Andrew Jackson example essay topic
Jackson advocated a single term of either four or six years for the chief executive and he proposed this change to Congress. Jackson also felt that Senators should be elected to four-year terms by the people, not by the state legislatures. He would even have the electorate select its federal judges for terms of seven years which indicated his commitment to rotation of office as a means of democratizing the government. (Schlesinger pp. 314,402-406) Jackson's argument for the principle of "rotation of office" was the argument of democracy. Offices exist to serve the people, no one has a special claim to office, and there are no elites, therefore, removal from office is not intrinsically wrong. So when the people elect a new President, it is only right that he be given the opportunity to bring into government the kind of people he needs to help him accomplish the tasks he was elected to perform.
He shouldn't be saddled with the holdouts of a previous administration who would most likely be indifferent, if not hostile, to the programs of the new President. Democracy requires that the decision of the people in the selection of their new chief executive should be reflected down to the last office holder, Jackson contended. And if his policy were implemented, he declared, then the notion of office as a specie of property would be terminated. (pp. 413-414) Although Jackson made a great noise about his policy of removal he actually dismissed relatively few men from government service. It has been shown that during his entire eight years as President he replaced no more than 10 percent of all office holders. In the first eighteen months of his presidency, only 919 out of 10,093 employees were removed. This is a very modest record of removal.
Also, it has been pointed out that Jackson's appointees, in terms of their education, social, and economic backgrounds, were hardly different from those of his predecessors in the presidential office. Government service was not really opened to the general public, as Jackson seemed to be demanding, but rather remained with the same class of bureaucrat that had always controlled the service. Jackson's commitment to the principle of rotation advanced the democratic process. Also, in all the changes he initiated while in office and all the changes he attempted to initiate, Jackson remained deeply rooted in tradition. Jackson's sense of the past and its value should not be underestimated. Historical continuity is never easily broken, and Jackson was more respectful of it than is generally appreciated.
Burstein, Andrew. The Passions of Andrew Jackson. New York: Random House, 2003. Miller, Douglas, T. "Jacksonian Democracy". Dictionary of American History. vol. 3. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1940.
Feller, Daniel. "Jackson, Andrew". The Encyclopedia of American Political History. Finkelman, Paul. Washington D.C. : CQ Press, 2001. Gie napp, William, E. "Jacksonian Ideology".
Encyclopedia of American Cultural and Intellectual History. Canton, Mary. vol. 1. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 2001. Kohl, Lawrence. "Jacksonian Era". Encyclopedia of the United States in the Nineteenth Century.
Finkelman, Paul. vol. 2.