[Terry Heath]
Brent Colton is a retired CIA operations officer now in the employ of the Creighton Corporation, a privately owned think tank that advocates various opinions on world issues, but it’s his clandestine job to solve the dirty problems for their private clients for a million dollar fee with no questions asked. When recovering stolen technology from a Vietnamese industrialist, Colton obtains evidence that he secretly partnered with a U.S. Senatorto rig the recent presidential election and elect him to the nation’s highest office.

WAS ANDREW JACKSON AMERICA’S LAST POPULIST PRESIDENT?
by Terry Heath, [IMAGE]2007

Terry Heath] Today’s historians are still in a quandary on why Andrew Jackson, the Seventh President of the United States and one of this nation’s greatest leaders, was a man of complete contradictions in his public life.

Was he the populist politician who championed the rights of all citizens in the growing republic, yet owned slaves to do the hard work on his own property?

Was he the grandiose dictator who tried to crush his political enemies whom he viewed as elitist or just a man from the working class battling those seeking to dominate the masses?

Was he the brilliant military genius who defeated the British in the War of 1812 for America’s only major victory in that ill-conceived conflict against England? Or was he the racist extremist who conquered the Indian Tribes and removed them from their homelands in the south because it was good for his own political career?

Was he all of that and more?

Sean Wilentz is a Professor of History at Princeton University and has written a new examination of Jackson in ‘The American Presidents’ series that are published by Times Books which are edited by Arthur Schlesinger, Jr. Schlesinger had previously written about the famed chief executive sixty years ago in the Pulitzer Prize winning biography ‘The Age of Jackson.’

Wilentz tries to explain in the brief 195 page tome those many contradictions of the Tennessee military commander nicknamed ‘Old Hickory’ for his toughness who is generally accepted as one of our nation’s top half-dozen greatest presidents.

Jackson served as chief executive from 1829 to 1837, when America was transitioning from having leaders who had participated in the Revolutionary War and the immediate years after to those politicians who would serve in the two decades leading up to our nation’s civil war. Jackson was a soldier in America’s struggle for independence against the British in his early teens, earning a scar on his head when he was struck by a sword belonging to a British officer and is the only American president to ever have been a prisoner of war.

His greatest military triumph came in January, 1815; albeit two months after the War of 1812 had officially ended with a peace treaty signing, when troops under his command defeated an invading force of British soldiers twice their size landing near the southern port city of New Orleans, Louisiana. He then spent a few years in battle with several of the Indian tribes in the southern states which culminated in those tribes’ relocation to the Midwest part of the country that came to be known as ‘The Trail of Tears.’

Jackson first ran for president in 1824 and got the highest tally of popular votes in the election. But none of the multiple candidates running that year were able to get a majority of the Electoral College votes to claim victory. The contest was then decided in the House of Representatives where runner-up John Quincy Adams was selected as the new chief executive after he made a deal with third-place candidate Henry Clay to gain his votes in exchange for Clay being promised the job of Secretary of State.

Jackson was livid on what happened to him that year and vowed revenge against what he considered to be the thievery by those politicians belonging to the New England aristocracy he so hated.

He ran again in 1828 and soundly defeated Adams in a re-match. But that victory turned bitter sweet when his wife Rachel died a few weeks before the March, 1837 inauguration which the president-elect believed was caused by stress when his political enemies spoke ill of her and her marriage to Jackson before her divorce to another man became final.

Wilentz writes that once in office, Jackson was a champion of the concept of the republic, meaning the will of the majority ruled while he attempted to re-structure the functions of national government into how he believed it should operate.

Modern pundits complain that today’s politicians can be nasty and uncivil towards each other in their rancorous discussions on the issues of the day. But today’s media sound bite zingers are tepid and restrained compared to how those of the different political parties and viewpoints treated each other two centuries ago when many disagreements ended with the two participants settling their feud with a duel.

The political opponents of the president referred to Jackson as ruling like a king or dictator, since the new chief executive did his best to re-tool the government into a bureaucracy of his liking such as making multiple changes in his cabinet to get those advisors he desired and would do what he wanted. The colloquial phrase ‘to the victor goes the spoils,’ refers to Jackson’s selection of those political supporters of his choosing into specific national government posts to do his bidding.

Jackson considered himself to be a man of honor and believed his words and those spoken by others to be a reflection of their firm beliefs. That’s why he terminated the relationship with John Calhoun, his own vice-president, in 1832 when he determined the South Carolina politician had crossed him when Calhoun supported that state’s desire to secede from the union in seeking nullification of certain laws over keeping the union together.

Calhoun resigned as vice-president, the first national officer to do so, got himself appointed as a senator from South Carolina while that state made plans to secede from the union if the federal government continued to demand its share of taxes through tariffs. Jackson mobilized federal troops to send into that state and let it be known that he would publicly hang his former vice-president if cessation plans went forth.

They didn’t.

Compare that to today’s politicians who say or do anything to keep their particular electorate happy, even it will hurt the nation in the long-term as long as it keeps them being re-elected.

Jackson also hated bankers and the concept of paper money that’s not based on gold or silver. He closed down the Second Bank of the United States, (today’s version of the Federal Reserve) and paid off the national debt in 1835 which endeared him to the masses. So it is with much irony that his image ended up on our twenty dollar bill, the most popular American paper currency that is issued by today’s Federal Reserve Bank which is privately owned and makes a profit from the public debt that increases every year and has no chance of ever being paid off.

Wilentz states that Jackson put the nation on the road to true democracy for all the people, although the democracy he believed in is not what we have today because that process evolved over time with the work of the many presidents who would follow.

By the end of Jackson’s second term, his popularity and large group of supporters across the country helped to start the creation of the modern Democratic Party and he was able through his influence to get his second vice-president, Martin Van Buren, elected to the presidency in 1836. Jackson’s own political beliefs also led to the formation of the political parties movement when the Whig Party, mainly composed of those politicians who opposed Jackson on just about everything during his time in office, was created in 1834. They lasted for twenty years until it was replaced by the Republican Party in 1856 for the continuation of the two major political party system this nation still has today.

Can it be considered unfair for those of us now alive two centuries later to judge Jackson and the other early 19th Century presidents on their stands regarding personal liberty when slavery was still prevalent to today’s standards of freedom for all citizens? Yes. But that’s not Jackson’s fault. He made the decisions he believed on what was best for the country’s long-term survival without compromise to any special interest group seeking favors for their particular cause to the detriment of the nation as a whole.

What politician of today can make that same claim?

Terry Heath

California

E-Mail readermail@terryheathbooks.com

Terry Heath]

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