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Progressive Progressive Legislation Legislation Angela Brown Chapter 8 Section 2 1
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Progressive Legislation Angela Brown Chapter 8 Section 2 1.

Dec 31, 2015

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Page 1: Progressive Legislation Angela Brown Chapter 8 Section 2 1.

Progressive LegislationProgressive Legislation

Angela Brown

Chapter 8 Section 2

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Page 2: Progressive Legislation Angela Brown Chapter 8 Section 2 1.

Urban ReformsUrban Reforms

Attacking the BossesPolitical machines survived most attacks.Voters switched back and forth between

reformers and bosses.Voter support for reforms prompted

machines to work w/reformers = astonishing improvements

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Page 3: Progressive Legislation Angela Brown Chapter 8 Section 2 1.

Cities Take Over UtilitiesCities Take Over Utilities

City control provided residents with more affordable services.

1915 2 out of 3 cities had form of city-owned utilities.

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Page 4: Progressive Legislation Angela Brown Chapter 8 Section 2 1.

Providing Welfare ServicesProviding Welfare Services

Public baths, parks, work-relief program, playgrounds, free kindergarten, lodging houses for the homeless (provided by some cities).

“All people would be good, if social conditions were good.”

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Page 5: Progressive Legislation Angela Brown Chapter 8 Section 2 1.

State ReformsState Reforms

More Power to Voters One way to limit power of party bosses was to

give voters more direct say in lawmaking and choosing candidates.

1. Direct Primaries- an election in which voters cast ballots to select nominees for upcoming elections

1916 all but three states no longer handpicked party leaders to run

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Page 6: Progressive Legislation Angela Brown Chapter 8 Section 2 1.

1. 17th Amendment- popular election of Senators

2. Initiative Process- citizens can propose new laws by obtaining a certain percentage of voters’ signatures on a petition

– Once signatures are collected, proposed law placed on the ballot for the next election

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Page 7: Progressive Legislation Angela Brown Chapter 8 Section 2 1.

3. Referendum- gave voters a more direct role in legislation

– Citizens may demand via petition that a law passed by the legislature be “referred” to voters for their approval or rejection

4. Recall- gave voters the ability to remove public officials from office before the next election

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Page 8: Progressive Legislation Angela Brown Chapter 8 Section 2 1.

Triangle FireTriangle Fire

March 25, 1911A match or cigarette ignited a fire on the

eighth floor of the Triangle Shirtwaist Company in New York City.

Many of the exit doors were locked to prevent employee theft.

146 people died in the blaze.

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Page 9: Progressive Legislation Angela Brown Chapter 8 Section 2 1.

http://content.answers.com/main/content/wp/en-commons/thumb/1/18/200px-Triangle_Factory_fire_005.jpg

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http://www.english.uiuc.edu/maps/poets/m_r/pinsky/fatalities.jpg

http://www.gwu.edu/~erpapers/abouteleanor/timeline/images/triangleshirtwaist1_t.jpg

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Page 11: Progressive Legislation Angela Brown Chapter 8 Section 2 1.

Reforms of the WorkplaceReforms of the Workplace

Triangle Fire – improved fire safety standards – appoint fire inspectors, compulsory fire drills, unlock and fire proof exits.

Labor department established, accident insurance programs and compensation systems.

1920 all but five states had provisions for workplace accidents.

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Page 12: Progressive Legislation Angela Brown Chapter 8 Section 2 1.

1908 Muller V. Oregon – U.S. Supreme Court limited hours to 10 a day for women laundry workers

1907 National Child Labor Committee convinced 30 states to abolish child labor – children defined as under age 14

Progressives sought minimum wage legislation for woman and children.

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Page 13: Progressive Legislation Angela Brown Chapter 8 Section 2 1.

Federal ReformsFederal Reforms

TR’s “Square Deal” United Mine Workers strike due to low wages –

1902 TR insisted both sides submit to arbitration (3rd

party decides on legally binding solution) TR threatened to use army to seize and operate

mines 1903 arbitration gave miners 10% raise, reduced

hours 10 to 9. – they did not officially recognize union

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Page 14: Progressive Legislation Angela Brown Chapter 8 Section 2 1.

TR called in a “square deal” for both sides = slogan for his presidency

1904 regulate food, drug, railroad industries1906 Hepburn Act authorized Interstate

Commerce Commission to limit rates if shippers complained of unfair treatment – permission needed before raising rates

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Page 15: Progressive Legislation Angela Brown Chapter 8 Section 2 1.

1906 Pure Food Drug Act and Meat Inspection Act required accurate leabeling of ingredients, strict sanitary conditions, rating system for meat.

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Page 16: Progressive Legislation Angela Brown Chapter 8 Section 2 1.

Anti-Trust ActivismAnti-Trust Activism

Roosevelt’s Attorney General used Sherman Anti-Trust Act to sue Northern Securities Company – a holding company

A holding company buys up stocks and bonds of smaller companies = creates a monopoly

1904 Supreme Court dissolved the company

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Page 17: Progressive Legislation Angela Brown Chapter 8 Section 2 1.

1909 Government filed 42 anti-trust actions (Standard Oil, beef trust, American Tobacco Company)

TR not anti-business – believed trusts should be supervised and controlled

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Page 18: Progressive Legislation Angela Brown Chapter 8 Section 2 1.

Protecting the EnvironmentProtecting the Environment

Earlier Presidents created Yellowstone/Yosemite – preserved 35 million acres of forest land

1900s experts to develop policy for land and water use backed by scientific data.

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Page 19: Progressive Legislation Angela Brown Chapter 8 Section 2 1.

TR set aside 200 million acres for National forests, mineral reserves and water projects

1902 – National Reclamation Act – set aside money from the sale of public lands to fund construction of irrigation systems in arid states

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Page 20: Progressive Legislation Angela Brown Chapter 8 Section 2 1.

New Labor DepartmentNew Labor Department

1912 Children’s Bureau created1913 Department of Labor added as a new

cabinet department – supported legislation to benefit women/children (contained both children’s and women’s bureaus)

1920 Women’s Bureau createdfirst – female bureau heads at federal level

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Page 21: Progressive Legislation Angela Brown Chapter 8 Section 2 1.

New Constitutional New Constitutional AmendmentsAmendments

1913 16th Amendment authorized Congress to collect income taxes (prior relied on income from tariffs).

1919 – 18th Amendment- prohibition-illegal to make, sell, or import liquor – repealed in 1933

Not everyone favored prohibition but thought it would protect society from the poverty and violence associated with drinking.

School children signed pledges showing contempt for the “Cup of Death”.

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