
reform while keeping it out of politics; and
anti-monopolists, who propose to tie up locomotives with
packthread. Even the labor organizations seem to fear to
go further in their platforms than some such propositions
as eight-hour laws, bureaus of labor statistics,
mechanics' liens, and prohibition of prison contracts.
...
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