Henry Clay: Great American Political Giant who was Forever Attempting to become President!
Henry Clay attempted the
Presidency three times yet each time he miscalculated the mood of the American
people. In 1824 he came in last in a four-way race; building his campaign on
Andrew Jackson’s Bank Veto in 1832, Clay failed to realize that voters saw the
veto as an extension of Jackson’s
heroic nature and champion of the common man. Finally, in 1844, Clay’s
“waffling” on the issue of Texas
annexation caused enough voters in the North to switch their support to James
Birney and the new Liberty Party, costing him crucial swing states.
The 1824 Election
When the results of the 1824
election were tabulated, Henry Clay was in fourth place with 37 electoral
votes. Although no candidate received enough electoral votes to win the
presidency, John Quincy Adams would be selected by a vote in the House of
Representatives. As Speaker of the House, Henry Clay played a pivotal role in
denying Andrew Jackson the presidency. Jackson,
with 99 electoral votes and almost three times the popular votes of Clay and
William Crawford, would never forget Clay’s role in the so-called “corrupt
bargain.”
1832 and the Bank of the United States
President Andrew Jackson
rejected a premature rechartering of the SBUS
(Second Bank of the US) in 1832
after Henry Clay convinced bank President Nicholas Biddle to seek a new
charter. It was the issue Clay hoped would bring him into the White House.
Portraying Jackson as a despotic tyrant and
recalling the images of George III, Clay and his followers believed that the
voters would agree and retire Jackson.
Jackson, however, was seen as a man of the people, a hero who
championed the cause of simple, hard working Americans. Jackson, who hated all
banks, saw the national bank as the “great whore of Babylon.” Everywhere he went, everyday people
cheered him as their advocate. The bank issue backfired. According to Paul
Boller, “For the first time in American history a President took a strong stand
on an important social issue and then asked for the approval of the voters at
the polls.” [1]
The Annexation of Texas and the 1844
Election
The annexation of Texas was the chief
issue in the 1844 election. Democrat James K Polk favored annexation.
Significantly, Polk’s stance was based on his sincere views favoring immediate
expansionism. Polk wanted to unite the nation between both oceans, assert
American claims in the Oregon Territory, and bring Texas
into the Union.
Henry Clay, however, viewed
the issue in terms of his own presidential ambitions. At first, Clay opposed Texas annexation,
gambling on the Northern vote. Northern voters, for the most part, rejected the
idea of bringing in another slave state. Sensing that his chance of victory
might be better if he switched positions, Clay came out for annexation. This
cost him crucial Northern votes.
Page Smith [2] gives an
interesting analysis of the 1844 vote. Polk won the election with less than 1
percent of the popular vote, yet in pivotal states like Ohio, James Birney, the antislavery
candidate, polled over 8,000 votes. In Pennsylvania
Polk won “by a bare 6,000 votes out of more than 328,000 cast.” Birney’s total
in the election was 62,300. Had Clay not switched his position on Texas, many of the
Birney votes might have gone to him.
Although Henry Clay never
became President, his long political career left an indelible mark on American
History. Returned to the National Senate in 1850, Clay would endeavor to craft
a final compromise designed to avert Civil War. For this he was vilified by
many Southerners.
Sources:
[1] Page Smith, The Nation Comes of Age: A People’s History of the Ante-Bellum Years
(New York: McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1981) p. 207.
[2] Paul F. Boller, Jr. Presidential Campaigns From George
Washington to George W. Bush (Oxford
University Press, 2004)
p. 53.
published 12/22/2008 inSuite101 by M.Streich. copyright.
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