Grover Cleveland.
Publié le 10/05/2013
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Americans, Roman Catholics, and Southerners, who all generally supported the Democratic Party.
The statement lost Blaine any chance of getting the Irish Americanvote in New York City.
The Mugwumps supported Cleveland because of Blaine’s political past.
Even the Prohibition Party candidate received 25,000 votes that normallywould have gone to the Republican candidate.
New York’s 36 electoral votes swung the election to Cleveland.
He won the state’s vote by only about 1000 in a total vote of more than 1,000,000, and the nationalelection by 219 electoral votes to Blaine’s 182.
IV PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES
Cleveland was inaugurated March 4, 1885, and he immediately showed his independence and disregard for the opinion of his supporters in the selection of his advisersand heads of departments, called the Cabinet.
His secretary of state was Thomas F.
Bayard, an advocate of lower tariffs (taxes) on imported goods, which offendedDemocrats, who wanted higher tariffs ( see Tariffs, United States).
His selection of William C.
Whitney, a financier, for secretary of the Navy was denounced by those who feared the power of big business.
The president drew hostile comments from Northerners when he made Lucius Q.
C.
Lamar of Mississippi secretary of the interiorand Augustus H.
Garland of Arkansas attorney general because both men had served the Confederacy.
A Civil Service
The president further demonstrated his independence by promising no “relaxation on my part” in enforcing the law regulating government employment, called thePendleton Act of 1883.
Cleveland more than doubled the number of government jobs that came under the Civil Service Commission; these jobs were given to peoplewho were qualified to fill the positions, rather than to party loyalists, as was usually the case at that time.
He also persuaded the Congress of the United States to repealthe Tenure-of-Office Act that since 1867 had restricted presidents in removing incompetent officeholders.
Ultimately, however, pressure from the Democratic Partyforced Cleveland to make concessions.
By the end of his term, faithful Democrats filled most federal jobs.
B Pension Bills
Cleveland was harassed by countless pension bills passed by Congress.
These bills granted money to people Congress felt were deserving, usually Civil War veterans.
Hevetoed more than 200 private pension bills, arguing that money would be given to people who didn’t deserve it.
He also vetoed a general pension bill that would haveawarded pensions to all disabled Union veterans, regardless of the cause of their disability.
The Grand Army of the Republic, the veterans’ organization of the UnionArmy, was outraged, and its leaders reminded the president that he had not been a soldier during the Civil War.
C Marriage
In early June 1886, the 49-year-old president married Frances Folsom, daughter of a former law partner.
Cleveland was the first president to be married in the WhiteHouse.
The couple had three daughters and two sons.
D Major Legislation
During his first term, Cleveland supported two major pieces of legislation.
One was the Dawes Act of 1887, also called the Allotment Act.
This act attempted to changethe Native Americans’ communal way of living and replace it with a sense of individualism by distributing tribal lands to individual Native Americans.
The act failed toachieve its goal.
Instead, much of the land fell into the hands of whites, further impoverishing a decreasing Native American population ( see Native Americans of North America).
The second major bill was the Interstate Commerce Act of 1887, which said that charges on railroads must be “reasonable and just.” This law established the principleof federal regulation of the economy.
It created the Interstate Commerce Commission but did not give it sufficient powers to regulate railroads effectively.
Cleveland also wanted to reduce the huge surplus then in the U.S.
Treasury.
He felt that the soundest way to do this was to lower the tariff, a tax on imports.
Industriesin Northern urban areas and banking interests tended to favor such tariffs because they helped domestic businesses by increasing the cost of imported goods;agricultural areas in the West and the South tended to oppose them because they made it harder for people to buy cheap foreign goods such as clothing.
Clevelandpresented his position on the tariff in a message to Congress late in 1887, but Congress did not act, and the tariff question became a major issue in the election of1888.
E Election of 1888
In 1888 the Democratic Party split over the tariff issue and over Cleveland’s generally conservative position.
However, Cleveland was renominated by the Democrats.His Republican opponent was Benjamin Harrison of Indiana.
The Republican platform favored more high tariffs.
Cleveland received only 168 electoral votes to Harrison’s233.
Nevertheless, the defeated president received about 100,000 more popular votes than did Harrison.
F Election of 1892
When Cleveland left public office in 1889, he returned to New York City and resumed his law practice.
Three years later, the Democrats again turned to him as theirparty’s greatest vote-getter.
At their national convention Cleveland was nominated on the first ballot.
In his third presidential campaign, Cleveland stood his ground against western Democrats who demanded free coinage of silver.
The unrestricted, or free, coinage ofsilver would have increased the amount of money available, causing the value of the dollar to decline.
Farmers in the South and the West supported free silver becausethey relied heavily on credit and would have been able to repay their loans much more easily.
Western mining companies also favored free silver because it increasedthe market for their silver.
Banks would have received money that was worth less than the money they had loaned; financial interests therefore opposed free silver.Because Cleveland refused to advance the free silver cause, many southern and western Democrats called Cleveland a “bloated Wall Street puppet.”
The Republicans in their campaign defended their high-tariff policy against repeated and strong Democratic criticism, but that was not enough.
Despite the argumentswithin his own party, Cleveland decisively defeated President Harrison, 277 electoral votes to 145.
V SECOND TERM AS PRESIDENT
Cleveland took the presidential oath on March 4, 1893.
Once more the job-seekers proved nearly unendurable.
The president complained that the period set apart for.
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Liens utiles
- Stephen Grover Cleveland 1837-1908 Deux fois Président des États-Unis en 1885 et 1893, pour deux mandats non consécutifs de quatre ans, il ne parvint jamais à devenir une figure populaire, surtout parce qu'il montra une trop grande indépendance dans ses décisions.
- Grover Cleveland - Biography.
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