BLAND
THE PARTING OF THE WAYS[1]
(1893)
Born in 1835, died in 1899; admitted to the bar in Utah in 1860; settled in Missouri, where in 1872 he was elected to Congress, serving until 1895; again elected to Congress in 1897, in 1896 an unsuccessful candidate for the Presidential nomination.
It is said that history repeats itself, and it seems that the Democratic party is especially the victim of history repeated in some way. When the people intrusted our party in 1884 with the administration of the government, when the Democratic House of Representatives was chosen, I remember full well, and I see around me gentlemen who remember it as I do, for they were here at that time, that before the inauguration of the president of the United States whom we had elected, the emissaries of Wall Street swarmed the lobbies of the House and this capitol, just as they did last winter, demanding—what? Demanding the repeal of the so-called Bland Act.
Precisely the same proceedings that we had here last winter! We were told then that it was the wish of the executive-elect that that Act be
- ↑ From a speech in the House of Representatives, on August 11, 1893.
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