Rough Rider, hunter, trust-buster, president, and Bull Moose
candidate. Biographers have long fastened on TR as man of action,
while largely ignoring his political thought. Now, in time for the
centennial of his Progressive run for the presidency, Jean
Yarbrough provides a searching examination of TR's political
thought, especially in relation to the ideas of Washington,
Hamilton, and Lincoln-the statesmen TR claimed most to admire.
Yarbrough sets out not only to explore Roosevelt's vision for
America but also to consider what his political ideas have meant
for republican self-government. She praises TR for his fighting
spirit, his love of country, and efforts to promote republican
greatness, but faults him for departing from the political
principles of the more nationalistic Founders he esteemed. With the
benefit of hindsight, she argues that the progressive policies he
came to embrace have over time undermined the very qualities
Roosevelt regarded as essential to civic life. In particular, the
social welfare policies he championed have eroded industry and
self-reliance; the expansion of the regulatory state has multiplied
the special interests seeking access to political power; and the
bureaucratic experts in whom he reposed such confidence have all
too often turned out to be neither disinterested nor effective.
Yarbrough argues that TR's early historical studies--inspired by
Darwinian biology and Hegelian political thought--treated westward
expansion from an evolutionary and developmental perspective that
placed race and conquest at the center of the narrative, while
relegating individual rights and consent of the governed to the
sidelines.
Although his early career showed him to be a moderate Republican
reformer, Yarbrough argues that even then he did not share
Hamilton's enthusiasm for the commercial republic, and substituted
an appeal to "abstract duty" for The Federalist's reliance on
self-interest. As New York governor and first-term president, TR
attempted to strike a "just balance" between democratic and
oligarchic interests, but by the end of his presidency he had
tipped the balance in favor of progressive policies. From the New
Nationalism until his death in 1919, Roosevelt continued to claim
the mantle of Washington and Lincoln, even as he moved further from
their political principles.
Through careful examination of TR's political thought,
Yarbrough's book sheds new light on his place in the American
political tradition, while enhancing our understanding of the roots
of progressivism and its transformation of the founders'
Constitution.
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