The American
The Journal of the American Enterprise Institute
 
 
The Return of the Jeffersonian Vision and the  Rejection of Progressivism
_By Michael Barone_ (http://american.com/author_search?Creator=Michael 
Barone)  
Tuesday, July 13,  2010  
 
 
 


 
 
 
We are once again—as in the days of the  early republic and not in the 
heyday of the Progressives and the New  Dealers—a republic of property owners.  






 
“No person shall…be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due  
process of law.” So reads a portion of the Fifth Amendment to the 
Constitution,  part of the Bill of Rights passed by the First Congress and 
ratified by 
state  legislatures, sponsored originally by Thomas Jefferson’s friend and 
political  ally James Madison. It echoed, of course, Jefferson’s words in the 
Declaration  of Independence: “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that 
all men are  created equal, that they are endowed by their creator with 
certain unalienable  rights, that among these are life, liberty, and the 
pursuit of happiness.” 
Madison and Jefferson followed the tradition of John Locke, the British  
philosopher whose Two Treatises on Government was taken as the justification 
for  the transfer of power known as the Glorious Revolution of 1688-89—the 
subject of  my 2007 book, Our First Revolution: The  Remarkable British 
Upheaval That Inspired America’s Founding Fathers.  Locke believed that men 
could 
be free only if their lives, liberty, and property  were protected by the 
rule of law. And he believed that only men with property  could be relied on 
to self-govern. 
Locke, therefore, thought that the responsibility for choosing legislators 
in  representative government should be limited to property owners, as it 
was in  elections to the House of Commons. In English counties, the franchise 
was  limited to 40-shilling freeholders—owners of property that brought in 
two pounds  a year. The franchise in the more numerous boroughs was limited 
in different  ways, in some cases to the owners of specific pieces of 
property. 
The American people, the property-owning majority,  even in this time of 
economic distress, seem to be embracing instead a culture  of independence, a 
culture as old as the republic itself.
The Founders anticipated a limited but broader franchise in America. They  
provided that senators should be chosen by legislatures, whose members were  
typically selected by a large electorate, and that members of the House 
should  be chosen by voters with “the qualifications requisite for electors of 
the most  numerous branch of the state legislature.” 
The Founders had different ideas of the worthiness of commerce. Jefferson  
envisioned a republic of freeholding egalitarian farmers. Alexander Hamilton 
 envisioned a republic on the path toward commercial and industrial 
preeminence.  But Jefferson’s vision was a more accurate picture of the United 
States in the  early years of the republic, where land was plentiful and labor 
scarce, where  the large majority of white men were farmers and most of them 
owned the land  they worked. 
In this freeholders’ republic, it was natural to move toward universal  
manhood suffrage, to allow every white male adult to vote. Some states took  
longer than others to reach this goal—South Carolina still had the legislature 
 choose its presidential electors until 1860. But the principle was widely  
accepted elsewhere: since almost everyone owned property, everyone should 
be  allowed to vote. There was a danger, recognized by Alexis de Tocqueville 
in the  1830s, that the poor would vote to strip the rich of their wealth 
and, in  President Obama’s words to Joe the Plumber, “Spread the wealth 
around.” 
The New Deal was an attempt to freeze an economy,  then in a downward 
spiral, into one place.
Tocqueville pointed to another danger as well, the danger of what he called 
 “soft despotism,” in which a seemingly benevolent government would 
channel  citizens into docile obedience like a herd of sheep. But that danger 
seemed  distant, even to Tocqueville, in an America whose dominant and more 
populist  party, Andrew Jackson’s Democrats, opposed government spending on 
public works  projects and feared the power of a central bank. 
Up through the end of the 19th century there did not seem to be a 
significant  tension between universal democracy and property rights. The 
Founders’ 
vision  prevailed. 
A New Vision Based on Fear 
But that was no longer the case in 1910. By then, another vision was being  
advanced, the vision of the Progressives—the vision of Presidents Theodore  
Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson, of political philosophers Herbert Croly and 
John  Dewey. 
The Progressives explicitly repudiated the Founders’ vision of limited  
government. They argued that government needed to redistribute property, to 
take  money from one group of citizens to help others, and to regulate economic 
 activity in ways previously considered unconstitutional. The Constitution, 
they  said, was a “horse and buggy” document, suited perhaps to the 
simpler society of  the 18th century, but dangerously out of date in a complex 
industrial society  which could not expect ordinary citizens to make their way 
without government  guidance and assistance. They were acting, they said, in 
the interests of the  people. Their critics said they were acting out of 
hunger for power. 
I want to advance another thesis: That they actually acted more out of fear 
 than of benevolence. They feared revolution. 
I want to advance another thesis: That  Progressives actually acted more 
out of fear than of benevolence. They feared  revolution.
They did not know what we know today: that revolution wasn’t going to occur 
 in America, as it had so often in Europe (multiple times in France, in 
many  European countries in 1848, and as recently as 1870-71). Revolution would 
 transform Russia in 1917-18. In the chaos and violence that followed World 
War  I, Marxist revolts broke out in cities as productive and sophisticated 
as Munich  and Budapest; Benito Mussolini’s fascists marched on Rome. The 
Progressives did  not take the Marxist view that revolution was inevitable, 
but they certainly  believed it was possible; Theodore Roosevelt was quite 
explicit about this  threat. And they believed it a serious menace, as 
avowedly Marxist socialist  parties gained millions of adherents in the 
expanding 
electorates of Europe. 
The Challenges of Urbanity 
This is understandable if we go back to 1910, and look at the America the  
Progressives faced. It was increasingly an urban country with an 
increasingly  industrial economy, a country where great masses of people did 
not own  
significant amounts of property. 
The United States in 1910 had 92 million people—it would pass the 100 
million  mark in 1915. This seems like a small number to us, living in a nation 
of 310  million, but it was an enormous multitude to the Americans of that 
time, a huge  increase over the 3.9 million recorded in the first Census just 
120 years  before, in 1790. 
Alexis de Tocqueville pointed to another danger as  well, the danger of 
what he called “soft despotism,” in which a seemingly  benevolent government 
would channel citizens into docile obedience like a herd  of sheep.
It was an America with huge and rapidly growing cities. New York City had 
4.8  million people in 1910, nearly half of them in Manhattan—almost a 
million more  than live there today—and half of those lived south of 14th 
Street. 
The subways  were being built that would spread the city out in the next 
decade to Brooklyn  and the Bronx, each of which gained more than half a 
million people in the  decade, during which the population of New York City 
rose 
to 5.6 million. Behind  New York in 1910 were Chicago with 2.2 million, 
Philadelphia with 1.5 million,  and St. Louis, Boston, Cleveland, Baltimore, 
Pittsburgh, and Detroit each with  about half a million or more. Altogether, 
one 
out of eight Americans lived in  these nine cities, America was rapidly 
moving to a time—reached by the 1920  Census—when a majority lived in cities. 
And these cities were filling up with immigrants. In the 1900-1910 decade,  
America grew from 76 million to 92 million and welcomed some 9 million  
immigrants. Four million more would arrive in the next four years. More than  
half of America’s population growth came from immigrants, and for the first 
time  many came from Eastern and Southern Europe, the vast majority of whom 
settled in  big cities. It was a time when America’s giant factories employed 
great masses  of immigrants. Henry Ford’s Highland Park plant was churning 
out hundreds of  thousands of Model Ts—and Ford was organizing English and 
civics lessons for his  workers, many of whom had little command of English. 
In America, most farmers owned their farms. But most city dwellers did not  
own significant property at all. Most city residents rented rather than 
owned  their homes; they cashed their paychecks for cash rather than have bank  
accounts; they depended on charity if they became disabled or widowed. It 
was  the America of Theodore Dreiser’s Sister  Carrie—a very hard America 
(as I used the term in my 2004 book, Hard America, Soft America), an America 
with  plenty of competition and accountability, but which could be very 
unforgiving of  mistakes and misfortunes. Millions made their way upwards, but 
most never  accumulated significant wealth. They lacked the stake in their 
communities and  in the larger society that property provides. 
The Obama Democrats came to power with an  assumption that in times of 
economic distress Americans would be more amenable  to or supportive of big 
government programs.
For the Progressives, this was scary. Who could tame the urban masses? The  
post-Civil War politicians who built Fort Sheridan and Great Lakes Naval 
Station  located them near Chicago to stamp out revolution if it came. And 
indeed there  was rioting in the streets of Chicago during the Pullman strike 
of 1893, when  President Grover Cleveland superseded the governor of Illinois 
and mobilized  federal troops. 
The Progressives and their progeny, the New Dealers—whether acting out of  
benevolence, hunger for power, or fear—were paternalistic; but they were 
also  precautionary. Give the masses work relief, Social Security, deposit 
insurance,  a floor on wages and prices, they thought, and the masses will not 
revolt or be  attracted to the totalitarian faiths advancing in the Old World—
the Communism  that many intellectuals championed, the fascism that Anne 
Morrow Lindbergh wrote  was “the wave of the future.” 
The Progressives argued that economic freedoms were unimportant because  
ordinary people, lacking property, didn’t really have much economic freedom  
anyway. As such, property rights must be subordinated to human rights. It was 
 better to guarantee people education, healthcare, food, housing—the 
domestic  programs that Franklin Roosevelt advanced as victory in World War II 
neared in  1944 and 1945. Economic growth was a secondary concern at best. 
Roosevelt seems  to have believed, as many Americans did at the time, that the 
era of economic  growth was over and that the postwar years would see a 
return to economic  depression. In any case, he was clearly focused on economic 
redistribution  rather than growth. 
The New Deal was an attempt to freeze an economy, then in a downward 
spiral,  into one place. It envisaged not growth but stasis. It was widely 
believed that  capitalism had failed and economic growth was a thing of the 
past. 
Misreading History and the Progressive  Overreach 
Today we have a presidential administration and a congressional leadership  
which consciously seeks to expand the size and scope of government in the  
tradition set out by the Progressives and New Dealers. They came to power  
assuming that in times of economic distress Americans would be more amenable 
to  or supportive of big government programs. This was a lesson they 
absorbed  directly or secondhand from the great New Deal historians Arthur 
Schlesinger Jr.  and James McGregor Burns, and from Franklin Roosevelt himself. 
Progressives argued that government needed to  redistribute property, to 
take money from one group of citizens to help  others, and to regulate 
economic activity in ways previously considered  unconstitutional.
But as I argued in my 1990 book, Our  Country: The Shaping of America from 
Roosevelt to Reagan, and as Amity  Shlaes argues differently in her book on 
the 1930s, The Forgotten Man, those lessons were  misleading. It’s true that 
American voters in the 1934 and 1936 elections  endorsed the policies of 
Franklin Roosevelt’s first term. But as the 1930s went  on, opinion shifted. 
By 1937, most Americans opposed Roosevelt’s plan to pack  the Supreme Court 
and were repelled by the sit-down strikes that resulted in  unionizing the 
auto and steel industries. Majorities favored reducing government  spending 
and controls, limiting the power of labor unions, and paring welfare  programs—
this was when the word “boondoggling” was added to the English  language. 
It is true that Roosevelt was re-elected in 1940 and that Democrats 
retained  majorities in Congress. But polling suggests that if the 1940 
election 
had been  decided on domestic issues, the Republicans would have won. 
Roosevelt was  nominated for a third term weeks after the fall of France, when 
Hitler and  Stalin and Imperial Japan were allies in command of most of the 
land-mass of  Eurasia—the closest the world has ever come to George Orwell’s 
vision in 1984.  Roosevelt was an experienced and tested leader; the Republican 
candidate, though  talented, was a former utility executive who had never 
held public office and  had no experience in foreign or military affairs. 
Most Americans have accumulated—or will, during  the course of their 
working years, accumulate— significant amounts of  wealth.
The Obama Democrats today believe they have progressed toward the goals  
Roosevelt outlined for domestic policy in his last year as president, and are  
puzzled by the adverse public reaction to their programs. But the America 
we  live in is a very different country from the America the Progressives and 
New  Dealers knew and, in part, because of the impact of some of the public 
policies  set in place by the New Dealers and their opponents. 
Those policies—as modulated by the Republican Congress in 1947 and 1948,  
which eliminated wage and price controls, cut taxes, limited the powers of 
labor  unions, and rejected public housing programs—helped to produce the 
postwar  prosperity which neither the New Dealers nor their political opponents 
 
predicted. The housing policies of the New Deal helped to make a majority 
of  Americans homeowners while the bipartisan G.I. Bill of Rights, shaped in 
large  part by the American Legion, enabled millions to attend college. 
These policies  helped produce the postwar prosperity that neither Roosevelt’s 
admirers nor most  of his opponents anticipated. 
And when macroeconomic policies produced the stagflation of the 1970s,  
politicians, Democratic as well as Republican, embraced deregulation, which  
squeezed out huge costs in transportation and communication. This reduced the  
costs of life’s necessities, which enabled more Americans to accumulate  
significant wealth over a working lifetime. 
John Locke believed that men could be free only if  their lives, liberty, 
and property were protected by the rule of law. And he  believed that only 
men with property could be relied on to  self-govern.
We live now in a moment where it is clear that some of these policies went  
too far. Policies to increase homeownership helped produce the 
housing-price  crash of 2007. Poorly understood innovations in finance led to 
the 
financial  crisis of 2008. The resulting recession is painful and is, I 
believe, 
being  prolonged by the economic policies of the Obama Democrats. 
But the fact is that we are once again, as in the days of the early 
republic  and not in the heyday of the Progressives and the New Dealers, a 
republic 
of  property owners. Most Americans have accumulated—or will, during the 
course of  their working years, accumulate— significant amounts of wealth. And 
that is why,  I believe, American voters seem to be rejecting the policies 
of the Obama  Democrats. Those policies, rooted in the Progressive and New 
Deal tradition, are  designed to encourage a culture of dependence. It is the 
“soft despotism” of  which Tocqueville warned us 175 years ago. The 
American people, the  property-owning majority, even in this time of economic 
distress, seem to be  embracing instead a culture of independence, a culture as 
old as the republic  itself. 
The major political development of the last 17 months has been an inrush of 
 hundreds of thousands or even millions of Americans into political 
activity, an  inrush symbolized by but not limited to the tea party movement. 
It is 
 fascinating to me that the tea partiers have adopted the language and in 
some  cases even the costumes of the Founders. While the Progressives’ 
descriptions of  a “horse and buggy” Constitution and their sense that giant 
auto 
factories and  steel mills were the harbinger of the future seem tinny and 
out of date, the  language of the Founders continues to resonate with the 
clear timbre of a silver  spoon tapping a crystal glass. The majority of the 
American people seem to  firmly agree with the Founders’ insistence that no 
one should be deprived of  life, liberty, or property without due process of 
law. And so we can take  satisfaction that most of our fellow citizens in 
our freeholders’ republic still  hold these truths to be self-evident.

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