Per Aspera: A Kansas History Podcast
In January 1893, a disputed election in Kansas triggered one of the most unusual constitutional crises in American history. What came to be known, only half-jokingly, as the Legislative War began with competing claims to control the Kansas House of Representatives, escalating into a standoff between rival legislatures operating under the same roof - complete with locked doors, armed guards, and dueling assertions of democratic legitimacy. Set against the backdrop of Gilded Age inequality and the rise of the Populist movement, the conflict reflected deep frustrations over who government was meant to serve, and who had the right to claim its authority. As tensions mounted, the crisis moved from procedural deadlock to physical confrontation. An attempted arrest inside the Statehouse led to scuffles. The chamber was barricaded. Doors were beaten down with sledgehammers. Armed men filled the Capitol. The governor called up the militia. But in a pivotal moment, both a militia commander and a county sheriff declined to intervene, unwilling to decide which side held legitimate authority. For several days in February 1893, Kansas stood on the edge of political violence, with crowds gathering and no clear authority recognized by all sides. At its core, the Legislative War was a crisis over a foundational principle of American democracy: the consent of the governed. What happens when that consent is claimed by opposing sides, and the institutions meant to measure it fail? In 1893, Kansas came close to finding out. The system held - but only just. Original content © Per Aspera and licensed CC BY-NC 4.0 unless otherwise noted. Some archival excerpts are used under fair use for commentary, criticism, and education.
5 episodios
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