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Phases of State Legislation:
The Albany Legislature
This chapter in his book American Ideals is TRs description
of the significance of the New York State Legislature. He notes the magnitude
of the interests affected by State legislation, chiefly because
New York, the Empire State, is a commonwealth more populous than
any one of two-thirds of the kingdoms of Europe
Roosevelt, a man of great integrity, was never afraid of speaking his
mind, and in this short essay he notes that the Legislature is in the
fullest sense of the term, a representative body. He has sat
in the Legislature, he notes, with bankers and bricklayers, day-laborers,
saloon-keepers, clergymen, and prize-fighters.
While he notes that the Legislature is not perfect, it is by no
means as bad a body as we would be led to believe if our judgment was
based purely on what we read in the great metropolitan papers.
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