
New Books Network Linda Upham-Bornstein, "'Mr. Taxpayer versus Mr. Tax Spender': Taxpayers’ Associations, Pocketbook Politics, and the Law during the Great Depression" (Temple UP, 2023)
Nov 2, 2025
Dr. Linda Upham-Bornstein, historian and author, specializes in grassroots taxpayers' associations and their role during the Great Depression. She explores the dramatic increase in local taxpayer activism, driven by economic hardship. The conversation highlights how these associations pushed for fiscal reforms through political pressure, tax strikes, and litigation. Upham-Bornstein connects these movements to America's populist tradition, analyzing their influence on modern fiscal accountability. Her insights reveal the lasting legacy of this grassroots activism on local governance today.
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Populist Roots Of Taxpayer Movements
- Taxpayer associations are a recurring American populist response to economic hardship and perceived elite corruption.
- They mobilize ordinary citizens to demand accountability and constrain wasteful government spending.
Basement Discovery Sparked Research
- Linda found Depression-era newspapers in her husband's law firm's basement that documented a taxpayer lawsuit over embezzlement.
- That case showed a taxpayers' association sparking a Farmer–Labor party effort, surprising her assumptions about their politics.
Economic Pressure Fueled Mobilization
- During the early Depression taxpayers' incomes collapsed while tax burdens rose sharply, forcing mass mobilization.
- Unemployment and collapsing farm incomes made tax payment literally unsustainable in many communities.

