The
Republican Platform, Adopted at St. Louis, June 18th, 1896.
The Republicans
of the United States, assembled by their representatives in National
Convention, appealing for the popular and historical justification of their
claims to the matchless achievements of thirty years of Republican rule,
earnestly and confidently address themselves to the awakened intelligence,
experience, and conscience of their countrymen in the following declaration of
facts and principles:
For the first
time since the Civil War the American people have witnessed the calamitous
consequences of full and unrestricted Democratic control of the Government. It
has been a record of unparalleled incapacity, dishonor and disaster. In
administrative management it has ruthlessly sacrificed indispensable revenue,
entailed an unceasing deficit, eked out ordinary current expenses with borrowed
money, piled up the public debt by $262,000,000 in time of peace, forced an
adverse balance of trade, kept a perpetual menace hanging over the redemption
fund, pawned American credit to alien syndicates, and reversed all the measures
and results of successful Republican rule. In the broad effect of its policy it
has precipitated panic, blighted industry and trade with prolonged depression,
closed factories, reduced work and wages, halted enterprise and crippled
American production, while stimulating foreign production for the American
market. Every consideration of public safety and individual interest demands
that the Government shall be rescued from the hands of those who have shown
themselves incapable of conducting it without disaster at home and dishonor abroad,
and shall be restored to the party which for thirty years administred
it with unequalled success and prosperity. And in this connection we heartily
endorse the wisdom, patriotism and the success of the Administration of
President [Benjamin] Harrison.
Allegiance to
Protection Renewed.
We renew and
emphasize our allegiance to the policy of Protection as the bulwark of American
industrial independence and the foundation of American development and
prosperity. This true American policy taxes foreign products and encourages
home industry; it puts the burden of revenue on foreign goods; it secures the
American market for the American producer; it upholds the American standard of
wages for the American workingman; it puts the factory by the side of the farm,
and makes the American farmer less dependent on foreign demand and prices; it
diffuses general thrift and founds the strength of all on the strength of each.
In its reasonable application it is just, far and impartial, equally opposed to
foreign control and domestic monopoly, to sectional discrimination and
individual favoritism.
We denounce the
present Democratic tariff as sectional, injurious to the public credit and
destructive to business enterprise. We demand such an equitable tariff on
foreign imports which come into competition with American products, as will not
only furnish adequate revenue for the necessary expenses of the Government, but
will protect American labor from degradation to the wage level of other lands.
We are not pledged to any particular schedules. The question of rates is a
practical question, to be governed by the conditions of the time and of
production; the ruling and uncompromising principle is the protection and
development of American labor and industry. The country demands a right
settlement, and then it wants rest.
Reciprocity
Demanded. We believe the repeal of the reciprocity arrangements negotiated by
the last Republican Administration was a national calamity, and we demand their
renewal and extension on such terms as will equalize our trade with other
nations, remove the restrictions which now obstruct the sale of American
products in the ports of other countries, and secure enlarged markets for the
products of our farms, forests and factories. Protection and reciprocity are
twin measures of Republican policy and go hand in hand. Democratic rule has
recklessly struck down both, and both must be re-established. Protection for
what we produce; free admission for the necessaries of life which we do not
produce; reciprocal agreements of mutual interest which gain open markets for
us in return for our open market to others. Protection builds up domestic
industry and trade and secures our own market for ourselves; reciprocity builds
up foreign trade and finds an outlet for our surplus.
We condemn the
present Administration for not keeping faith with the sugar producers of this
country; the Republican party favors such protection
as will lead to the production on American soil of all the sugar which the
American people use and for which they pay other countries more than
$100,000,000 annually. To all our products--to those of the mine and the field,
as well as those of the shop and the factory--to hemp, to wool, the product of
the great industry of sheep husbandry, as well as to the finished woolens of
the mill--we promise the most ample protection.
Merchant
Marine.
We favor
restoring the early American policy of discriminating duties for the upbuilding of our merchant marine and the protection of our
shipping in the foreign carrying trade, so that American ships--the product of
American labor, employed in American shipyards, sailing under the Stars and
Stripes, and manned, officered and owned by Americans--can regain the carrying
of our foreign commerce. The Currency Plank.
The Republican party is unreservedly for sound money. It caused the
enactment of the law providing for the resumption of specie payment in 1879;
since then every dollar has been as good as gold.
We are
unalterably opposed to every measure calculated to debase our currency or
impair the credit of our country. We are, therefore, opposed to the free
coinage of silver, except by international agreement with the leading
commercial nations of teh world, which we pledge
ourselves to promote; and, until such agreement can be obtained, the existing
gold standard must be preserved. All our silver and paper currency must be
maintained at parity with gold, and we favor all measures designed to maintain
inviolable the obligations of the United States and all our money, whether coin
or paper, at the present standard, the standard of the most enlightened nations
of the earth.
Justice
to Veterans.
The veterans of
the Union armies deserve and should receive fair treatment and generous
recognition. Whenever practicable, they should be given the preference in the
matter of employment, and they are entitled to teh
enactment of such laws as are best calculated to secure the fulfilment
of the pledges made to them in the dark days of the countryÕs
peril. We denouce the practice in the Pension Bureau,
so recklessly and unjustly carried on by the present administration, of
reducing pensions and arbitrarily dropping names from the rolls, as deserving
the severest condemnation of the American people.
Foreign
Relations.
Our foreign policy
should be at all times firm, vigorous and dignified, and all our interests in
the Western hemisphere carefully watched and guarded. The Hawaiian Islands
should be controlled by the United States, and no foreign Power should be
permitted to interfere with them; the Nicaragua Canal should be built, owned,
and operated by the United States, and, by the
purchase of the Danish Islands, we should secure a propert
and much-needed naval station in the West Indies.
The massacres
in Armenia have aroused the deep sympathy and just indignation of the American
people, and we believe that the United States should exercise all the influence
it can properly exert to bring these atrocities to an end. In Turkey, American
residents have been exposed to the gravest dangers, and American property
destroyed. There, and everywhere, American citizens and American property must
be absolutely protected at all hazards and at any cost.
We reassert the
Monroe Doctrine in its full extent, and we reaffirm the right of the United
States to give the doctrine effect by responding to the appeals of any American
State for friendly intervention in case of European encroachment.