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markie

(23,600 posts)
Mon Aug 11, 2025, 04:19 AM Aug 11

"Sources of Danger to the Republic"

https://frederickdouglasspapersproject.com/s/digitaledition/item/18126
excerpts of
Frederick Douglass - always a good read

"..........He is there for four years, and your only comfort, your only consolation, for whatever usurpation and misbehavior he is guilty of, is, that by and by you will have the right to elect another. What I needed for my manhood was, that I should be my own master. What the American people need for their manhood and their national security is, that the people shall, in time of war, and in time of peace be the masters of their own government.......

Now what are the elements that enter into this one man power and swell it to the formidable measure at which we find it at this time? The first thing
is the immense patronage of the President of the United States—the patronage of money, of honor, of place and power. He is able to divide among
his friends and among his satellites—attaching men to his person and to his political fortunes—a hundred million of dollars per annum in time of
peace, and uncounted thousands of millions of dollars in time of war are virtually at his disposal. This is an influence which can neither be weighed,
measured nor otherwise estimated. The very thought of it is overwhelming.
This amount of money lodged outside of the government in unfriendly hands could be made a formidable lever for the destruction of the government. It is a direct assault upon the national virtue. While the President of the United States can exalt whom he will, cast down whom he will; he can
place A into office for agreeing with him in opinion, and cause B to be put out of office because of an honest difference of opinion with him. Who
does not see that the tendency to agreement will be a million times stronger than the tendency to differ, even though truth should be in favor of difference.

Now I hold that this patronage should be abolished, that is to say that the President’s control over it should be abolished. The Constitution evidently contemplated that the large arm of our government should control the matter of appointments. It declares that the President may appoint by
and with the consent and with the advice of the Senate; he must get the Senate’s advice and consent, but custom and a certain laxity of administration has almost obliterated this feature of the Constitution, and now the President appoints, he not only appoints by and with the consent, but he has
the power of removal, and with this power he virtually makes the agency of the Senate of the United States of no effect in the matter of appointments. I
am very glad to see that a movement is on foot in Congress to make the appointments by the President or removal by the President alone illegal.
The security which you and I will have against the President is........."
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"Sources of Danger to the Republic" (Original Post) markie Aug 11 OP
Douglass is referring to the incumbent at the time, Lincoln's vice president Andrew Johnson of Tennessee Simeon Salus Aug 11 #1

Simeon Salus

(1,523 posts)
1. Douglass is referring to the incumbent at the time, Lincoln's vice president Andrew Johnson of Tennessee
Mon Aug 11, 2025, 09:21 AM
Aug 11

Before the current catastrophe, Andrew Jackson was the president who in 1827 really threw weight into patronage, what we now refer to as the "spoils system" (from to the victor belong the spoils), removing long-time bureaucrats in favor of Jackson's own Democratic (then conservative) party operatives.

Already a corruption of the public will and a waste of public funds, by 1871 the spoils system had become so nakedly crooked that Congress passed and President Grant signed the law creating a civil service commission, but Republicans (then the liberal party) in the House refused to fund it. James Garfield ran for president in 1880 on a platform of civil service reform and won, but ironically was assassinated by an unhappy office seeker.

Partially as a result of the assassination, Garfield's vice president Chester Arthur was able to get the Pendleton Civil Service Reform Act passed in 1883, requiring applicants to pass examinations to determine relatively competency among them. After Nixon's resignation for corruption, a largely conservative Democratic congress passed the Civil Service Reform Act of 1978, establishing what sanity the system had before the wrecking ball which is Drumpf came into office.

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