One Hundred Years
Ago, Eugene Debs Gave An Anti-War Speech That Landed Him in Prison
By Peter Dreier
June 18, 2018
In
1920, Eugene Victor Debs ran for president from a cell in the federal prison in
Atlanta for a speech opposing World War 1 that he gave
100 years ago – on June 18, 1918.
Despite his imprisonment,
Debs received 913,664 votes – 3.4 percent of the total.
In his
speech, the Socialist Party leader told a packed crowd at a park in Canton,
Ohio: “You need to know that you are good for something more than slavery and
cannon fodder.”
In
1917, President Woodrow Wilson persuaded Congress to declare war on Germany and
its allies. That move catalyzed opposition from within the Congress (led by
Robert La Follette of Wisconsin) and by civil libertarians, religious
pacifists, and Socialists, led by Debs. Two months later, Congress passed the
Espionage Act, which made it illegal to incite active opposition to U.S.
involvement in the war. Federal agents arrested scores of Socialists and other
dissidents. Though ill, the 62-year old Debs criss-crossed the county,
delivering a series of antiwar speeches. The Canton speech proved to be his
last oration before heading to prison.
Eleven
days after the Canton speech, Debs was indicted in the U.S. District Court in
Cleveland for violating the Espionage Act. He was convicted by a jury on
September 12, 1918, and sentenced to federal prison. He appealed the ruling to
the Supreme Court, but on April 12, 1919, it confirmed the lower court’s
verdict. Debs was sentenced to 10 years imprisonment.
What
did Debs say 100 years ago that landed him in prison?
In his
speech, Debs told the crowd – a Socialist Party gathering that was infiltrated
by U.S. agents – that he was aware that he had to speak carefully to avoid
federal prosecution. So while he gave a typical speech that criticized
the capitalist system and blamed big business for pushing the country into war
and profiting from it, he was careful not to mention World War 1 or
specifically attack Wilson. Nevertheless, his speech was hardly subtle.
“The
master class has always declared the wars. The subject class has always fought
the battles,” Debs said. “The master class has had all to gain and nothing to
lose, while the subject class has had nothing to gain and all to
lose—especially their lives.”
“They
have always taught and trained you to believe it to be your patriotic duty to
go to war and to have yourselves slaughtered at their command. But in all the
history of the world you, the people, have never had a voice in declaring war,
and strange as it certainly appears, no war by any nation in any age has ever
been declared by the people.”
Debs
added:
“And
here let me emphasize the fact—and it cannot be repeated too often—that the
working class who fight all the battles, the working class who make the supreme
sacrifices, the working class who freely shed their blood and furnish the
corpses, have never yet had a voice in either declaring war or making peace. It
is the ruling class that invariably does both. They alone declare war and they
alone make peace.”
In
comments that resonate with today’s controversy over the meaning of patriotism,
Debs said:
“These
are the gentry who are today wrapped up in the American flag, who shout their
claim from the housetops that they are the only patriots, and who have their
magnifying glasses in hand, scanning the country for evidence of disloyalty,
eager to apply the brand of treason to the men who dare to even whisper their
opposition to Junker rule in the United Sates. No wonder Sam Johnson declared
that ‘patriotism is the last refuge of the scoundrel.’ He must have had this
Wall Street gentry in mind, or at least their prototypes, for in every age it
has been the tyrant, the oppressor and the exploiter who has wrapped himself in
the cloak of patriotism, or religion, or both to deceive and overawe the
people.”
Debs
was one of the nation’s great orators and his scathing attacks on the country’s
corporate plutocrats – resonated with many Americans disgruntled by rising
inequality.
In his Canton speech, he asked:
“To
whom do the Wall Street Junkers in our country marry their daughters? After
they have wrung their countless millions from your sweat, your agony and your
life’s blood, in a time of war as in a time of peace, they invest these untold
millions in the purchase of titles of broken-down aristocrats, such as princes,
dukes, counts and other parasites and no-accounts. Would they be satisfied to
wed their daughters to honest workingmen? To real democrats? Oh, no! They scour
the markets of Europe for vampires who are titled and nothing else. And they
swap their millions for the titles, so that matrimony with them becomes
literally a matter of money.”
Debs
attacked the super-rich who encouraged Americans to “cultivate war gardens,
while at the same time a government war report just issued shows that
practically 52 percent of the arable, tillable soil is held out of use by the
landlords, speculators and profiteers. They themselves do not cultivate the
soil. They could not if they would.”
If
Debs believed that by avoiding a direct attack on Wilson and the war would keep
him out of prison, he was mistaken. He was arrested, prosecuted, and
convicted anyway as part of the federal government’s repression of Socialists
and other radicals, who not only opposed U.S. involvement in the war world but
were also organizing workers in unions and electing many Socialist candidates
to local, state and federal office. To halt the Socialist Party’s momentum,
the government raided its local offices, banned its publications from the mail,
and arrested its leaders. In his Canton speech, Debs cited a number of
prominent Socialists who had been hauled off to jail for exercising their right
of free speech. He would soon be on that list.
But
before he entered prison, he made one more speech. On September 18, Debs
delivered his most famous speech in a Cleveland federal courtroom upon being
sentenced to prison. His opening remarks remain some of the most moving words
in American history:
“Your
Honor, years ago I recognized my kinship with all living beings, and I made up
my mind that I was not one bit better than the meanest on earth. I said then,
and I say now, that while there is a lower class, I am in it, and while there
is a criminal element I am of it, and while there is a soul in prison, I am not
free.”
“I
listened to all that was said in this court in support and justification of
this prosecution, but my mind remains unchanged. I look upon the Espionage Law
as a despotic enactment in flagrant conflict with democratic principles and
with the spirit of free institutions.”
“Your
Honor, I have stated in this court that I am opposed to the social system in
which we live; that I believe in a fundamental change—but if possible by
peaceable and orderly means.”
Who
was this beloved figure who, without being able to campaign for president,
still managed to garner over 900,000 votes for president while sitting in a
prison cell?
Debs
was both a fierce patriot and a fiery radical, but he came to his socialist
politics gradually, even reluctantly. Perhaps because of this he could persuade
and agitate audiences with his radical message, for he embodied the best of
America’s ideals of justice, compassion, and fairness.
Debs
looked like a bald Sunday School teacher, all six and a half feet of him, with
a kind face and an aura of optimism and hope. His political and social views
emerged from his Christian upbringing in the heartland of Indiana. He absorbed
the small-town values of skilled workers striving to join the middle class and
the virtues of hard work, frugality, and benevolence.
The
son of Alsatian immigrant retail grocers, Debs was born in 1855 and raised in
Terre Haute, Indiana. As a youth, he loved reading the fiery speeches of
dissidents like Patrick Henry and John Brown and soon began attending lectures
by such well-known orators as James Whitcomb Riley, abolitionist Wendell
Phillips, and suffragist Susan B. Anthony. He left school at 14 to work as a
paint scraper in the Terre Haute railroad yards. He quickly rose to a job as a
locomotive fireman. He was laid off during the depression of 1873, found
another job as a billing clerk for a grocery company, and never worked for a
railroad company again.
But he remained close to his railroad friends, who
admired his leadership skills. When the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen (BLF)
organized a chapter in Terre Haute in 1875, Debs signed up as a charter member
and was elected recording secretary.
Debs
originally viewed the BLF as a kind of charitable and fraternal organization,
helping injured workers and, if necessary, their widows and children. He
opposed strikes and the violence that often accompanied them, even though the
police and company thugs often caused the violence. After the railroad strike
of 1877—the first truly national strike in US history, which ended in defeat
for the unions after heavy government repression—Debs gave a speech defending
the union from charges, widespread in the press, that it had encouraged
violence. Debs got a rousing reception and was soon was named grand
secretary-treasurer of the national union and editor of Locomotive Fireman’s
Magazine. Under Debs’ editorship, the magazine became a leading labor voice,
its readership expanding far beyond BLF members.
In
addition to this union job, Debs embarked on a political career. He served two
terms as city clerk of Terre Haute and was elected to the Indiana State
Assembly in 1884, but after one term he decided that the labor movement was a
better way to achieve his reformist goals. He still believed in the possibility
of industrial cooperation and discouraged workers from participating in
confrontations with employers or the government.
In the
mid-1880s, the railroad companies—which had once provided well-paying jobs to
their skilled workers—began reclassifying occupations and cutting wages. This
led to a series of major strikes, each of which was crushed by the railroad
companies. The companies hired private thugs to use violence against strikers
and pitted the different railroad brotherhoods against each other, hiring scab
employees from different trades to replace the strikers.
But
with this new strike wave, Debs began to question whether big corporations
could ever be trusted to work cooperatively with workers or to support
political democracy.
These
events shook Debs’ thinking. As late as 1886, Debs, along with other railroad
brotherhood officials, refused to support the Knights of Labor strike against
Jay Gould’s railroad company. When the fledgling American Federation of Labor
that year led a national general strike for the eight-hour workday, Debs was silent.
But with this new strike wave, Debs began to question whether big corporations
could ever be trusted to work cooperatively with workers or to support
political democracy.
In
1891, realizing that railroad workers were easily divided and could not prevail
against the growing economic and political power of the corporations, Debs left
the BLF. He saw the need for an industry-wide union organization that would
unite all railroad workers. His guiding principle became the Knights of Labor
slogan: “An injury to one is the concern of all.” In 1893, Debs brought
together union leaders from the different crafts at a meeting in Chicago and
founded the American Railway Union (ARU).
The
ARU’s membership grew quickly. It was the first large national industrial
union, a forerunner of the great industrial unions that emerged in the 1930s,
and it won its first major test. In response to a strike, the Great Northern
Railroad in 1893 capitulated to almost all the union’s demands.
The
next year, the Pullman Company laid off workers and cut wages but did not lower
rent in the company-owned houses or prices for groceries at the company store
where workers were required to shop. Workers from Pullman asked the ARU for
support. Some Chicago civic leaders, including Jane Addams, tried to arrange
behind-the-scenes diplomacy to settle the strike, but Pullman refused to
negotiate. So Debs and the ARU called for a national boycott (or a “sympathy
strike”) of Pullman cars. The ARU’s 150,000 members in over twenty states
refused to work on trains pulling the cars. They went on strike, not to win any
demands of their own but to help several thousand Pullman workers win their
strike. But the railroads found a sympathetic judge who ruled that the boycott
was interfering with the US mail and issued an injunction to end the boycott.
The ARU refused to desist, so President Grover Cleveland—a Democrat and a foe
of the labor movement—sent in federal troops.
ARU leaders, including Debs, were
arrested on conspiracy charges. Debs and his union compatriots were sentenced
to six-month jail terms for disregarding the injunction.
Debs
used his six months in prison to think about what had gone wrong with his union
organizing. He decided that the collusion between the ever-larger corporations
and the federal government, including the courts and the National Guard, could
not be undone by union activism alone. Redeeming American democracy from its
corporate stranglehold required political action. Because both Republican and
Democratic presidents called in troops to stop working-class victories, Debs
was convinced that America needed a new political party, one whose base would
be made up of workers and their unions.
Milwaukee’s
Socialist leader Victor Berger visited Debs in jail, bringing a copy of Karl
Marx’s Das Kapital. Debs read it carefully and began to consider the potential
of socialism as an alternative to capitalism. After his release, he traveled to
Chicago by train, and was astonished to see a crowd of over 100,000 people
gathered in the pouring rain to greet him.
Debs
helped organize the Social Democratic Party, a new party modeled on similar
growing mass organizations in Europe.
Debs
helped organize the Social Democratic Party, a new party modeled on similar
growing mass organizations in Europe. He ran for president on the party’s
ticket in 1900 and received 88,000 votes. The next year, the Social Democrats
merged with some members of the Socialist Labor Party to form the Socialist
Party of America. Debs ran again for president in 1904, this time attracting
400,000 votes. In 1905, he joined with other union activists and radicals to
start the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), known as the “Wobblies.”
But although he and the Wobblies shared a belief in organizing all
workers into “one big union,” Debs did not share their opposition to political
action, to running candidates for office. The IWW favored what they called
“direct action” instead, including seizing direct control of industry through
mass strikes.
Debs
resigned from the IWW in 1908 and ran for president a third time, doing no
better than in 1904. But by 1910, America’s mood was changing. Dozens of
Socialists won victories in local and state races for office, advancing a
specific agenda of radical reforms, including women’s right to vote, child
labor laws, and workers’ rights to join unions and when necessary to strike, as
well as workplace safety laws for workers in railroads, mines, and factories.
Two
years later, they expanded their victories, and Debs polled 0ver 900,000 votes
for president – more than 6 percent of the total. He would have garnered more
votes, but two other candidates—Democrat Woodrow Wilson and Progressive Party
candidate (and former president) Theodore Roosevelt—stole some of the
Socialists’ thunder, diverting the votes of workers, women, and consumers with
promises of such “progressive” reforms as women’s suffrage, child labor laws,
and workers’ right to organize unions. One cartoonist drew a picture of Debs
skinny-dipping while Teddy Roosevelt made off with his clothes.
Debs
was a tireless campaigner but could not expect sympathetic coverage in the
mainstream press. The socialist newspapers—the Appeal to Reason in the Midwest
and the Jewish Daily Forward in New York, in particular—covered his campaign
and had large readerships. Still, Debs had to travel to get the word out,
taking trains from city to city, speaking wherever a crowd could be assembled.
Without microphones, Debs had to speak loudly and dramatically; his words
rippled through the crowd as people relayed the speech to one another.
Despite
Debs’ defeat in 1912, he won over 10 percent of the vote in Arizona,
California, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oklahoma, Oregon, and Washington State. His
campaign helped fellow Socialists win elections throughout the country. That
year, about 1,200 Socialist Party members held public office in 340 cities,
including seventy-nine mayors in cities including Milwaukee, Buffalo,
Minneapolis, Reading, and Schenectady.
Debs’
1920 campaign for president was his fifth and last. The slogan on one
campaign poster read, “From Atlanta Prison to the White House, 1920.” A popular
campaign button showed Debs in prison garb, standing outside the prison gates,
with the caption: “For President, Convict No. 9653.”
On
Christmas Day 1921, President Warren G. Harding, a Republican, freed Debs and
twenty-three other prisoners of conscience. By the time they were released, the
socialist movement that Debs had helped build was dead, a victim of government
repression and internal factional fighting between opponents and supporters of
the new Bolshevik regime in Russia. Debs died in 1926. But many of the
ideas that Debs and the Socialist Party championed—including women’s suffrage,
child labor laws, unemployment relief, public works jobs, Social Security, a minimum
wage, and others—took hold after his death.
Peter Dreier is E.P. Clapp Distinguished Professor of Politics, and chair of the Urban & Environmental Policy Department, at Occidental College. His most recent book is The 100 Greatest Americans of the 20th Century: A Social Justice Hall of Fame (Nation Books, 2012). His other books include: Place Matters: Metropolitics for the 21st Century(University Press of Kansas, 3rd edition, 2014), and The Next Los Angeles: The Struggle for a Livable City (University of California Press, revised 2006). He writes regularly for the Los Angeles Times, Common Dreams, The Nation, and Huffington Post.
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