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From
The Outlook, November 18, 1911, pp. 649-56 THE TRUSTS, THE PEOPLE, AND THE
SQUARE DEAL EDITORIAL BY THEODORE ROOSEVELT THE suit against the Steel Trust by
the Government has brought vividly before our people the need of
reducing to order our chaotic Government policy as regards business. As
President in messages to Congress I repeatedly called the attention of
that body and of the public to the inadequacy of the Anti-Trust Law by
itself to meet business conditions and secure justice to the people, and
to the further fact that it might, if left unsupplemented by additional
legislation, work mischief, with no compensating advantage; and I urged
as strong as I knew how that the policy followed with relation to
railways in connection with the Inter-State Commerce Law should be
followed by the National Government as regards all great business
concerns; and therefore that as a first step the powers of the Bureau of
Corporations should be greatly enlarged or else that there should be
created a Governmental board or commission with powers somewhat similar
to those of the Inter-state Commerce Commission, but covering the whole
field of inter-State business exclusive of transportation (which should
by law be kept wholly separate from ordinary industrial business, all
common ownership of the industry and the railway being forbidden). In
the end I have always believed that it would also be necessary to give
the National Government complete power over the organization and
capitalization of all business concerns engaged in inter-State commerce.
A member of my Cabinet with whom even
more than with the various Attorneys-General I went over every detail of
this trust situation, was the one time Secretary of the Interior Mr.
James R. Garfield. He writes me as follows concerning the suit against
the Steel Corporation:
"Nothing appeared before the
House Committee that made me believe we were deceived by Judge Gary. This I think is a case that shows
clearly the difference between destructive litigation and constructive
legislation. I have not vet seen a full copy of the Government's
petition, but our papers give nothing that indicates any kind of unfair
or dishonest competition such as existed in both the Standard Oil and
Tobacco Cases As I understand it, the competitors of the Steel Company
have steadily increased in strength during the last six or seven years
Further- more, the per cent of the business done by the Steel
Corporation has decreased during that time. As you will remember, at our
first conference with Judge Gary, the Judge stated that it was the
desire and purpose of the Company to conform to what the Government
wished, it being the purpose of the Company absolutely to obey the law
both in spirit and letter. Throughout the time that I had charge of the
investigation, and while we were in Washington I do not know of a single
instance where the Steel Company refused any information requested; but,
on the contrary, aided in every possible way our investigation.
The position now taken by the
Government is absolutely destructive of legitimate business because they
outline no rule of conduct for business of any magnitude. It is absurd
to say that the courts can lay down such rules. The most the courts can
do is to find as legal or illegal the particular transactions brought
before them. Hence, after years of tedious litigation there would be no
clear-cut rule for future action. This method of procedure is dealing
with the device, not the result, and drives business to the elaboration
of clever devices, each of which must be tested in the courts.
I have yet to find a better method of
dealing with the anti-trust situation than that suggested by the bill
which we agreed upon in the last days of your Administration. That bill
should be used as a basis for legislation, and there could be
incorporated upon it whatever may be determined wise regarding the
direct control and supervision of the National Government, either
through a commission similar to the Inter-State Commerce Commission or
other-wise."
Before taking up the matter in its
large aspect, I wish to say one word as to one feature of the Government
suit against the Steel Corporation. One of the grounds for the suit is
the acquisition by the Steel Corporation of the Tennessee Coal and Iron
Company; and it has been alleged, on the authority of the Government
officials engaged in carrying on the suit, that as regards this
transaction I was misled by the representatives of the Steel
Corporation, and that the facts were not accurately or truthfully laid
before me. This statement is not correct. I believed at the time that
the facts in the case were as represented to me on behalf of the Steel
Corporation, and my further knowledge has convinced me that this was
true. I believed at the time that the representatives of the Steel
Corporation told me the truth as to the change that would be worked in
the percentage of the business which the proposed acquisition would give
the Steel Corporation, and further inquiry has convinced me that they
did so. I was not misled. The representatives of the Steel Corporation
told me the truth as to what the effect of the action at that time would
be, and any statement that I was misled or that the representatives of
the Steel Corporation did not thus tell me the truth as to the facts of
the case is itself not in accordance with the truth. In the Outlook of
August 19 last I gave in full the statement I had made to the
Investigating Committee of the House of Representatives on this matter.
That statement is accurate, and I reaffirm everything I therein said.
not only as to what occurred, but also as to my belief in the wisdom and
propriety of my action-indeed, the action not merely was wise and
proper, but it would have been a calamity from every standpoint had I
failed or to take it. On page 137 of the printed report of the testimony
before the Committee will be found Judge Gary's account of the meeting
between himself and Mr. Frick and Mr. Root and myself. This account
states the facts accurately. It has been alleged g that the purchase by
the Steel Corporation of the property of the Tennessee Coal and Iron
company gave the Steel Corporation practically a monopoly of the
Southern iron ores--that is, of the iron ores south of the Potomac and
the Ohio. My information, which I have every reason to believe is
accurate and not successfully to be challenged, is that, of these
Southern iron ores the Steel Corporation has, including the property
gained from the Tennessee Coal and Iron Company, less than 20 per
cent-perhaps not over 16 per cent. This is a very much smaller
percentage than the percentage it holds of the Lake Superior ores, which
even after the surrender of the Hill lease will be slightly over 50 per
cent. According to my view, therefore, and unless--which I do not
believe possible--these figures can be successfully challenged, the
acquisition of the Tennessee Coal and Iron Company's ores in no way
changed the situation as regards making the Steel Corporation a
monopoly. The showing as to the percentage of production of all kinds of
steel ingots and steel castings in the United States by the Steel
Corporation and by all other manufacturers respectively makes an even
stronger case. It makes the case even stronger than I put it in my
testimony before the investigating Committee, for I was scrupulously
careful to make statements that erred, if at all, against my own
position. It appears from the figures of production that in 1901 the
Steel Corporation had to its credit nearly 66 per cent of the total
production as against a little over 34 per cent by all other steel
manufacturers. The percentage then shrank steadily, until in 1906, the
year before the acquisition of the Tennessee Coal and Iron properties,
the percentage was a little under 58 per cent. In spite of the
acquisition of these properties, the following year, 1907, the total
percentage shrank slightly, and this shrinking has continued until in
1910 the total percentage of the Steel Corporation is but a little over
54 per cent, and the percentage by all other steel manufacturers but a
fraction less than 46 per cent. Of the 54 3-10 per cent produced by the
Steel Corporation 1 9-10 per cent is produced by the former Tennessee
Coal and Iron Company. In other words, these figures show that the
acquisition of the Tennessee Coal and Iron Company did not in the
slightest degree change the situation, and that during the ten years
which include the acquisition of these properties by the Steel
Corporation the percentage of total output of steel manufacturers in
this country by the Steel Corporation has shrunk from nearly 66 percent
to but a trifle over 54 per cent. I do not believe that these figures
can be successfully controverted, and if not successfully controverted
they show clearly not only that the acquisition of the Tennessee Coal
and Iron properties wrought no change in the status of the Steel
Corporation, but that the Steel Corporation during the decade has
steadily lost, instead of gained, in monopolistic character.
So much for the facts in this
particular case. Now for the general subject. When m) Administration
took office, I found, not only that there had been little real
enforcement of the Anti-Trust Law and but little more effective
enforcement of the Inter-State Commerce Law, but also that the decisions
were so chaotic and the laws themselves so vaguely drawn, or at least
interpreted in such widely varying fashions, that the biggest business
men tended to treat both laws as dead letters. The series of actions by
which we succeeded in making the Inter-State Commerce Law an efficient
and most useful instrument in regulating the transportation of the
country and exacting justice from the big railways without doing them
injustice-while, indeed, on the contrary, securing them against
injustice-need not here be related. The Anti-Trust Law it was also
necessary to en- force as it had never hitherto been enforced; both
because it was on the statute-books and because it was imperative to
teach the masters of the biggest corporations in the land that they were
not, and would not be permitted to regard themselves as above the law.
Moreover, where the combination has really been guilty of misconduct the
law serves a useful purpose, and in such cases as those of the Standard
Oil and Tobacco Trusts if effectively enforced, the law confers a real
and great good.
Suits were brought against the most
powerful corporations in the land which we were convinced had clearly
and beyond question violated the Anti-Trust Law. These suits were
brought with great care and only where we felt so sure of our facts that
we could be fairly certain that there was a likelihood of success. As a
matter of fact in most of the important suits we were successful. It was
imperative that these suits should be brought, and very real good was
achieved by bringing them, for it was only these suits that made the
great masters of corporate capital in America fully realize that they
were the servants and not the masters of the people, that they were
subject to the law, and that they would not be permitted to be a law
unto themselves; and the corporations against which we proceeded had
sinned, not merely by being big (which we did not regard as in itself a
sin), but by being guilty of unfair practices towards their competitors,
and by procuring unfair advantages from the railways. But the resulting
situation has made it evident that the Anti-Trust Law is not adequate to
meet the situation that has grown up because of modern business
conditions and the accompanying tremendous increase in the business use
of vast quantities of corporate wealth. As I have said, this was already
evident to my mind when I was President, and in communications to
Congress I repeatedly stated the facts. But when I made these
communications there were still plenty of people who did not believe
that we would succeed in the suits that had been instituted against the
Standard Oil, the Tobacco, and other corporations, and it was impossible
to get the public as a whole to realize what the situation was. Sincere
zealots who believed that all combinations could be destroyed and the
old-time conditions of unregulated competition restored, insincere
politicians who knew better but made believe that they thought whatever
their constituents wished them to think crafty reactionaries who wished
to see on the statute-books laws which they believed unenforceable, and
the almost solid "Wall Street crowd " or representatives of
"big business " who at that time opposed with equal violence
both wise and necessary and unwise and improper regulation of
business--all fought against the adoption of a sane, effective, and
far-reaching policy.
It is a vitally necessary thing to
have the persons in control of big trusts of the character of the
Standard Oil Trust and Tobacco Trust taught that they are under the law,
just as it was a necessary thing to have the Sugar Trust taught the same
lesson in drastic fashion by Mr. Henry L. Stimson when he was United
States District Attorney in the city of New York. But to attempt to meet
the whole problem not by administrative governmental action but by a
succession of lawsuits is hopeless from the standpoint of working out a
permanently satisfactory solution. Moreover, the results sought to be
achieved are achieved only in extremely insufficient and fragmentary
measure by breaking up all big corporations, whether they have behaved
well or ill, into a number of little corporations which it is perfectly
certain will be largely, and perhaps altogether, under the same control.
Such action is harsh and mischievous if the corporation is guilty of
nothing except its size; and where, as in the case of the Standard Oil,
and especially the Tobacco, trusts, the corporation has been guilty of
immoral and anti-social practices, there is need for far more drastic
and thoroughgoing action than any that has been taken, under the recent
decree of the Supreme Court. In the case of the Tobacco Trust, for
instance, the settlement in the Circuit Court, in which the
representatives of the Government seem inclined to concur, practically
leaves all of the companies still substantially under the control of the
twenty-nine original defendants. Such a result is lamentable from the
standpoint of justice. The decision of the Circuit Court, if allowed to
stand, means that the Tobacco Trust has merely been obliged to change
its clothes, that none of the real offenders have received any real
punishment, while, as the New York "Times," a pro-trust paper,
says the tobacco concerns, in their new clothes, are in positions of
"ease and luxury," and "immune from prosecution under the
law." Surely, miscarriage of justice is not
toll strong a term to apply to such a result when considered in
connection with what the Supreme Court said of this Trust. That great
Court in its decision used language which in spite of its habitual and
severe self-restraint in stigmatizing wrong-doing, yet unhesitatingly
condemns the Tobacco Trust for moral turpitude, saying that the case
shows an "ever-present manifestation… of conscious wrongdoing
" by the Trust, whose history is " replete with the doing of
acts which it was the obvious purpose of the statute to forbid, …
demonstrative of the existence from the beginning of a purpose to
acquire dominion and control of the tobacco trade, not by the mere
exertion of the ordinary right to contract and to trade. but by methods
devised in order to monopolize the trade by driving competitors out of
business, which were ruthlessly carried out upon the assumption that to
work upon the fears or play upon the cupidity of competitors would make
success possible." The letters from and to various officials of the
Trust, which were put in evidence show a literally astounding and
horrifying indulgence by the Trust in wicked and depraved business
methods-such as the "endeavor to cause a strike in their [a rival
business firm's] factory," or the "shutting off the market
" of an independent tobacco firm by "taking the necessary
steps to give them a warm reception," or forcing importers into a
price agreement by causing and continuing "a demoralization of the
business for such length of time as may be deemed desirable " (I
quote from the letters). A Trust guilty of such conduct should be
absolutely disbanded, and the only way to prevent the repetition of such
conduct is by strict Government supervision, and not merely by lawsuits.
The Anti-Trust Law cannot meet the
whole situation, nor can any modification of the principle of the
Anti-Trust Law avail to meet the whole situation. The fact is that mans
of the men who have called themselves Progressives, and who certainly
believe that they are Progressives, represent in reality in this matter
not progress at all but a kind of sincere rural toryism. These men
believe that it is possible by strengthening the Anti-Trust Law to
restore business to the competitive conditions of the middle of the last
century. Any such effort is foredoomed to end in failure, and, if
successful, would be mischievous to the last degree. Business cannot be
successfully conducted in accordance with the practices and theories of
sixty years ago unless we abolish steam, electricity, big cities, and,
in short, not only all modern business and modern industrial conditions,
but all the modern conditions of our civilization. The effort to restore
competition as it was sixty years ago, and to trust for justice solely
to this proposed restoration of competition, is just as foolish as It we
should go back to the flintlocks of Washington's Continentals as a
substitute for modern weapons of precision. The effort to prohibit all
combinations, good or bad, is bound to fail, and ought to fail; when
made, it merely means that some of the worst combinations are not
checked and that honest business is checked. Our purpose should be, not
to strangle business as an incident of strangling combinations, but to
regulate big corporations in thoroughgoing and effective fashion, so as
to help legitimate business as an incident to thoroughly and completely
safeguarding the interests of the people as a whole. Against all such
increase of Government regulation the argument is raised that it would
amount to a form of Socialism. This argument is familiar; it is
precisely the same as that which was raised against the creation of the
Inter-State Commerce Commission, and of all the different utilities
commissions in the different States, as I myself saw, thirty years ago,
when I was a legislator at Albany, and these questions came up in
connection with our State Government. Nor can action be effectively
taken by any one State. Congress alone has power under the Constitution
effectively and thoroughly and at all points to deal with interstate
commerce, and where Congress, as it should do, provides laws that will
give the Nation full jurisdiction over the whole field then that
jurisdiction becomes, of necessity, exclusive-although until Congress
does act affirmatively and thoroughly it is idle to expect that the
States will or ought to rest content with non-action on the part of both
Federal and State authorities. This statement, by the way, applies also
to the question of "usurpation " by any one branch of our
Government of the rights of another branch. It is contended that in
these recent decisions the Supreme Court legislated; so it did; and it
had to; because Congress had signally failed to do its duty by
legislating. For the Supreme Court to nullify an act of the Legislature
as unconstitutional except on the clearest grounds is usurpation; to
interpret such an act in an obviously wrong sense is usurpation; but
where the legislative body persistently leaves open a field which it is
absolutely imperative, from the public standpoint, to fill, then no
possible blame attaches to the official or officials who step in because
they have to, and who then do the needed work in the interest of the
people. The blame in such cases lies with the body which has been
derelict, and not with the body which reluctantly makes good the
dereliction. A quarter of a century ago, Senator
Cushman R. Davis, a statesman who amply deserved the title of statesman,
a man of the highest courage, of the sternest adherence to the
principles laid down by an exacting sense of duty, an unflinching
believer in democracy who was as little to be cowed by a mob as by a
plutocrat, and moreover a man who possessed the priceless gift of
imagination, a gift as important to a statesman as to a historian, in an
address delivered at the annual commencement of the University of
Michigan on July 1, 1886, spoke as follows of corporations:
"Feudalism, with its domains,
its untaxed lords, their retainers, its exemptions and privileges, made
war upon the aspiring spirit of humanity, and fell with ail its
grandeurs. Its spirit walks the earth and haunts the institutions of to-dav,
in the great corporations, with the control of the National highways,
their occupation of great domains, their power to tax, their cynical
contempt for the law, their sorcery to debase most gifted men to the
capacity of splendid slaves, their pollution of the ermine of the judge
and the robe of the Senator, their aggregation in one man of wealth so
enormous as to make Croesus seem a pauper, their picked, paid, and
skilled retainers who are summoned by the message of electricity and
appear upon the wings of steam. If we look into the origin of feudalism
and of the modern corporations--those Dromios of history--we find that
the former originated in a strict paternalism which is scouted by modern
economists, and that the latter has grown from an unrestrained freedom
of action, aggression and development, which they commend as the very
ideal oft political wisdom. Laissez-faire, says the professor,
when it often means bind and gag that the strongest may work his will.
It is a plea for the survival of the fittest--for the strongest male to
take possession of the herd by a process of extermination. If we examine
this battle cry of political polemics, we find that it is based upon the
conception of the divine right of property, and the preoccupation by
older or more favored or more alert or richer men or nations, of
territory, of the forces of nature, of machinery, of All the functions
of what we call civilization. Some of these men, who are really great,
follow these conceptions to their conclusions with dauntless
intrepidity."
When Senator Davis spoke, few men of
great power had the sympathy and the vision necessary to perceive the
menace contained in the growth of corporations; and the men who did see
the evil were struggling blindly to get rid of it, not by frankly
mutineer the new situation with new methods, but by insisting upon the
entirely futile effort to abolish what modern conditions had rendered
absolutely inevitable. Senator Davis was under no such illusion. He
realized keenly that it was absolutely impossible to go back to an
outworn social status, and that we must abandon definitely the laissez-faire
theory of political economy, and fearlessly champion a system of
increased Governmental control paying no heed to the cries of the worthy
people who denounce this as Socialistic. He saw that, in order to meet
the inevitable increase in the power of corporations produced by modern
industrial conditions, it would be necessary to increase in like fashion
the activity of the sovereign power which alone could control such
corporations. As has been aptly said, the only way to meet a
billion-dollar corporation is by invoking the protection of a
hundred-billion-dollar government; in other words, of the National
Government, for no State Government is strong enough both to do justice
to corporations and to exact justice from them. Said Senator Davis in
this admirable address, which should be reprinted and distributed
broadcast: "The liberty of the individual
has been annihilated by the logical process constructed to maintain it.
We have come to a political deification of Mammon. Laissez-faire
is not utterly blameworthy. It begat modern democracy, and made the
modern republic possible. There can be no doubt of that. But there it
began its limit of political benefaction, and began to incline toward
the point where extremes meet. . . . To every assertion that the people
in their collective capacity of a government ought to exert their
indefeasible right of self-defense, it is said you touch the sacred
rights of property."
The Senator then goes on to say that
we now have to deal with an oligarchy of wealth, and that the Government
must develop power sufficient enough to enable it to do the task.
Few will dispute the fact that the
present situation is not satisfactory and cannot be put on a permanently
satisfactory basis unless we put an end to the period of groping and
declare for a fixed policy, a policy which shall dearly define and
punish wrong-doing, which shall put a stop to the iniquities done in the
name of business, but which shall do strict equity to business. We
demand that big business give the people a square deal; in return we
must insist that when any one engaged in big business honestly endeavors
to do right he shall himself be given a square deal; and the first, and
most elementary, kind of square deal is to give him in advance full
information as to just what he can, and what he cannot, legally and
properly do. It is absurd, and much worse than absurd, to treat the
deliberate lawbreaker as on an exact par with the man eager to obey the
law, whose only desire is to find out from some competent Governmental
authority what the law is, and then to live up to it. Moreover, it is
absurd to treat the size of a corporation as in itself a crime. As Judge
Hook says in his opinion in the Standard Oil Case: " Magnitude of
business does not alone constitute a monopoly . . . the genius and
industry of man when kept to ethical standards still have full play, and
what he achieves is his . . . success and magnitude of business, the
rewards of fair and honorable endeavor [are not forbidden]... [the
public welfare is threatened only when success is attained] by wrongful
or unlawful methods." Size may, and in my opinion does, make a
corporation fraught with potential menace to the community; and may, and
in my opinion should, therefore make it incumbent upon the community to
exercise through its administrative (not merely through its judicial)
officers a strict supervision over that corporation in order to see that
it does not go wrong, but the size in itself does not signify
wrong-doing, and should not be held to signify wrong-doing.
Not only should any huge corporation
which has gained its position by unfair methods. and by interference
with the rights of others, by demoralizing and corrupt practices, in
short, by sheer baseness and wrong-doing, be broken up, but it should be
made the business of some administrative governmental body, by constant
supervision, to see that it does not come together again, save under
such strict control as shall insure the community against all repetition
of the bad conduct-and it should never be permitted thus to assemble its
parts as long as these parts are under the control of the original
offenders, for actual experience has shown that these men are, from the
standpoint of the people at large, unfit to be trusted with the power
implied in the management of a large corporation. But nothing of
importance is gained by breaking up a huge inter-State and international
industrial organization which has not offended otherwise than by its
size, into a number of small concerns without any attempt to regulate
the way in which those concerns as a whole shall do business. Nothing is
gained by depriving the American Nation of good weapons wherewith to
fight in the great field of international industrial competition. Those
who would seek to restore the days of unlimited and uncontrolled
competition and who believe that a panacea for our industrial and
economic ills is to be found in the mere breaking up of all big
corporations simply because they are big are attempting not only the
impossible, but what if possible, would be undesirable. They are acting
as we should act if we tried to dam the Mississippi. to stop its flow
outright. The effort would be certain to result in failure and disaster;
we would have attempted the impossible, and so would have achieved
nothing, or worse than nothing. But by building levees along the
Mississippi, not seeking to dam the stream, but to control it. we are
able to achieve our object and to confer inestimable good in the course
of so doing. This Nation should definitely adopt
the policy of attacking, not the mere fact of combination. but the evils
and wrong-doing which so frequently accompany combination The fact that
a combination is very big is ample reason for exercising a close and
jealous supervision over it, because its size renders it potent for
mischief; but it should not be punished unless it actually does the
mischief, it should merely be so supervised and controlled as to
guarantee us, the people, against its doing mischief. We should not
strive for a policy of unregulated competition and of the destruction of
all big corporations, that is, of all the most efficient business
industries in the land. Nor should we persevere in the hopeless
experiment of trying to regulate these industries by means only of
lawsuits, each lasting several years, and of uncertain result. We should
enter upon a course of supervision, control, and regulation of these
great corporations--a regulation which we should not fear, if necessary,
to bring to the point of control of monopoly prices, just as in
exceptional cases railway rates are now regulated. Either the Bureau of
Corporations should be authorized, or some other governmental body
similar to the Inter-State Commerce Commission should be created, to
exercise this supervision, this authoritative control. When once immoral
business practices have been eliminate… by such control, competition
will thereby be again revived as a healthy factor, although not as
formerly an all-sufficient factor, in keeping the general business
situation sound. Wherever immoral business practices still obtain--as
they obtained in the cases of the Standard Oil Trust and Tobacco
Trust-the Anti-Trust Law can be invoked; and wherever such a prosecution
is successful, and the courts declare a corporation to possess a
monopolistic character, then that corporation should be completely
dissolved, and the parts ought never to be again assembled save on
whatever terms and under whatever conditions may be imposed by the
governmental body in which is vested the regulatory power. Methods can
readily be devised by which corporations sincerely desiring to act
fairly and honestly can on their own initiative come under this
thoroughgoing administrative control by the Government and thereby be
free from the working of the Anti-Trust Law. But the law will remain to
be invoked against wrongdoers: and under such conditions it could be
invoked far more vigorously and successfully than at present.
It is not necessary in an article
like this to attempt to work out such a plan in detail. It can assuredly
be worked out. Moreover, in my opinion, substantially some such plan
must be worked out or business chaos will continue. Wrong-doing such as
was perpetrated by the Standard Oil Trust, and especially by the Tobacco
Trust, should not only be punished. but if possible punished in the
persons of the chief authors and beneficiaries of the wrong, far more
severely than at present. But punishment should not be the only, or
indeed the main, end in view. Our aim should be a policy of construction
and not one of destruction Our aim should not be to punish the men who
have made a big corporation successful merely because they have made it
big and successful, but to exercise such thoroughgoing supervision and
control over them as to insure their business skill being exercised in
the interest of the public and not against the public interest.
Ultimately, I believe that this control should undoubtedly indirectly or
directly extend to dealing with all questions connected with their
treatment of their employees, including the wages, the hours of labor,
and the like. Not only is the proper treatment of a corporation, from
the standpoint of the managers, shareholders, and employees, compatible
with securing from that corporation the best standard of public service,
but when the effort is wisely made it results in benefit both to the
corporation and to the public. The success of Wisconsin in dealing with
the corporations within her borders. so as both to do them justice and
to exact justice in return from them toward the public, has been signal;
and this .Nation should adopt a progressive policy in substance akin to
the progressive policy not merely formulated in theory but reduced to
actual practice with such striking success in Wisconsin.
To sum up, then. It is practically
impossible, and, if possible, it would be mischievous and undesirable,
to try to break up all combinations merely because they are large and
successful, and to put the business of the country back into the middle
of the eighteenth century conditions of intense and unregulated
competition between small and weak business concerns. Such an effort
represents not progressiveness but an unintelligent though doubtless
entirely well-meaning toryism. Moreover, the effort to administer a law
merely by lawsuits and court decisions is bound to end in signal
failure, and meanwhile to be attended with delays and uncertainties and
to put a premium upon legal sharp practice. Such an effort does not
adequately punish the guilty, and yet works great harm to the innocent.
Moreover, it entirely fails to give the publicity which is one of the
best by-products of the system of control by administrative officials;
publicity, which is not only good in. itself, but furnishes the data for
whatever further action may be necessary. We need to formulate
immediately and definitely a policy which, in dealing with big
corporations that behave themselves and which contain no menace save
what is necessarily potential in any corporation which is of great size
and very well managed. shall aim not at their destruction but at their
regulation and supervision, so that the Government shall control them in
such fashion as amply to safeguard the interests of the whole public
including producers, consumers, and wage-workers. This control should,
if necessary, be pushed in extreme cases to the point of exercising
control over monopoly prices as o rates on railways are now controlled;
al though this is not a power that should be used when it is possible to
avoid it. The law should be clear, unambiguous. certain, so that honest
men may not find that unwittingly they have violated it. In short. our
aim should be, not to destroy, but effectively and in thoroughgoing
fashion to regulate and control, in the public interest the great
instrumentalities of modern business, which it is destructive of the
general welfare of the community to destroy, and which nevertheless it
is vitally necessary to that general welfare to regulate and control.
Competition will remain as a very important factor when once we have
destroyed the unfair business methods, the criminal interference with
the rights of others which alone enabled certain swollen combinations to
crush out their competitors-and. incidentally, the "
conservatives" will do well to remember that these unfair and
iniquitous methods by great masters of corporate capital have done more
to cause popular discontent with the propertied classes than all the
orations of all the Socialist orators in the country put together.
I have spoken above of Senator
Davis's admirable address delivered a quarter of a century ago. Senator
Davis s one-time partner. Frank B. Kellogg, the Government counsel who
did so much to win success for the Government in its prosecutions of the
trusts, has recently delivered before the Palimpsest Club of Omaha an
excellent address on the subject; Mr. Prouty, of the Inter-State
Commerce Commission, has recently, in his speech before the
Congregational Club of Brooklyn, dealt with the subject from the
constructive side; and in the proceedings of the American Bar
Association for 1904 there is an admirable paper on the need of
thoroughgoing Federal control over corporations doing an inter-State
business, by Professor Horace L. Wilgus. of the University of Michigan.
The National Government exercises control over inter-state commerce
railways, and it can in similar fashion, through an appropriate
governmental body, exercise control over all industrial organizations
engaged in inter-State commerce. This control should be exercised, not
by the courts, but by an administrative bureau or board such as the
Bureau of Corporations or the Inter-State Commerce Commission; for the
courts cannot with advantage permanently perform executive and
administrative functions.
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