Progressive Covenant with the People
Theodore Roosevelt
[A speech excerpted from "A Confession of Faith,"
an address originally delivered to the national convention of the
Progressive party in Chicago on 6 August, 1912. See: Social
Justice and Popular Rule: Essays, Addresses, and Public Statements
Relating to the Progressive Movement (1910-1916) by Theodore
Roosevelt]
Political parties exist to secure responsible government and to
execute the will of the people. From these great staffs, both of the
old parties have ganged aside. Instead of instruments to promote the
general welfare they have become the tools of corrupt interests which
use them in martialling [sic] to serve their selfish purposes. Behind
the ostensible government sits enthroned an invisible government owing
no allegiance and acknowledging no responsibility to the people. To
destroy this invisible government, to befoul the unholy alliance
between corrupt business and corrupt politics is the first task of the
statesmanship of the day. Unhampered by tradition, uncorrupted by
power, undismayed by the magnitude of the task, the new party offers
itself as the instrument of the people, to sweep away old abuses, to
build a new and nobler government.
This declaration is our covenant with the people and we hereby bind
the party and its candidates with this [signation?] to the pledges
made there herein. With all my heart and soul, with every particle of
high purpose that is within me, I pledge you my word to do everything
I can to put every particle of courage, of common sense, and of
strength that I have at your disposal, and to endeavor so far as
strength has given me to live up to the obligations you have put upon
me and to endeavor to carry out in the interest of our whole people
the policies to which you have today solemnly dedicated yourselves in
the name of the millions of men and women for whom you speak. Surely
there never was a fight better worth making than the one in which we
are in. It little matters what befalls any one of us who for the time
being stands in the forefront of the battle. I hope we shall win, and
I believe that if we can wake the people to what the fight really
means we shall win. But, win or lose, we shall not falter.
Whatever fate may at the moment overtake any of us, the movement
itself will not stop. Our cause is based on the eternal principles of
righteousness; even though we who now lead may for the time fail, in
the end the cause itself shall triumph. Six weeks ago, here in
Chicago, I spoke to the honest representatives of a convention which
was not dominated by honest men; a convention wherein sat, alas! a
majority of men who, with sneering indifference to every principle of
right, so acted as to bring to a shameful end a party which had been
founded over half a century ago by men in whose souls burned the fire
of lofty endeavor. Now to you men, who, in your turn, have come
together to spend and be spent in the endless crusade against wrong,
to you who face the future resolute and confident, to you who strive
in a spirit of brotherhood for the betterment of our nation, to you
who gird yourselves for this great new fight in the never-ending
warfare for the good of humankind, I say in closing what in that
speech I said in closing: we stand at Armageddon, and we battle for
the Lord.
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