Friday, April 19, 2024

How This Year’s Election Mirrors An Earlier Presidential Rematch

Eight American presidents before Donald Trump have lost reelection since the 

beginning of modern popular-vote elections, in the 1830s. In four out of the 

eight, the losing party came back and won four years later, but Democrat Grover

 Cleveland was the only president who returned to office after leaving it. Three

 others ran again as third-party candidates (Theodore Roosevelt, Millard 

Fillmore, and Martin Van Buren). Of those, only Van Buren had been voted out of

 office. So Cleveland’s 1892 defeat of his Republican opponent, Benjamin

 Harrison — the man who beat him in 1888 — is our only real historical parallel

 for 2024.

The miracle of the Democratic Party was that it had survived the Civil War at all. The party did not win a national popular majority between 1852 and 1932. In 1860, Democrats won only four states that didn’t secede, and by 1884, five new states had been admitted to the Union, only one of which (West Virginia) ever voted for Cleveland. Cleveland’s 1884 victory was the first for a Democrat in a presidential election since 1856.
The Confederacy was still a live memory in the 1880s: Jefferson Davis lived until 1889, and Cleveland (who was from Buffalo and had scarcely ever traveled farther south than Albany) put two ex-Confederates in his first cabinet. The eleven ex-Confederate states, voting Democratic as a bloc, provided 107 of the 201 electoral votes needed to win in 1884 and 1888, and 112 out of 222 in 1892. In 1884, Cleveland carried just four states (New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, and Indiana) where slavery had been illegal in 1860, and he lost two of those in 1888.
While Cleveland won the popular vote in 1884, 1888, and 1892, he was always between 48 and 49 percent of the total. His margins depended on the escalating disenfranchisement of black voters in the South.
As always, the Democrats have been throughout history the enemy of Black Americans.  The Democrats use them as their tools, if they can, and like they have since the 1960's, but are more than happy to screw them over if that turns out to be in their interest.
Like Trump, Cleveland was a New Yorker dogged by a sex scandal and he barely defeated a former secretary of state who reeked of crooked politics and opportunism. Only 2000 was closer than 1884, when the allocation of New York’s decisive 36 electoral votes was determined by a margin of 1,149 popular votes. A Republican rally speaker’s branding of the Democrats as the party of “Rum, Romanism, and Rebellion” was even more costly than calling the other party’s voters “deplorable.”
Controversy over an illegitimate child probably fathered by the then-unmarried Cleveland — which escalated into last-minute charges that he had raped the mother (she denied this) — left Cleveland so embittered toward the press that he wrote privately after the election, “I intend to cultivate the Christian virtue of charity toward all men except the dirty class that defiled themselves with filthy scandal. . . . I don’t believe God will ever forgive them and I am determined not to do so.” His hatred deepened when the papers fabricated charges in 1888 that he was also a wife-beater.
The chant of Cleveland's political enemies over his bastard was, "Ma, ma, where's my pa?  Gone to the White House, haw haw haw!"
Intractably stubborn and immune to advice, Cleveland in office divided his own voters by pursuing tariff reductions that alienated Northerners while adhering to a hard-money stance unpopular with farmers in the West; fired up the Republican base by continually vetoing disability pensions for individual Union veterans; and feuded with state-level Democrats (especially David Hill, his Tammany Hall–backed successor as governor of New York) who objected to his leaving Republicans in coveted federal civil-service jobs. Cleveland left the campaigning in 1888 to his 74-year-old running mate, Allen Thurman, who told a Madison Square Garden crowd that he was there to rebut the charge “that Allen G. Thurman is an old, weak, broken-down man” but regretted that he was “too unwell” to say more that day.
Enter Benjamin Harrison of Indiana, a Civil War brigadier general and former senator whose grandfather had been president, running with Levi Morton of New York. 
Interesting fact: there have been two presidents named Harrison.  And there have also been two named Bush, Johnson, Roosevelt and Adams!  Now if we could just get another Eisenhower!
Scrumming between the 47-yard lines, they flipped just Indiana and New York, but that was enough. Many Democrats, still obsessed with grievance over the contested 1876 election, felt that Harrison’s well-oiled campaign had stolen the election. Cleveland accepted the result. But his glamorous and charismatic 24-year-old wife, Frances — who had become a national fashion icon in the two years since they married — told the White House staff to keep the place in order because they’d be back in four years.
Sounds a bit like Melania, but with attitude!
Harrison and the Republican “billion-dollar Congress” went on a spending spree that blew through the budget surplus, much of it on pensions for their own voters. On party-line votes, they raised tariffs so high that many workers saw the prices of food and other staples increase sharply. They also enacted the Sherman Silver Purchase Act, which expanded the money supply — but not enough to please the free-silverites. Labor unrest underlined the fact that wages were not keeping up with the cost of living. In the 1890 midterm wave, House Republicans were massacred, but the president’s party held on to the Senate, ensuring two years of stalemate.
Deadlocked at the polls, the two parties obsessed over every possible edge. In 1884, both parties bankrolled third parties that aimed to erode the other side’s base: a Greenback ticket that appealed to soft-money Democrats and a Prohibition ticket that wooed dry Republicans. In 1891, Harrison scrapped plans for a special session of the House after two Republicans died, leaving the party’s majority so precarious that Democrats often tried to deny them a quorum. He added six new western states in his first two years in office (North Dakota, South Dakota, Wyoming, Montana, Idaho, and Washington), while Republican campaign posters warned that Cleveland would add New Mexico, Arizona, and Utah as Democratic states. When Republicans pushed for federal protections for black voters in the South, Cleveland accused them of using expanded voting laws to steal elections in perpetuity. 
Cleveland and Harrison were very different men from Trump and Biden; they lacked charisma rather than character. Henry Adams quoted “the common saying” about Harrison and Cleveland that “one of them had no friends; the other, only enemies.” Both were workaholic, detail-oriented lawyers known for their ramrod integrity; Cleveland was tightfisted and brusque, while Harrison was an earnest and devout Evangelical Christian. Cleveland hated negative campaigning so much that he bought documents damaging to his opponent in 1884 and threw them in the fireplace. In 1892, both men were absent from the campaign trail to an extent unusual even then: Cleveland battled gout, and Harrison was at the bedside of his wife, who died of tuberculosis in late October. While they were not as geriatric as today’s candidates, the white-bearded 59-year-old Harrison was the oldest Republican nominee until Dwight Eisenhower.
Back then, 59 was a lot older than it is today.
The outcome of the election reflects how an electorate responds when a stale, rejected plurality candidate is offered as the only alternative to an unpopular incumbent. Voters ousted Harrison, but without much enthusiasm.
That enervating dénouement, followed by the immediate onset of a depression in 1893, marked the end of an era of political stasis. In 1896, the parties chose fresher faces in McKinley and Bryan.
The more things change, the more they stay the same.  We will see how things work out this year, but Americans would be mad to re-elect a failed 80 year old that is sliding fast into senility.

24 comments:

  1. Don't you mean a failed 77 year old who is fast sliding into prison?

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    1. Both of them suck. You suck, too, if you need to be led by political creatures, fellating either one of them with your support. Work for yourself and create your own reality but I can tell by your knee jerk comment that's a hopeless possibility. Interesting history, CW. Thanks for posting this.

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    2. I'd compare the accomplishments of Trump's one term with Biden's anytime. And that's with the rabid resistance of the Democrats, the Deep State, the Media, and about half of the Republicans. Further, much of the negative impressions people have of Trump are creations of the media, not reality. Finally, the political prosecutions you reference are an abomination to America; acts more appropriate in a totalitarian or banana state. If he does go to prison, it will be a legal and political outrage, and open the door to prosecution of Democrats, as well as seriously exacerbate the divisions in the country. Not much of a uniter, that Biden/Deep State. Should Biden and Hunter worry about this precedent, given the much more serious legal violations they've engaged in? At this point in his presidency, Trump was successfully working to get the Arabs and Israelis to get along. Where did that go with Biden/Afghanistan/Iran/Ukraine/etc?

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    3. Some people like being slaves.

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    4. Funny, don't recall taking orders from anyone - but I do see one party in particular try to censor our speech, restrict our freedoms (gotta buy an electric car, and no more gas stoves, and eat those bugs!), and snatch our firearms from our grasp. So, who's more likely to be that slaver?

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    5. Marion Barry got reelected.

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    6. Marion Barry got reelected.

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  2. But Trump actually WON in 2020 if ONLY LEGAL and LEGITIMATE votes were counted...so no real comparison to history. And since few if any of the criminal "mechanisms" have been properly addressed for this election, why should anyone expect an honest election (or ever again frankly)?

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    1. Nothing was done by those elected or appointed to fix a corrupt election so why expect anything different. No one went to jail, Mayorkas got off, Biden got off, the dirty guvs got off. NOT ONE person has been tried for TREASON.

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    2. No, Trump did NOT win in 2020. No election irregularities were ever proven and all of the recounts showed the same result. Trump Lost!

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  3. The Dems have a valid dread of Trump re-entering the White House. He claimed the position first time with the chant of "Lock her up!" but waved off the possibility, even though he was the one who stirred it up in the first place. If he's sworn into office wearing an orange jumpsuit while in a jail cell Trump will free the January 6th prisoners and then pursue the real criminals of the past four years.

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    1. This country will be foaming at the mouth when Trump is elected. Look at the Palestinian protesters shouting death to America (who by the way should be deported or shot). The George Floyd riots will be nothing compared to what the marxist and communists have planned. Have a plan, be ready.

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    2. The entire world has a dread of Trump re-entering the White House.

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    3. Typical of crooks who don't want their criminal enterprise to end.

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    4. The entire world knows that another Trump presidency would be a disaster for the world.

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  4. The lying crooked media has to dealt a death blow.

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  5. Sliding? He's already there!

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  6. If not for the 19th Amendment, there wouldn't have been another Democrat president since Wilson.

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    1. Absolutely, dude. So true.

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    2. Alexander von RimsApril 20, 2024 at 2:45 AM

      If only men could vote, Republicans would win everything. If only women could vote, Democrats would win everything. So what? Any party could win every time if it disqualified all the groups which incline against it. In a real democracy/republic, everybody can vote.

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  7. If Old Joe is reinstalled in the White House this November, we are fooked.

    https://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=old%20joe

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  8. Alexander von RimsApril 20, 2024 at 2:42 AM

    Things have change a lot since those times. Especially, the parties have changed. It's easy to see which party today is the party of those who wave the confederate flag.

    In the end the abortion issue will sweep away everything else. It's happened with every election since the Dobbs ruling.

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  9. There is no difference between the two parties.
    Things get progressively worse regardless of who's in office.
    They're all on the same team (even Trump).
    But go ahead and keep voting. My guess is we'll have some crisis this year that will require the election to be postponed or suspended "for national security".

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  10. Just listen to Trump speak, his cheese has slid off his cracker.

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