"W'iW'WUf Commoner. 9TvrTTinr v The WILLIAM J. BRYAN, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER. Vol. ,4, No, 44, Lincoln, Nebraska, November 18, 1904. Whole Number 200 .....Roosevelt's Great Opportunity. i President Roosevelt has now an opportunity suck as conies to but few men in a generation. His nomination for the vice presidency was due to his enemies as much as to his friends. The New York leaders thought that he could give them less trouDle as president of the senate than as governor of the state. He himself was reported as hesitating about accepting the position. He was in doubt so the correspondents said wheth er it would aid him in his ambition to reach, the presidency.- 'Ho accepted and by the act of an assassin the responsibilities of tne presidency were suddenly imposed upon him. Then he began to plan to succeed himself. No candidate ior the presidency ever used the power of the office more openly or notoriously to secure a presidential nomination. His altered position on the trust Question could not bo con strued otherwise than as a surrender to the trusts, and from the time he ceased to urge anti-trust legislation he had the support of the great trusts. Ho and the membqrs of his cabinet have virtually admitted the receipt of trust contributions; they have simply denied with emphasis that these "well-to-do" and the "thrifty" he will naturally look at questions from their standpoint and throw the influence of the administration upon their side. His writings have raised the suspicion that he is Hamlltonian rather than Jcffcrsonian in his ideas and bias. Hamilton believed that tho well born were born to rule and that the not too well born were born to bo ruled that tho well-born must conduct tho government in their own Inter est and also, of course, In the interest of thoso born to be governed. Ho also believed that the government ought to be strong and centralized. Hamilton had a great deal more faith in tho wisdom and patriotism of the wealthy than in the wisdom and patriotism of the poorer classes. Jefferson, on tho other hand, believed in tho peo ple, trusted the people and 'defended the people. He did not object to a man's having wealth, but he insisted that a man must be measured not by his worldly goods but by his character, and that his influence in government should depend upon his inalienable rights and not upon the number of dollars that he had accumulated. Men seldom change their sympathies. Opinions contriDuuonwa fm0may change, but sympathies are more permanent Dress or an -implied promise- 01 the trusts! ' "" " In tho election just past the president received an unprecedented rlurallty. it woll require an analysis of the complete returns to determine just to what extent it was a personal victory- and to what extent e profited tiy tho .esentment felt by democrats toward the leaders at present In control of their party organization. But whether tho president's great victory was aue tc admira tion for his own qualities or to dissatisfaction among democrats, he now; has ar opportunity that will not return. He has announced that he will not be a candidate for re-election and this an nouncement not only relieves him of anxiety; but it removes from him the blinding influence of selfish ambition. Unless he is, restrained by obli gations consciously or unconsciously incurred ho can devote Simself to ti autles of his office with an eye singly to his position in history. He is too much of a student of public -affairs not to be awaro of the growing issue between democracy on the one tide and plutocracy on..he other b etwee ' the mpsses, Interested in good government and in equal opportunity, and toe privileged classes, fattening upon governmental favoritism. Being aware of this struggle he must take his stand upon one side or the other. He must contribute to tho triumph that must ulti mately come to the people or stand as the cham pion of organized wealth. Tho settlement of this Issue will i-ave a large bearing upon the future of tho country. Except insofar as he is influ enced by gratitude or by a desire to repay those who have contributed to his campaign fund, als conduct will be determined by .lis sympathies. If his sympathies are with the struggling masses he will view .every question from their standpoint and use the influence of the executive to further their "interests. If -his sympathies are with the and "when one's sympathies do' change the chanfjo i3 usually though not always due to a change in his financial condition. For instance, a poor man may become rich, and when ho becomes rich he may view questions from tho standpoint of the rich rather than from the standpoint of the poor, and this Is especially true If he acquires his wealth by questionable me:ns. Tho man who has grown rich by floating ilctltlous capital or by watering stock is llkeiy to manifest a violent dislike for the people who object to the exploita tion of the public. The man who has grown rich by usurious interest and by tho methods of the Shylock is not apt to have a good opinion of those who would limit interest rates and protect the needy from Imposition and injustice. On the other hand, those who have been made aristocratic by wealth are sometimes made democratic by ad versity. Sometimes, however, men cross the lino through thoug t and reflection rather than be cause of prosperity or financial loss. Insofar as his executive acts furnish an indication as to his sympathies, President Roosevelt seems to Incline "toward tho plutocratic side of the controversy. His refusal to enforce the criminal law against tho trust magnates shows that the large criminal who plunders on a gigantic scale does not seem to him so heinous an offender c& the small crim inal, for In no other way can his inaction be explained, unless his friends say that it was due to fear of the political .nfluence of the trusts. If the law providing a penalty for conspiracies In restraint of trade is an unjust one it ought to be repealed; if It is a jutt law It ought to be en forced. ..Ill he enforce it nowwhen ho Is no longer terrorized by the fear of what tho trusts may do? Or has he compromised himself by ac cepting their financial support? If he is free to act and his sympathies are on the side bt the people we may expect c vigorous prosecution of the private monopolies which aro now proylng upon tho pcoplo. Will ho recommend more strict regulation of tho rallroadc? No ono enn doubt that ho is a beliovcr In the gold standard, but docs ho carry his reverence for the opinions of tho financiers and his dcalro to favor them to tho point of continuing the enor mous advantago which tho government has been granting to the banfts? Will ho continue to use tho treasury department as if it were a busi ness asset of the Wall street financiers, or will ho -administer it in behalf of tho peoplo? Labor Is demanding remedial legislation. Will he become the champion of the wago-oarnora to tho extent of recommending legislation to which they are entitled? Ho demonstrated the value of arbitration when he arbitrated tho anthra cite coal strike; will he now Insist upon legislation creating a permanent arbitration board which can be called into activity whouovor there Is a dif ference between the interstate employers and tholr employes? ill he recommend legislation which will remove from the courts tho power to employ the writ of injunction as thoy havo been usln it in tho Intorest of employers In their contests with labor? Will ho Insist upon the enforcement of the elght-hoir day ol public works? Tho re publican national platform was silent upon these questions while the democratic platform spoke out upon them. What will the president do, now that he has a chance to act unembarrassed by a desire for re-election? He refused to make any promise or outline any plan In regard to the Philippine question. Will he direct his efforts toward the es tablishment of self-government Jiero, or will ne yield to the commercial demands for a colonial policy? Wi.l he make his administration memorable by establishing a republic in the Orient, or will he sow the seeds of imperialism on American so!17 If ho is not willing to encourage the doctrine of self-gover-mcnt among ae Filipinos, is he will ing to help bring our own government nearer to the people? Will he use the influence of his of fice to secure tne election of senators by the peo ple and thus make the senate responsive to the will of tho people? Here is one reform which alone would add more fame to his name than a whole life-time spent in the service of predatory wealth. He owes his first elevation to the presidency to an unexpected event the murder of a president He owes hit. iccent great victory largely, to the error of democratic leaders. Others have there fore given him the opportunity which he coveted; how will he employ ;t? His place in history will depend not uje j. what others have done for aim but upon wa -t he does for the country. Let hint read again the history of his country and note the difference between those presidents who have befriended the masses and those who have es poused the cause of ihe privileged few. " The financiers and monopolists can male " ..j