William Howard Taft's Influence On The Government

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During presidency, William Howard Taft was not a heavy drinker. He did not ever have a drink in his hand during presidential occasions. He used a cane to walk from 1920 onward, because his large weight took a toll on his joints. He became employed as a Law Professor at Yale University. He had been apart of the National War Labor Board, and at the end of the war he was a strong supporter of the American participation in the League of Nations. He also supported Wilson’s foreign policy in Europe. He then co-founded the League for Enforced Peace, a precursor to the League of Nations. The League for Enforced Peace was an American Organization that became in 1915, and promoted the formation of a body for world peace. He was accompanied by …show more content…

Which had made him the happiest he had been in his public service. He made improvements to make the Supreme Court of the United States more efficient, which fell far behind. He wrote 253 opinions, or around one-sixth of all the decisions given to him during his term. His influence on the Supreme Court was helpful in securing the passage of the Judge’s Act of 1925, which gave more options in choosing cases so it could focus more of their attention on questions about the constitution and other national importances. Most of Taft’s decisions were cautious and constraining of the government. According to the Miller Center, In Truax v. Corrigan, for example, he struck down the provision of the Clayton Anti-Trust Act which barred injunctions against labor picketing. He reasoned that even peaceful picketing may violate the Fourteenth Amendment in depriving business owners of their property without the due process of law. He also ruled against the right of Congress to discourage child labor by levying an excise tax on goods manufactured by children (Bailey v. Drexel Furniture Co.) However, in at least one instance Taft had an opportunity to expand the …show more content…

On June 10, 1913 Taft had a fainting feeling while playing golf. This may have been the first attack of atrial fibrillation, which is when the hearts two upper chambers do not beat the way they should. They beat irregularly and too fast and shiver like a bowl of jello, instead of beating in a normal pattern. By 1924, he was taking three pills a day. September of 1926, William was possibly chronically in atrial fibrillation. His blood pressure was 160/100 and his heart rate was 50-55 beats per minute very irregular. Taft retired from work as Chief Justice on February 3, 1930 and had died only a little over a month later. Taft had died on March 8, 1930, at age seventy-two, from a cardiovascular disease, high blood pressure, and inflammation of the bladder. His funeral, as I said before, was the first funeral to be broadcasted on the radio. William H. Taft had been the first president to be buried at Arlington National Cemetery, which he now is only one of two. John F. Kennedy and him are the only two presidents buried there. Taft’s presidency was often thought of as him lacking at his job, but following a president like Theodore Roosevelt, was not easy. Only few are aware that Taft made more trusts over his four years in office than Theodore Roosevelt

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