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"Democracy's Achievement"
Ladies and gentlemen, true democracy is a religion. It is not
completely monopolized by the members of the Democratic party.
Many of its loyal disciples find themselves affiliated with other
parties. Democracy truly believes in the rule of the people, in
their wisdom, in their common sense, in their common honesty, in
their justice, in their patience and steadfastness, in their right
and ability to govern themselves. It thinks in terms of the
greatest good to the greatest number.
Its greatest patron saint was Thomas Jefferson, who stood for
freedom of religion, freedom of speech, freedom of the press,
freedom of opportunity, the education of the people by free
schools, and the right of every citizen to vote. On these
principles Jeffersonian Democracy took control of the government in
1801, and held it for many decades. When the party organization
fell under the control of those who believed in human slavery, it
passed from power by a revolt of Jeffersonian Democrats who would
not stand for human slavery. They organized a new party and took
the name which the followers of Jefferson had employed in 1801,
calling themselves Republicans.
When the wise and kind Lincoln on the field of Gettysburg
prayed that the government of the people, for the people, and by
the people should not perish from the earth, he voiced a spirit of
true democracy throughout the world. When the Republican party got
control of the government during the Civil War, every selfish
interest that wished to use the powers of government for private
advantage gradually attached itself to the Republican party,
courted its leaders, became busy in its organization, contributed
to its election, promoted its nomination, and steadily have been an
increasing influence in its management. When in 1912 after
many years it became obvious that an invisible government of
organized commercial and financial selfishness had gained control
of the organization of the Republican party, the people of the
United States placed in power the regenerated Democratic party, and
magnificently the Democratic party has responded to the trust. It
has passed fifty great progressive acts, such as the Federal
Reserve Act, the Farm Loan Act, the Good Roads Act, the
Agricultural Extension Act, Vocational Instruction. It has
organized the Department of Labor, the Federal Trade Commission,
the Tariff Commission, and showed itself, by the overwhelming
evidence of concrete acts, the one great, liberal, progressive, and
truly democratic party of the nation. It organized the country for
war, passed the great war measures and won the greatest war in
history, and saved the liberties and civilization of the world. It
took the country in a period of serious depression in 1913, carried
it successfully through the Great World War and after seven years
the country is in the condition of the greatest prosperity. Bank
resources have increased from twenty-five billion to forty-eight
billion. Everybody is busy. Wage is high, trains crowded and
hotels overflowing.
Who can have the impudence to question the Americanism of the
Democratic party and all these great accomplishments? What is
Americanism, if it be not the great policies which the Democratic
party have put into execution? When it stamped out sedition at
home, whipped the Hun abroad and made America the commercial,
financial and the moral leader of all the world, so that all great
nations do homage to the United States, and small nations when they
bend their heads in prayer, pray God to bless the American people.
But my countrymen, we are face to face with the immediate
future. It is not enough to say what we have done. It is of the
greatest importance to say what we shall do. The spirit and
purposes, the vision and constructive genius which the Democratic
party has exhibited in the last six years justifies the faith that
this great party can be better relied on than any other party to
solve the reconstruction problems following the war.