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Others - "Fighting Bob" La Follette and the Progressive Movement: Third-Party Politics in the 1920s (Paperback)
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Others - "Fighting Bob" La Follette and the Progressive Movement: Third-Party Politics in the 1920s (Paperback)
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The fourth volume in this series on independent and third-party
politics in the United States focuses on the 1920s, a period when
the American people, longing for a return to "normalcy," rejected
the idealism and liberalism of Woodrow Wilson's administration and
strongly embraced the conservatism of Warren G. Harding and his
successors, Calvin Coolidge and Herbert Hoover. In electing Harding
in a landslide, the American people made it clear that they had
little interest in continuing the great wave of progressive reform
that helped shape politics and the role of government in the United
States from the turn of the century until 1917, shortly after the
U.S. entered World War I. With the exception of Robert M. La
Follette's momentous campaign for the White House in 1924-a year
when one out of every six voters supported the Wisconsin
insurgent's independent candidacy-it was a rather bleak period for
America's progressive forces and a particularly painful and lonely
period for the country's minor parties. This narrative concludes
with the presidential election of 1928, a year when the dignified
and urbane Norman M. Thomas, Eugene V. Debs' successor on the
Socialist Party ticket, polled only a tiny fraction of the more
than 919,000 votes cast for his imprisoned predecessor eight years
earlier. Across the board, the results were calamitous for the
country's nationally-organized third parties.
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