ID | 165170 |
Title Proper | Domestic Politics of World Power |
Other Title Information | Explaining Debates over the United States Battleship Fleet, 1890–91 |
Language | ENG |
Author | Fordham, Benjamin O |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | The United States' 1890–91 decision to begin building a battleship fleet, an important point in its development as a world power, can illuminate the domestic sources of foreign policy ambition. An analysis of roll-call votes in the House of Representatives indicates that socioeconomic divisions arising from industrialization strongly influenced support and opposition to the battleship fleet. This relationship worked mainly through trade policy interests: members of Congress from import-competing states tended to support the effort, while those from export-oriented states tended to oppose it. The patriotic symbolism of battleships at a time of labor unrest also helped motivate support for the program, though evidence of this pattern is less conclusive. Although party affiliation was crucial, it was also partly a function of economic structure, which shaped the two parties’ electoral fortunes. The impact of trade interests during this period is a mirror image of what previous research has found concerning the post-World War II era, when export-oriented interests tended to support American global activism and import-competing interests to oppose it. The reason for the difference is the Republican Party's commitment to trade protection, which strongly influenced both the goals of the policy and the identity of its supporters. |
`In' analytical Note | International Organization Vol. 73, No.1; Winter 2019: p.435-468 |
Journal Source | International Organization Vol: 73 No 2 |
Key Words | Domestic Politics ; World Power ; United States Battleship Fleet ; 1890–91 |