tKi0m mVH" ' .;Ji-0iW I" ': r' The Commoner. 2 VOLUME 8, NUMBER 2f I t THE ': REPUBLICAN PARTY IS IN FULL RETREAT 1 Tho republicans who attended tho.natipnat convention. w pcptntors and joined in. the, deim onstrationin' favor of President Roosdvolt' and Senator LaFdlletto must liaVo fel inlligrnant as they watched' the! panic, stricken dclpgWa. rum ning over oach' other In their effort to got awayt from the LaFolletto reforms, some of which had boon endorsed by, tho president himself. Con gressman Cooper, of Wisconsin, representing tho LaFollotto men, brought in a minority report signed by himself alone. Fifty-two members of the committee signed tho majority roport, and one Signed tho minority report. Tho republican party will find tho ratio of fifty-two .to one a vory embarrassing one to deal with in the , com ing campaign. Mr. Coopor's report contained a declaration in favor of publicity as to campaign funds. It was lost by a voto of 880 to 94, moro than nine to one, and yet the president has been advocating legislation in favor of publicity as. to campaign contributions, and Secretary Taft wroto a lottor to Mr. Burrows advocating t)ie passage of a publicity bill. How fortunate it was that Secretary Taft's letter was finally dis covered and published! Senator Burrows, tho man to whom the Taft lottor was addressed, was tho temporary chairman of tho conyontion, and tho convention over which he presided turned down tho publicity plank by a voto of nine to ono! Who will deny that, on this subject, tho republican party is retreating? Another plank of tho LaFolletto platform authorized tho ascertaining of the value of the railroads. This plank was lost by a voto of 917 to. 68 -nearly fifteen to ono and yet President Roosevelt has advocated this vqry proposition. Hero is, a retreat on the railroad question. In anothor column roforoncp is made to- tho HAVE YOU READ i-4n.M - ' jfrHave you read the republican -platform? If i not you ought to read it. The contest in the republican party betwedri the reformer arid tho standpatter is for the present at fin end, with.' tho standpatter in., the saddle. ' The ' platform is a silent repudiation of nearly every promise of reform that tho president and his 'followers have given to the country. Itbeglns with an eujogy of the president. "In n8 other period since the days of LincolnVocttovQlng to thoplatform, "has there been such mighty progress In those ideals of government which make for' justice, equality and, fair-dealing among men," J'Th'e highest aspirations of tho American pfeoYve have found a voice." (A reflection Is here implied on pre vlbua republican presidents who have failed to fivrnish a voice, for "the highest aspirations of the American people.") "Their most exalted servant represents the best aims,nnd worthiest purposes of all his countrymen. American man hood has been lifted to a noble 'sense of duty and obligation." Without asking' why the re publican party has held office and divided the official salaries among its partisans so long with out giving us a president who represented "the best aims and worthiest purposes of the people;" without asking why no other republican presi dent in recent days "lias lifted American man hood to a noble sense of duty and obligation," we may ask why it is that the republican con vention spends so much time In 'praising; the president xind gives so little attention to the specific endorsement of the tilings he has' ad vocated. But the president inust feel that he is the only republican deserving of praise. The recent congresses, according to the plat form, have been full of patriots and the repub lican legislators have been keeping "stop in the forward march to bettor government." What does the presidont think of being bracketed with republican senntors and members of congress in this indiscriminate praise? Nothing is said of the conspiracy formed among the republican lead ers of the scnato to defeat the president's -railroad rate bill; no intimation 1b here given that he sent several messages to congress in a vain en deavor to get tho lower house to take up the re forms which he was urging. The president must resent the fact that the platform expressos no gratitude to the democratic members and sena tors for supporting him when the republicans dfceerted him Not only does the platf.rm fail' to' give the democrats -credit for helnlmr i president in every effort" to lift, up, American manhood to "aoioble sense of' duty andobllga- injunction plank. Tho injunction plank adopted by, the republican conventipn is a retreat from the position taken by the president and from the, position taken by Secretary Taft in his speeches,, although neither of thcnTwent as far at they ought to have gene -in their effort to prevent1 what "is known as government by injunction. Here is the third retreat. 1 :jThe president has advocated the income tax as a means of iireventing swollen fortunes and of equalizing the burdens of government. The republican platform is silent on the subject. Was tho president right in the position he took? If so, then the convention was wrong in not endorsing him. Will the republican voters fol low the president in this just demand or will they follow the republican organization in re treating from it? The president advocated an inheritance tax, but the republican convention is silent on that subject. Was the president ahead of the repub lican party in advocating this reform, or has the republican party receded from the presi dent's position? Did the president give a false alarm on this question or has the party sounded a retreat? ' ' In the president's message to congress last spring ho presented an indictment against the conspiracy formed among the great lawbreakers to prevent the enforcement of the law and to evade the punishments provided by law. The platform adopted by the republican convention contains no intimation of danger. If there are any conspiracies, the convention did not see them if there are any combinations, it. had not heard of them; if there are any dangers ahead, it was unconscious of them. Was the president mistaken when he issued his defiance, or are the republican 'managers deceived when they :. i) think that an aroused public will calmly con template the encroachments of predatory wealth. This . is retreat number six. The convention, by voto of 866 to 114 more than seven to one voted down the plank in favor of the popular election, of United States senators. Iti Js true that the president and Sec retary Taft haye never advocated th popular election of 'senators. They seem to take tho Hamiltohian rather than the Jeffersohiati view, but the most popular reform in the United1 States today is the reform that has for its object the election of United States senators by 'direct vote. It has five times been endorsed by the national house of representatives three times -tfhen the house of representatives was republican; It has been endorsed by nearly two-thirds of the states of the union, and there is probably ndt a state in the union in which it would not be endorsed at a popular election and yet in spite of the record made in the house of representatives and by the various states, this reform is rejected by a seven-to-one vote in a republican national con vention. ' '" Here are seven propositions upon which the republican party, in national cdnyeiritibh 'as sembled, has retreated from the poSitlcmV taken by that party In congress or fr6m 'the 'position taken by the president. What have Roosevelt republicans to say? The president hag awakened a spirit of reform within his party, ho 'has at least revealed to the world that there are re formers in the republican party. Can that spirit now be quelled by a stand-pat Convention? ' Mil lions of republicans .have enlisted at the presi dent's call to arms and are ready to' raai-ch .for ward ; will they furl their banners and turn back merely because the president 'acquiesces in' !the sounding of a retreat? : ,: 'n ;-w "" i WE V'i )pi SfANDPAT. PLATFORM FOR 1908 thStfhiit it ACTUALLY CONDEMNS THE FIL I&ij$TEft Wl-JI&ft THE PEMiQCRATIC MINOR-, IUY ,: INSTITUTED - AND (CARRIED ON EOR JL THE EXPRESS PURPOSE' OF COMPELI REPUBLICANS TO CARRY 'OUT THE -PRESIDENT'S RECOMMENDATIONS. Mr. Williams, leader of tho minority, timd and again called up on the republicans to furnish thirty votes in sup port of the president's policies and pledged the democratic minority to furnish the remaining number of votes necessary to carry out several of the president's'- recommendations, and yet the men Who vrot'd the platform presume upon: the igridrance of thfettpublic and' complain that the. flllbu'ster prevented the enactment of "many wholesome and' progressive laws." The writers 'of the platform "especially commend the passage of the emergency cur rency bill" a bill which combined two features, one of which' had been rejected by the senate, and the other by the house. So long as there was a chance for a discussion there was sufficient republican opposition to condemn both features of the bill, but under the influence of a few financiers, the bill was rushed through during the closing hours with all of the bad features restored and all of -the goOd ones elim- inatod. How proud the republican bosses in the senate and house must feel to have their work thus-'endorsed by 'arepublican national, conven tion: ' . . The plank demanding a permanent change in the currency system is general enough to permit the republican orators to advocate in each section of the country thS system most popular there, and sufficiently indefinite to en able congress td'do whatever it pleases or noth ing without violating -any pledgee The trust plank must prove a disappoint ment to every republican who has come to under stand the iniquity 'Of the trusts. There Is no demand for a rigid enforcement of the law there Is no suggestion that the criminal clause which has not yet brought a; trust malefactor within the walls of a penitentiary should bo called into use. The platform says that the law can bo strengthened by amendments which will enlarge the supervision of the general govern ment, hut these amendments are not mentioned and there is nothing in this plank of the platform that can be appealed to to secure any real Im provement in tho law. If tho presidont, with all of. his strenuosity; has not been able to enforce the criminal law against a single trudt, what chance is there of a less strenuous, man making' progress with such lan anti-trust iplank as that Inserted in the republican platform? ' . . ... i There is a plank in the platform in favor of such legislation and supervision "as, will pre vent the future.' overissue 'of i stocksuand' bonds by interstate carriers." This is' rgo6d,?,'b'ut li1' is' coupled with the advocacy 6f,ji!db:Ungrr rangement which makes a large concession to the railroads without exacting any security to the public, for the convention voted frown an amendment proposed by Senator LaFpllette's followers authorizing an enlargement of the pow-? ers of the interstate commerce commission. : The negro comes in for Tils quadrennial quota of taffy. He is reminded that the' repub lican party gave him freedom and citizetiship and in this there is the implied 'warning that he must not use his citizenship against the party that gave it to him. It Boasts that he is indebted to that party for his political rights and for his progress in intelligence, Industry, etc. The republican party has made political capital out of the negro for a third of a century. In many of the close states it has won its elections by the negro vote and in the states where it has had power it has never treated the negro any better- than he has been treated by the dem ocrats. In other words, in the northern states the democrats, without receiving any support from the negro vote, have been as friendly to him as the 'republicans. In the' south the demo crats have 'furnished a large art of the money to provide that education of which the repub lican platform boasts. And yet in each recur ring campaign the republican leaders have at tempted to appeal to the prejudices of the negro by parading before him the restrictions placed upon suffrage in some of the southern states; They have been in control of the government, with the exception of a few years, for now nearly half a century and they have controlled the courts as well as the other branches of the gov ernment. 'If. the democrats have done anything that they ought not to have done, why have hot the republicans prevented it?. Why is it that the republican leaders are only solicitous about the colored man when voting time comes? The republican platform says: "We condemn all devices which have for their real aim his (thO negro's) disfranchisement for reasons of color alone as unfair, un-American and repugnant to the supreme law of the land." How can these things he repugnant to the supreme law of the land when the republican suprfeme 'Court Is sup posed to stand guard over the supreme law of the land? There is scarcely a republican plat form that does not approach the negro with'th i U, . s