With the publication of the
Römische Geschichte in the 1850s, the German historian
Theodor Mommsen set the enduring and popular interpretation that
optimates and
populares represented aristocratic and democratic parliamentary-style political parties, with the labels emerging around the time of the Gracchi. His interpretation "owe[d] much to nineteenth century German liberal thought". However, classicists generally agree that neither
optimate or
popularis referred to political parties: "It is common knowledge nowadays that
populares did not constitute a coherent political group or 'party' (even less so than their counterparts,
optimates)". Unlike in modern times, Roman politicians stood for office on the basis of their personal reputations and qualities rather than with a party manifesto or platform. For example, the opposition to the
First Triumvirate failed to act as a united front with coherent coordination of its members, acting instead on an ad hoc basis with regular defections to and from those opposing the political alliance depending on the topic of debate, personal relations, etc. These ad hoc alliances and many different methods of gaining political influence meant there were no "neat categories of
optimates and
populares" or of conservatives and radicals in a modern sense. Erich S Gruen, for example, in
Last Generation of the Roman Republic (1974) rejected both
populares and
optimates, saying "such labels obscure rather than enlighten" and arguing that
optimates was used not as a political label, but instead used to praise a member of the political elite. Moving away from the 19th century view of political parties or factions vying for dominance, the scope of the modern academic debate focuses on whether the terms referred to an ideological split among aristocrats or whether the terms were meaningless or topics of debate themselves.
Optimates The traditional view of the
optimates refers to aristocrats who defended their own material and political interests and behaved akin to modern
fiscal conservatives in opposing wealth redistribution and supporting small government. To that end, the
optimates were viewed traditionally as emphasising the authority or influence of the senate over other organs of the states, including the popular assemblies. In other instances, the
optimates are defined "somewhat mechanically, as those who opposed the
populares". This definition relying on a "senatorial" party or fiscal conservatives breaks down at a closer reading of the evidence. A "senatorial" party describes no meaningful split, as basically all active politicians were senators. A definition to the terms based on whether a politician supported land redistribution or grain subsidies runs into two issues. Such measures were not "the sole preserve of the so-called populares" and "were not per se incompatible with traditional senatorial policy, given the extensive colonisation the senate had overseen in the past and the grain provision which members of the elite occasionally organised on a private basis". Moreover, identifying the
populares based on the policies they supported in office would place politicians traditionally identified as belonging to one "faction" into the "opposite" camp: •
Publius Sulpicius Rufus, one of the classic
populares, supported policies that had little "to do with the betterment of the
populus and in fact appear to have been distinctly unpopular". •
Marcus Livius Drusus, brought agrarian reform laws with the support of the senate, giving his policies a
popularis tone, even when senatorial support and agrarian reforms are supposedly dichotomous. •
Cato the Younger, traditionally identified as
the optimate, becomes
popularis for supporting expansion of the grain dole during his
tribunate. •
Sulla, traditionally identified also as an arch-conservative, turns
popularis for "probably confiscat[ing] and redistribut[ing] more land in Italy than any other Roman politician". • And
Julius Caesar, traditionally seen as
popularis (though never self-identifying with that label in his extant texts), emerges as an
optimate for "substantially reduc[ing] the number of grain recipients in Rome during his dictatorship". Other proposed views of
optimates are that they were leaders of the senate or those acting with the support of the senate. Mouritsen in
Politics in the Roman Republic (2017) rejects both of the traditional definitions. Of
optimates being those with the support of the senate: Usage of the term by contemporaries also was not highly dichotomised.
Optimate was used generically to refer to the wealthy classes in Rome as well as the aristocracies of foreign cities or states:
Populares References to
populares in scholarship today "do not imply a co-ordinated 'party' with a distinctive ideological character, a kind of political grouping for which there is no evidence in Rome, but simply allude to a... type of senator" who is "at least at that moment acting as the people's man". This is in contrast to the 19th century view of the
populares from Mommsen, in which they are a group of aristocrats which supported democracy and the rights and material interests of the common people. The highly influential view of Christian Meier redefined the
popularis as a label for a senator using the popular assemblies' law-making powers to overrule decisions of the senate, primarily as a political tactic to get ahead in Roman politics. In this view, a
populares politician is a person who:[adopts] a certain method of political working, to use the populace, rather than the senate, as a means to an end; the end being, most likely, personal advantage for the politician concerned.
Ratio popularis The
ratio popularis, or strategy of putting political questions before the people writ large, was pursued when politicians were unable to achieve their goals through the normal process in the senate. This was in part structural: the "dyadic nature of [the senate and people of Rome, ie the republic] meant that when a senator opposed his peers... there was only recourse available" to the people. This political method involved a populist style of rhetoric, and "only to a limited extent, that of policy" with even less ideological content. The content of
popularis legislation was tied to the fact that politicians choosing to go before the people required needed strong support therefrom to overrule the decision of the senate. This forced politicians choosing a popular strategy to include policies that directly benefited voters in the assemblies, such as debt relief, land redistribution, and grain doles. The earlier
popularis tactics of
Tiberius Gracchus reflected the dominance of rural voters who had resettled to Rome recently, while the later
popularis tactics of
Clodius reflected the interests of the masses of urban poor. Material interests like corn subsidy bills were not the whole of
popularis causes:
popularis politicians also may have made arguments on the proper role of the Assemblies in the Roman state (ie, a popular sovereignty) rather than just questions of material interests. Other benefits proposed attempted to empower supporters in the popular assemblies, with introduction of secret ballot, restoration of tribunician rights after
Sulla's dictatorship, promotion of non-senators onto juries before the law courts, and the general election of priests. All of these empowered non-senatorial supporters broadly, including both the wealthy
equites and the poor urban population in Rome.
Ideological view One of the larger issues in modern scholarship is whether the politicians who operated in the
ratio popularis actually believed in their proposals, scepticism of which "certainly seems well warranted in many cases". A democratic interpretation of Roman politics neatly complements an ideological revival by interpreting Roman politicians to vie for popular support at an ideological, but not factional, level. This link, however, remains tenuous, as "candidates apparently never ran on specific policies or associated themselves with particular ideologies during their campaign[s]". Moreover, speculation as to the inner motivations of Roman politicians cannot be substantiated one way or the other, as the inner thoughts of the Roman elite are almost entirely lost. Even the apparent deaths suffered by "
popularis" tribunes cannot be accepted at face value: initial intentions are not final outcomes, it is unlikely that those who followed a
popularis path expected death. Mackie argued that
popularis politicians had an ideological bent towards criticising the senate's legitimacy, focusing on the sovereign powers of the popular assemblies, criticising the senate for neglecting common interests, and accusing the senate of administering the state corruptly. She added that
populares advocated for the popular assemblies to take control of the republic, phrasing demands in terms of
libertas, referring to popular sovereignty and the power of the
Roman assemblies to create law. T. P. Wiseman argues, further, that these differences reflected "rival ideologies" with "mutually incompatible [views on] what the republic was". This democratic interpretation did not imply a party structure, instead focusing on motivations and policies. Scholars of the late republic have not reached a consensus as to whether Roman politicians really were divided in these terms. Nor does an ideological approach explain the traditional identification of certain politicians (eg
Publius Sulpicius Rufus) as
popularis when the policies they advanced were only weakly connected to the welfare of the Roman voter. Robb argues, moreover, that the premise of the label, ie that a certain person or policy benefits the people write large, is of little use: "the principle of acting in the popular interest was a central one that all politicians would claim to be following".
In rhetoric The "constitutional framework in which politicians operated automatically turned policy disagreements into rhetorical contests between
populus and aristocracy": tribunes which were unable to secure the support of their peers in the senate would naturally go before the people; to justify this they turned to stock arguments for popular sovereignty; opponents would then bring out similar stock arguments for senatorial authority. Young Roman politicians also turned regularly to controversial rhetoric or policies in an attempt to build their name recognition and stand out from the mass of other political candidates in their short one-year terms, with few apparent negative impacts on their longer-term career prospects.
Popularis rhetoric was couched "in terms of the consensus of values at Rome at the time:
libertas,
leges,
mos maiorum, and senatorial incompetence at governing the
res publica". In public speeches during the republic, legislative disagreements did not emerge in party-political terms: "from the rostra... neither the opponents of
Tiberius Gracchus, nor Catulus against Gabinius, nor Bibulus against Caesar, nor Cato against Trebonius even so much as suggested that their advice to the was predicated on an 'optimate' policy based on a different arrangement of political ends and means from those of the 'popular' advocates of a bill... there was, it seems, virtually no place on the rostra for ideological bifurcation". For the Roman in the street, political debate was not related to party affiliations, but the issue and proposer itself: "Is the proposer of this agrarian (or frumentary, etc.) law really championing our interests, as he avows, or is he rather pursuing some private benefit for himself or something else behind the scenes?" which naturally flowed into the themes of personal credibility that recur in republican public rhetoric. Like most Roman rhetoric,
popularis rhetoric also drew heavily on historical precedents (
exempla) – including that from ancient times, such as the revival of the
comitia Centuriata as a popular law court, – from the abolition of the Roman monarchy to the popular rights and liberties won by the secession of the plebs.
Popularis rhetoric surrounding secret ballots and land reform were not framed in terms of innovations, but rather, in terms of preserving and restoring the birth-right liberty of the citizenry. And
populares too could hijack traditionally
optimate themes by criticising
current senators for failing to live up to the examples of their ancestors, acting in ways which would in the long run harm the authority of the senate, or framing their own arguments in fiscal responsibility. Both putative groups agreed on core values such as Roman liberty and the fundamental sovereignty of the Roman people; even those who were supporting the senate at some time or another would not be able to wholly discount the traditional sovereignty attributed to the people. Furthermore, much of the perceived difference between
optimates and
populares emerged from rhetorical flourishes unsupported by policy: "no matter how emphatically the people’s interests and 'sovereignty' may have been asserted, the republic never saw any concrete attempts to change the nature of Roman society or shift the balance of power". == Usage by ancient Romans ==