Was The President of The People for The People?
Economic development and Politics which show if President Jackson was actually for the common man.
Jackson was not born into wealth and was a self-made man, and he knew the rights of those who aren’t elites must be protected too. As president he attempted to create America into a country for the common man. Therefore, it is a valid characterization of the Jacksonian era being for the common man is true. This is most apparent in the economic developments and politics of this period.
Jackson accomplished many significant things during his presidency that would affect America for a long time to come. However, while thinking of the countries future, he said he would offer “equal protection and equal benefits” to the Americans. He did so by not always succumbing to the powerful aristocrats, a prime example of this would be the abolishment of the National Bank. The National Bank would secure many wealthy aristocrats in more wealth and cause the poor to be victimized by massive monopolies the select elites possessed. Furthermore, he believed in the idea of social mobility, which meant that any person should be allowed to move up in class, as he had. This meant that he did not want to keep the rich, wealthy but instead he wanted to distribute the wealth and that he wanted the common man to succeed the way he had. Additionally, at many men were not able to vote, and he wanted to create universal male suffrage. This meant he wanted not only the while land owning males to be able to vote but instead all white males. This meant he did not want the people who had land and those who had enough money to afford land to vote, but instead, many more men, whom he felt deserved a say in their government.
Therefore it is most apparent in certain economic developments and the politics of this period, that the Jacksonian era was correctly stated as an era for the common people. This can be seen because he attempted to abolish the national bank in an attempt to prevent the monopolies the wealthy contained, created a sense of social mobility, and tried to obtain universal male suffrage. In hopes that universal male suffrage would give more political equality to those people who could not afford land.
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