As the last posting indicates, the final days
of the Whig Party were being counted down after the 1852 election. That posting describes that in addition to a
trouncing in that election, the political landscape was not conducive for the
party to pursue its established policy positions. That included a pro tariff stance that did
not match the conditions of a prosperous economy.
The reason for a tariff, beyond securing
funding for the central government, was to protect domestic manufacturers. All that could be seen among the electorate
was that the tariff added to the prices of imported goods – making domesticated
produced goods relatively cheaper – but increasing overall prices that Americans
paid. Apparently, during the
mid-nineteenth century period, domestic producers were not so dependent on such
help. So, with overall high employment
rates and rosy economic expectations, the Whig message lost much of its appeal.
1853-1856
With
the new Franklin Pierce Administration in place (minus its deceased vice
president, William R. King), the first national issue was the debate over what
will become the Kansas-Nebraska Act. At
stake were the last remnants of the Missouri Compromise. That compromise prohibited the expansion of
slavery in the newly created western states (initially attained through the Louisiana
Purchase) that fell north of Missouri’s southern border line (36ﹾ30’ N), with the exception of Missouri, as it
extended to the Pacific shore.
With the enactment of the newer law,
slavery could be instituted if a northern state legislature decided to allow
the practice within that state’s borders.
This law created a new political environment.[1] How?
In the North, a new allegiance arose among “anti-Nebraska Act”
Democrats, Free-Soil advocates, and Whigs.
In Wisconsin and Michigan, these advocates adopted the name, Republican
Party. Its initial aim was not to
abolish slavery but prevent its expansion.
Adding to the complexity, the Know-Nothing
movement took hold among people who were antagonistic to Catholics or
non-Anglican immigrants. Eventually this
group organized itself as the American Party.
They saw themselves as picking up the Whig identity, but the
Know-Nothings were preoccupied with mass immigration the nation was
experiencing and bought into the belief that there was a Catholic conspiracy. The parochial nature among many Americans excluded
these other Western European immigrants as being welcome.
On the other hand, Republicans were
concerned with Slave Power – the perceived political hold Southern slaveholders
had over the federal government in the years leading up to the Civil War. Already enjoying their control over their
respective state governments, the slaveholders wanted to secure at least their veto power over federal policy
– assuming an equal number of senators between slave and free states in the US
Senate – if not an inordinate influence over what the US Congress decided to
enact. In other words, this small
minority was exercising or seeking power way beyond its numbers.
While unusual, this divided
anti-Democratic Party coalition proved effective in the 1854 mid-term election. The Democrats suffered significant loses. And regardless of a few exceptions, the
winners of those individual congressional contests did not identify as
Whigs. Instead they ran independently or
took up association with one of the other identified groupings – such as the Know-Nothings. Northern and southern Whigs were beyond reconciliation
to form a national presence and so leaders from the two regions of the country
simply abandoned the party.
For example, former Whig president,
Millard Fillmore joined the Know-Nothing partisans even though he openly
disagreed with that group’s xenophobic notions and he encouraged others to
follow his lead into that movement. That
happened in 1855. A big move occurred
when in that same year New York senator, William H. Seward, encouraged a good
number of Whigs to follow him into the Republican Party.
And with that one can consider these
developments as being the death knell of the Whig Party. That set up, in effect, a three-way race in
the 1856 presidential election: the
Democrats, the Know-Nothings, and the Republicans. The Know-Nothings, at its convention,
nominated the ill-fitting Fillmore (who would also be nominated by a scarcely
attended Whig party convention) and promoted a less than cohesive platform but that
generally decided to downplay slavery as an issue. The Republicans nominated John C. Fremont. This party, at this point, was mostly a
northern phenomenon and was helped by defecting northern Know-Nothings.
In the confusing campaign that followed
– for example, while the Know-Nothing candidate, Fillmore mostly ignored that
party’s nativism and really ran to reenergize whatever remained of Whig support
– the result was that the Democratic candidate, James Buchanan, won. He received 45 percent of the popular vote (174
electoral votes). Fremont took 33
percent (114 electoral votes), and Fillmore garnered 22 percent (8 electoral
votes). All and all, one can judge the
Whig party was dead although former Whigs attempted a run for president in 1860.
Addendum, 1860
A
postmortem note can be added by describing the remnants of the party and how they
went about their dealings in 1860. Led
by Senator John J. Crittenden, a group of Whig unionists, conservatives, formed
the Constitutional Union Party and it nominated John Bell, a long-time Whig, who
was anointed as the “ghost of the old Whig Party” by a Southern newspaper.[2] While not taking a stand on slavery, this
unionist “party” ran on a preserving the union platform. The party won pluralities in three states.
And
with that election, this timeline ends. What
follows in this blog will be a rundown of what the Whig Party stood for and how
it affected America’s development. Of
primary concern in this blog is the way the party operated within the espoused
values of federalism. Generally,
federalism is a governmental/political construct which holds that a polity
should be organized and maintained by a federated populous – one that defines its
shared citizenship as a partnership.
While the US Constitution sets up
structurally and legally such an arrangement, it does not guarantee that the
nation’s people will hold to it emotionally or cognitively. Again, this blog’s claim is that the Whig Party
along with its competing entities – other parties and organized interest groups
– held as dominate a cultural bias for a version of federalism.
That version is called, by this blogger,
the parochial/traditional version and in its most simplistic terms holds that
only Western European descents should be allowed to enter that partnership. But, as this posting indicates, the level of
parochialism could be more exclusive. For
some Americans, these newer immigrants – for example Irish immigrants – were illegitimate
and unwelcomed.[3]
[1] Michael F. Holt, The Rise and Fall of the
American Whig Party: Jacksonian Politics and the Onset of the Civil War
(Oxford University Press, 1999).
[2] Jack P. Maddex, Jr., The Virginia Conservatives,
1867-1879: A Study in Reconstruction
Politics (Chapel Hill, NC: 2018). Quoted phrase found on p. 13.
[3] This level of exclusivity is depicted dramatically in
the feature film, Gangs of New York.
See Martin Scorsese (director), Gangs of New York (Buena Vista
Pictures, 2002).
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