This classic work presents the candid wit and wisdom of George
Washington Plunkitt (1842-1924), a longtime state senator from New York
who represented the Fifteenth Assembly District and was especially
powerful in New York City. Plunkitt was part of the city's Tammany Hall
organization and a cynical practitioner of what today is generally known
as "machine politics," a patronage-based system in which politicians
openly exercise power for personal gain.
Plunkitt defined "dishonest graft" as working solely for one's own
interests, as opposed to "honest graft," which involves the interests of
one's party and state as well as individual benefits. An enthusiastic
party man, he believed in appointments, patronage, spoils, and all the
corrupt practices that were curtailed by the civil service law,
regarding them as both the rewards and cause of patriotism. Modern
readers will find his strikingly modern-sounding motivations and
justifications both entertaining and instructive.