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Curbing Campaign Cash - Henry Ford, Truman Newberry and the Politics of Progressive Reform (Hardcover)
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Curbing Campaign Cash - Henry Ford, Truman Newberry and the Politics of Progressive Reform (Hardcover)
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In the 1918 Michigan race for the U.S. Senate, auto tycoon Henry
Ford faced off against a less well-known industrialist, Truman
Newberry. Bent on countering Ford's fame and endorsement from
President Wilson, Newberry's campaign spent an extravagant amount,
in fact much more than the law seemed to allow. This led to his
conviction under the Federal Corrupt Practices Act-but also to his
eventual exoneration in the first campaign finance case to be
decided by the U.S. Supreme Court. In Newberry v. United States the
Court ruled that Congress had no jurisdiction to regulate primary
elections, a controversial decision that allowed southern states to
create whites-only primaries and stalled campaign finance reform.
In the first book in eight decades on this initial test of federal
campaign finance regulations, Paula Baker examines this case study
of state and local campaign spending to describe how politicians
found their footing in an environment created by progressive reform
and invented modern campaigns. Through this seminal election, she
pries apart two persistent strains in American political culture:
suspicion of money in politics and suspicion of politics itself.
In reexamining the story of the 1918 election, Baker takes a broad
view of the history of the political reform to probe some of the
foundational arguments about why money in politics sometimes seems
so corrupt. She follows the controversy as it unfolded-beginning
with progressive reform of politics and the remaking of
campaigns-then takes readers through the shifting scenes, from
Detroit to Washington, where the Ford-Newberry conflict played out.
Baker reexamines the political divisions between conservatives and
progressive reformers to reveal contradictions in how Progressive
Era federal finance regulations worked, with efforts to weaken the
power of political parties and democratize politics actually making
campaigns more expensive. And although the law opened the door to
partisan prosecutions for spending, Congress remained unwilling to
craft legislation that actually curbed spending.
While legislation in recent decades largely has aimed at
contributions rather than spending and the Supreme Court has
weighed whether specific limits abridge free speech, Progressive
Era ideas about money and politics continue to guide campaign
finance reform. Curbing Campaign Cash provides a compelling new
account of a key chapter in the history of this issue.
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