The Presidency of Barack Quincy Adams Obama
By Beach Blogger at 10 February, 2010, 7:35 am
When one focuses on just how obstructionist the modern Republican Party has become in Congress, it’s difficult to find any parallels in our history. Certainly, one that comes immediately to mind is the decade preceding the Civil War. This was, like now, a time when political passions ran high and political compromise between contending factions was difficult. It is signaled most dramatically, perhaps, by the odious 1850 Fugitive Slave Law . This disreputable federal statute enabled anyone who claimed another person was a runaway slave to enlist the U.S. Marshals for help in seizing by force the unfortunate victim. Nothing more than the slave owners’ oral word was required. No evidence was required. No bail was allowed. Anyone resisting ‘return’ of the purported slave was subject to criminal prosecution, imprisonment, and a ruinous fine. Even then, however, Southern pro-slavery congressmen — who ceaselessly worked to ensure that slavery would spread as fast as the growing nation admitted new states to the Union — refrained from holding hostage every single presidential domestic and foreign policy initiative. They did, that is, until we approached the very edge of Civil War. Perhaps the closest parallel to our times is the presidency of John Quincy Adams. By then the first political parties — Federalists and Republican-Democrats — were on the edge of extinction. Nevertheless, it was a time of intense, and then-unparalleled– political partisanship. The time immediately before and during the Adams’ presidency was regarded as one of “horribly embroiled conditions” and “unexampled bitterness” and “strife.” Religious pastors became politicians-in-the-pulpit. The public press was highly partisan and sharply divided. Virtually every newspaper sided with one partisan faction or another, and each attacked their opposite numbers with zeal. At the local level, thinly-veiled vituperation and name-calling in the guise of “toasts” on Independence Day and other celebratory occasions became political ammunition for each side. As one historian of the times immediately before the Adams’ presidency wrote, “This rage of party continued several years, and was sometimes so violent as to be in danger of degenerating into animosity and personal hatred.” Partisans, to a degree, did disagree over some major issues. Chief among these was the War of 1812; tariffs on imported foreign goods to protect nascent industries from aggressive foreign competition;
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The Presidency of Barack Quincy Adams Obama
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