[Theodore Roosevelt by Theodore Roosevelt]@TWC D-Link bookTheodore Roosevelt CHAPTER V 12/76
But of course in these fights we were obliged to strike a large number of influential politicians, some of them in Congress, some of them the supporters and backers of men who were in Congress.
Accordingly we soon found ourselves engaged in a series of contests with prominent Senators and Congressmen.
There were a number of Senators and Congressmen--men like Congressman (afterwards Senator) H.C.Lodge, of Massachusetts; Senator Cushman K.Davis, of Minnesota; Senator Orville H.Platt, of Connecticut; Senator Cockrell, of Missouri; Congressman (afterwards President) McKinley, of Ohio, and Congressman Dargan, of South Carolina--who abhorred the business of the spoilsman, who efficiently and resolutely championed the reform at every turn, and without whom the whole reform would certainly have failed.
But there were plenty of other Senators and Congressmen who hated the whole reform and everything concerned with it and everybody who championed it; and sometimes, to use a legal phrase, their hatred was for cause, and sometimes it was peremptory--that is, sometimes the Commission interfered with their most efficient, and incidentally most corrupt and unscrupulous, supporters, and at other times, where there was no such interference, a man nevertheless had an innate dislike of anything that tended to decency in government.
These men were always waging war against us, and they usually had the more or less open support of a certain number of Government officials, from Cabinet officers down.
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