Andrew Jakson - the New Democracy
By: regina • Essay • 495 Words • July 15, 2009 • 1,382 Views
Essay title: Andrew Jakson - the New Democracy
The New Democracy
When Jackson took office many things changed. The Spoils system was put into affect. The everyday man now had a bigger voice, and for once in a long time the people; not the electoral collage or corrupt senators and congressmen ran the nation.
When the Federalists had dominated, democracy was not respected, but by the 1820s, it was widely appealing. Politicians now had to bend to appease and appeal to the masses, and the popular ones were the ones who claimed to be born in log cabins and had humble backgrounds. Those who were too clean, too well dressed, too grammatical, or too highly intellectual were not liked by the public.
Jacksonian Democracy said that whatever governing that was to be done should be done directly to the people. It was called the New Democracy, and it was a great idea based on universal manhood suffrage. While older federalist senators taunted and ridiculed the younger and humbler senators when the messed up these new democrats argued that if they messed up, they messed up together. The flowering political democracy was in part caused the logical growth of the open-minded ideas that had taken root in colonial times. More and more people understood how banks, tariffs, and internal improvements affected the quality of their lives. The panic of 1819, the Missouri Compromise of 1820 and the steadily improving economy helped this idea nourish greatly. In the panic of 1819, overextended banks had called back their debts, and often, farmers unable to pay up lost their farms while the bankers didn't have to lose their property because they simply suspended their own payments, and the apparent favoritism caused outcry.
The problem with Missouri had aroused Southern