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Winner of the 2000 Election will be the Reform
Movement
By Frank Towers History News Service
When the Electoral College picks a president who lost the
popular vote, as it soon might, it casts doubt on the
legitimacy of the winner and the way that he was chosen. The
last time the Electoral College's action undermined an
election's legitimacy, in 1888, voters forced established
politicians to address political and social reforms
advocated by third parties. Given that precedent, we may
find, surprisingly, that Ralph Nader, this year's distant
third-place finisher, will have the most impact on the near
future of American politics.
It's worth looking for guideposts to our current
uncharted political course in the reform movement that
emerged after 1888, an election that bears striking
similarities to this year's and the last time an Electoral
College decision differed from the popular vote.
In 1888 and 2000, major party candidates quietly endorsed
the main economic change of their time. In the late 1800s,
it was the shift in power from small entrepreneurs to large
corporations. In our time, it is free trade and
globalization, or the opening of world markets to facilitate
competition across national boundaries.
Record campaign spending occurred in both eras. This
year, "soft money" (contributions to parties, unrestricted
by candidate fundraising laws, that parties funnel to
individual campaigns) topped $400 million. In 1888 business
gave more money than ever before to Republican, Benjamin
Harrison, who became president, and Democrat Grover
Cleveland, the popular vote winner.
In both elections, third parties criticized Republicans
and Democrats for ignoring larger issues. In 1888, disparate
third parties of workers, farmers and moral reformers
attacked Harrison and Cleveland for disregarding low wages,
farm foreclosures and alcohol abuse. Despite their
differences, this year's Green party and Reform party have
criticized Bush and Gore for their frenzied spending and
inattention to free trade's abuses. In 1888 and 2000, third
parties won few votes but their message that major parties
had made government unresponsive to popular will aimed to
shake up the status quo.
By inaugurating a president who got fewer votes than his
opponent, the 1888 election amplified the message that
politics-as-usual could thwart majority rule in the same way
that the 2000 election has provoked criticism of the
Electoral College and increased suspicion of political
institutions.
After 1888, the newly created People's party, or
Populists, exploited distrust of major parties by attacking
political corruption, courting black voters despite Jim Crow
racism, and urging workers and farmers to recognize their
common interest in fighting business consolidation. Because
of these efforts, in 1892 the People's party won 22
Electoral College votes and several congressional and
gubernatorial races. Should the same thing happen now, the
headline of 2004 is likely to be a strong third-party
showing, reminiscent of the Populists, that would force
Democrats and Republicans to take reformers seriously.
At least that's what happened after 1892. Progressivism,
the name for the third-party reform agenda, began to find
major party advocates who in the succeeding two decades
passed anti-trust laws, sought to ban child labor, protected
food quality, conserved land and created the Federal Reserve
banking system. Politicians who this year said little about
big problems like international child labor or global
warming may, pressed by third-party forces, soon be falling
over each other to offer responses to these challenges.
But today's progressives will need to prioritize the two
concerns that created support for Ralph Nader if they want
to influence the major parties. Nader polled best with
unskilled workers threatened by free trade's downward
pressure on wages and with registered independents seeking
to change the way politics operates. Building broad support
for changing the complex global economy will be harder than
convincing people to reform politics, especially after the
post-election contest, which has increased calls to review
election procedures.
Turn-of-the-century reformers enacted the direct primary,
initiative and referendum, secret ballot and popular
election of U.S. senators before passing most social and
economic legislation. The popularity of Minnesota's Reform
party governor, Jesse Ventura, and Sen. John McCain, a
campaign finance critic who sought the Republican
nomination, suggests that a movement to clean up lobbying
and campaign funding could succeed now even if a movement to
abolish the World Trade Organization will have to wait.
Harrison's tarnished win in 1888 gave foes of the
two-party system the momentum needed to launch a generation
of reform that addressed political corruption and later
tackled broad social problems. In the wake of our recent
close election, a new era of popular reform is poised to
begin. As they did a century ago, progressives have a unique
historical role to play in initiating this process and in
doing so they stand to gain the most from the election of
2000.
Frank Towers is an assistant professor of history at
Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colo., and a writer
for the History News Service.
[Frank Towers, History Department, Colorado State
University, Fort Collins, CO 80523-1776. Telephone: (970)
491-6245; fax (970) 491-2941; e-mail: ftowers@lamar.colostate.edu.]
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Website designed and administered by Christopher
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This article was posted on December 11, 2000.
Pictured at top (left to right): King Hammurabi
II of Babylon, Maximilian Robespierre, Thomas Jefferson,
Suffragists Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton,
Georges Clemenceau, Neil Armstrong on the moon.
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