Monday, February 4, 2013

How did the Populist Party respond to the conditions of the Gilded Age?

The Populist Party (its real name was the "People's
Party") responded to the conditions of the Gilded Age by trying to increase the power of
farmers and, to some extent, workers.  They also tried to decrease the power of the
rich.


One of the major ways the Populists tried to do this
was through government ownership of major utilities and through regulation.  The
Populists tried to get the government, for example, to regulate the prices railroads
could charge for hauling freight.  They also tried to get the government to take
ownership of things like electric and telephone systems.


In
these ways, the Populists hoped, the power of the rich would be decreased and the
farmers and workers would have more power and better lives.

No comments:

Post a Comment

What is the meaning of the 4th stanza of Eliot's Preludes, especially the lines "I am moved by fancies...Infinitely suffering thing".

A century old this year, T.S. Eliot's Preludes raises the curtain on his great modernist masterpieces, The Love...