The Honorable Peter Stirling and What People Thought of Him eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 604 pages of information about The Honorable Peter Stirling and What People Thought of Him.

The Honorable Peter Stirling and What People Thought of Him eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 604 pages of information about The Honorable Peter Stirling and What People Thought of Him.

“It’s a pity it can’t please all, but the majority’s got to rule.”

“Yes,” promptly said another, “this is really a Maguire ratification meeting.”

“There’s nothing else to do,” affirmed a third.

But a fourth said:  “Then what are we here for?”

No one seemed to find an answer.  After a moment’s silence, the original speaker said: 

“It’s the only way we can be sure of winning.”

“He gives us every pledge,” echoed the second.

“And we’ve agreed, anyways, so we are bound,” continued the first speaker.

Peter took his cigar out of his mouth.  “Who are bound?” he asked, quietly.

“Why, the organization is—­the party,” said Number Two, with a “deny-it-if-you-dare” in his voice.

“I don’t see how we can back out now, Stirling,” said Number One.

“Who wants to?” said another.  “The Labor party promises to support us on our local nominations, and Maguire is not merely a Democrat, but he gives us every pledge.”

“There’s no good of talking of anything else anyhow,” said Number One, “for there will be a clean majority for Maguire in the convention.”

“And no other candidate can poll fifty votes on the first ballot,” said Number Two.

Then they all looked at Peter, and became silent.  Peter puffed his cigar thoughtfully.

“What do you say?” said Number One.

Peter merely shook his head.

“But I tell you it’s done,” cried one of the men, a little excitedly.  “It’s too late to backslide!  We want to please you, Stirling, but we can’t this time.  We must do what’s right for the party.”

“I’m not letting my own feeling decide it,” said Peter.  “I’m thinking of the party.  For every vote the Labor people give Maguire, the support of that party will lose us a Democratic vote.”

“But we can’t win with a triangular fight.  The Republicans will simply walk over the course.”

If Peter had been a hot-headed reformer, he would have said:  “Better that than that such a scoundrel shall win.”  But Peter was a politician, and so saw no need of saying the unpleasantest thing that occurred to him, even if he felt it.  Instead, he said:  “The Labor party will get as many votes from the Republicans as from us, and, for every vote the Labor party takes from us, we shall get a Republican vote, if we put up the right kind of a man.”

“Nonsense,” cried Number One.

“How do you figure that?” asked another.

“In these panic times, the nomination of such a man as Maguire, with his truckling to the lowest passions and his socialistic speeches, will frighten conservative men enough to make them break party lines, and unite on the most certain candidate.  That will be ours.”

“But why risk it, when, with Maguire, it’s certain?”

Peter wanted to say:  “Maguire shall not be endorsed, and that ends it.”  Instead, he said:  “We can win with our own man, and don’t need to trade with or endorse the Labor party.  We can elect Maguire by the aid of the worst votes in this city, or we can elect our own man by the aid of the best.  The one weakens our party in the future; the other strengthens it.”

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The Honorable Peter Stirling and What People Thought of Him from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.