William Simon U'Ren (January 10, 1859 – March 8, 1949) was an American lawyer and political activist. the son of immigrants from Cornwall, England. Their surname was originally spelled Uren. U'Ren's father, William Richard U'Ren was a socialist who worked as a blacksmith and emigrated to America owing to difficult economic conditions.
In America, the elder U'Ren lived as a farmer in the Midwest, working also as a blacksmith when possible. U'Ren studied law and business in the evenings. He earned a law degree and was admitted to the Colorado state bar at the age of 21. U'ren was already a convert to progressive causes, especially the Single Tax proposed by Henry George. Albert Lewelling gave him a copy of James W. Sullivan's book Direct Legislation by the Citizenship Through the Initiative and Referendum (1892) and U'ren decided to invest his time and effort in the cause.
Direct Legislation League
He was a leader of the People's Power League after 1892. U'Ren brought together representatives of the state Farmer's Alliance and labor unions to form the Direct Legislation League, of which he was named secretary. He had an express goal of implementing the three legs of direct democracy – Initiative, referendum, and recall. In 1894 U'Ren was elected chairman at the Populist Party convention, and won approval of an Initiative & Referendum platform plank. In 1896 U'Ren won a seat in the Oregon House of Representatives; however, in 1897 the House failed to organize, only holding a short special session in the fall of 1898. U'Ren worked the legislature during his term, without success, to gain approval for initiative and referendum. After his 1897 defeat, U'Ren reorganized the Oregon Direct Legislation League to broaden the base of initiative, referendum, and recall support. The new executive committee included bankers, the president of the state bar association, and The Oregonian editor Harvey W. Scott.
U'Ren and the Direct Legislation League won passage of an initiative and referendum amendment in 1898. Under the constitution of the time, amendments had to be approved by two successive sessions of the legislature. By 1902 the legislature had approved the amendment and voters had ratified it.
Other initiatives
thumb|upright=0.7|right|Plaque honoring U'Ren at the [[Clackamas County, Oregon|Clackamas County Courthouse in Oregon City]]
U'Ren associated himself with many initiative efforts, including banning free railroad passes, establishing popular election of U.S. Senators, and creating the first presidential primary in the United States. Two of the more significant early initiatives he sponsored were a 1906 constitutional amendment extending initiative and referendum powers to local jurisdictions, and a 1908 amendment that gave voters power to recall elected officials. In 1912, he proposed an amendment to the Oregon Constitution to essentially weigh each legislator's vote on proposed bills according to the number of votes he received in the last election; this measure failed by a large margin.
In 1908 U'Ren led the successful effort to amend the Oregon state constitution to accommodate proportional representation that would provide voters with first, second and third choices on the ballot. He said, "Real representative government is impossible unless all political parties, minorities as well as majorities, are thus fairly represented in the legislature in proportion to the number of supporters that each has among the voters."
U'Ren was a strong proponent of the single tax system advocated by Henry George, but was unsuccessful in getting it adopted in Oregon. After his defeat in a 1914 race for Governor on the single tax platform, he largely withdrew from active politics. Originally supportive of his campaign, U'Ren later denounced President Franklin Roosevelt and the New Deal, warning against dictatorship and a federal government out of control. U'Ren's proposition to tackle the Depression was to create a voluntary and bureaucratic-free "American Industrial Army". A Jeffersonian who believed in a third way between welfare statism and laissez-faire, U'Ren was critical of concentrated power anywhere until his death, supporting "constitutional reforms" to shackle monopolies. He was also critical of unions that acted dictatorial.
He died of pneumonia at age 90, in Portland, Oregon on March 8, 1949.
Footnotes
Further reading
- Alexander, John K. "U’Ren, William Simon (1859-1949)" American National Biography (1999) 22:121-123.
- Etulain, Richard. "William S. U'Ren (1859–1949)" Oregon Encyclopedia (2022) online
- Etulain, Richard W. William S. U'Ren: Oregon Father of the Initiative, Referendum, and Recall (Portland, Chaparral Books, 2020).
- Johnston, Robert D. The Radical Middle Class: Populist Democracy and the Question of Capitalism in Progressive Era Portland (2003), pp 127–137.
- Lindstrom, David Elvin. "W.S. U'Ren and the Fight for Government Reform and the Single Tax: 1908-1912." (Thesis, Portland State U, 1972). online
- McClintock, Thomas C. “Seth Lewelling, William S. U’Ren and the Birth of the Oregon Progressive Movement.” Oregon Historical Quarterly 68#3, 1967, pp. 196–220. online
- Morgan, Murray C. "The Tools of Democracy and the Woolly Rhinoceros Eaters," (Seattle: Junior League of Seattle, March 1972).
- Schuman, David. "The Origin of State Constitutional Direct Democracy: William Simon U'Ren and the Oregon System." Temple Law Review 67 (1994): 947+.
- Steffens, Lincoln. Upbuilders, Chapter 5. New York: Doubleday, Page and Co., 1909.
- Woodward, Robert C. "William S. U'Ren: A progressive era personality." in G. Thomas, Edwards and Carlos A. Schwantes, eds. Experiences in a promised land: essays in Pacific Northwest history ( University of Washington Press, 1986) pp. 195-205.
- Woodward, Robert C. "W. S. U'Ren and the Single Tax in Oregon." Oregon Historical Quarterly vol. 61 no. 1 (1960).
