Jackson, the “People’s President” or the “President of the Common Man” was not a philosophical thinker or an aristocrat like many of the presidents before him. Jackson was a Westerner who rose to fame when he defied the Secretary of War’s commands. Jackson viewed democracy as equal protection and equal benefits to all white male citizens and not favoring one group or region (Brinkley, 237). His anti-aristocratic views were evident in the political changes he made. He changed the caucus system, the way that presidential candidates were decided, to a convention. The convention was believed by the Jacksonians, to allow the presidential candidates to come directly from the people not just the elite institutions (Brinkley,
Jackson, the “People’s President” or the “President of the Common Man” was not a philosophical thinker or an aristocrat like many of the presidents before him. Jackson was a Westerner who rose to fame when he defied the Secretary of War’s commands. Jackson viewed democracy as equal protection and equal benefits to all white male citizens and not favoring one group or region (Brinkley, 237). His anti-aristocratic views were evident in the political changes he made. He changed the caucus system, the way that presidential candidates were decided, to a convention. The convention was believed by the Jacksonians, to allow the presidential candidates to come directly from the people not just the elite institutions (Brinkley,