On March 20, 1854 a double handful of political malcontents—Whigs despairing of their failing party, Free Soilers, even an anti-slavery
Democrat or two—met in a school house in Ripon,
Wisconsin at the request of lawyer Alvan
E. Bovay. They were upset by
the Kansas-Nebraska Act then being debated in Congress which would junk the
old Missouri Compromise and leave the door open to the extension of slavery in all of the western
Territories by election—Popular
Sovereignty. The meeting resolved
that stronger measures must be taken to oppose the pet project of Illinois Senator Stephen A. Douglas.
The Ripon meeting is considered the founding meeting of the Republican Party. But it was just one of several such
meetings held across the Midwest and
in New York State contemplating or
urging similar action.
The extension of slavery was not the
only part of the Kansas-Nebraska Act that stirred
passions and brought recruits. A now little
remembered provision in the act forbad non-citizen
aliens from voting or holding office in the Territories. That sounds
benign today, but Wisconsin was being rapidly settled by waves of immigrants—Germans, Norwegians, Swedes, Danes, Finns, and
Welsh—who usually established settlements with their own countrymen. These people could not organize their communities if they did not vote and hold
office. Wisconsinites naturally feared
that such measures might then be extended
even to established states.
Anti-slavery people also recognized that this would diminish the ability
of anti-slavery residents including most immigrants from opposing slavery in
Popular Sovereignty elections.
A state-wide convention was held in Madison that July to formally
establish the Republican Party and nominate
candidates in the fall election. The delegates
resolved, “That we accept this issue [freedom or slavery], forced upon us
by the slave power, and in the defense of freedom will cooperate and be known
as Republicans.”
Influential
editor Horace Greely had supported
the name for a new party that June in his New York Tribune. “[Republicans] fitly designate those who had united to restore the Union to its true mission of champion and promulgator of
Liberty rather than propagandist of
slavery.” and no one had any better ideas.
The infant Wisconsin party had immediate success. In the elections of 1854 Republicans won two
of the three U.S. House of Representatives
seats, a majority of the State Assembly
seats, and a large number of local
offices. And with control of the
state Senate they were able to elect
a U.S Senator. A year later they
took the Governorship.
Such impressive results obviously made Wisconsin a leader in the movement to create a national party. But others
had been busy as well. In New York state wily political boss Thrulow
Weed and ambitious Senator William Steward brought not
only Whigs and Free Soilers but the locally powerful former American Party—Know Nothings—members together with the backing of Greeley’s Tribune.
The name Republican was previously
associated with slave holder Thomas
Jefferson, ancestral founder of
the Democrats. The irony was lost on no one.
As in Wisconsin local parties in New
York, Michigan, Ohio, and elsewhere in the North had success while the old Whig and
shaky Free Soil parties continued to crumble.
In July 1856 these local
organizations met for the first time in a national
convention in Philadelphia. By this time the Kansas-Nebraska Act was in
full effect and the virtual civil war between pro and anti-slavery faction
in Bleeding Kansas was stirring
passions. 600 delegates attended, mainly
from the northern states but also including the border states of Virginia,
Maryland, Delaware, Kentucky, plus the District of Columbia. The Territory
of Kansas was seated as a state.
Dashing and handsome John C. Fremont, the Pathfinder, was nominated as the Republican Party's first presidential candidate. He did surprisingly well. |
The party nominated the dashing, arrogant, but somewhat dim soldier
and explorer John C. Frémont. To hear him tell the tale, he had personally
lassoed California for the Union by unilateral action during the Mexican
War. His Army superiors and the naval
officer in charge of California were not
amused and the Pathfinder had
been court martialed for mutiny.
Despite this dust up,
Frémont was a popular hero and he
had the advantage of a determined and
much smarter wife, Jessie and
her powerful father, Senator Thomas Hart Benton of Missouri, still a Democrat but opposed
to violation of the old Missouri Compromise.
Young up and coming Illinois lawyer
Abraham Lincoln narrowly lost the nomination for Vice President to New
Jersey’s William L. Dayton.
The Whigs failed to nominate a candidate in 1856 and overnight the
Republicans went from third party to
major party status—the only minor party in American history to
make the leap. The Democrats
nominated colorless but capable James
Buchanan, the Secretary of State and
former Senator from Pennsylvania and
like other Democratic Presidential candidates, a “Northern man of Southern
Principles.” The Know Nothing American
Party put up former President Millard
Fillmore who promptly denounced
the party’s nativist platform and
ran as a savior of the union. Fillmore went
nowhere. Buchanan swept the South and was able to hold
onto some northern states. Frémont surprised almost everyone and won a third
of the popular vote and 11 Electoral votes including New York,
Ohio, and Massachusetts.
After the 1858 mid-term elections,
Republicans had won a majority in the U.S.
House, a strong minority in the
Senate, and a majority of northern Governorships. Southerners quickly became convinced that a
Republican victory in 1860 would be a fatal
blow to their “way of life”, the
popular euphemism for slavery.
The Republicans still sometimes--when they are not pandering to Southern White voters, Neo-Confederates, and Alt-Right bully boys--claims to be the Party of Linclon, the first Republican President. |
When the Republican’s next met
several powerful politicians expected to be the nominee—especially Seward and Ohio Governor Salmon P. Chase. Both had strong bases and credentials as ardent opponents of slavery. But by shrewd
maneuvering, particularly by appealing
to border states by painting himself as a moderate who would “not
disturb slavery where it existed” and as a champion for maintaining the Union, Lincoln walked away with the nomination.
The Democrats shattered three ways by section and their strongest candidate,
Lincoln’s old debating opponent Douglas, could not win enough electoral
votes. The Republicans were in and in
short order the Confederacy seceded. You know the rest of that story.
After the Civil War the Republicans were the ruling party with only three
interruptions for the next 65 years.
But they quickly developed
factions. The Radical Republicans—whose reputations
have been tarnished by generations
of diligent pro-Southern historians—remained committed to racial equality
in the old Confederacy. Many
Republicans, including their large,
loyal base of Germans in the
Midwest, tended to support the rising labor movement. New England and New York elected officials tended to be far more liberal on most
issues than Northern Democrats, support of the union movement aside.
On the other hand the Party quickly
became the darling of the vigorous robber baron class of capitalists
and monopolists of all
stripes. That lead to corruption in high places in government
but the steady stream of money
proved a siren song hard to resist. Factions of the party fought hammer and tong over issues like anti-trust laws and labor
reforms for decades. In the late 19th Century Marc Hanna formalized the
dominance of Big Business capitalists
through his Civic Federation and a “grand bargain” that gave labor a symbolic but powerless “seat at the table.”
In the meantime, in the Midwestern
heartland of the party a kind of reflexive
small town/successful farmer conservatism took root that was mostly entrenched stodgyism—reflective
resistance to most change, anti-labor, Protestant, and more than slightly tinged with nativism.
Bob La Follette brought Progressivism to the Party. |
In the early 20th Century Robert La Follette and others in the upper Midwest
would infuse the party with a new brand of Progressivism. Theodore
Roosevelt, the accidental President
and “that damned cowboy!” to party conservatives,
brought his own brand of progressivism to the White House and in 1912 split
the Republicans to form his personal
Progressive Party, helping hand the
Presidency to Democrat Woodrow
Wilson. Many of his progressive
followers never returned to the
Republicans.
As for those Democrats, they had
their own divisions. In the South they returned to power after the end of Reconstruction, erased its reforms, instituted Jim
Crow, and ruled the Solid South unopposed. Because they returned their Senators and Representatives time after time, virtually for life, the Southerners by seniority became enormous powers in
Congress.
On the other hand agrarian radicalism on the plains and out West led by William Jennings
Bryan re-infused the Democrats with a brand of Jeffersonian suspicion of banks, hard money, and monopolies. And the big
cities of the East and Midwest large immigrant populations, rebelling at
the increasing nativism—and eventually prohibitionism—of
the Republican dominance became overwhelmingly Democrat. That in turn brought the party to closer identification with the labor
movement.
After World War I the various factions of the Republican Party, each for
its own reasons, ranging from pacifist
revulsion at the carnage of the Great War, to xenophobia, to high tariff
protectionism, to fervent belief in American
exceptionalism, tended to unify
around what became known as isolationism.
The Great Depression seemingly permanently
upset the Republican apple cart.
They were ousted as the ruling
power by re-invigorated Democrats,
the New Deal, and a seemingly irresistible rise of liberalism. The Republicans reacted in two ways. First with sputtering outrage at “That Man!”
Then party liberals got the upper hand with candidates like Wendell Willke and Thomas E. Dewey who simply promised a slightly more moderate
continuation of the New Deal. “We can do it better,” was their
argument.
Japanese
bombs ended isolationism as a viable political position, although
forms of it via conservative voices like Senator
Robert Taft of Ohio, would linger
into the post war years.
What really began to change the
Republican Party was its decision to paint
itself as the champion of Anti-communism. That began the long assault on party liberals, particularly the scorned Eastern Establishment as being either “pink” themselves or soft.
The huge personal popularity
of Dwight Eisenhower was able to
hold that rising faction at bay, but
the John Birch Society, the godfather organization of modern movement conservatism, reviled him.
When Eisenhower began intervening on behalf of court ordered desegregation in the South, archconservatives began aping of
Southern Democrats calls for States
Rights and the sacred right of private property as a sufficient reason
for businesses to deny Blacks public
accommodations.
The Federal Government, including its ensnarement with the world community via the United Nations and other organizations, became increasingly the
enemy for this still minority tendency.
There were still plenty of pro-Civil Rights Republicans who gloried in being the Party of Lincoln as well as liberal internationalists.
A Birch Society attack on popular Ike. |
In 1964, however, conservatives led
by Arizona Senator Barry Goldwater, gave
the back of their hand to party liberals and the Eastern Establishment
represented by Nelson Rockefeller. Liberal, or even self-described moderate Republicans, would never again seriously vie for party leadership, even when Goldwater
went down in spectacular flames
against Lyndon Johnson. The long, slow withering of liberal
Republicanism was under way.
Taking advantage of Southern outrage at Democrats for the Civil Rights acts of the 1960’s and the example of George Wallace’s electoral successes, Richard Nixon inaugurated the
successful Southern Strategy to
usurp Democratic power in the South.
Soon the South was solid
again—solidly Republican.
Despite his conservative rhetoric
and political game plan, in retrospect Nixon’s presidency was not only moderate, but fairly liberal. Had he not personally surrendered to his demons and gone down in disgrace, he might have left behind a fairly
moderate party. Instead his embittered hard core supporters blamed
liberals—Democrats and Republicans alike.
But you can’t win National elections based only on the South. Republicans began exploiting cultural resentments over hippies, anti-war protestors, and eventually bra burning feminists and abortion
and in the process peeled away segments
of traditional working class support
from the Democrats.
Becoming the perpetual party of against and
demonizing liberalism was becoming
intoxicatingly successful.
And with the folksy charm of Ronald Regan conservatives were triumphant in the party. When his one-term successor George Bush, was ousted by charismatic Democrat Bill Clinton, Republican strategists
decided that Bush had not been a true
conservative after all and that a real right
winger would have won the day.
Resentful conservatives did two things.
First they began to contest party moderates and liberals in primaries and even non-partisan local elections.
And they turned to the so-called Moral
Majority of the burgeoning Evangelical movement for reliable foot soldiers and highly motivated voters.
An infrastructure of think
tanks, radio talk shows, and
eventually a cable TV network, was financed by the deep pockets of
supposedly libertarian billionaires, was
set up to amplify orchestrated messages.
Primaries
became places where Republican
candidates could only win by constantly
trying to outflank each other on the right.
By the early 21st Century old
fashion New England liberal Republicans were extinct and socially
moderate conservatives, derided as country
club Republicans in the vast white
suburbs were equally endangered.
The creation of the Astroturf Tea Party Movement along with
its anti-immigrant xenophobia, resentment of the poor as shiftless takers,
and simple diffused rage, was welcomed by the Republican establishment,
and then made its prisoner.
For the results, pick up any newspaper.
The party started in that Wisconsin
school house persists only in its name. It has now been totally usurped by Donald Trump. The
ghosts of those founders must look down
aghast at what the not-so-grand old
party has become.
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