In the presidential contest of 1824,
Andrew Jackson won the most electoral votes, edging out John Quincy
Adams, Henry Clay, and William Crawford. Because Jackson did not have a
majority, however, the election was decided in the House of
Representatives, where Adams prevailed. Adams subsequently chose Clay as
his secretary of state. Jackson’s supporters were infuriated by what
they described as a “corrupt bargain” between Adams and Clay. The
Washington establishment had defied the will of the people, they
believed. Jackson rode the wave of public resentment to victory four
years later, marking a dramatic turning point in American politics. A
beloved hero of western farmers and frontiersmen, Jackson was the first
nonaristocrat to become president. He was the first president to invite
everyday folk to the inaugural reception. To the horror of the political
elite, throngs tracked mud through the White House and broke dishes and
decorative objects. Washington insiders reviled Jackson. They saw him
as intemperate, vulgar, and stupid. Opponents called him a jackass—the
origin of the donkey symbol for the Democratic Party. In a conversation
with Daniel Webster in 1824, Thomas Jefferson described Jackson as “one
of the most unfit men I know of” to become president of the United
States, “a dangerous man” who cannot speak in a civilized manner because
he “choke[s] with rage,” a man whose “passions are terrible.” Jefferson
feared that the slightest insult from a foreign leader could impel
Jackson to declare war. Even Jackson’s friends and admiring colleagues
feared his volcanic temper. Jackson fought at least 14 duels in his
life, leaving him with bullet fragments lodged throughout his body. On
the last day of his presidency, he admitted to only two regrets: that he
was never able to shoot Henry Clay or hang John C. Calhoun.
The similarities between Andrew Jackson and Donald Trump do not end with
their aggressive temperaments and their respective positions as
Washington outsiders. The similarities extend to the dynamic created
between these dominant social actors and their adoring audiences—or, to
be fairer to Jackson, what Jackson’s political opponents consistently feared
that dynamic to be. They named Jackson “King Mob” for what they
perceived as his demagoguery. Jackson was an angry populist, they
believed—a wild-haired mountain man who channeled the crude
sensibilities of the masses. More than 100 years before social
scientists would invent the concept of the authoritarian personality to
explain the people who are drawn to autocratic leaders, Jackson’s
detractors feared what a popular strongman might do when encouraged by
an angry mob.
Excerpted from an interesting article -
The Mind of Donald Trump.
Jackson certainly had both a temper and a high sense of honor, both of which helped him get into all those duels, but he also cultivated the impression that he was dangerous because of these characteristics, and used that to his benefit when needed.
ReplyDeleteWhen during the War of 1812 he came down to the defense of New Orleans, the elite of that city expected to see a wild man, but were stunned and then charmed when he presented himself as a man of calm manners and high cultivation. He could be either, as the situation required. He was a far more complicated and intelligent man than some histories would have you believe.
One glaring difference between Jackson and Trump is that Andrew Jackson actually fought in the military, led campaigns, and fought his own duels.
ReplyDeleteI suppose that is actually more than one glaring difference, isn't it? :)
DeleteBasically you tried to make some sort of weird point that loud populists are all the same? Let's see, what else did Jackson do?
ReplyDelete"In January 1835, Jackson paid off the entire national debt, the only time in U.S. history that has been accomplished."
This is why the Democrats want Jackson off the $20 Bill. They racked up the National Debt and don't want to be reminded about who paid it off in full.
I thought maybe it was the Indian Removal Act that kind of mars his image being on the $20.
DeleteBut then, I am not a Democrat.