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William Jennings Bryan and the rise and decline of the Progressive
Era
A Godly Hero: The Life of William Jennings Bryan by
Michael Kazin
By Shannon Jones
11 August 2006
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A Godly Hero: The Life of William Jennings Bryan by
Michael Kazin (Alfred A Knopf, New York, 2006), 400 pages
In 1896, a political newcomer from Nebraska, William Jennings
Bryan, won the Democratic presidential nomination. His scathing
attacks on the banks and trusts captured the popular imagination
and propelled him to the center stage of politics for the next
two decades.
The life of Bryan is the subject of a new biography by Michael
Kazin, a professor of history at Georgetown University. Bryans
political activity spanned the years of populism and progressivism.
This was the period when the United States entered the world stage
as a leading imperialist power. It was a time of rising expectations
and mounting social contradictions.
Bryans career expressed a number of contradictory elements.
The Great Commoner, as he came to be known, represented
a reaction primarily among lower-middle-class social layers to
the growth of monopoly capitalism in the late nineteenth and early
twentieth centuries. He combined the narrow-minded outlook of
a lay evangelist with the posture of a radical agitator. His denunciations
of the Eastern moneyed elite, often couched in Biblical terms,
expressed the opposition of small farmers and other oppressed
middle-class layers to the emergence of monopoly capitalism.
As his career progressed, Bryans most reactionary features
came to dominate and he drifted steadily to the right. In the
end, abandoned by most of his former supporters, he became an
object of ridicule and contempt.
It would be the duty of a conscientious biographer to delineate
and analyze the tendencies expressed by Bryan, show their origin
and trajectory, and explain the social interests they reflected.
However, Kazins book is bound up with an attempt to find
a new, refurbished pedigree for the Democratic Party as a party
of the people. Inevitably, this lends the work a one-sided
and tendentious character.
Commenting on the 1896 Democratic convention that nominated
Bryan for president, Kazin writes, But the platform officially
declared that Democrats were in favor of beginning to redistribute
wealth and power in America. In rhetoric at least, the party has
never gone back (p. 55).
The attempt by Kazin to uncritically equate the Democratic
Party in the Bryan era to the modern Democratic Party is dishonest.
Beginning with the Carter administration and accelerating in the
1980s, the Democratic Party separated itself from the legacy of
Progressivism and New Deal liberalism. Under the Democratic Clinton
administration, social inequality increased to the greatest level
in more than 50 years.
The Democratic Party was never a party of the people.
By Bryans time, it had long since established itself as
one of the parties of the capitalist ruling class. It combined
the defense of some of the most reactionary aspects of American
capitalismmost notably, the brutal oppression of blacks
in the Southwith certain reformist policies that appealed
to oppressed sections of the middle class as well as urban workers.
Its particular function, well established by the latter part of
the nineteenth century, was to capture mass discontent and channel
it along non-revolutionary lines, so as to uphold the essential
class interests of American big business. This is the role that
it played in corralling and emasculating the populist movement,
and Bryan personally played a major role in this fundamentally
reactionary process.
The attempt to bolster the Democratic Party through a partisan
and one-sided interpretation of the careers of historical figures
is not new. In his book The Age of Jackson, published
in 1945, Arthur Schlesinger Jr. attempted to demonstrate that
the administration of Franklin Roosevelt continued a tradition
of Democratic progressivism that had its roots in the administration
(1829-1837) of Andrew Jackson, who cultivated a commoner
image while upholding the interests of the Southern slave-owners.
Kazins work is noteworthy for the reactionary political
conclusions it draws. He finds fault with the modern Democratic
Party, not for abandoning the reformist legacy of the New Deal,
but for failing to align itself even more fully with the politics
of the Republican right. He calls for an adaptation to the religious
right by means of appeals based on Christian morality.
In a previous work, The Populist Persuasion (Basic Books,
1995), which traces the use of populist appeals by both left-
and right-wing political movements in the United States, Kazin
noted in a positive tone the power of Christian moralism
to motivate critics of an unethical status quo (p. 39).
In this work, Kazin takes up this theme in an even more explicit
manner, advocating that the Democratic Party adopt a populist
morality based on a direct appeal to Christian scripture.
That Kazin should be fixated by Bryan the evangelist says more
about the rightward trajectory of liberals such as Kazin than
it says about Bryan. At its core, Bryans embrace of fundamentalist
religious views reflected his belief that Christianity represented
an indispensable anchor for the capitalist social order. He came
to fear that scientific insights, in particular, the theory of
evolution, would erode religious faith, threatening chaos. At
the end of his life, this became his main preoccupation.
But the most significant feature of Bryans career was
not his pathetic attempt to defend the biblical story of creation
in his famous 1925 courtroom encounter with Clarence Darrow, but
rather his role in diverting the social protest that rocked the
United States in the years preceding World War I into the dead
end of the Democratic Party.
Early years
William Jennings Bryan was born in Marion County, Illinois,
in 1860, on the eve of the American Civil War. His father, Silas
Bryan, was a judge and was prominent in local Democratic Party
politics. Born in Virginia, he had been a Stephen A. Douglas Democrat
before the Civil War and opposed the abolition of slavery.
The young Bryan attended Illinois College in Jacksonville and
there pursued training in oratory. While attending college, he
came under radical and progressive influences. He heard lectures
by prominent orators such as Henry Ward Beecher, Wendell Phillips
and Robert Ingersoll.
He later studied law at Union College in Chicago, where he
worked in the law office of Lyman Trumbell, who, as a Republican
senator from Illinois, had spearheaded the passage of the Thirteenth
Amendment abolishing slavery.
Bryan practiced law successfully for a few years in Illinois,
then decided to move with his family to Nebraska to set up a law
partnership with a friend. In Nebraska, he became increasingly
involved in Democratic Party politics, giving speeches on behalf
of candidates for state office and winning a local reputation
as a powerful speaker. In 1888, he attended the Democratic national
convention in St. Louis, giving his support to Grover Cleveland.
Bryans entry into politics seemed almost accidental.
In 1890, the Democratic Party chose him as its candidate for a
seat in Congress. However, it appeared he had little chance as
a Democrat running against a popular incumbent in a state that
usually voted Republican. Fortuitously, his decision to run coincided
with a terrible farm crisis and the rise of agrarian radicalism,
reflected in the growth of the Farmers Alliance. In 1890, corn
prices fell so low in Nebraska that it was cheaper to burn corn
than coal.
Kazin writes, Bryan tried to make himself the symbolic
leader of the prairie insurgency. Alongside attacks on the tariff,
his congressional platform thundered with calls to suppress
the trusts, to aid debtors by coining silver on equal terms
with gold, and to ban land speculation by non-resident aliensall
demands he shared with the agrarian rebels (p. 26).
His surprising victory launched a startlingly rapid rise to
political prominence. He was the Democratic presidential nominee
in three elections1896, 1900 and1908losing each time.
In Congress, his speaking abilities captured public attention.
However, as Kazin comments, he would be dogged throughout his
career by the perception that he was a man in love with
his words, but heedless of rigorous argument (p. 40).
Despite being defeated in a bid to capture a Senate seat in
1894, he was able to leverage his popularity to win the Democratic
presidential nomination two years later.
Progressivism
The period between around1890 and 1920, the era of Progressivism,
saw the enactment of many democratic reformsthe income tax,
direct election of senators, anti-trust legislation, womens
suffrage, to name a few. It reflected an adaptation to a broad
democratic movement that arose in reaction to the development
of monopoly capitalism and imperialism. The same period in Europe
witnessed the growth of mass social democratic parties.
The founding of the Populist Party in 1892 marked the beginning
of this period. Based primarily in the West and the South, the
party grew out of the activities of the Farmers Alliances, which
advocated radical measures to relieve the distress of small farmers
crushed by the pressure of the banks and railroads. In the presidential
election of 1892, the Populist Party emerged as a serious electoral
contender to the two established parties. Its candidate, former
Union general James B. Weaver, won 1 million popular votes and
22 electoral votes.
The movement was an amalgam of disparate and contradictory
tendencies. However, at its base were millions of angry farmers
willing to consider radical measures as a way out of their distress.
Its leaders denounced the plutocracy and raised demands of a radical
and progressive character, such as state ownership and operation
of the railroads and telegraph.
With Bryan, the Democratic Party adapted itself to the changing
mood of the masses and positioned itself to deflect social discontent
in a direction that posed no challenge to the capitalist system.
The party claimed to be the party of the common man and sought
to blunt the appeal of socialist opponents of the capitalist system
by proposing limited reforms. At the same time, Democrats and
Republicans reacted violently to any manifestation of independent
struggle by the working class. Strikes were crushed under the
blows of court injunctions, arrests, and state and federal troops.
Agrarian discontent
Bryans entry into active politics coincided with the
growth of agrarian and industrial discontent in the early 1890s.
Neither of the two hidebound and conservative capitalist parties
could offer any solution to the growing distress of industrial
workers and the mass of small farmers driven to ruin by low farm
prices and gouging by moneylenders, merchants and railroads.
Bryan adapted himself to this movement. Kazin notes that in
1892 Bryan ran, in all but name, as a Populist (p.
36). He even endorsed Weaver, the Populist candidate for president,
against Cleveland, the Democratic nominee.
There were bitter and bloody strikes in this period. In 1892,
steelworkers struck the Homestead Works in Pennsylvania. The strikers
were defeated after armed battles with private Pinkerton guards
and the state militia, in which many workers died.
The issue of the growing power of the railroad monopolies was
one of broad concern. In 1893, there was a major financial panic,
and conditions for masses of workers and farmers grew even more
desperate. In 1894, the newly formed American Railway Union led
by Eugene V. Debs called a national strike to support workers
at the Pullman Palace Sleeping Car Company. It was met by violent
repression by the Democratic administration of Grover Cleveland,
which sent thousands of federal troops to attack the strikers.
Debs and other union leaders were arrested and jailed.
The Populist Party sought to expand its appeal by supporting
the strikers and denouncing the government intervention. Debs
was among those won to the Populist ranks.
While the electoral success of the Populists was concentrated
mainly in the Great Plains and Rocky Mountain states, one of the
most interesting features of this period was the growth of the
movement in the South. Southern small farmers and sharecroppers,
black and white, faced appalling conditions in the latter part
of the nineteenth century. In 1892, cotton prices reached their
lowest level in decades. There were waves of foreclosures and
the forced sale of farms.
Factory workers faced equally dire conditions. Among mill workers
in Atlanta, famine and pestilence are today making worse
ravages than among the serfs of Russia, wrote the Atlanta
Journal. It described workers quarters where there
is no sanitation, no help or protection from the city, no medicine,
no food, no fire, no nursesnothing but torturing hunger
and death (quoted from Tom Watson, Agrarian Rebel,
C. Vann Woodward, Oxford University Press, 1972, p. 225).
Populism in the South drew wide support despite violent and
desperate attacks by the Democratic Party apparatus. Populist
supporters were mobbed and in some instances killed. The party
faced slander in the press and blatant ballot stuffing.
The feeling of the Democracy toward us is one of murderous
hate, wrote one Southern Populist. I have been shot
at many times. Grand juries will not indict our assailants. Courts
give us no protection (ibid, p. 223).
The Democratic Party establishment was particularly enraged
by the Populists rejection of race-baiting. The Populist
Party made an appeal for a united front between black and white
farmers and sharecroppers, calling on them to put aside racial
animosity and join in a common struggle against the plutocracy.
It opposed the Democratic Party policy of white supremacy and
sought to foster unity and cooperation between the exploited members
of both races. Blacks were included in the ranks of Populist agitators.
Often, speaking before mixed audiences, they recorded considerable
success.
The presidential campaign of 1896
In the election of 1896, the Populists seemed poised to make
impressive gains. Instead, the movement foundered and collapsed.
Understanding why this happened is critical to assessing both
the weaknesses of the Populist movement and the role and nature
of the Democratic Party.
Here, Bryan played an important part. In his person he seemed
to many to combine Populist goals with the authority and organizational
power of the Democratic Party.
The contradictory and unstable character of the Populist Party
became manifest in the presidential campaign of 1896, when a large
section of the movement became diverted by the free silver
panacea. The prominence given to this issue reflected the divide
between the movements leadership and its worker and farmer
base. The latter was attracted by the more radical
demands such as public ownership, while the Populist leadership,
which included some larger landowners and businessmen, wanted
to avoid any challenge to the profit system.
Already in 1895, moves were underway in the Populist leadership
to undertake a fusion with a section of the Democratic Party on
the issue of the free coinage of silver. Stung by the sharp drop
in popularity of the Cleveland administration and threatened by
the Populists on the left, by 1895 large sections of the Democratic
Party were adopting the call for free silver as a
means of electoral survival.
When the Democratic Party nominated Bryan as its presidential
candidate in 1896, the Populist Party leadership agreed to support
his campaign based on common support for free silver
and several other Populist demands, but not public ownership.
The strongest opposition to fusion existed in the South, where
a line of blood separated the Democratic Party from the new party.
Facing stiff opposition to fusion, the Populist leaders agreed
to a compromise, nominating the Democrat Bryan for president and
Populist leader Tom Watson of Georgia for vice president. The
elevation of Watson onto the Populist presidential ticket, a concession
to the radical wing of the party, turned out to be meaningless,
since the Democrats refused to reciprocate by withdrawing their
vice presidential nominee, Arthur Sewal of Maine, a wealthy shipbuilder.
However, it proved effective in temporarily silencing the anti-fusionists
and permitting what turned out to be the effective liquidation
of the Populist Party. From that day forward, the party ceased
to be a significant factor in American politics.
Sabotage
Writing of Bryans role in the 1896 election, Kazin declares,
His campaign endeared him to countless Americans who came
to regard him as a godly hero. And in his advocacy of a stronger,
more interventionist state, Bryan calmed his partys ancestral
dread of federal power. Every Democratic president from Woodrow
Wilson to Lyndon Johnson would reap the benefits of his apostasy
(p. 45).
Kazin is correct to attach importance to the role of Bryan
in refashioning the Democratic Party. But to suggest that the
nomination of Bryan transformed the Democratic Party in some fundamental
way is deceitful. Leaders of the Democratic Party may have been
willing to accept Bryans nomination as a necessary evil
to head off Populism, but that was as far as his services were
needed. The Democratic Party establishment actively sabotaged
his campaign in order to ensure the election of the pro-imperialist
William McKinley.
Though radical on its face in certain aspects, Bryans
eclectic program could not provide a genuine alternative for masses
of workers and small farmers to the growing power of the giant
banking, railroad and industrial monopolies. The central plank
of the Democrats program, free silver, was largely
a red herring, reflecting differences between sections of the
ruling class itself. It did not in any way challenge the system
responsible for the exploitation of workers and farmers. Indeed,
free silver inflationary policies threatened to erode
even further the poverty-level living standards of wage earners.
Missing from Bryans platform were demands that challenged,
in any significant way, the conditions of class exploitation itself.
For example, in place of the call of the Populist Party for public
ownership of the railroads, the Democratic platform merely called
for regulation.
It was difficult for Bryan to convince workers, who had just
suffered three years of falling wages, unemployment and strikebreaking
under a Democratic administration, to accept Bryans claim
that this party now truly represented their interests. As Kazin
notes, Bryans attempt to appeal to urban workers faced an
uncomfortable reality...labor had nothing concrete to gain from
free silver and would only suffer if a change in currency drove
up prices for food and other necessities (p. 69).
While Bryan captured broad support in the West and the South,
his campaign was received coolly by workers in the major industrial
centers of the North and East. Kazin notes, Outside the
Deep South, Bryan carried only one city with over a hundred thousand
residentsand that was Denver, stronghold of the white metal,
where Republicans hardly bothered to campaign (p. 77).
The Democratic Party and white supremacy
The collapse of the Populist Party in the wake of the debacle
of 1896 struck hardest in the South. Black tenant farmers were
left totally at the mercy of a Democratic Party that terrorized
and disenfranchised them. Beginning in the 1890s, laws mandating
racial segregation and imposing poll taxes and literacy tests
designed to exclude blacks from voting were imposed by Democratic-controlled
state legislatures across the South.
These measures were instituted largely as a response to the
Populists attempt to form an alliance between poor blacks
and whites against the southern oligarchy. By driving a wedge
between poor blacks and whites and between oppressed workers and
small farmers, the Democratic Party sought to institutionalize
a divide-and-rule strategy to maintain the system of class oppression.
The reign of terror against blacks intensified. Lynchings, tolerated
and even encouraged by state authorities, were common occurrences.
Kazin attempts to construct something of an apologia for the
Democratic Partys embrace of white supremacy. He writes,
Most white progressives endorsed segregation of the races;
many argued that black people would advance more quickly and suffer
less violence if they did so apart. Racismwhether aggressive
or paternalisticposed no barrier to the potential bond between
rural Dixie and the blue-collar North. Kazin continues,
Bryan was the inevitable standard-bearer of this embryonic
coalition (p. 150).
How one could be progressive and a white supremacist
at the same time Kazin doesnt explain. Rather than expose
the fundamental contradiction between the Democratic Partys
claim to represent the people and its support for terror against
blacks and their disenfranchisement in the South, Kazin offers
a facile apology.
Lurking in the background of such arguments is the belief,
which Kazin shares with many liberals, that the working people
themselves are to blame for racism. However, as the brief experience
of Populism in the South demonstrated, an alliance of poor whites
and blacks was realizable. It was the ruling elites in both the
North and the South, through the Democratic Party, that sought
to break up this emerging coalition, so threatening to their interests.
Bryan never took a principled stand against white supremacy
in the South. Kazin suggests that Bryans silence on this
question is puzzling. However, it is not hard to explain.
The ruling elite in the South, the remnants of the old southern
slaveholding oligarchy, formed a critical base of the Democratic
Party. This Party had defended slavery and secession and had led
the struggle against post-Civil War Reconstruction. It had opposed
granting suffrage to freed slaves and generally opposed all progressive
reforms aimed at alleviating the oppression of blacks and poor
whites. No politician could hope for national leadership in the
Democratic Party, let alone expect to win the presidency, by attacking
the system of racial oppression in the South.
On what basis could a party resting on such a foundation claim
to represent the working class? Kazin never bothers to ask this
question. However, this fact alone is enough to puncture Kazins
claim that Bryanism represented a progressive, class aware
movement articulating the aspirations of workers and small farmers.
The rise of US imperialism
Bryans rise to prominence coincided with the entrance
of the United States into the world scramble for colonies and
markets. In 1896, the United States annexed Hawaii, and in 1898,
the US provoked war with Spain, resulting in the seizure of Cuba,
Puerto Rico, the Philippines and Guam.
These imperialist adventures were in part a response by the
US ruling class to the growing social contradictions at home.
The American ruling elite sought to overcome its internal economic
contradictions by seeking through military conquest new markets
and sources of cheap raw materials.
Despite his anti-militarist posture, Bryan supported the declaration
of war against Spain and even formed his own militia regiment.
(The McKinley administration made sure his unit never saw action.)
Bryan later joined those opposed to the US campaign to suppress
the insurgency in the Philippines. However, as Kazin notes, Bryan
refused to use his influence in the Democratic Party to derail
the Senate vote ratifying the treaty with Spain annexing the island
nation.
Bryans anti-militarism coincided with the genuine feelings
of American workers and farmers who wanted no part of wars of
conquest. However, the official opposition to colonialism represented
an eclectic mixture of progress and reaction. This found expression
in the politics of the Anti-Imperialist League, a coalition formed
to oppose the annexation of the Philippines.
It included both sincere opponents of imperialist militarism
and xenophobic elements, fearful of the consequences of assimilating
an alien people. Commenting on this phenomenon, Kazin notes, But
most Democrats who opposed the war juggled their higher principles
with their dread of annexing a distant nation populated by what
one Missouri senator called half-civilized, piratical, muck-running
inhabitants (p. 92).
Bryan never formally joined the Anti-Imperialist League. However,
his politics reflected the same contradictions. While he gave
eloquent speeches denouncing militarism, he often evinced a chauvinist,
patronizing attitude toward the Filipinos and other oppressed
peoples. On July 4, 1906, he gave a speech entitled The
White Mans Burden before the American Society in London.
Further, with the exception of the Philippine intervention,
Bryan never actually opposed any war the US undertook once the
war commenced. Appointed to the post of secretary of state in
the administration of Woodrow Wilson in 1913, he was responsible
for deploying US troops and warships against Haiti, the Dominican
Republic and Mexico. In a particularly disgraceful episode, Bryan
supported the sending of a US expeditionary force to occupy Vera
Cruz, Mexico in response to an alleged insult to the American
flag.
Despite Bryans support for these interventions in Americas
back yard, Wilson became irritated with Bryans
pacifist rhetoric, especially as the US began preparing public
opinion for entry into the World War. Bryan left the cabinet and
resumed his lucrative public speaking career, which had already
made him a wealthy man.
Out of the cabinet, Bryan continued to oppose US entry into
the war, even endorsing the call for a national referendum on
the war question. However, as soon as Congress declared war on
Germany, he lined up behind the US military machine. He even joined
in the persecution of those who continued to oppose the war, denouncing
them as unpatriotic.
The road to Dayton, Tennessee
The final years of Bryans life were marked by a continual
shift to the right. World War I demonstrated to millions of workers
on all continents the incompatibility of the system of monopoly
capitalism with peace, prosperity and democracy. The war, which
gave rise to the Russian Revolution and the creation of the first
workers state, deflated Progressive Era illusions in the possibility
of taming capitalism through the introduction of democratic reforms.
During his years as secretary of state, Bryan had become a
prominent spokesman for the Prohibition movement. In the wake
of World War I, he became a leading evangelist, though he was
never formally ordained. In his sermons, he made opposition to
the teaching of evolution in public schools a central theme.
At a time when this issue has been revived by the religious
right, it is worthwhile to consider Bryans role in opposing
the teaching of evolution. Kazin attempts a lame apologia for
Bryans embrace of fundamentalist backwardness. He writes,
In recent years, however, the recognition that most evolutionists
in the 1920s were dedicated to improving the human
race through eugenics has made Bryan seem more sympathetic.
(P. 263)
One is prompted to ask: Sympathetic to whom?
Kazin laments the fact that the Scopes trial has for decades
overshadowed Bryans career as a social reformer. However,
there is an objective reason for this.
The pacifist and reformist illusions advanced by Bryan were,
in the final analysis, aimed at forestalling the threat of social
upheaval by undermining radical and socialist influences in the
working class. Bryans program was never based on a scientific
analysis of the contradictions of capitalism, but rather hazy
notions drawing on Christian morality. As events more and more
undermined the illusions of the masses in the possibility of peaceful
reform, Bryan reacted with an attack on science, blaming the outbreak
of war and revolution on the decline in religious faith.
Kazin writes, Never before had he made a religious question
a political priority. But World War I shredded the ideal of peaceful
progress and brotherhood, giving materialist doctrines such as
Marxism and Darwinism the benefit of the doubt when it came to
explaining why warfare intensified and inequality endured
(p. 264).
Within the Presbyterian Church, Bryan became the leader of
those forces opposed to the so-called modernizersthose who
wanted to reconcile church doctrine with the teachings of science.
In 1923, he ran for titular head of the Presbyterian Church, but
lost to an opponent with more tolerant views on the question of
teaching evolution.
At this time, he also began speaking out more openly in defense
of segregation and white supremacy. At the 1924 Democratic national
convention, he used his influence to help kill an amendment to
the party platform condemning the Ku Klux Klan.
In 1925, five states banned the teaching of the theory of evolution
in public schools. When the state of Tennessee sought to prosecute
John Scopes, a young substitute biology teacher, for teaching
evolution, Bryan agreed to join the prosecutorial team.
The trial proved to be a debacle for opponents of evolution.
Under Clarence Darrows cross-examination, Bryan, the accomplished
orator, was made to appear a buffoon and an ignoramus. Bryan was
preparing to publish his rebuttal of Darrow when he collapsed
and died a few days after the trial.
As the columnist H.L. Mencken wrote, He seemed only a
poor clod like those around him, deluded by a childish theology,
full of an almost pathological hatred of all learning, all human
dignity, all beauty, all fine and noble things (p. 298).
But Kazin doesnt agree with progressive intellectuals
who continue to repeat Menckens great slur (p. 299).
Presumably, Kazin would have preferred Bryans views to have
carried the day.
Kazin expresses perplexity at the relentlessly right-wing trajectory
of evangelical Christianity in the decades since Bryans
death. He seems genuinely confused about the fact that today Bryans
legacy is primarily honored within right-wing circles, and then
only for his role as an opponent of evolution.
He complains that in the post-war period white progressives
either ignored religious devotion or thought it an impediment
to social change, as though Bryans political evolution
wasnt the clearest demonstration of just that. He goes on
to criticize liberals who ignore religious issues grounded
in moral conviction.
He concludes with the following tirade: Time and again,
secular reformers defeat themselves by assuming...that they can
appeal solely to the economic self-interest of working-class Americans
and ignore moral issues grounded in religious conviction
(p. 303).
The Democratic Party is already well along in making this shift,
as seen in its efforts to further water down its defense of abortion
rights, and attempts by Joseph Lieberman and others to attack
the principle of the separation of church and state.
It is highly symptomatic of the mood prevailing in wide sections
of the formerly liberal intelligentsia that the most reactionary
features of Bryan fascinate Kazin. What about the question of
public ownership, the redistribution of wealth, opposition to
militarism? The Democratic Party rejects these Progressive Era
goals, but this is of little concern to Kazin.
The author displays an amazing indifference to the democratic
content of the centuries-long struggle over the separation of
church and state. Further, he rejects out of hand the possibility
that there is an inherent conflict between the holding of religious
and anti-scientific views and the development of a consistent
and progressive political outlook. And these are the views of
someone who is considered to be in the more liberal wing of the
Democratic Party.
Kazins work underscores the collapse of the liberal reformist
perspective and the lack of any real commitment within the privileged
upper-middle-class layer on which the Democratic Party rests to
the defense of democratic principles.
This has material roots. The social foundations upon which
the reforms of the Progressive and New Deal eras rested no longer
exist. The global economic position of US capitalism has been
decisively eroded. It is now the worlds largest debtor nation
and faces powerful overseas economic competitors. Under these
conditions, all the past gains of the working class, including
basic democratic rights, are under attack.
The task facing the working class is not an attempt to revive
moribund liberalism, but to construct an independent political
party of its own based on a socialist and internationalist program.
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