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Recall that historiography is the study of historical writing: the history of history.
Historians’ interpretations of past events—including historical interpretations of the People’s Party (also known as the Populist Party)—change over time. Historians are obliged to approach history objectively and to make their interpretations without bias.
Historians agree that the ideals and goals of the Populist Party, which they refer to as Populism, are embedded in the Omaha Platform of 1892, which proposed reforms for the economy, transportation, and the democratic process.
Beyond this area of agreement, historians have differed on the significance of the Populist Party. Some have focused on the Party itself—what historian Michael Kazin refers to as Populism “with a capital P” (Kazin, p. 5)—and the context in which it emerged. Others have examined instances in which politicians and coalitions have used populist rhetoric to promote liberal or conservative political agendas.
Although historical evaluation of the Populist Party—and Populism—is ongoing, for the purposes of this tutorial it can be divided into two lines of inquiry:
To argue that the Populist Party represented a distinct political movement in American history, historians need evidence that the People’s Party was organized in response to specific economic and social challenges. They must also offer proof that the Party developed a distinct political ideology and unique solutions to these challenges.
Lawrence Goodwyn, whose Democratic Promise: The Populist Moment was published in 1976, was a notable historian who argued that the Populist Party was a distinct political movement in the late 19th century. He claimed that the movement was “the largest democratic mass movement in American history,” and that, for a brief time, it offered a democratic alternative to “the corporate state.” Goodwyn defined the corporate state as the political-economic order of the Gilded Age, which advanced the interests of big business and investment at the expense of farmers and workers. (Goodwyn, p.vii, xxi)
In addition, Goodwyn argued that Populism was a coherent political ideology based on three key elements: public participation, cooperation, and monetary reform. To support his argument, Goodwyn pointed to groups like the Farmers’ Alliance, which, during the late 1880s, encouraged organization and cooperation between farmers: what Goodwyn referred to as a “movement culture.”
American farmers struggled with marginalization during the late 19th century. In the South, many endured a harsh life under the crop-lien system and sharecropping. In the Great Plains region, farmers were forced to deal with railroad and grain-elevator monopolies that dictated shipping rates and crop prices. Yet, through the words of speakers like Charles W. Macune, and organizations like the Grange and the Farmers’ Alliance, farmers from both areas found common cause and organized to address the problems they faced. Goodwyn wrote the following about their participation in the Farmers’ Alliance:
Lawrence Goodwyn, Historian
“The farmers of the Alliance had spent much of their lives in humiliating circumstances….They were ridiculed for their poverty, and they knew it….(T)hey had also known for decades that they could do nothing about their plight because they were locked into the fabric of the (crop) lien system and crushed by the mountain of interest they had been forced to pay. But now, in their Alliance, they had found something new. That something may be described as individual self-respect and collective self-confidence….All were useful if imprecise terms to describe a growing political sensibility, one free of deference and ridicule. Such an intuition shared by enough people is, of course, a potentially powerful force.” (Goodwyn, p. 33)
Organizations like the Farmers’ Alliance and (later) the People’s Party, provided farmers with opportunities to unite with their neighbors in a common cause. The subsequent development of a platform based on the Subtreasury Plan and other reforms gave the Populist movement a distinct ideology
The Populist ideology encouraged cooperation between farmers and called on the federal government to regulate the economy for the benefit of farmers and other workers. As Goodwyn argued, “The People’s Party was to wage a frantic campaign to wrest effective operating control of the American monetary system from the nation’s commercial bankers and restore it, ‘in the name of the whole people,’ to the United States Treasury.”
After fusing with the Democratic Party during the 1896 election, the Populist Party vanished from the national political scene. Among its most important legacies was the labeling of subsequent mass democratic movements as populist. This phenomenon led historian Michael Kazin to define populism as a distinct political style in American politics.
Michael Kazin, HistorianTo understand populism in this way, Kazin focuses on the language used by political leaders. He takes this approach to analyze the Populist Party of the 1890s. The language used by the Populist Party included the labeling of banks and monopolies as a “money power” that ignored the people’s interests and corrupted government. Kazin also uncovers elements of Christian morality and redemption in the Party’s rhetoric. He notes that the Populist Party defined “the people” broadly, to encompass industrial workers and reformers, as well as farmers.
In his 1995 book The Populist Persuasion: An American History, Kazin defines populism as:
“a language whose speakers conceive of ordinary people as a noble assemblage not bounded narrowly by class, view their elite opponents as self-serving and undemocratic, and seek to mobilize the former against the latter.” (Kazin, p. 1)
Kazin argues that populism is “a flexible mode of persuasion,” one in which leaders of the People’s Party, as well as major figures in later political movements “used traditional kinds of expressions, tropes, themes, and images to convince large numbers of Americans to join their side or to endorse their views on particular issues.” (Kazin, p.3)
Michael Kazin, Historian (Continued)
Kazin summarizes the People’s Party as follows:
“On the one hand, it spoke out in pride and anger for the lost commonwealth of agrarians and artisans, the moral center of a society that had spun away from its once noble orbit…. On the other hand, the Populists were forerunners of a more pragmatic style of expressing discontent. Blending the many hues of reform and radicalism into a single national organization, however short-lived, and maneuvering, however fatally, to take advantage of an opening at the political top demonstrated the zeal of missionaries armed with a sensible method.” (Kazin, p. 46)
In his book, Kazin identifies the ways in which Populism as a political style influenced American politics throughout the 20th century. He refers to a number of conservative political movements in the second half of the 20th century, including the presidential campaigns of Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan, which incorporated elements of populism as a political style to great effect. Both candidates portrayed themselves and their constituencies as outsiders with respect to the political system. This shows that, in modern politics, populist rhetoric has been used to campaign on behalf of “the people” for liberal or conservative ends.
This examination of the historiography of the Populist Party, and populism in American politics, shows that the meaning of Populism is complex and open to debate.
Let’s examine a primary source on this subject: the Omaha Platform of 1892. While reading the following excerpt, keep the interpretations of Lawrence Goodwyn and Michael Kazin in mind. Do you see evidence of the Populist Party as a political movement with a distinct ideology? Is there evidence of populism as a political style?
The Omaha Platform of 1892
PREAMBLE
“…(W)e meet in the midst of a nation brought to the verge of moral, political, and material ruin. Corruption dominates the ballot box, the Legislatures, the Congress….The people are demoralized.... The newspapers are largely subsidized or muzzled, public opinion silenced, business prostrated, homes covered with mortgages, labor impoverished, and the land concentrating in the hands of capitalists…. The fruits of the toil of millions are boldly stolen to build up colossal fortunes for a few, unprecedented in the history of mankind; and the possessors of those, in turn, despise the republic and endanger liberty. From the same prolific womb of governmental injustice we breed the two great classes—tramps and millionaires….
Assembled on the anniversary of the birthday of the nation, and filled with the spirit of the grand general and chief who established our independence, we seek to restore the government of the Republic to the hands of ‘the plain people,’ with which class it originated…. We pledge ourselves that if given power we will labor to correct these evils by wise and reasonable legislation, in accordance with the terms of our platform….
PLATFORM
We declare, therefore—
….We believe that the time has come when the railroad corporations will either own the people or the people must own the railroads, and should the government enter upon the work of owning and managing all railroads, we should favor an amendment to the Constitution by which all persons engaged in the government service shall be placed under a civil-service regulation of the most rigid character, so as to prevent the increase of the power of the national administration by the use of such additional government employees.
FINANCE—We demand a national currency, safe, sound, and flexible, issued by the general government only, a full legal tender for all debts, public and private, and that without the use of banking corporations, a just, equitable, and efficient means of distribution direct to the people, at a tax not to exceed 2% per annum, to be provided as set forth in the sub-treasury plan of the Farmers’ Alliance, or a better system; also by payments in discharge of its obligations for public improvements….
TRANSPORTATION—Transportation being a means of exchange and a public necessity, the government should own and operate the railroads in the interest of the people. The telegraph, telephone, like the post-office system, being a necessity for the transmission of news, should be owned and operated by the government in the interest of the people….”
The Omaha Platform uses language that Michael Kazin associated with populism as a political style. Most of it is used in the Preamble, which criticizes the political and economic system, and concludes that American society had been divided into “two great classes—tramps and millionaires.” The document lists several proposals to return the American government and economy to “the plain people.” These include the Subtreasury Plan and transportation reform, which reinforce Lawrence Goodwyn’s interpretation of the Populist Party as a distinct political movement in response to the economic and social challenges of the late 19th century.
Source: This tutorial curated and/or authored by Matthew Pearce, Ph.D with content adapted from Openstax “U.S. History.” Access for free at openstax.org/details/books/us-history LICENSE: CREATIVE COMMONS ATTRIBUTION 4.0 INTERNATIONAL
REFERENCES
Goodwyn, L. (1981). The populist moment: a short history of the agrarian revolt in America. Oxford: Oxford University Press
Kazin, M. (1995). The populist persuasion: an American history. New York, NY: BasicBooks, a division of HarperCollins., Omaha Platform, 1892