When talking about the election of 1896, there are many changes that occurred that have had a long term-effect on the nation as a whole. One of these long-term effects which proved to be quite significant was the political shift that took place which was representative of another significant shift in the United States. McKinley and the Republicans were victorious, and the Republicans would dominate politics for quite some time.
In a way, the 1896 election was an election of farmers against urban goers. The farmers or the rural community represented by William Jennings Bryan versus the urbanists or city people represented by William McKinley. The election of 1896 signified a shift in the United States; A shift to an industrial society. A victory
The book Adams vs. Jefferson: The Tumultuous Election of 1800 is a book describing what led up, and what happened during the 1800 election. Furling went as far as to mention the American revolution and talked all the way to the year 1800. Although he didn’t talk about the 1800 election until the last couple chapters, Ferling filled the readers minds with what was going on in America before the election. Ferling gives a short biography about all the candidates in the election of 1800, like Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, Charles Pinckney, and Aaron Burr.
The election of 1824 was very different than today’s elections. It set the stage for the 1828 Presidential Election to birth the “Modern American Political Campaign.” There were four candidates for the campaign in 1824. They were all from the same party. This prevented all of them from being able to get enough Electoral votes to become President.
Last by not least, chapter five describes the political parties from 1912 to the present. The election of 1912 brought major adjustments to the two major political parties as both the Democrats and Republicans switched as now Democrats favor a strong federal government as they chose Woodrow Wilson to lead their party and the Republican desired small governments. Since the transition of the beliefs from both parties, the last “liberal” Republican president was Theodore Roosevelt as he sought to represent the Republican party during the election of 1912 as a liberal and the first “liberal” Democrat was Woodrow Wilson as his viewpoint of the federal government after WWI was on a much larger scale than the Whigs, Federalists, or liberal Republicans
The populist and Bryan were for free silver while fighting in contradiction of the gold standard which believed as unfair since it was based on a 16-1 ratio in worth. The republicans and gold democrats were his opposing forces. McKinley would win the election of 1896 over Bryan and he ran resilient in were those states that silver was bountifully mined and also the deep south because of his democratic ideals and his fundamentalism in
The 1912 Election and the Power of Progressivism: A Brief History with Documents by Brett Flehinger is about the four Presidential candidates during the election of 1912, their political parties and campaigns. The book shows how opposed each candidate 's platform was and which problems the candidates agreed on. The book has documents from this time to further aid in understanding what exactly was happening. None of the candidates, however, were as different as Theodore Roosevelt and his predecessor, William Howard Taft. Their platforms and ideas regarding trusts, direct democracy and courts and the constitution differed greatly, whilst they agreed on the important issue of women 's suffrage.
In 1898, three political parties tried to win the election, the Republicans, the Populists, and the Democrats. Many of the Populists were poor black farmers and sided with Republicans. Though they had their electoral successes in 1894 and 1896, they were defeated by the Democrats in 1898. The Democrats won the 1898 election because they believed in anti-negro domination and attacking the Republicans.
In our society today, it can be difficult to forget the fact that just a century ago, minority groups such as women and African Americans faced adversity as they battle the fight for equality. All across America, people worked diligently to push for a change that would have a lasting effect. The year of 1920 encompassed several major turning points in American history such as the Election of 1920, the Sacco-Vanzetti case, and the impacting roles of minorities. While there were many turning points in the year of 1920, the election of 1920 was one of the most politically critical moments.
The turmoil, upheaval, and controversy of the 2016 Trump election is a significant current event of the modern world, but this landslide election is not the first in America’s history to raise such conflicting opinions. The Revolution of 1800 was another shift in political history that impacted not only the candidates, but majority of the public. The defeat of John Adams to Vice President Thomas Jefferson led to the rise of the Democratic-Republican Party rule and the eventual demise of the Federalist Party. Often in politics, opposing views, scandals, and negative publicity plays a role in the election process, due to this, in both the 2016 election and 1800 election negative criticism from both parties was evident. The 1800 and 2016 elections
There is one specific Presidential election that, in my mind, had the most significant impact on the United States. This is the Election of 1860. The main topic during this election was slavery. It was up to the people of the United States to decide the fate of their country. Similar to how the country was split at the time, both candidates held two opposing viewpoints on the issue.
The United States presidential election of 1920 was unique in many respects. The major political parties chose relatively unknown candidates. Also the election was the first since the ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment on August 18, 1920, and thus the first in which women had the right to vote in all 48 states. As a result, the total popular vote increased dramatically, from 18.5 million in 1916 to 26.8 million in 1920. Political discussion was dominated by the aftermath of World War I and a hostile response to certain policies of Democratic president Woodrow Wilson, as well as the massive reaction against the reformist zeal of the Progressive Era.
Some of the things that change America politically involved social events, social changes and or social movement such as the women's right movement. Some of these social things are what caused to change America politically. An example is when Elizabeth Cady Stanton who spoke at Seneca Falls Declaration at August 2, 1848 said “But we are assembled to protest against a form of government, existing without the consent of the governed--to declare our right to be free as man is free, to be represented in the government which we are taxed to support, to have such disgraceful laws as give man the power to chastise and imprison his wife” and “ we now demand our right to vote according to the declaration of the government under which we live.” was an women who was fighting for women's rights and their right to vote, just like any white man in America that can vote freely. (Document I) She was not the only woman who was fight for their rights.
American voters became more influential in presidential elections because of the events that took place during the Jacksonian and Progressive Eras. In the Jacksonian Era, some voting restrictions were removed, voting became more private, the public was more informed about politics, and voters were taken into greater consideration by presidential candidates. In the Progressive Era, better living conditions, the fight against corruption, and other political reforms made it easier for the working class to vote for candidates that they favored. These events gave voters a greater influence in politics and made elections more fair. During the Jacksonian Era, states began to give citizens a larger influence over presidential elections.
The theme of American Democracy and Its Discontents 1919-present represents within it many defining moments and events that changed or supported the change of The United States of America. Through my studies of this time period I found many events that I believe specifically changed how we live our lives to this day. In reviewing these events, the four events that stood out to me as the most significant were the Stock Market Crash which led to the Great Depression, the Equal Rights Amendment, World War II, specifically the attack by the Japanese on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii and the U.S. dropping of an atomic bomb in Hiroshima, Japan, and Rowe vs. Wade, the legalization of abortion. One of the most critical lows in Post World War I America was when
The Short and Long Term Political Effects of the Emancipation Proclamation The Emancipation Proclamation or Proclamation 95, signed and passed by president Abraham Lincoln on January 1, 1863, was an executive order that changed the federal legal status of more than 3 to 4 million enslaved people in the designated areas of the South from slave to free. With the freedom of slaves across several rebellious states whose economies ran on slavery, the reception of the order was far from exceptional. The Proclamation ordered the freedom of all slaves in ten states, South Carolina, Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Texas, Virginia, Arkansas and North Carolina, and because it was issued under the president's authority to suppress rebellion,
New Nationalism vs. New Freedom In the 1912 election for president there were four candidates, two were Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson. Both had reforms that they placed as the center of their campaigns. Roosevelt’s reform was New Nationalism and Wilson’s was New Freedom.