-Caveat Lector-

http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/USAlafollette.htm

Robert La Follette, the  son of a small farmer, was born in Dane County,
Wisconsin, on 14th June, 1855. He worked as a farm labourer before
entering the University of Wisconsin in 1875. After graduating in 1879 he
set up as a lawyer and the following year became District Attorney of Dane
County.

Elected to Congress as a Republican, La Follette was extremely critical of
the behaviour of some of the party bosses. In 1891, La Follette announced
that the state Republican boss, Senator Philetus Sawyer, had offered him a
bribe to fix a court case.

Over the next six years La Follette built up a loyal following within the
Republican Party in opposition to the power of the official leadership.
Proposing a programme of tax reform, corporation regulation and an
extension of political democracy, La Follette was elected governor of
Wisconsin in 1900. Once in power La Follette employed the academic staff
of the University of Wisconsin to draft bills and administer the laws that he
introduced.

La Follette was also successful in persuading the federal government to
introduce much needed reforms. This included the regulation of the
railway industry and equalized tax assessment. In 1906 La Follette was
elected to the Senate and over the next few years argued that his main
role was to "protect the people" from the "selfish interests". He claimed
that the nation's economy was dominated by fewer than 100 industrialists.
He went on to argue that these men then used this power to control the
political process. La Follette supported the growth of trade unions as he
saw them as a check on the power of large corporations.

In 1909 La Follette and his wife, the feminist, Belle La Follette founded the
La Follette's Weekly Magazine. The journal campaigned for women's
suffrage, racial equality and other progressive causes.

La Follette supported Woodrow Wilson in the 1912 presidential election
and approved his social justice legislation. However, he complained that he
was under the control of big business and was totally opposed to Wilson's
decision to enter the First World War. Once war was declared La Follette
opposed conscription and the passing of the Espionage Act. La Follette
was accused of treason but was a popular hero with the anti-war
movement.

La Follette became the candidate of the Progressive Party in the 1924
presidential election. Although he gained support from trade unions, the
Socialist Party and the Scripps-Howard newspaper chain, La Follette and
his running partner, Burton K. Wheeler, only won one-sixth of the votes.
Robert La Follette died on 18th June, 1925.







Art Young, The Masses (1917)












(1) Robert La Follette, Autobiography (1911)

In 1876 Robert G. Ingersoll came to Madison to speak. Ingersoll had a
tremendous influence upon me, as indeed he had upon many young men at
the time. It was not that he changed my beliefs, but he liberated my mind.
Freedom was what preached: he wanted the shackles off everywhere. He
wanted men to think boldly about all things: he demanded intellectual and
moral courage. He wanted men to follow whatever truth might lead them.
He was a rare, bold, heroic figure.



(2) Robert La Follette, Autobiography (1911)

William McKinley drew men to him by the charm, courtliness, and
kindliness of his manner. McKinley was a magnetic speaker; he had a clear,
bell-like quality of voice, with a thrill in it. He spoke with dignity, but with
freedom of action. The pupils of his eyes would dilate until they were
almost black, and the face, naturally without much colour, would become
almost like marble - a strong face with a noble head.

I know of my own knowledge that McKinley stood against many of the
corrupt influences within his own party - that he even stood firmly against
the demands of his best friend, Hanna.



(3) When Robert La Follette became governor of Wisconsin in 1900 he
began to appoint people from the local university.

I made it a policy, in order to bring all the reserves of knowledge and
inspiration of the university more to the service of the people, to appoint
experts from the university wherever possible upon the important boards
of the state - the civil service commission, the railroad commission and so
on - a relationship which the university has always encouraged and by
which the state has greatly profited.



(4) Lincoln Steffens, The Struggle for Self-Government (1906)

"They" say in Wisconsin that La Follette is a demagogue, and if it is ,
demagogy to go thus straight to the voters, then "they" are right. But then
Folk also is a demagogue, and so are all thoroughgoing reformers. La
Follette from the beginning has asked, not the bosses, but the people for
what he wanted, and after 1894 he simply broadened his field and
redoubled his efforts. He circularized the State, he made speeches every
chance he got, and it the test of demagogy is the tone and style of a man's
speeches, La Follette is the opposite of a demagogue. Capable of fierce
invective, his oratory is impersonal; passionate and emotional himself, his
speeches are temperate. Some of them are so loaded with facts and such
closely knit arguments that they demand careful reading, and their effect
is traced to his delivery, which is forceful, emphatic, and fascinating.



(5) Robert La Follette, Autobiography (1911)

Benjamin Harrison was a man of superior ability. Reserved,
undemonstrative, a bit austere in manner, direct, quick to grasp a
proposition and decide on its merits, Harrison was a strong executive,
commanding the respect and confidence of all whom he came in contact.
He was conservative but not what we would call today a reactionary.



(6) Robert La Follette, Autobiography (1911)

In 1905 I recommended a graduated income tax which has since been
adopted by the state. It is the most comprehensive income tax system yet
adopted in this country. The tax as 1 per cent begins on incomes above
$800 in the case of unmarried people and above $1,200 in the case of
married persons, increasing one half of 1 per cent of thereabout for each
additional $1,000, until $12,000 is reached, when the tax becomes 5.5 per
cent. On incomes above $12,000 a year the tax is 6 per cent.

Wisconsin today leads all the states of the union in the proportion of its
taxes collected from corporations. It derives 70 per cent of its total state
taxes from the source, while the next nearest state, Ohio, derives 52 per
cent.

All of these new sources of income have enabled us to increase greatly
the service of the state to the people without noticeably increasing the
burden upon the people. Especially have we built up our educational
system.



(7) Robert La Follette, speech on railroad companies (23rd April, 1906)

The public has reasoned out its case. For more than a generation of time
it has wrought upon this great question with heart and brain in its daily
contact with the great railway corporations. It has mastered all the facts.
It is just. It is honest. It is rational. It respects property rights. It well
knows that its own industrial and commercial prosperity would suffer and
decline if the railroads were wronged, their capital impaired, their profits
unjustly diminished.

For a generation the American people have watched the growth of this
power in legislation. They observe how vast and far-reaching these modem
business methods are in fact. Against the natural laws of trade and
commerce is set the arbitrary will of a few masters of special privilege. The
principal transportation lines of the country are so operated as to
eliminate competition. Between railroads and other monopolies controlling
great natural resources and most of the necessaries of life there exists a
"community of interests" in all cases and an identity of ownership in many.
They have observed that these great combinations are closely associated
in business for business reasons; that they are also closely associated in
politics for business reasons; that together they constitute a complete
system; that they encroach upon the public rights, defeat legislation for
the public good, and secure laws to promote private interests.

Is it to be marveled at that the American people have become convinced
that railroads and industrial trusts stand between them and their
representatives; that they have come to believe that the daily conviction
of public officials for betrayal of public trust in municipal. State, and
national government is but a suggestion of the potential influence of these
great combinations of wealth and power?



(8) Robert La Follette, speech (4th April, 1917)

If we are to enter upon this war in the manner the President demands, let
us throw pretense to the winds, let us be honest, let us admit that this is
a ruthless war against not only Germany's Army and her Navy but against
her civilian population as well, and frankly state that the purpose of
Germany's hereditary European enemies has become our purpose.

Again, the President says "we are about to accept the gage of battle with
this natural foe of liberty and shall, if necessary, spend the whole force of
the nation to check and nullify its pretensions and its power." That much,
at least, is clear; that program is definite. The whole force and power of
this nation, if necessary, is to be used to bring victory to the Entente
Allies, and to us as their ally in this war. Remember, that not yet has the
"whole force" of one of the warring nations been used.

Countless millions are suffering from want and privation; countless other
millions are dead and rotting on foreign battlefields; countless other
millions are crippled and maimed, blinded, and dismembered; upon all and
upon their children's children for generations to come has been laid a
burden of debt which must be worked out in poverty and suffering, but
the "whole force" of no one of the warring nations has yet been
expended; but our "whole force" shall be expended, so says the President.
We are pledged by the President, so far as he can pledge us, to make this
fair, free, and happy land of ours the same shambles and bottomless pit of
horror that we see in Europe today.

Just a word of comment more upon one of the points in the President's
address. He says that this is a war "for the things which we have always
carried nearest to our hearts - for democracy, for the right of those who
submit to authority to have a voice in their own government." In many
places throughout the address is this exalted sentiment given expression.

It is a sentiment peculiarly calculated to appeal to American hearts and,
when accompanied by acts consistent with it, is certain to receive our
support; but in this same connection, and strangely enough, the President
says that we have become convinced that the German government as it
now exists - "Prussian autocracy" he calls it - can never again maintain
friendly relations with us. His expression is that "Prussian autocracy was
not and could never be our friend," and repeatedly throughout the
address the suggestion is made that if the German people would overturn
their government, it would probably be the way to peace. So true is this
that the dispatches from London all hailed the message of the President as
sounding the death knell of Germany's government.

But the President proposes alliance with Great Britain, which, however
liberty- loving its people, is a hereditary monarchy, with a hereditary ruler,
with a hereditary House of Lords, with a hereditary landed system, with a
limited and restricted suffrage for one class and a multiplied suffrage
power for another, and with grinding industrial conditions for all the
wageworkers. The President has not suggested that we make our support
of Great Britain conditional to her granting home rule to Ireland, or Egypt,
or India. We rejoice in the establishment of a democracy in Russia, but it
will hardly be contended that if Russia was still an autocratic government,
we would not be asked to enter this alliance with her just the same.



(9) Robert La Follette, Autobiography (1911)


While Theodore Roosevelt was President, his public utterances through
state papers, addresses, and the press were highly coloured with
rhetorical radicalism. One trait was always pronounced. His most savage
assault upon special interests was invariably offset with an equally drastic
attack upon those who were seeking to reform abuses. These were
indiscriminately classed as demagogues and dangerous persons. In this way
he sought to win approval, both from the radicals and the conservatives.



(10) Lincoln Steffens, Autobiography (1931)

Governor La Follette was a powerful man, who, short but solid, swift and
willful in motion, in speech, in decision, gave the impression of a tall, a big,
man. He had meant to be an actor; he was one always. His lines were his
own, but he consciously, artfully recited them well and for effect which,
like an artist, he calculated. But what I saw at my first sight of him was a
sincere, ardent man who, whether standing, sitting, or in motion, but the
grace of trained strength, both physical and mental.

Bob La Follette was called a little giant. Rather short in stature, but broad
and strong, he had the gift of muscled, nervous power, he kept himself in
training all his life. His sincerity, his integrity, his complete devotion to his
ideal, were indubitable; no one who heard could suspect his singleness of
purpose or his courage. The strange contradictions in him were that he
was a fighter - for peace; he battered his fist so terribly in one great
speech for peace during the World War that he had to be treated and
then carried it in bandages for weeks.


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