n 2 The Commoner, .VOLUME 7, NUMBER 35 ;fTr """ijl ft & 1 l u.- I ! x v r u ft i'- c not accept his advice. Ills Influence 'as a presi dential candldato can not yet bo measured, fpr not a single state lias yet Instructed for him. Thero arc at least three other presidential can didates, who are likely to have their own states behind them Knox, oX Pennsylvania; Fair- banks, of Indiana; and Cannon, of Illinois. Fairbanks is tho president of the senate, Cannon Is tho speaker of tho house, and Knox repre sents Pennsylvania in the senate. Can ho givo the "pledge of these men that, congress will act at once and insure statehood before November, 1908, apd,, if the other presidential candidates promised It, Is there any assurance that tho re publish members of the senate and, hpuse would consent? Even If a majority of hoth tho senate and the house favored statehood, tho opposition could talk the measure to death in the senate, where they have no rule for closing the debate. If you are to trade your birthright for a mess of pottage, you ought at least to be sure of re ceiving tho, pottage. But why does ho advise you to reject the constitution and postpone Btatohood? Because he is opposed to some parts of the constitution. He has tsuggestod several amendments which he would, like tohave adopted. Even If the amendments which he proposed were good amendments and worthy to be adopted, it would not be necessary to reject the constitution in order to adopt them. He speaks of the federal constitution as a model-one and praises it in un qualified terms, and yet, when .that constitution was adopted, it was so unsatisfactory that ton amendments were adopted immediately after ward. These amendments were all proposed during the discussion which preceded the adop tion ,of the constitution, but tho people saidx "Adopt the constitution now and .amend it after wards," and this advice was followed. The country secured a constitution and a govern ment, and then proceeded to adopt the amend ments desired. If Secretary Taft had tho con fidence he ought to have in your people, he would have given you the same advice that our forefathers followed a century and a quarter, ago.. The democrats can vote in favor of the constitution because they believe it a good one; the republicans who desire to change it can bave as their slogan "Adopt the constitution now, amend it afterwards." It is much, safer to postpone amendments to the constitution of Oklahoma than it was to postpone amendments to the federal constitution. First, because it is easier to amend the constitution of Oklahoma. To amend the federal constitution it is necessary to have the amendment ratified by three-fourths of the states,,' after being proposed by two thirds of both houses of congress or by a con stitutional convention; whereas, the constitu tion of Oklahoma can be amended by a majority vote, ,of the,, people, and, the amendments can be proposed either by a majority vote of the legis lature or by a small percentage of the people acting t through, , petition. ,The initiative and referendum inake amendment so easy that no republican, can find an excuse fpr rejecting the Oklahoma constitution, unless he is really op posed, to statehood and prefers to have jthe ter ritory governed through officials appointed from Washington, But there is a second reason why it is safer to adopt the Oklahoma constitution than it was the federal constitution; viz., because the amendments suggested by Secretary Taft deal with, the. property rights, while tho , amendments a.dopted to the federal constitution deal w,ith .human rights, If you will compare tho ten. amendments adopted immediately after the adoption., of the federal constitution, you will, find tha,ttfiey were of vital importance and materially affected the life and liberties of tho people, hiJetaU amendments-proposed by Sec retary 'Jalt dqal almost entirely witU property rights, 4and thosq property rights do not con cern thp., property of individuals but the prop erty q, corporations. Surely, if our forefathers could aqopt a constitution that needed ten amendments, dealing with important questions andidifflpult to. secure, tho people of Oklahoma can affqrd tQ adopt the splendid constitution thaj hap been submitted, when the amendments propped bySecretary Taft are not material and, if they were material. nniii i i rX by the people, ' ' " There is one passage in his speech which I dovnot understand and which seems to con tain a covert .threat. He says that he is confl uent that there would he n nw- nhn . , this constitution was rejected and that th ere probably would be "an organization of the. 01. ganizod territory of Indian Territory Until', vou - wuiu bl jyjiuy.jior joint statehoooWand .that jruu wuiuu passim wiui a constitution made up by persons who are not so patriotic and notso full of the desire to exactly ascertain tho will of tho people." Tho last part of the sentence may be intended for sarcasm, although it is sur prising that a candidate for president should speak sarcastically about an effort to ascertain tho will of the people. "What can be more im portant than to find out what the people want and to mako government conform to the wishes of tho voters? But the covert threat is con tained in the earlier part of the sentence, where he suggests that the Indian Territory might be kept out until after the Territory of Oklahoma had adopted a constitution. That construction can be placed upon his language, although, tho language is so ambiguous that it is not abso lutely certain what he does mean. Does he mean to reopen the question of double state hood? Or does he mean that the people living in the Indian Territory are to be denied rep resentation until after the people of Oklahoma have a chance to adopt a constitution? Would he oxclude the people of the Indian Territory because they are democratic? Surely, states manship has fallen to a .low plane if political rights are secure only when the voter votes a particular ticket or connects himself with a par ticular party. But what are the objections Secretary Taft finds to the constitution. First, he is opposed to the initiative and. the, referendum. This to him is a fatal defect, and why? Because the initiative and referendum enable the people to control their own government. Experience has shown that with the growth of corporate wealth an influence has entered into politics which was absent when our government was founded. Cor porations desiring municipal franchises have corrupted city councils and secured franchises of enormous value without consulting the peo ple. To prevent this the referendum has been adopted In many of our cities and will ultimately be adopted In all of them. Because railroads and other large corporations have exerted a de moralizing influence over state legislatures, the initiative and referendum, have been proposed for the protection of the people of the state, and, because the people of Oklahoma have dared to express more faith in the voters than in those chosen to represent the voters, Secretary Taft -would have you postpone statehood. He is on his way to the Pacific coast. According to his published itinerary he will pass through South Dakota; will he rebuke the republicans of South Dakota for having adopted the initiative and referendum in that state? He will also pass through Montana. Will he rebuke the repub licans of Montana, who have also adopted the initiative and referendum? He is likely to speak in Oregon, and there, too, the republicans have adopted the initiative and referendum. ' Will he expend his wrath upon them, or has he so exhausted his energies in denouncing the initiative and referendum in a democratic state as to be, speechless -when lie talks to the repub licans of the far west? In the state of Ohio, one branch of the legislature has already en dorsed $he' initiative and referendum and the. other branch is pledged to do so when the legis lature reconvenes this winter. It is a crime for Oklahoma to do what other states have done and what Ohio is preparing to do, viz., enlarge the power ,of the people to control their own repre sentatives? The secretary says" that, according to the Oklahoma constitution, the legislature can re peal a law passed by the people and that the people can pass it again and the legislature repeal it' again. He ought to commend this rather than condemn it for, if the constitution had provided that a law passed by the people could not he repealed by the legislature,-he would have been sure to criticise that, for that would have resulted in the enactment of two kinds of laws, but he forgets that the referen dum, as well as the initiative, is provided for by the constitution and that if the legislature at tempts to repeal a law passed by the people, they can sit in judgment upon that attempt, as upon other acts of legislature. And why not have the referendum? If a governor can veto -a meas ure passed by a legislature, why deny that power to the people who elect both governor and legislature? His; second objection to the constitution is found In the clause that "prevents the Consoli dation of railroads. Thl& objection will hardly be treated seriously by the public, foV surely the people have a right to prevent cc-nsoYidatidn if they want to, and if they find that they have injured -themselves by 'preventing consolidation they can' easily amend their constitution sb as to permit; consolidation. And it wili' be much easier to secure such an amendment with the aid of the railroads than it would he 'to secure- an amendment preventing consolidation with the railroads opposing such an amendment. He is also alarmed lest the railroads will take advantage of the four-mile proposition and compel tho county seats tq furnish the right of way. His anxiety on this subject also is with out foundation, far the county seats can pro tect themselves by refusing to furniBh the right of way if they think they are being held up. But it is amusing to see him objecting to one provision because it favora the railroads and to another because it opposes the railroads. The least he could do would he to pair these two objections and let one offset the other. His fourth objection, however, is more amusing, it is ludicrous. He says: "Fourthly, and-I have to refer to something not i:. the con stitution, I believe, because it was stricken out by amendment, and that is the provision by which foreign corporations would lose the right to do business if they take a suit into federal court." He is certainly driven to an extremity when he has to make his objection to a provi sion that has been stricken out. He regards the provision as a very bad one, aiid instead of congratulating the convention upon striking it outy he -uses it as an objection to the constitu tion of which it -was formerly a part. I think they ought to have left the provision in, for a state has a right to prescribe the terms upon which foreign corporations do business in the state, and I know of nomore reasonable con dition than that the foreign corporation shall submit' itself to the state courts? This provi sion did not originate in Oklahoma. More than twenty years ago a similar provision was adopt ed in the state of Wisconsin, and the supreme court has held that it is a valid provision, and the secretary ought to know that this provision has been adopted in various states because of the manner in which corporations have abused their right to invoke the aid of the United States courts. Litigants have been dragged into courts distant from them and worn out with delays and court expenses, until the people of the states have found it necessary to protect themselves by this kind of a- provision. The fact that Secretary Taft finds fault with such a provision is conclusive proof that he looks at such questions from the standpoint-of the cor porations and not from the standpoint of the people. It shows that his sympathies., are with the great aggregations of wealth, and not with the Gtod-made man, whose rights have been trampled upon and whose interests have been disregarded. In presenting his fourth argument he takes occasion to advance the time-worn argument that capital is timid and must be very carefully nursed and pampered. He says; "You know capital can protect itself; it is not obliged to go .to one state or the other. All you have to do Is to show capital that when it comes to , your state it will have a square deal. If you can do that, capital will come. If you can not do that, it will not come." It Is the old plea that all laws must be "made for capital and none for the protection of the rights of the Individual. How different is. the secretary's speech from 'the speeches" of Abraham Lincoln, wherein he as serted that, while the republican party believed in both the man and the dollar, it believed in the. man before the dollar. Secretary Taft, on the, contrary, believes in the dollar first and the man afterward, JLf at all, and he puts property rights so much above human rights that he would have youndelay statehood until you can offer greater. inducements to capital. With Lincoln-tit wap '!a government-of the people, by the people and for the people," that was to be preserved to .posterity. With Secretary Taft it is a government of capita, by capital and for capital that lsjto be fastened on , you, or else statehood is not to be desired. And thenSOie tells you that he is talking business. "N6to 1 am talking practical sense," - he says "I am not talking demagoguery or sentiment, I am talking business" Ye'she uses the terms and phrases of those who regard as statesmen only, those whose ears are trained to catch the slightest pulsations of the pocketbook and who regard as dema'gogues all who attempt to place restrictions upon corporate wealth or defend the right of the masses' to life liberty and the pursuit of happiness. His next objection to tho constitution is that it protects 'the laboring ta'en from ' what is known as government by injunction, -by insuring them a trial by jury if the contempt complained of is cdmmitted outside the presence of the court. A bill to this effect passed the United' States senate rome twelve yoa'rsagb,,,bulf aV-'sbo'n 1asni the '-corporations' found1 Out1- aUdutfvcit f,ttiey1 strangled the measure itf'thtf hoWel'1 Bte'nVake' tfOJI u7l( L f i 'I ' ( miL.Aw4A Mk. iliMdSimSiimm'JMS &!