-Caveat Lector-

The Man, the Leader, the Legacy: Part 6
by Ralph Raico, April 1999

In the course of the 1920s, Roosevelt had grown close politically to the
major figure in Democratic politics in New York, Alfred E. Smith. On the
face of it, this was a curious alliance. Smith's base was the powerful
Tammany Hall machine, in New York City. [The Judaization of Tammany is now
complete, for the Irish element has been overcome by Jewish money.
JEWISH INFLUENCES IN AMERICAN POLITICS-
http://www.muslim.net/islam/Zionism/Ford/ij_ch8.html]

In contrast, Roosevelt liked to pose as an independent and reformer, an
enemy to everything Tammany stood for: wholesale patronage and systematic
graft. Yet each man had something the other could use: Smith, Irish and
Catholic, an adamant foe of Prohibition, was so rooted in the great city
that his theme song was "The Sidewalks of New York." Roosevelt, a Protestant
from "upstate," who could appease "drys" on the liquor question, offered his
many connections among the social and financial elite. Franklin quickly
patched up his old quarrel with the Tammany machine. In 1924, he was ready
to lend Smith, now governor of New York, something of his patrician glamour,
as he nominated him for president of the United States.

The Democratic convention was held in the old Madison Square Garden, where
the sweltering New York summer was particularly oppressive. Smith's chief
rival, William Gibbs McAdoo, had been treasury secretary under Wilson and
was considered friendly to the Ku Klux Klan, then enjoying a great revival.
In those days (and until 1936) a two-thirds majority was needed for
nomination by the Democrats--a means of ensuring a southern veto over any
candidate the party would select.

When the moment came to put Smith's name in nomination, Roosevelt,
supporting himself on crutches, made his painful way across the platform. It
was his first political speech since he had fallen ill, and his courage and
good cheer were palpable to the thousands of spellbound onlookers. Literally
in the spotlight, he delivered his speech in his fine, strong tones.
Clearly, here was a man who, in spite of dreadful physical disability, was
vibrant and robust. The speech had been composed primarily by Judge Joseph
Proscauer. In the end, what everyone remembered was the phrase from William
Wordsworth, which Judge Proscauer had insisted on and which Roosevelt had
found too "poetic":

This is the Happy Warrior, this is he
Whom every Man in arms should wish to be.
>From then on, Al Smith would be known as the Happy Warrior.
The balloting went on for days--roll call followed roll call, each beginning
with the head of the Alabama delegation famously intoning, "Alabama casts 24
votes for Oscar W. Underwood." Finally, on the 103rd ballot, the compromise
candidate passed the two-thirds hurdle. He was John W. Davis, a wealthy
corporate lawyer, hailing from West Virginia, but now associated with the
J.P. Morgan interests and ensconced on Long Island. (It was a period when
the reputation of big business was running high.) Franklin was the only real
star of the ill-fated convention. In the November election, Davis lost to
the Republican incumbent Calvin Coolidge by a landslide. Nearly 5 million
votes were cast on the Progressive line for Robert La Follette, Woodrow
Wilson's bitter antagonist on war with Germany.

During the next four years, FDR kept building up his network of contacts in
the national party. But everything seemed rosy for the Republicans for the
foreseeable future, and Roosevelt's plan was to make recovering his health
his major concern. He purchased the establishment at Warm Springs, set up a
foundation to run it, and spent more and more time there. In 1928, he once
again put Al Smith's name in nomination at the convention, in Houston,
incidentally speaking for the first time to a national radio audience of
millions. Radio was to be the medium of which FDR would become the
acknowledged master. It created a sense of intimacy with the listeners that
perfectly fit his personal style, besides allowing him to bypass the
newspaper press, often controlled by his unrelenting enemies.

In Houston the nomination took only one ballot. But Al Smith's candidacy was
doomed. Not only was the country basking in what seemed to be an indefinite
prosperity under the Republicans, but what had been advantages for Smith in
New York hurt him badly in most of the rest of the country: his pronounced
opposition to Prohibition (he was himself a notorious drinker), his links to
Tammany, and his religion. It did nothing to dampen anti-Catholic suspicions
when, on a visit by Smith and his wife to Rome, the Pope referred to him as
"my beloved son, Governor Smith." (Mrs. Smith was no asset either; to many,
including Eleanor's set, Katie was unspeakably vulgar--so Irish, you know.)

The Smith camp believed they had no chance at all if they failed to carry
New York. Upstate, the religious issue swayed many. But with the Protestant
Roosevelt on the ticket as candidate for governor, the chances would be
good. (Herbert Lehman, candidate for lieutenant governor, could be counted
on to attract the Jewish vote.) Roosevelt, however, demurred; he and his
advisors feared a Democratic catastrophe that would sink the whole ticket,
even in New York. Besides, Roosevelt had great hopes for the water cure at
Warm Springs. Smith made a personal plea. Then John J. Raskob, the self-made
tycoon and high DuPont executive Smith had appointed as Democratic national
chairman, sweetened the pot by promising to cover the deficits of the Warm
Springs center. The year before, a relative had left FDR a fortune of
$600,000. Still, given his family's lifestyle, money was always to some
degree a problem for him. He accepted the offer, and Raskob made the first
installment of $25,000. In the end, Raskob donated $100,000 to the cause so
dear to Franklin's heart.

Roosevelt was once again in his element as he threw himself into campaigning
up and down the state, and, thus, not coincidentally, demonstrated that his
paralysis was no disqualification for high office. Yet there was a strong
Republican tide running, and the Roosevelt camp was deeply worried.

Although Herbert Hoover had never held elective office before, he was the
heavy favorite in the election of 1928. He had what nowadays would be called
"very low negatives." He was widely respected as a successful engineer (the
world's richest, it was said) and even more as the food relief administrator
in Europe during the World War and in Russia during the first Soviet famine.
Woodrow Wilson, whom he admired greatly, made him "food czar" of the United
States. Oddly, no one knew whether Hoover was a Democrat or a Republican,
until he agreed to serve as secretary of commerce in Harding's and then in
Coolidge's cabinet.

The election was a triumph for Hoover, who managed to carry a number of
states in what was then the "Solid [Democratic] South." Smith even lost New
York, by more than 100,000 votes. At first it looked as if Roosevelt would
be buried in Smith's debacle. But after a tense night of ballot counting, he
squeaked through with a margin of 25,000 over his Republican opponent,
Albert Ottinger, out of the 4.2 million votes cast. A defeat would probably
have ended Roosevelt's political career. Instead, he now found himself--like
his cousin Teddy before him--governor of the Empire State.

Al Smith expected that Roosevelt, of whose talents, aside from campaigning,
he had no very high opinion, would allow himself to be guided by his older,
more experienced ally. But the new governor soon made it clear that he was
the power in Albany. It was the beginning of Smith's enmity towards his
former protégé, which lasted to the end of his life.

Roosevelt brought with him to Albany a coterie of loyal aides and supporters
who would later accompany him to Washington, among them: Frances Perkins, to
head the state labor department; his Hyde Park neighbor Henry Morgenthau
Jr., to help deal with agricultural matters; Samuel Rosenman, lawyer and
sometime state politician, to ghost-write his speeches; and Marguerite
(Missy) LeHand, his faithful personal secretary. Felix Frankfurter, still a
Harvard Law School professor, was an eager source of frequent advice. But
Roosevelt fired Robert Moses, who had thwarted his attempt to get his friend
Louis Howe on the state payroll as a parks commissioner. Roosevelt never
forgave the highhanded but scrupulously honest Moses for his refusal to
countenance a bit of cronyism and continued his vendetta for years.

With a state legislature controlled by the Republicans, Roosevelt could not
have accomplished much of a program, even if he'd had well-thought-out
ideas. He continued the mildly interventionist policies of Al Smith in
regard to labor unions and working conditions, expanded workmen's
compensation, and spoke out for state generation of electric power and a
state-controlled unemployment insurance system. Roosevelt boasted that one
of his greatest achievements was prison reform, which emphasized
rehabilitation rather than punishment of the criminal. Attica prison, in
western New York, was the showcase of his efforts in this field.

At that time, governors of New York stood for election every two years. The
1930 campaign raised once more the thorny question of Prohibition. By now it
was clear that the "noble experiment" had not only failed utterly, but would
soon be a thing of the past. Still, Roosevelt was cautious. While the
delegates to the Democratic state convention--mostly Al Smith
Democrats--insisted on outright repeal of the 18th Amendment, Roosevelt
favored a new constitutional amendment, permitting liquor to be sold (in
states that legalized it) only through state-run stores. His great fear was
the return of the "saloon." It goes without saying that through the whole
period of Prohibition, Franklin, along with the rest of the elite, enjoyed
their cocktails whenever they wished. (His own favorite tipple was the
fashionable martini.)

In the election, the Republicans put up Charles H. Tuttle, a New York City
district attorney who had fought Tammany corruption. He was no match for
Roosevelt, who was reelected by a margin of 725,000, carrying even the
upstate vote. FDR's circle of friends and advisors, now including James A.
Farley, the former boxing commissioner whom Roosevelt made the head of the
state Democratic party, was ecstatic. Back then, New York, with 47 electoral
votes, enjoyed roughly the same position in national politics that
California does today. FDR was the clear front-runner for the presidential
nomination in 1932.

There were still problems, though. Roosevelt was embarrassed by the scandals
erupting in the Tammany machine. On the one hand, he needed Tammany support
for 1932; on the other, his mild reputation for "liberalism" would suffer if
he was seen to curry favor by overlooking the turpitude of the New York City
bosses. Unfortunately, there was no way he could stop the investigations of
the implacable Judge Samuel Seabury (a kind of Kenneth Starr of the time).
But he was able to dawdle in bringing charges against the main culprits.
Finally, Jimmy Walker, Tammany mayor of New York, resigned, and let
Roosevelt off the main hook.

All subsidiary issues were overshadowed, however, by one great fact: the
Depression had begun. Republican prosperity was over, and suddenly Hoover
was vulnerable in the upcoming presidential election. But first Roosevelt,
as governor, would have to cope as best he could with the consequences of
the Depression in his own state.

Ralph Raico is professor of history at the State University College at
Buffalo. His most recent publication is the introduction to the
50th-anniversary edition of The Roosevelt Myth by John T. Flynn, available
from Laissez Faire Books.
http://laissezfaire.org/index.cfm
He is also the author of "American Foreign Policy--The Turning Point,
1898-1919," which appeared in The Failure of America's Foreign Wars,
published by the The Future of Freedom Foundation.


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