Posted on 10/18/2009 11:57:05 AM PDT by BluesDuke
Toward the end of a mostly sympathetic profile of the great journalist and critic H. L. Mencken, Christopher Hitchens once claimed that Menckens only brilliance and verve occurred during the period between 1910 and the end of Prohibition. Which is to say, before Franklin Roosevelts New Deal came along. Its an all too common refrain. Biographer Terry Teachout characterized Mencken as blinded partly by his hatred of Roosevelt. Mencken scholar Charles A. Fecherwhom youd expect to know betterdeclared Menckens opinion of Roosevelt to be maniacalthere is no other word to use.
Although its true that Mencken ended the 1930s as an enemy of what he called FDRs More Abundant Life, he hardly started out the decade that way. A self-described lifelong Democrat, Mencken voted for Roosevelt in 1932 and voiced cautious support for the New Deals first stirrings, writing in March 1933, I have the utmost confidence in his good intentions, and I believe further that he has carried on his dictatorship so far with courage, sense and due restraint.
It wasnt until Mencken realized the vast size and intrusive scope of that dictatorship that he went on the attack, lambasting the New Deal as a puerile amalgam of exploded imbecilities, many of them in flat contradiction of the rest. Indeed, in a passage that could be recycled and reused in our own troubled times, Mencken denounced Roosevelt for proposing to lift the burden of debt by encouraging fools to incur more debt, and to husband the depleted capital of the nation by outlawing what is left of it.
That the rebel of the twenties should now become a spokesman of the conservatives of the thirties, observed Mencken scholar Malcom Moos, came as a shock to many of Menckens admirers. But was it really so shocking? As Americas most famous political journalist for several decades, Mencken routinely championed the individual against the collective, siding with the imprisoned antiwar socialist Eugene V. Debs, with the embattled high school science teacher John Scopes, and with the thankless American taxpayer, the sort who feels that he is being mulcted in an excessive amount for services that, in the main, are useless to him, and that, in substantial part, are downright inimical to him. To put it differently, Mencken didnt turn right, the country lurched wildly to the left.
And he wasnt the only one to feel the shift. By the late 1930s, a handful of prominent liberals suddenly found themselves on the wrong side of the New Deal consensus. Much like Mencken, they joined the right almost by default. For the sin of holding fast to certain fundamental beliefs, including the quaint notion that big business and big government should be kept as far apart as possible, they were dubbed heartless reactionaries and economic royalists. Yet thanks to their principled opposition, some of the New Deals worst excesses were brought to light or kept at least partially in check.
Foremost among the members of this new right was the muckraking journalist John T. Flynn. Unlike Mencken, whose radical views had always centered on a rugged brand of individualism, Flynn qualified as a progressive liberal until the New Deal drove him away. A graduate of Georgetown Law School, Flynn made his name in the 1920s and early 1930s as a left-leaning financial columnist and author whose books bore such titles as Graft in Business and Trusts Gone Wrong! He enjoyed identifying and exposing the dirty deeds of big business and, as biographer John Moser writes, in particular he saw abuses in the banking system and the New York Stock Exchange, and as early as February 1929 he was predicting that the value of corporate securities was about to plummet. Flynns work earned him a prominent perch at The New Republic, then as now one of the countrys leading left-liberal publications, where he wrote a weekly economics column from 1933 until he was dropped in 1940 for his increasingly harsh attacks on FDRs policies.
But like Mencken, Flynn started out as a Roosevelt supporter, referring to the New Deal as a promising experiment. It took the National Recovery Administration to cure him of that. The centerpiece of FDRs first 100 days, the NRA represented the nightmare of central planning made real. Enacted as part of the National Industrial Recovery Act of 1933, which FDR hailed as the most important and far-reaching legislation ever enacted by the American Congress, the NRA sought to micromanage the economy through more than 500 wage-, hour-, and price-fixing codes of fair competition, mandating everything from the price of food to the cost of having a shirt hemmed. The NRAs stated purpose was to increase efficiency via military-style organization, yet as historian Arthur Ekirch has pointed out: Little attention was paid to the fact that it was industry itself that had largely prepared the regulations governing prices and production. Also ignored was the fact that the NRA meant the suspension of antitrust laws along with the whole theory of free competition and free enterprise.
Flynn was among the few who noticed. As a member of the progressive movement, he had long worried about the growing power and influence of the big corporations. Now FDR and his so-called brain trust were climbing into bed with them! As Flynn put it, Curiously, every American liberal who had fought monopoly, who had demanded the enforcement of the anti-trust laws, who had denied the right of organized business groups, combinations and trade associations to rule our economic life, was branded as a Tory and a reactionary if he continued to believe these things. Thus Flynn found himself on the right.
Using the same muckraking approach that had made him a darling of the left, Flynn denounced the NRA as probably the gravest attack upon the whole principle of the democratic society in our political history. As for Roosevelt, Flynn argued that although the president proclaimed his devotion to democracy, he adopted a plan borrowed from the corporative state of Italy and sold it to all the liberals as a great liberal revolutionary triumph.
Nor did these scathing attacks go unnoticed. After reading an article of Flynns published by the Yale Review, FDR wrote privately to the editor, denouncing Flynn as a destructive rather than a constructive force who should be barred hereafter from the columns of any presentable daily paper, monthly magazine, or national quarterly.
While Flynns words certainly stung, the attacks from Democratic hero Al Smith shook the New Deal coalition to its core. A legend among the reform-minded, Smith had long championed leftist causes ranging from minimum wage laws for women to government-built housing for the poor. A child of Manhattans Lower East Side, Smith rose from Tammany Hall to the state capitol at Albany, where he served four terms as New York governor. In 1928, he received the Democratic Partys presidential nomination, though he suffered a disastrous electoral defeat at the hands of Republican Herbert Hoover. At the 1932 party convention, Smith lost the nomination to FDR.
So it came as a surprise when Smith began criticizing the New Deal. After all, hadnt he supported the same sort of policies in New York? But like Flynn, Smith saw himself as a constructive critic, not as a partisan foe. As one of the countrys most famous opponents of alcohol prohibition, a group popularly known as the wets, Smith had been deeply troubled by the lessons of the Eighteenth Amendment. Prohibition, he wrote in 1933, gave functions to the Federal government which that government could not possibly discharge, and the evils which came from the attempts at enforcement were infinitely worse than those which honest reformers attempted to abolish. As biographer Christopher Finan put it, Smith began to believe that the danger of giving new power to the federal government outweighed any good it might do. . . . He was putting himself on a collision course with the New Deal.
That collision came on January 25, 1936, when Smith delivered a fiery antiNew Deal speech before the Liberty League, a mostly conservative group organized in opposition to Roosevelts policies. As Smith told the capacity crowd gathered at Washingtons Mayflower hotel, this country was organized on the principles of representative democracy, and you cant mix Socialism or Communism with that. Deriding FDR and his brain trust for their betrayal of the Democratic partys principles, Smith declared: It is all right with me if they want to disguise themselves as Norman Thomas or Karl Marx, or Lenin, or any of the rest of that bunch, but what I wont stand for is to let them march under the banner of Jefferson, Jackson, or Cleveland.
Unfortunately for Smith, most Democrats saw things differently. Joseph Robinson, who had been Smiths running mate on the 1928 presidential ticket, derided Smith for addressing the Liberty Leagues billion-dollar audience. He has turned away from the East Side with those little shops and fish markets, Robinson sneered, and now his gaze rests fondly upon the gilded towers and palaces of Park Avenue.
Though Smith continued to enjoy hometown popularity in New York, he was basically excommunicated from the party. In 1936 he crossed the aisle to support Republican presidential candidate Alfred Landon, declaring, I am an American before I am a Democrat. Four years later he campaigned on behalf of Republican Wendell Wilkie. FDR trounced them both.
As Smith remarked of his harsh treatment at the hands of one-time friends and allies, Unless youre ready to subscribe to the New Deal 100 per cent and sign your life name on the dotted line, youre a Tory, youre a prince of privilege, youre a reactionary, youre an economic royalist. It took his support for FDR during World War II to repair the damage.
A similar impatience with the New Deals critics would famously reappear in FDRs war on the Supreme Court, culminating in his failed court-packing bill of 1937, which would have allowed Roosevelt to appoint as many as six new Supreme Court justices. Among other things, that conflict transformed the fiery progressive Sen. Burton K. Wheeler (D-MT) from a longtime friend into a deadly foe.
On February 5, 1937, FDR submitted his plan to reorganize the federal judiciary by allowing the president to appoint one new federal judge to match every sitting judge who had served at least 10 years and hadnt retired or resigned within six months of turning 70. A lower mental or physical vigor leads men to avoid an examination of complicated and changed conditions, FDR argued. Little by little, new facts become blurred through old glasses fitted, as it were, for the needs of another generation. In other words, the Courts commitment to such horse and buggy notions as property rights and limited constitutional government kept getting in the New Deals way. Most ominously, in Schechter Poultry Corp. v. United States (1935), the Court unanimously struck down FDRs beloved NRA.
So Roosevelt bided his time, waiting until after his sweeping reelection in 1936 to strike against the nine old men. As historian William E. Leuchtenburg put it, the court-packing scheme bore the mark of a sovereign who after suffering many provocations had just received a new confirmation of power. Senator Wheeler would have agreed with that description, particularly the sovereign part. Wheeler thought the whole thing reeked of unbridled executive power.
And Wheeler, much more than Flynn or Smith, was a true-believing New Dealer with impeccable credentials. In 1924, he served as the running mate of Progressive Party presidential candidate Robert M. La Follette. As chairman of the Senate Interstate Commerce Committee, Wheeler played an indispensable role in the 1935 passage of FDRs bill to regulate utility holding companies. And on a personal note, when the Supreme Court nullified the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1933 in United States v. Butler (1936). Wheelers son-in-law, an economist at the Agricultural Adjustment Administration, was tossed out of work.
But none of that changed Wheelers low opinion of FDRs court-packing plan. As Wheeler wrote in a letter to the socialist leader Norman Thomas, It is an easy step from the control of a subservient Congress and the control of the Supreme Court to a modern democracy of a Hitler or a Mussolini. Addressing a national radio audience less than two weeks after FDR introduced the plan in Congress, Wheeler moved in for the kill: Every despot has usurped the power of the legislative and judicial branches in the name of the necessity for haste to promote the general welfare of the massesand then proceeded to reduce them to servitude. I do not believe that President Roosevelt has any such thing in mind, but such has been the course of events throughout the world.
Against Wheelers incendiary rhetoric and crafty legislative maneuverings, the court-packing bill failed to garner the necessary votes and died in the Senate by a final tally of 70-20. Wheelers conservative stand thus helped preserve some degree of judicial independence. (Though FDR did eventually get what he wanted. By the time of his death in 1945, he had packed the Court with eight New Dealfriendly justices. And the plan itself is widely credited with influencing swing vote Justice Owen Roberts, whose newfound support was called the switch in time that saved nine.) Todays pro-Roosevelt liberals might take a moment to contemplate what George W. Bush would have done with those courtpacking powers.
But outside of the court-packing battle, did the fight against the New Deal really matter? As Smith discovered, the voters didnt seem to have any problem with Roosevelt, and most historians still praise him today for ending the Depression and saving capitalism. Is there anything to learn from the principled liberals who stood athwart the New Deal yelling stop?
Albert Jay Nock thought there was. An acclaimed journalist, editor, and biographer, Nock remains one of FDRs most intriguing opponents. Though hes normally remembered as a founding father of the modern libertarian and conservative movements, Nock actually championed a unique brand of Jeffersonian anti-statism that has never fit comfortably on the political right. An advocate of free trade and minimal government, he also opposed the private ownership of land, taking his cue from Henry Georges 1879 bestseller Progress and Poverty, which argued that the government should be funded exclusively via a single tax on collectively owned land.
Indeed, Nocks political and economic views owed as much to the progressive historian Charles A. Beard as they did to the libertarian theorist Herbert Spencer. In his best remembered book, Our Enemy, The State, Nock combined Spencers emphasis on free trade and social cooperation with Beards thesis that the U.S. Constitution represented an unscrupulous and dishonourable coup detat waged explicitly by the speculating, industrial-commercial and creditor interests. As historian Charles Hamilton observed about The Freeman, the political magazine Nock edited for its entire 19201924 run, readers couldnt decide if it was liberal, conservative, Bolshevik, revolutionary, anarchist, or Georgist. Hamilton might as well have been writing about Nock himself.
And although Nock was never a New Deal supporter, he was nonetheless shoved to the right by the Rooseveltian juggernaut. As Brian Doherty observed in his definitive libertarian history, Radicals for Capitalism, Nock had never stopped thinking of himself as a radical. He found it bitterly ironic that in the post-New Deal era, conservative businessmen became his primary audience.
As far as Nock was concerned, it was the New Dealers who had forfeited their liberal status. He was the one keeping true liberalism alive so that future generations might bring it back into vogue. Considering their professions of Liberalism, Nock wrote in a 1934 introduction to Herbert Spencers The Man Versus the State, it would be quite appropriate and by no means inurbane, to ask Mr. Roosevelt and his entourage whether they believe that the citizen has any rights which the State is bound to respect. Would they be willing . . . to subscribe to the fundamental doctrine of the Declaration? One would be unfeignedly surprised if they were.
Today, a chorus of distinguished economists and legal scholars has joined Nocks lonely voice of New Deal opposition, suggesting that his efforts to preserve classical liberalism paid off in the endas did the efforts of Mencken, Flynn, Smith, and Wheeler. Though they didnt defeat FDR or even inspire a particularly effective opposition movement at the time, their positions have since been rediscovered by generations of libertarians and conservatives seeking to rein in the post-New Deal state. With President Barack Obama now wielding a similar array of sweeping executive powers in the face of a growing economic crisis, their principled examples have become more important than ever.
Damon W. Root is an associate editor at Reason magazine. This article originally appeared in the September/October 2009 edition of Cato Policy Report.
Yep. The New Deal made the economy worse. That much is obvious now. It confirmed the enemy of freedom that is the state itself.
Excellent article—thanks!
Which is why FDR was originally hailed by his supporters as "The American Mussolini".
Mencken’s “Boobocracy” is very much still with us.
(Or maybe it's because I prefer that locution myself . . .)
“The urge to save humanity is almost always a false front for the urge to rule.”
H. L.Mencken
And yet, in 1936, FDR won an unprecedented 3rd term by a score of 523-8. His other wins were almost as big. 1932: 472-59. 1940: 449-82 and 1944: 432-99.
mark
Notice if you will, Gentle Reader, the number of hits if you search this article for the word "liberal." FDR called himself a liberal quite unselfconsciously.At the start of the Twentieth Century the term "liberal" meant the same in America as it still does in the rest of the world - essentially, what is called "conservatism" in American Newspeak. Of course we "American Conservatives" are not the ones who oppose development and liberty, so in that sense we are not conservative at all. We actually are liberals.
But in America, "liberalism" was given its American Newspeak - essentially inverted - meaning in the 1920s (source: Safire's New Political Dictionary). The fact that the American socialists have acquired a word to exploit is bad enough; the real disaster is that we do not now have a word which truly descriptive of our own political perspective. We only have the smear words which the socialists have assigned to us. And make no mistake, in America "conservative" is inherently a negative connotation just as surely as marketers love to boldly proclaim that the product which they are flogging is NEW!
It is monopoly AP journalism which has transformed the meaning of "liberal" and "progressive" from words aptly describing the Constitution to their opposites. Notice it the article that FDR presumed to tell journalists not to hire people who didn't toe the New Deal line.
And yet, in 1936, FDR won an unprecedented 3rd term by a score of 523-8. His other wins were almost as big. 1932: 472-59. 1940: 449-82 and 1944: 432-99.
You thought that was the first or the last time the lambs rushed to the slaughter? ;)
The urge to save humanity is almost always a false front for the urge to rule. H. L.Mencken
The only thing one can do "for society" is to present society with one improved unit.---Albert Jay Nock.
Democracy---The fine art of running the circus from the monkey cage.---Mr. Mencken.
You may be right. If H.L. didn't say boobocracy he should have.
1978, Charles Angoff, Alfred F. Rosa, The Old Century and the New: Essays in Honor of Charles Angoff, page 73 Henry L. Mencken could come up from Baltimore to spread terror among the boobocracy, and vanquish weekly the ministers, college professors, and chambers of commerce.
Mencken was a great man who is now reviled by the Left and the Neocons (may they all rot in hell) alike.
Only proves the old Yiddish saying that the Masses are Asses. This is why I don’t understand why anyone who wishes our constitution to be preserved can with a clear conscience support “rule by referendum” and the “will of the sheeple.”
Thank you so much for this excellent find.
It sounds as though Mr. Angoff or Mr. Rosa came up with “boobocracy.” Still a tribute to Mr. Mencken, though.
I dont understand why anyone who wishes our constitution to be preserved can with a clear conscience support rule by referendum and the will of the sheeple.
I'm put in mind of Barry Goldwater's observation (in The Conscience of a Conservative, I believe) that the Constitution was not designed to create a democracy but to prevent tyranny of the majority.
As for referendum (not to mention initiative), you have only to look at California to know just what kind of tangles those can leave.
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