[75 years ago this week, Dewey didn’t defeat Truman—but the 1948 election was close and contested enough that one newspaper famously reported he did. So this week I’ll AmericanStudy that election and a few other hotly contested ones (not including 2020, because it really wasn’t), leading up to a special Guest Post from an FSU alum and talented young journalist who would never get it so wrong!]
On the moment
that definitely changed things in post-Revolutionary America—but also,
inspiringly, didn’t.
It’d be an
overstatement to say that the first decade of post-Constitution America was
devoid of national or partisan divisions—this was the era of the Alien and Sedition Acts and their responses, after all; also of that little rebellion up in Pennsylvania—but I don’t think it’s inaccurate to see the first three
presidential terms (Washington’s two and John Adams’s one) as among the most
unified and non-controversial in our history. That’s true even though Adams’s Vice President was his chief rival in the 1796
election, Thomas Jefferson; Jefferson had
gained the second-most electoral votes, which in the first constitutional model
meant that he would serve as vice president (an idea that itself relfects a
striking lack of expected controversy!). There were certainly two distinct
parties as of that second administration (Adams’s Federalists and Jefferson’s
Republicans), and they had distinct perspectives on evolving national
issues to be sure; but there doesn’t seem
to be much evidence of significant partisan divisions between them in that
period.
To say that
things changed with the presidential election of 1800 would be to drastically understate the case. Once again
Adams and Jefferson were the chief contenders, now linked by the past four
years of joint service but at the same time more overtly rivals because of that
prior election and its results; moreover, this time Jefferson’s running mate, Aaron Burr, was a far more
prominent and popular candidate in his own right. And this combination of
complex factors led to an outcome that was divisive and controversial on
multiple levels: Jefferson’s ticket handily defeated that of his boss, greatly
amplifying the partisan rancor between the men and parties; but at the same
time Burr received the same number of electoral votes as Jefferson, an unprecedented (then or since) tie between two Republicans that sent the election into the
hands of the Federalist-controlled Congress. Although most Federalists opposed
Jefferson (for obvious reasons), through a murky and secretive process (one
likely influenced by Alexander Hamilton) Jefferson was ultimately chosen on the 36th ballot as the nation’s third president.
Four years later Burr shot Hamilton dead in the nation’s most famous duel, and it’s entirely fair to say that, in
the aftermath of this heated and controversial election, the nation could have
similarly descended into conflict. But instead, Burr and Hamilton’s eventual
fates notwithstanding, the better angels of our collective nature rose to the
occasion—Adams peacefully handed over the executive to Jefferson, all those who had supported Burr recognized the new
administration, and the parties continued to move forward as political but not social or destructive rivals. If
and when the partisan divisions seem too deep and too wide, and frankly too
much for me to contemplate, I try to remember the election of 1800; not because
it went smoothly or was perfect (far from it), nor because the leaders in that
generation were any nobler or purer (ditto), but rather precisely because it
went horribly and was deeply messed-up and the leaders were as selfish and
human as they always are, and yet somehow—as untested and raw as we were—we
came out on the other side. Maybe, just maybe, we’ll find a way to do the same.
Next
contested election tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What
do you think?
No comments:
Post a Comment