The Failure of Jacksonian Democrats

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Democracy, a new form of government, a government for the people, was seen in different lights. As time progresses, the government becomes firmer in its regime and doctrine, yet keeps the same focus; for the people. The United States was created for the people, and by the people, and the need for the people to continue to be the main focus was crucial. However, once Jackson was elected president, the idea of people staying the main focus of government began to falter. Those who support Jackson wished for something in return, and Andrew Jackson supported the rights of the spoils system, thus giving his people the seats they thought they deserved. However, as time went on, the focus on the people slowly changed to what those in those special seats wanted. Jacksonian Democrats, who viewed themselves as the guardians of the United States Constitution under the presidency of Andrew Jackson claimed to have held the interest of the common people in high regard, altering not only our Forefathers’ electoral processes but the government as a whole. However, through their actions toward their common people, the uprooting of Native Americans, and the fatality of a national bank, they eventually created a larger mess than just a “kitchen cabinet” could withstand.
Although Jacksonian democrats held suspicion against the federal government’s past “bargains”, they, too, shared the evil. Contradicting themselves, after Jackson’s inauguration, those who claimed to have supported him in his election endeavors were rewarded with public office. The spoils system was thus established in Jacksonian democracy, leading to conspiracies. Those chosen, who were unworthy of their positions barely owned a positive trait to their name, for many were illiterate...

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... people. Their rising action could be described as a child forming a strategy to achieve what they want, such as a cookie in a cookie jar located somewhere higher than the child’s reach. Through time, they form a type of ladder, and in some cases, this ladder is made of objects that should not go together, like land greed and the lives of the settled Native Americans. If the child steps a wrong way on its makeshift ladder, it will come crashing down eventually, like the national bank. The democrats sought to do what they thought was right, just, and constitutional, yet, in the long run, their plans became negative, forming the Panic of 1837. The Jacksonian Democrats’ main focus was to reach their hands into the cookie jar, refusing to share the crumbs of government with the people who needed it most. Thus forming, in the future, a bigger mess to clean up in the end.

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