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Progressivism

Progressivism. Us history goal 7. PROGRESSIVISM !!!. Journal Entry # 12 Based on your knowledge of society today, what do you feel is important to change? How? Ex. PROGRESSIVISM. Suffragette s. Muckracker s. Temperance. M i d c l a s s W o m e n. Popul ists. Civi l Rights. Labor

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Progressivism

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  1. Progressivism Us history goal 7

  2. PROGRESSIVISM !!! Journal Entry # 12 Based on your knowledge of society today, what do you feel is important to change? How? Ex.

  3. PROGRESSIVISM Suffragettes Muckrackers Temperance MidclassWomen Popul ists CivilRights Labor Unions

  4. Four Goals of Progressivism Primary Goal of the Movement: Return the power to the people • Protecting Social Welfare • Promoting Moral Improvement • Creating Economic Reform • Reforming Local Government “The 4”:

  5. Progressives were • White Protestants • Middle class and native born. • College Educated Professionals • Social workers • Scholars • Politicians • Preachers • Teachers • Writers

  6. Adopt Populist Ideas • Move away from laissez faire with government regulating industry • Make US government responsive to the people (voting) • Limit power of the political bosses. • Improve worker’s rights, conditions for poor and immigrants • Clean up the cities • End segregation and Jim Crow

  7. Social WelfareSoftenworking conditions in industry, regulate unfair business practices, eliminate child labor, help immigrants and the poor

  8. Promoting Moral Improvement • Morality was the key to improving lives • Alcohol was undermining American morals (Temperance/Prohibition) • WCTU (Women’s Christian Temperance Union) • Passed the 18th amendment (abolish alcohol)  largest women’s group in U.S. history  245,000 members by 1911

  9. Economic Reform • American began to question the breaks that businesses got from the government. Fairness and opportunity in the work world, regulate unfair trusts and bring about changes in labor. Americans start to question the capitalist system and some embrace communism

  10. CONSERVATION Preserve natural resources and the environment

  11. MUCKRAKERS • Muckrakers were journalists and photographers who exposed the abuses of wealth and power. • They felt it was their job to write and expose corruption in industry, cities and government. Progressives exposed corruption but offered no solutions.

  12. They believed that if the public could only see or read for itself….. • There would be an outcry and people would want to help make conditions better….. • Or demand the government to make reforms. • “Digging up the dirt”=Investigative Journalism

  13. Notable Muckrakers • Jacob Riis- photographs the horrid tenement living conditions; How the Other Half Lives • Ida Tarbell- exposed Standard Oil Trust(McClure’s Magazine) • Lincoln Steffens- “Shame of the Cities” – exposes political corruption • Upton Sinclair- author of The Jungle – abuses in the Meat Packing Industrymeatpacking industry

  14. Tenement Housing

  15. Ida M. Tarbell – “Mr. Rockefeller has systematically played with loaded dice”

  16. Lincoln Steffens: Most famous of the muckraking journalists (1903-1910)

  17. Upton Sinclair – Exposes abuses in the meat packing industry

  18. Reforming Government Give the government back to the people, get more people voting and end corruption with political machines.

  19. Reforming Local Government Goal:Reform local and state governments by introducing direct involvement of the people. At the national level, women’s suffrage and direct election of the U.S. Senate

  20. State Government Reform • Robert La Follette– Wisconsin Governor • loyal Republican at odds with political machine • Elected governor in 1900 – backed “Wisconsin Idea” • Wisconsin Idea • use of direct primary • increase taxes on railroads and public utilities • commissions regulate • enact laws that curb excessive lobbying • labor reforms & protect natural resources • States around the U.S. copy the model

  21. Recall Allows voters to petition to have an elected representative removed from office. Initiative Allows voters to petition state legislatures in order to consider a bill desired by citizens. Referendum Allows voters to decide if a bill or proposed amendment should be passed. Ensures that voters select candidates to run for office, rather than party bosses. Privacy at the ballot box ensures that citizens can cast votes without party bosses knowing how they voted. Secret Ballot Direct Primary State Reforms

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