The Taft Administration
Taft Becomes President
William
Howard Taft had been Theodore Roosevelt’s most trusted lieutenant. He had
served as a judge, a governor of the Philippines and as Roosevelt’s secretary
of war. In fact, he seemed an acceptable successor to almost everyone. Thanks
to Roosevelt’s efforts, Taft easily received his party’s nomination for the
1908 election. The Democratic candidate, twice-defeated William Jennings Bryan,
lost once more.
Taft’s Approach to Government “My dear Theodore,” Taft wrote to his old
friend a couple of weeks after assuming the office. “When I am addressed as
‘Mr. President,’ I turn to see whether you are at my elbow.” The comment was
telling.
Roosevelt
and Taft were very different people. Roosevelt was a dynamic person who loved
the spotlight and the rough-and-tumble world of politics. He had grand ideas
and schemes but left the details of administering them to others. Taft was the
opposite in many ways. He was skillful administrator and judge. He disliked political
maneuvering and preferred to avoid conflict with others. Unlike Roosevelt, who
acted quickly and decisively on issues, Taft responded slowly, approaching
problems from a legalistic point of view. “I don’t like politics,” he wrote, “I
don’t like the limelight.” Although committed to many progressive ideas, Taft’s
personality and approach to politics quickly brought him into conflict with
progressives.
The Payne-Aldrich Tariff Act Like many progressives, Taft believed high
tariffs limited competition, hurt consumers, and protected trusts. Roosevelt
had warned him to stay away from tariff reform because it would divide the
Republican Party. Taft, however, went ahead and called Congress into special
session to lower tariff rates.
To
pass a new tariff, Taft needed the help of the Speaker of the House Joseph G.
Cannon. As Speaker, Cannon appointed all committees and decided which bills
they handled. By exercising almost total control over debate. Cannon could push
some bills through without discussion and see that others never came to vote.
Progressives wanted to unseat Cannon because he often blocked their
legislation.
Taft
disagreed with the effort to unseat Cannon. He pressured progressive
Republicans into stopping their campaign against Cannon. In exchange, Cannon
quickly pushed the tariff bill through the House of Representatives. Taft’s
compromise angered many progressives. The following year, they defied the
president by joining with House Democrats and removing Cannon from power.
Taft
further alienated progressives when the tariff bill went to the Senate. The
powerful head of the Senate Finance Committee, Republican Nelson Aldrich from
Rhode Island, wanted to protect high tariffs, as did many other conservative
senators. The result was the Payne-Aldrich Tariff, which cut tariffs hardly at
all and actually raised them one some goods. After discussions with Aldrich and
other senators, however, Taft decided to accept the new tariff. Progressives
felt betrayed and outraged by Taft’s decision: “I knew the fire had gone out of
[the Progressive movement],” recalled chief forester Gifford Pinchot after
Roosevelt left office. “Washington was a dead town. Its leader was gone and in
his place [was] a man whose fundamental desire was to keep out of trouble.”
The Ballinger-Pinchot Controversy With Taft’s standing among Republican
progressives deteriorating, a sensational controversy broke in 1909 helping
destroy Taft’s popularity with reformers for good. Many progressives had been
unhappy when Taft replaced Roosevelt’s secretary of the interior, James R.
Garfield, and aggressive conservationist, with Richard A. Ballinger grew when
he tried to make nearly a million acres of public forests and mineral reserves
available for private development.
During
this mounting concern, Gifford Pinchot charged the new secretary with having
once plotted to turn over valuable public lands in Alaska to a private
syndicate, or business group, for personal profit. Pinchot took the charges to
the president. Taft’s attorney general found the charges were groundless.
Still
not satisfied, Pinchot leaked the story to the press and asked Congress to
investigate. Taft fired Pinchot for insubordination, or disobedience. The
congressional committee appointed to study the controversy cleared Ballinger.
By
signing the Payne-Aldrich Tariff Act, supporting Ballinger against Pinchot, and
backing Cannon, Taft gave the impression that he had “sold the Square Deal down
the river.” Popular indignation was so great that the congressional elections
of 1910 resulted in a sweeping Democratic victory, with Democrats taking the
majority in the House and Democrats and Progressive Republicans grabbing
control of the Senate from the conservatives.
Taft’s Progressive Reforms
Despite his
political problems, Taft also had several successes. Although Roosevelt was
nicknamed the “trustbuster,” Taft was a stronger supporter of competition and
actually brought twice as many antitrust cases in four years as his predecessor
had in seven.
In
other areas, too, Taft established the Children’s Bureau, a federal agency
similar to Roosevelt’s Bureau of Corporations. The Children’s Bureau
investigated and publicized problems with child labor. Taft also supported the
Mann-Elkins Act of 1910, which increased the regulatory powers of the ICC.
The
Ballinger-Pinchot controversy aside, Taft was also a dedicated conservationist.
His contributions in this area actually equaled or surpassed those of
Roosevelt. Taft set up the Bureau of Mines to monitor the activities of mining
companies, expanded the national forests, and protected waterpower sites from
private developments.
Although
disturbed by stories of Taft’s “betrayal” of progressivism, Roosevelt at first
refused to criticize the president. Then in October 1911, Taft announced an
antitrust lawsuit against the U.S. Steel, claiming that the company’s decision
to buy the Tennessee Coal and Iron Company in 1907 had violated the Sherman
Antitrust Act.
The
lawsuit was the final straw for Roosevelt. As president, he had approved U.S.
Steel’s plan to buy the company. Roosevelt believed Taft’s focus on breaking up
trusts was destroying the carefully crafted system of cooperation and
regulation that Roosevelt had established. In November 1911, Roosevelt publicly
criticized Taft’s decision. Roosevelt argued that the best way to deal with the
trusts was to allow them to exist while at the same time increasing
government’s ability to regulate them.
Having
broken with Taft, it was only a matter time before progressives convinced
Roosevelt to reenter politics. In late February 1912, Roosevelt announced that
he would attempt to replace Taft as the 1912 Republican nominee for President.
The American Vision
Glencoe