Articles Pertinent to the Jackson Era:
Jackson's Bank Veto Message
What would Andrew Jackson
have said to the evasive and frequently arrogant Goldman Sachs executives that
took a drubbing during a U.S. Senate hearing in April 2010 about their
financial practices? Among other practices, Goldman sold doomed mortgage
packages to investors but labeled them triple-A. Purchased by pension fund
managers and others that relied on the good name and judgment of Goldman, many
Americans lost millions when the scheme crashed, contributing to the greatest
economic meltdown since the Great Depression. Goldman executives walked away
with millions in bonuses.
Andrew Jackson’s Bank Veto
Message
In 1832, Andrew Jackson sent
a veto message to the U.S. Senate, refusing to permit the re-chartering of the
Second Bank of the United
States. Although his July 10th
message highlighted numerous reasons for the veto – including the substantial
investments of foreigners “mostly of Great Britain,” Jackson’s primary
complaint was that the bank did not serve the “liberties of the people” but
catered to a wealthy few – “…some of our own opulent citizens.”
At the end of his lengthy
message, Jackson
asserts that, “It is to be regretted that the rich and powerful often bend the
acts of government to their selfish purposes.” Government did not exist to make
the rich richer at the expense of hard working Americans, the “humble members
of society.”
According to Jackson, equal protection was not a bendable
construct: “there are no necessary evils in government.” He further maintains
that, “Many of our rich men have not been content with equal protection and
equal benefits, but have besought us to make them richer by act of Congress.”
Andrew Jackson’s Early
Experiences with Bank Speculation
Critics of Jackson argue that he was influenced by his
impoverished youth and early adult years that he lost money due to earlier bank
failures that resulted in financial speculation, and that his common background
clashed with the so-called Virginia Dynasty as well as the financial plutocrats
of industry and finance.
Jackson, however, was proud of his background and saw himself
as a man of the people. Jackson owned a
plantation in Tennessee, his “Hermitage,” but
his personal wealth and success had been accomplished by the sweat of his brow
and the American work ethic, part of a Biblical injunction Jackson took literally.
Jackson Identified with the Everyday Common Man
Although a wealthy man
himself – owning hundreds of slaves, he never forgot those Americans that gave
him the popular vote in the election of 1824 (an election decided by the House
of Representatives because no candidate received the necessary electoral votes)
or the popular support he received in 1828.
He was also keenly aware that
his enemies, the bank supporters and northeastern money interests, viewed him
as an illiterate frontier interloper. When Harvard
University conferred an honorary
degree on Jackson,
John Quincy Adams angrily wrote the college trustees threatening to send back
his earned degree.
Jackson’s Message Today Would Hold Banks Accountable
How would Jackson deal with Goldman Sachs if he were
alive today? His chastening would have included Biblical invectives (he
referred to the Bank of the U.S.
as the “whore of Babylon.”).
Above all, he would have challenged the Congress to respond to the American
people, to restore the liberties of the people, and to demand truth and
accountability from the perpetrators of financial ruin affecting millions of
common, hard working citizens.
Sources:
Text of Andrew Jackson’s Veto
Message, The Avalon Project, Yale University
Page Smith, The Nation Comes of Age: A People’s History
of the Ante-Bellum Years, Volume Four (McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1981)
First Published October 17, 2010 in Suite101 by M.Streich. Copyright
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