Hello and welcome to this bonus episode of a history podcast recorded straight after our recently published episode.
Speaker AWho is Calvin Coolidge?
Speaker AI'm joined now by my guest from that episode, she's chair of the Coolidge Foundation, Amity Schlaise, to just discuss President Coolidge a little bit more.
Speaker AAmity, thank you so much for hanging on.
Speaker BOf course.
Speaker AGenuinely one of the most interesting conversations I've had on this podcast because as I was saying to you off air, Calvin Coolidge is just not a guy that really gets discussed or taught certainly over here in the uk.
Speaker ASo for anyone that hasn't listened to the full episode, please go and do that now.
Speaker ABut just following our lengthy conversation and everything you've said about Coolidge, how would you rank him among the 46 presidents?
Speaker BWell, he generally ranks in the 20s.
Speaker BI wish it were higher.
Speaker BAnd I am ever more convinced of his merit.
Speaker BSo I would rank him in the top 10.
Speaker AYeah, certainly in terms of, you know, humility, modesty and his approach.
Speaker AI think there's a lot of similarities to sort of Jimmy Carter there.
Speaker BNo, well, but Coolidge achieved what he sought and Jimmy Carter did not.
Speaker BCoolidge sought to stabilize the economy and see, hoped for strong growth through policy and he managed it.
Speaker BSo Coolidge was deliberate and his deliberation or his perseverance, he was successful.
Speaker BSo he wasn't just a nice guy or a civil guy.
Speaker BHe did what he said.
Speaker BMaybe Carter did that too.
Speaker BBut also he was successful at what he did.
Speaker BWell, gee, in the face of much hostility, remember the progressive movement in the 20s, Coolidge period was growing.
Speaker BSo I, I get Coolidge is closer to Thatcher than to Jimmy Carter.
Speaker AInteresting.
Speaker AAnd yeah, as you, you mentioned in the, in the main episode, you know, that, that, that threat from the Progressive Party while Coolidge was, was in the White House is, is something that feels almost unprecedented nowadays considering how sort of closed in that two party system is.
Speaker AI, I do wonder, considering just how different that political landscape is now versus when Coolidge was president, how effective you think he would have been in today's climate had he been.
Speaker BWell, when the dollar crashes because of a competing currency, we too will hire, you know, for our austerity, a Thatcher or Coolidge.
Speaker BAmericans are too, what's the word?
Speaker BToo complacent currently.
Speaker BYou know, but we haven't seen the consequences of our own policy.
Speaker BWe will.
Speaker BAnd then there'll be an appetite for a stronger.
Speaker BI think one should also mention immigration because Coolidge signed a immigration restriction, the Johnson reed Act, in 24.
Speaker BHe's oft criticized for that.
Speaker BBut in his view, and in the view of nearly all lawmakers on the Hill House and Senate, America needed a pause from immigration.
Speaker BThe way Coolidge stands out was he was not a bigot.
Speaker BHe showed that one could support immigration restriction without being a bigot.
Speaker BAnd that is true.
Speaker BAnd today there's so much of a fear factor.
Speaker BI will be cast a bigot if I say we need a pause.
Speaker BSo he's a valuable model in that he treasured those newcomers who were already in America.
Speaker BHe said, whether you came over three centuries ago on the Mayflower or three years ago in the steerage, we're in the same boat here.
Speaker BWe're going to do what we can for people who are here who are with us.
Speaker BBut isn't it time for a pause?
Speaker BAnd the way he did it was just much better than populist bigoted rants.
Speaker AAnd of course, it shouldn't be understated just how I guess progressive that way of thinking was for 1920s America.
Speaker AI mean, you'd be hard pressed not to find someone who wasn't quite prejudiced.
Speaker BWell, it was just a different time.
Speaker BIt was truly a different time.
Speaker BHe was particularly upset about the Japanese exclusion in the 24 bill and said he would veto it because if it had stood alone.
Speaker BBut he didn't because he was to be overridden anyhow.
Speaker BBut it's interesting to go back and look at the way he handled the migration question us today, caught in this challenge, well, maybe there should be fewer immigrants or fewer we ought to change our policy.
Speaker BBut it does to say so make us a bigot.
Speaker BThat he handled that beautifully and Americans understood it, including immigrant Americans.
Speaker BThey were quite supportive of him.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd it's mad to me just when you've spoken about his legacy in his presidency, just how effective he was and how popular he seemed to be, that we don't know more about college and that he doesn't stand a bit higher in the.
Speaker AIn the sort of legacy of great presidents.
Speaker BWell, the presidential ranking is a zero sum situation, right?
Speaker BOne goes up, the other has to go down.
Speaker BThat's why I don't like rankings, because life isn't quite like that.
Speaker BAnd the terms shift, if you'll notice.
Speaker BPeople shift their terms even as they rank.
Speaker BWell, do you like him?
Speaker BSo there's always something slightly corrupt about presidential ranking or illogical, at the very least, the terms always shift.
Speaker BSo in that zero sum game, if you like Franklin Roosevelt, which many do very much for different reasons, again on different terms, his service in the war, the great helmsman, his or his more progressive policies then you have to not like Coolidge as strongly as you like Roosevelt up, down because they are opposites.
Speaker BSo yeah, that I think I find something to like in both.
Speaker BAnd I don't think it's a trade off or what we say, a seesaw or a teeter totter we used to call it.
Speaker BRight one versus.
Speaker BBut that's the, that's the sort of awful physics of president ranking up down.
Speaker BAnd you know in school teachers spend a lot of energy on Roosevelt.
Speaker BTherefore they have to spend too much probably.
Speaker BAnd then they have also in their time budget for the semester little for Coolidge.
Speaker BIt goes like that.
Speaker BIt's very interesting.
Speaker AYeah, it's a, it's a, it's a very valid point.
Speaker AAnd on, on that note, Amity, I thank you for joining me for this little extra chat.
Speaker AAnd anyone hearing this who hasn't already heard the full episode about President Coolidge, do please go and check that out right now.
Speaker AAmity, remind people where they can find out more with the Coolidge foundation and sort of contact you directly.
Speaker BOh, coolidgefoundation.org we're not the Coolidge Project.
Speaker BThat's somebody else.
Speaker BWe're coolidgefoundation.org or calvin-coolidge.
Speaker BYou'll find us.
Speaker BThen you can learn all about our scholarships.
Speaker BConsider coming 4th of July.
Speaker BThank you.
Speaker AThank you so much for joining me and to everyone listening, thank you so much for listening and goodbye.
Speaker BBye.
Speaker BAppreciated this.
Speaker BThank you.