Plot Synopsis (continued)
In
a confrontational scene, an avuncular Taylor meets the concerned
young Senator. Smooth-tongued and glib, Taylor tells Senator Smith
about his "interest" in Willet Creek Dam and his persuasive
boss-influence over all social institutions. He cooly attempts to
buy Smith off by assuring him riches, political power and success
if he remains silent about the Willet Creek Dam fraud. To his complete
surprise, Jeff learns that his hero/idol Joseph Paine has expediently
been in office for twenty years due to corruption:
Taylor: Anything that benefits the state is mighty
important to me. Owning a lot of its industry, newspapers, and
other odds-and-ends. Now if I felt that you had the welfare of
the state at heart like I have, I'd say you were a man to watch.
Now what do you like? Business? If you like business, you can pick
any job in the state and go right to the top. Or politics? Huh?
If you like being a Senator, there's no reason why you can't come
back to that Senate and stay there as long as you want to. (Smith
rises slowly and confronts Taylor eye-to-eye.) If you're smart.
Now you take the boys here, or Joe Paine. They're doing all right.
They don't have to worry about being re-elected or anything else.
They're smart. They take my advice.
Smith: (in an incredulous tone) You mean you tell these men and Senator
Paine what to do?
Taylor: Why yes. Joe Paine has been taking my advice for the past
twenty years.
Smith: You're a liar.
In Senator Paine's office, decorated wall-to-wall with
pictures, mementos, memorabilia and law books, Paine explains the
reality of the situation, tells Jeff where he stands in relation
to Taylor, and advises him to be less of an idealist:
I was hoping you'd be spared all this. I was hoping
that you'd see the sights, absorb a lot of history, and go back
to your boys. Now you've been living in a boy's world, Jeff, and
for heaven's sakes, stay there! This is a man's world. It's a brutal
world Jeff, and you've no place in it. You'll only get hurt. Now
take my advice. Forget Taylor and what he said. Forget you ever
heard of the Willet Creek Dam...I know it's tough to run head-on
into facts but, well as I said, this is a man's world Jeff, and
you've got to check your ideals outside the door, like you do your
rubbers. Thirty years ago I had your ideals. I was you.
I had to make the same decision you were asked to make today. And
I made it. I compromised - yes! So that all those years, I could
sit in that Senate and serve the people in a thousand honest ways.
You've got to face facts, Jeff. I've served our state well, haven't
I? We have the lowest unemployment and the highest federal grants.
But, well, I've had to compromise. I've had to play ball. You can't
count on people voting. Half the time they don't vote anyway. That's
how states and empires have been built since time began. Don't
you understand? (Pause) Well Jeff, you can take my word for it.
That's how things are. Now I've told you all this because, well
I've grown very fond of you. About like a son, in fact. And I don't
want to see you get hurt.
Invoking their friendship and the friendship Paine
had with Smith's father, Senator Paine begs Jeff to avoid interfering
with the Deficiency Bill on the Senate floor: "You stay away
from it. Don't say a word. Great powers are behind it and they'll
destroy you before you even get started." Smith leaves Paine's
office without a response, apparently left with no choice. He is
unwilling to compromise and sacrifice his principles for a scheme
involving graft, and he is feeling betrayed and let down by his sponsoring
guide in the Senate. Moreover, he is overwhelmed by the realization
that there is corruption in the men who were responsible for his
appointment.
The next day, Smith fidgets during the reading of the
Deficiency Bill and rises to question Section 40 regarding Willet
Creek Dam. When it appears that Paine's corruption will be exposed,
he interrupts Smith's words in mid-sentence and shifts blame toward
Smith to frame him. The new tactic of the conspirators is to shift
blame to Smith, and to discredit and accuse him of their own crime.
The phony land purchases are shifted to him (with falsified documents
and evidence) to show that the boys camp bill is Smith's own pork
barrel - introduced for his own profit:
Mr. President. I have risen to a difficult task to
say that out of evidence that has come to my attention, I consider
Senator Smith unworthy to address this body...Senators, I have
conclusive evidence to prove that my colleague owns the very land
described in his bill. He bought it the day following his appointment
to the Senate. And he's holding it, using this body and his privileged
office for his own personal profit! Accordingly, I offer a resolution
for an immediate inquiry by the Committee of Privileges and Elections
as to the fitness of my colleague to continue to sit in this chamber.
Forcing Smith to be investigated by the Senate and
branded for expulsion, Paine diverts attention from his own fraudulent
actions. Smith is hissed and booed by the chamber - en masse, the
young pages remove their Boy Ranger pins and throw them away.
In the committee hearings, trumped-up charges, false
witnesses (Gov. Hopper and Sen. Paine testify falsely) and forged
documents (a signed contract or deed to the land) are produced as
evidence to show that Smith will enrich himself with the boys camp
with "carefully laid plans to make an enormous profit out of
the nickels and dimes scrapped together by the boys of this country." Smith
stands silently for a moment looking at the seated Paine, who has
his head bowed and refuses to acknowledge his presence face-to-face.
Smith abruptly leaves the hearings, unable to prove his innocence.
Disillusioned, distraught, and disbelieving, Jefferson
Smith makes a late-night visit (with his suitcases) to the Lincoln
Memorial - his second (and presumably last) visit before leaving
Washington. He notices the last sentence of Lincoln's 1863 Gettysburg
Address inscribed on the marble wall: "AND THAT GOVERNMENT OF
THE PEOPLE BY THE PEOPLE FOR THE PEOPLE SHALL NOT PERISH FROM THE
EARTH."
Now a broken man, he sits down on his bags which are packed in readiness
to leave and begins to weep. From the darkened shadows, Saunders emerges
and tells him: "You know, I had a hunch I'd find you here." She
is thankful for having received a jar of strawberry preserves from
his mother. From the newspapers, she tells him what she learned: "You
certainly got to be a Senator."
Smith acknowledges her wisdom and cynical, Washington-wise
savvy:
You sure had the right idea about me, Saunders. You
told me to go back home, keep fillin' those kids full of hooey.
Yeah. Just a simple guy you said was still wet behind the ears.
A lot of junk about American ideals. Yeah, that's certainly a lot
of junk, all right...I don't know. This is a whole new world to
me. What are you gonna believe in? And a man like Paine, Senator
Joseph Paine gets up and swears that I've been robbin' kids of
nickels and dimes - a man I've admired and worshipped all my life.
I don't know. There are a lot of fancy words around this town.
Some of them are carved in stone. Some of 'em, I guess the Taylors
and Paines have put 'em up there so suckers like me can read 'em.
Then when you find out what men actually do - Well, I'm gettin'
out of this town so fast and away from all the words and the monuments
and the whole rotten show.
Crushed and downtrodden, Smith is determined to leave
town, defeated and finished. In the somber, dim light of the Memorial,
Saunders comes to realize that he sincerely loves the democratic
process. Revitalizing him with her own rebirth of idealism and reminding
him of the "faith" of the Founding Fathers (who were "fools" but
the "odds against 'em didn't stop those men"), she encourages
him to stand fast, stay and fight the machine-controlled Senate and
the corrupt dam scheme of the scoundrels Senator Paine and Taylor:
Saunders: I see. When you get home, what are you
gonna tell those kids?
Smith: I'll tell 'em the truth. Might as well find it out now as
later.
Saunders: I don't think they'll believe you, Jeff. You know, they're
liable to look up at you with hurt faces and say, 'Jeff, what did
you do? Quit? Didn't you do something about it?'
Smith: Well, what do you expect me to do? An honorary stooge like
me against the Taylors and Paines and machines and lies...
Saunders: Your friend Mr. Lincoln had his Taylors and Paines. So
did every other man whoever tried to lift his thought up off the
ground. Odds against 'em didn't stop those men. They were fools that
way. All the good that ever came into this world came from fools
with faith like that. You know that Jeff. You can't quit now. Not
you! They aren't all Taylors and Paines in Washington. Their kind
just throw big shadows, that's all. You didn't just have faith in
Paine or any other living man. You had faith in something bigger
than that. You had plain, decent, every day, common rightness. And
this country could use some of that. Yeah - so could the whole cock-eyed
world. A lot of it. Remember the first day you got here? Remember
what you said about Mr. Lincoln? You said he was sitting up there
waiting for someone to come along. You were right! He was waiting
for a man who could see his job and sail into it. That's what he
was waiting for. A man who could tear into the Taylors and root 'em
out into the open. I think he was waiting for you Jeff. He knows
you can do it. So do I.
Smith: What? Do what, Saunders?
Saunders: You just make up your mind you're not gonna quit and I'll
tell you what. I've been thinkin' about it all the way back here.
It's a forty foot dive into a tub of water, but I think you can do
it.
Smith: Clarissa, where can we get a drink?
Saunders (slapping his knee): Now you're talkin'! (As they leave,
he waves back at the seated, imposing figure of Mr. Lincoln.)
The next morning, Smith appears at his Senate desk
to the consternation of the others in the chamber. Saunders waves
and clasps her hands for him from the gallery high above. She tells
Diz: "Pray Diz, if you know how." The report from the committee
hearings on Jefferson Smith's expulsion is read, recommending that
the resolution be adopted to expel him. The President of the Senate
chooses to recognize Senator Smith and he is allowed to speak, having "an
equal claim on the attention of this chair." From the gallery,
Saunders cries: "Let him speak!"
Jefferson Smith begins his climactic, one-man filibuster
scene (considered one of the virtuoso scenes of 1930s films), in
part to stall a vote that would oust him from the Senate:
...I've got a few things I want to say to this body.
I tried to say them once before and I got stopped colder than a
mackeral. Well, I'd like to get them said this time, sir. And as
a matter of fact, I'm not gonna leave this body until I do get
them said.
In one of the film's unforgettable moments, the tension
on the Senate floor is magnified. In a full shot of the chamber,
Smith stands at his desk in the last row of Senators. In the same
shot, Senator Paine in the first row rises and interrupts Smith,
and without turning to face him, asks if the junior Senator will
yield the floor. Smith insolently refuses to yield to Senator Paine,
knowing something about the rules of yielding (from instructions
and coaching received from Saunders):
No sir, I'm afraid not. No sir. I yielded the floor
once before, if you can remember, and I was practically never heard
of again. No sir. And we might as well all get together on this
yielding business right off the bat now. (Laughter) Now, I had
some pretty good coaching last night, and I find that if I yield
only for a question or a point of order or a personal privilege,
that I can hold this floor almost until doomsday. In other words,
I've got a piece to speak, and blow hot or cold, I'm gonna speak
it.
When he yields to a question from the dignified Senator
Paine, Smith is reminded of the guilty charges brought against his
character. Condemned, Smith responds:
Mr. President. I stand guilty as framed! Because
Section 40 is GRAFT! And I was ready to say so, I was ready to
tell you that a certain man of my state, a Mr. James Taylor, wanted
to put through this dam for his own profit. A man who controls
a political machine! And controls everything else worth controlling
in my state! Yes, and even a man powerful enough to control Congressmen,
and I saw three of them in his room the day I went up to see him...And
this same man, Mr. James Taylor, came down here and offered me
a seat in this Senate for the next twenty years if I voted for
a dam that he knew and I knew was a fraud. BUT if I dared to open
my mouth against that dam, he promised to break me in two. All
right, I got up here and I started to open my mouth and the long
and powerful arm of Mr. James Taylor reached into this sacred chamber
and grabbed me by the scruff of the neck...
With a point of order, Paine admits to being one of
the Congressmen in the room with Mr. Taylor, and accuses Smith of
deliberately trying to "plant damaging impressions" of
his conduct. In the meeting with Taylor, they were there for the
purpose of bringing evidence against Smith and asking him to resign
to avoid "bringing disgrace upon a clean and honorable state." Paine,
with a show of raw power, denounces his junior Senator and then leaves
the floor:
Gentlemen, I have lost all patience with this brazen
character. I apologize to this body for his appointment. I regret
I ever knew him. I'm sick and tired of this contemptible young
man and I refuse to stay here and listen to him any longer. I hope
every member of this body feels as I do.
Few in the Senate support Smith's requests to listen:
I want a chance to talk to people who'll believe
me. The people of my state. They know me. And they know Mr. Taylor.
And when they hear my story, they'll rise up and they'll kick Mr.
Taylor's machine to kingdom come. Now I want one week to go back
there and bring you proof that I'm right. And in the meantime,
I want this Senate's promise that I will not be expelled and that
the Deficiency Bill will not be passed.
Many of the Senators think it is an "affrontery" for
Smith to dare to disgracefully stand there and ask for a postponement
of the passage of the Deficiency Bill:
"Why, millions will be without food and shelter. Public works
will be at a stand-still." Smith challenges his political adversaries:
The people of my state need permanent relief from
crooked men riding their backs.
When the chamber clears of Senators, Smith promises
to endlessly speak in a classic filibuster. Prepared, he removes
a supply of food and drink from his coat:
And I'll tell you one thing, that wild horses aren't
gonna drag me off this floor until those people have heard everything
I've got to say, even if it takes all winter.
With hand gestures suggesting what to do, Saunders
provides heroic support from the balcony. During the 23-hour filibuster,
Smith tries to gain time with a "call to quorum" while
the results of his own investigation into corruption can reach
him. Diz phones in his own story angle:
This is the most titanic battle of modern times.
A David without even a slingshot rises to do battle against the
mighty Goliath Taylor machine, allegedly crooked inside and out.
With Boss Taylor in control of the media, newspapers,
and radio, the truthful distribution of Smith's message is doomed
to fail. Taylor confidently tells Senator Paine: "I'll blacken
this punk so that he'll...You leave public opinion to me." Taylor
is relentless in seeking total victory over Smith, knowing the consequences
if they fail:
If he even starts to convince those Senators, you
might as well blow your brains out, you know that, don't ya? This
is the works, Joe! Either we're out of business or we're bigger
than we ever were before. We can't miss a trick. We can't stop
at anything until we've smashed this yokel and buried him so deep...
But Senator Paine doesn't have the "stomach" to
do anything more. His guilt-stricken conscience slowly softens him.
Banner headlines in the newspapers blast Smith's "cowardly" filibuster:
SMITH DISGRACES STATE
Criminal in Vicious Attack on Beloved Senator Paine
SMITH STOPS RELIEF!
Blocks Deficiency Bill - Starves Country to Save Hide
JAILBIRD DEFIES NATION
'Let The Poor Starve,' He Shouts
Radio announcements, banners ("STOP SMITH")
and billboards ("SEND SMITH TO JAIL WHERE HE BELONGS," "SMITH
TALKS - THE PEOPLE STARVE," and "GET BEHIND SENATOR PAINE")
are part of Taylor's conspiracy to silence support for Smith.
During an informal caucus of the Senators with The
President of the Senate, one of the Senators expresses his admiration
for Smith's sincerity:
I didn't like this boy from the beginning. But most
of us feel that no man who wasn't sincere could stage a fight like
this against these impossible odds.
From the Senate itself, H. V. Kaltenborn (Himself)
announces the Senate proceedings to the CBS radio audience:
Half of official Washington is here to see democracy's
finest show, the filibuster, the right to talk your head off, the
American privilege of free speech in its most dramatic form. The
least man in that chamber, once he gets and holds that floor by
the rules, can hold it and talk as long as he can stand on his
feet providing always, first, that he does not sit down, second,
that he does not leave the chamber or stop talking. The galleries
are packed. In the diplomatic gallery are the envoys of two dictator
powers. They have come here to see what they can't see at home.
DEMOCRACY IN ACTION.
Throughout the entire filibuster sequence, the action
cross cuts from scenes in the Senate chamber, to radio announcers,
to reactions at home, to the Boy Rangers' support for Smith, to Taylor's
manipulation of the party machine by telephone that orders crushing
obstacles to be thrown in Smith's direction.
After reading from the Declaration of Independence
(partially to stall for time), Smith preaches to the Senate and offers
home-spun insight on democratic ideals:
Now, you're not gonna have a country that can make
these kind of rules work, if you haven't got men that have learned
to tell human rights from a punch in the nose. (The Gallery applauds)
It's a funny thing about men, you know. They all start life being
boys. I wouldn't be a bit suprised if some of these Senators were
boys once. And that's why it seemed like a pretty good idea for
me to get boys out of crowded cities and stuffy basements for a
couple of months out of the year. And build their bodies and minds
for a man-sized job, because those boys are gonna be behind these
desks some of these days. And it seemed like a pretty good idea,
getting boys from all over the country, boys of all nationalities
and ways of living. Getting them together. Let them find out what
makes different people tick the way they do. Because I
wouldn't give you two cents for all your fancy rules if, behind
them, they didn't have a little bit of plain, ordinary, everyday
kindness and a - a little lookin' out for the other fella, too...That's
pretty important, all that. It's just the blood and bone and sinew
of this democracy that some great men handed down to the human
race, that's all. But of course, if you've got to build a dam where
that boys camp ought to be, to get some graft to pay off some political
army or something, well that's a different thing. Aw no! If you
think I'm going back there and tell those boys in my state and
say: 'Look. Now fellas. Forget about it. Forget all this stuff
I've been tellin' you about this land you live in is a lot of hooey.
This isn't your country. It belongs to a lot of James Taylors.'
Aw no! Not me! And anybody here that thinks I'm gonna do that,
they've got another thing comin'. (He whistles loudly with his
fingers in his mouth, startling Senators who are dozing or reading
other materials) That's all right. I just wanted to find out whether
you still had faces. I'm sorry, gentlemen. I-I know I'm being disrespectful
to this honorable body, I know that. I- A guy like me should never
be allowed to get in here in the first place. I know that! And
I hate to stand here and try your patience like this, but EITHER
I'M DEAD RIGHT OR I'M CRAZY.
After seven and one-half hours into the filibuster,
one of the Senators proposes a motion to call for a recess until
the morning. In a three-way routine between the rostrum (the President),
the gallery (Saunders), and the floor (Smith), the twinkle-eyed President
slyly looks up at Smith's coach in the gallery. Saunders, who knows
the political ropes of Washington, signals for the uncomprehending
Smith to not accept the motion. She gestures and points down toward
the President, suggesting: "Ask him." The tolerant, amused
President hides a smile of tacit approval for her coaching, and then
explains how Smith would lose control of the floor if he accepted
the motion for recess.
At a moment of crisis, Senator Smith is cheered and
buoyed up after receiving a note taken to him on the floor by a young
page. The note is from Saunders in the gallery with the acknowledgement
of a long-distance courtship in the postscript:
Jeff
You're wonderful. Press boys all with you - Read them Constitution
next very slow.
Diz says I'm in love with you.
P.S.
(He moves his thumb away to uncover the final few words)
He's right.
Smith faces media manipulation, false claims, and a "muzzling" of
freedom of the press by the Taylor machine: "Not one word of
what he's saying is being printed in that state. Taylor has practically
every paper in the state lined up and he's feeding them doctored-up
junk." Saunders transmits a dictation to Smith's mother (Beulah
Bondi) that will be printed in the only free press left - Jeff's Boys
Stuff publication. With the support of an army of faithful boys,
the boys' paper is type-set with the headline: "JEFF TELLS TRUTH" -
the only uncensored news available to Smith's constituents. With
wagons and bicycles, the handbills are distributed in support of
Smith, and the boys organize a parade. When the word that there is
opposition reaches Taylor's headquarters, McGann sends the word out
to confiscate and destroy the Boys Stuff newspaper and disrupt
the parade, resulting in injuries to many of the boys. A carload
of boys distributing newspapers is deliberately forced off the road
by Taylor's forces, resulting in a gruesome crash and accident. Mrs.
Smith phones Saunders, distressed by the repercussions: "Children
hurt all over the city. Tell Jeff to stop!"
After twenty-three hours (and 16 minutes), with an
agonizingly-weakened voice after many hours of filibustering, radio
announcer Kaltenborn summarizes the fight on "the greatest floor
in the land":
...It is the most unusual and spectacular thing in
the Senate annals. One lone and simple American holding the greatest
floor in the land. What he lacked in experience, he's made up in
fight. But those tired Boy Ranger legs are buckling, bleary-eyed,
voice gone, he can't go on much longer. And all official Washington
is here to be in on the kill.
With an indomitable spirit but with a pleading, weary,
pathetically hoarse voice, Smith has a few more exhortations for
the Senators who have returned to watch the end of the filibuster.
In an extraordinary metaphor emphasizing the Capitol Dome high above
him, Smith imaginatively suggests re-positioning the lady of the
Dome back to an ethical center where she belongs:
Just get up off the ground. That's all I ask. Get
up there with that lady, that's up on top of this Capitol Dome.
That lady that stands for Liberty. Take a look at this country
through her eyes if you really want to see somethin'. And you won't
just see scenery. You'll see the whole parade of what man's carved
out for himself after centuries of fighting. And fighting for something
better than just jungle law. Fighting so as he can stand on his
own two feet free and decent, like he was created no matter what
his race, color, or creed. That's what you'd see. There's no place
out there for graft or greed or lies! Or compromise with human
liberties! And if that's what the grown-ups have done with this
world that was given to them, then we'd better get those boys camps
started fast and see what the kids can do. And it's not too late.
Because this country is bigger than the Taylors or you or me or
anything else. Great principles don't get lost once they come to
light. They're right here. You just have to see them again.
One final blow has been manufactured to defeat Smith
- hundreds of "Taylor-made"
phony telegrams from constituents in his state. Senator Paine is granted
permission to bring in "evidence of the response" from his
state. Baskets, wire barrels and bundles of stacks of 50,000 wired
telegrams from constituents are deposited in the front of the Senate
chamber. Paine holds up a fistful, telling Smith that they all demand
that he yield the floor and give up his filibuster: "The people's
answer to Jefferson Smith."
In one of the most powerful scenes ever filmed, Jefferson
staggers forward in disbelief to look at the telegrams, pawing through
them and desperately looking for some evidence of support. In a symbolic
crucifixion stance, he grabs two large fistfuls and holds them out.
With his hoarse voice, he turns toward Senator Paine and delivers
an impassioned speech about "lost causes"
- accusing Paine face-to-face of betraying his ideals:
I guess this is just another lost cause, Mr. Paine.
All you people don't know about lost causes. Mr. Paine does. He
said once they were the only causes worth fighting for. And he
fought for them once, for the only reason that any man ever fights
for them. Because of just one plain simple rule: 'Love thy neighbor.'
And in this world today, full of hatred, a man who knows that one
rule has a great trust. You know that rule, Mr. Paine. And I loved
you for it, just as my father did. And you know that you fight
for the lost causes harder than for any others. Yes, you even die
for them. Like a man we both knew, Mr. Paine.
Then with heart-stirring courage, the bone-tired Smith
finishes his heroic speech with a croaking voice:
You think I'm licked. You all think I'm licked. Well,
I'm not licked, and I'm gonna stay right here and fight for this
lost cause even if this room gets filled with lies like these,
and the Taylors and all their armies come marching into this place.
Somebody'll listen to me. Some...
Smith staggers, faints and collapses on the floor,
dumping a basket of telegrams over onto himself. Sympathetically,
Saunders screams from the gallery. With a strained look on his face,
Senator Paine rushes from the Senate floor toward the vestibule/cloakroom
as the stricken Smith is treated. Two or three shots ring out, and
Paine is seen struggling with other Senators. They prevent him from
killing himself, as he screams in a public confession:
I'm not fit to be a Senator. I'm not fit to live.
Expel me! Expel me! Not him.
Conscience-stricken and in a fit of remorse at the
last minute, Senator Paine saves the day. He re-enters the Senate
floor and admits that everything Smith said was true - exonerating
and vindicating him and the American political system:
Every word that boy said is the truth! Every word
about Taylor and me and graft and the rotten political corruption
of our state. Every word of it is true. I'm not fit for office!
I'm not fit for any place of honor or trust. Expel me!
The Senate and gallery erupt into wild cheering and
applause at the miraculous victory of freedom and democracy over
corruption. The figure of Smith is carried unconscious from the floor
of the Senate. Young page boys are thrilled. Instrumental in his
defeat of insurmountable odds, Saunders dances up and down with Diz
in the gallery and then shouts "Yippee!" The President
of the Senate sits back and watches the turmoil and jubilation, unable
to restore order. Faith and vindication of Smith's idealism win out. |