Everything about United States Populist Party totally explained
The
Populist Party (also known as the
People's Party) was a relatively short-lived
political party in the
United States in the late 19th century. It flourished particularly among western farmers, based largely on its opposition to the
gold standard. The party didn't remain a lasting feature of the political landscape, though many of its ideas have. The very term "
populist" has since become a generic term in U.S. politics for politics which appeals to the common in opposition to established interests.
At least three distinct American parties have used the term
populist in their names since 1924. See "Recent Incarnations" section below.
History
The Populist Party grew out of the agrarian revolt that rose to the collapse of agriculture prices following the
Panic of 1873. The
Farmers' Alliance, formed in Lampasas, TX in 1876, promoted collective economic action by farmers and achieved widespread popularity in the
South and
Great Plains. The Farmers' Alliance was ultimately unable to achieve its wider economic goals of collective economic action against brokers, railroads, and merchants, and many in the movement agitated for changes in national policy. By the late 1880s, the Alliance had developed a political agenda that called for regulation and reform in national politics, most notably an opposition to the gold standard to counter the
deflation in
agricultural prices.
The drive to create a new political party out of the movement arose from the refusal of both
Democrats and
Republicans to take up and promote the policies advocated by the Alliance, notably in regard to the Populists' call for unlimited coinage of
silver.
The Populist Party was formed by members of the
"Alliance", in conjunction with the
Knights of Labor, in 1889–1890. The movement reached its peak in 1892 when the party held a convention in
Omaha, Nebraska and nominated candidates for the national election.
The party's
platform, commonly known as the
Omaha Platform, called for the abolition of national banks, a graduated
income tax,
direct election of Senators, civil service reform, a working day of eight hours and Government control of all
railroads,
telegraphs, and
telephones. In the
1892 Presidential election,
James B. Weaver received 1,027,329 votes. Weaver carried four states (
Colorado,
Kansas,
Idaho, and
Nevada) and received electoral votes from
Oregon and
North Dakota as well.
The party flourished most among farmers in the Southwest and
Great Plains, as well as making significant gains in the
South, where they faced an uphill battle given the firmly entrenched
monopoly of the
Democratic Party. Opposition to the
gold standard was especially strong among western
farmers, who viewed the inherent scarcity of gold (and its slow movement through the banking system) as an instrument of Eastern
banking interests who could force mass
bankruptcies among farmers in the
west by instigating
"credit crunches". Many western farmers rallied around the Populist
banner in the belief that
greenbacks not backed by a hard mineral standard would allow credit to flow more freely through rural regions.
Free silver platform received widespread support across class lines in the
Mountain states, where the economy was heavily dependent upon silver mining. The Populists were the first political party in the United States to actively include women in their affairs. At a time when cultural attitudes of white supremacy were permeating all aspects of American life, a number of southern Populists, including
Thomas E. Watson, openly talked of the need for poor blacks and poor whites to set aside their racial differences in the name of shared economic self-interest. Regardless of these rhetoric appeals, however, racism didn't evade the People's Party. In fact, after the party's disintegration, Watson himself later became an outspoken white supremacist.
Presidential election of 1896
By 1896, the Democratic Party took up many of the Populist Party's causes at the national level, and the party began to fade from national prominence. In
that year's presidential election, the Populists nominated Democratic candidate
William Jennings Bryan; he backed the Populist opposition to the gold standard in his famous "
Cross of Gold" speech. The Populists couldn't bring themselves to also nominate Bryan's wealthy running mate,
Arthur Sewall, and nominated
Thomas E. Watson for vice president instead, though Watson staunchly opposed fusion with the Democrats. The 1896 convention was the Coliseum of the
St. Louis Exposition and Music Hall which in the same month hosted the
1896 Republican National Convention. Bryan lost to
William McKinley by a margin of 600,000 votes. The effects of
fusion with the Democrats were disastrous to the Party in the south. Collaboration with the racist Democratic establishment effectively ended the Populist/Republican alliance which had governed
North Carolina with the support of
African Americans. By 1898, the North Carolinian Populists were attempting to out-flank the Democrats with a virulently racist campaign.
In
1900, while many Populist voters supported Bryan again, the weakened party nominated a ticket of
Wharton Barker and
Ignatius L. Donnelly.
Thomas E. Watson was the Populist nominee for president in
1904 and in
1908, after which the party effectively ceased to exist.
Legacy
The nation remained at least partially on the gold standard until 1973, when President Nixon revoked it. However, the Populists' notion of allowing
silver to become legal tender was noted and adopted by the US Government, but only for a short period of time. On the same note there exist historians who would cite the
Sherman Silver Purchase Act as a major contributing factor to the depression of 1893.
In addition, the Populist Party's call for the direct election of senators was realized in 1913 with the ratification of the
seventeenth amendment.
Elected officials
Governors
- Colorado: Davis Hanson Waite, 1893-1895
- Kansas: Lorenzo D. Lewelling, 1893–1895
- Kansas: John W. Leedy, 1897–1899
- Nebraska: Silas A. Holcomb, 1895-1899 (Fusion of Democrats and Populists)
- Nebraska: William A. Poynter, 1899-1901 (Fusion of Democrats and Populists)
- North Carolina: Daniel Lindsay Russell, 1897-1901 (Fusion of Republicans and Populists)
- Oregon: Sylvester Pennoyer, 1887–1895 (Fusion of Democrats and Populists)
- South Dakota: Andrew E. Lee, 1897–1901
- Tennessee: John P. Buchanan, 1891-1893
- Washington: John Rogers, 1897-1901 (Fusion of Democrats and Populists)
United States Congress
Approximately forty-five members of the party served in the U.S. Congress between 1891 and 1902. These included six
United States Senators:
William A. Peffer and William A. Harris from Kansas
Marion Butler of North Carolina
James H. Kyle from South Dakota
Henry Heitfeld of Idaho
William V. Allen from Nebraska
The following were Populist members of the U.S. House of Representatives:
52nd United States Congress
Thomas E. Watson, Georgia's 10th congressional district
Benjamin Hutchinson Clover, Kansas's 3rd congressional district
John Grant Otis, Kansas's 4th congressional district
John Davis, Kansas's 5th congressional district
William Baker, Kansas's 6th congressional district
Jerry Simpson, Kansas's 7th congressional district
Kittel Halvorson, Minnesota's 6th congressional district
William A. McKeighan, Nebraska's 2nd congressional district
Omer Madison Kem, Nebraska's 3rd congressional district
53rd United States Congress
Marion Cannon, California's 6th congressional district
Lafayette Pence, Colorado's 1st congressional district
John Calhoun Bell, Colorado's 2nd congressional district
Horace Ladd Moore, Kansas's 2nd congressional district
Thomas Jefferson Hudson, Kansas's 3rd congressional district
John Davis, Kansas' 5th congressional district
William Baker, Kansas' 6th congressional district
Jerry Simpson, Kansas' 7th congressional district
William A. Harris, Kansas Member-at-large
William A. McKeighan, Nebraska's 5th congressional district
Omer Madison Kem, Nebraska's 6th congressional district
Alonzo C. Shuford, North Carolina's 7th congressional district
54th United States Congress
Albert Taylor Goodwyn, Alabama's 5th congressional district
Milford W. Howard, Alabama's 7th congressional district
William Baker, Kansas' 6th congressional district
Omer Madison Kem, Nebraska's 6th congressional district
Harry Skinner, North Carolina's 1st congressional district
William F. Strowd, North Carolina's 4th congressional district
Charles H. Martin (1848-1931), North Carolina's 6th congressional district
Alonzo C. Shuford, North Carolina's 7th congressional district
55th United States Congress
Albert Taylor Goodwyn, Alabama's 5th congressional district
Charles A. Barlow, California's 6th congressional district
Curtis H. Castle, California's 7th congressional district
James Gunn, Idaho's 1st congressional district
Mason Summers Peters, Kansas's 2nd congressional district
Edwin Reed Ridgely, Kansas's 3rd congressional district
William Davis Vincent, Kansas's 5th congressional district
Nelson B. McCormick, Kansas's 6th congressional district
Jerry Simpson, Kansas's 7th congressional district
Jeremiah Dunham Botkin, Kansas Member-at-large
Samuel Maxwell, Nebraska's 3rd congressional district
William Ledyard Stark, Nebraska's 4th congressional district
Roderick Dhu Sutherland, Nebraska's 5th congressional district
William Laury Greene, Nebraska's 6th congressional district
Harry Skinner, North Carolina's 1st congressional district
John E. Fowler, North Carolina's 3rd congressional district
William F. Strowd, North Carolina's 4th congressional district
Charles H. Martin, North Carolina's 5th congressional district
Alonzo C. Shuford, North Carolina's 7th congressional district
John Edward Kelley, South Dakota's 1st congressional district
Freeman T. Knowles, South Dakota's 2nd congressional district
56th United States Congress
William Ledyard Stark, Nebraska's 4th congressional district
Roderick Dhu Sutherland, Nebraska's 5th congressional district
William Laury Greene, Nebraska's 6th congressional district
John W. Atwater, North Carolina's 4th congressional district
57th United States Congress
Thomas L. Glenn, Idaho's 1st congressional district
Caldwell Edwards, Montana's 1st congressional district
William Ledyard Stark, Nebraska's 4th congressional district
William Neville, Nebraska's 6th congressional district
Recent incarnations
People's Party
In the 1970s, a "People's Party" was established as a left-wing, anti-war coalition. It ceased to exist after 1976.
Populist Party (right-wing)
In 1984, the Populist Party name was revived by some extreme right activists including Willis Carto. The party's 1984 presidential nominee, Olympic medalist and ordained minister Bob Richards, and running mate Maureen Salaman carried 66,324 votes. This party became the electoral vehicle for the right-wing Presidential campaigns of former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke in 1988, and of former Green Beret officer Bo Gritz in 1992, but was defunct by 1996. Willis Carto and party chair Don Wassall were said to be rivals competing for control of the party. In 1994 the anti-Carto group won the internal struggle and re-organized the group as the American Nationalist Union.
Electoral history
United States presidential election, 1984: Bob Richards/Maureen Salaman 51,918
United States presidential election, 1988: David Duke/Floyd Parker 32,574
United States presidential election, 1992: James Bo Gritz/Cyril Minett 106,152 0.10%
Populist Party of America
A new group officially formed in 2002 calling itself the Populist Party of America (http://www.populistamerica.com), which advocates direct democracy and a "strict adherence to the Bill of Rights" as well as a general opposition to President George W. Bush and the Iraq War. This party is registered with the Federal Election Commission (at a Los Angeles address) but hasn't yet fielded candidates for president or established itself as an electoral force.
Populist Parties, 2004-present
Meanwhile, the name Populist Party was adopted in 2004 by groups in several states seeking a ballot line for independent presidential candidate Ralph Nader. The Populist Party of Maryland was one of those groups, but unlike most, it continued to exist after Nader's poor showing in 2004. In the 2006 United States Senate election in Maryland, the Populist Party of Maryland supported a fusion ticket of Green Party, Libertarian Party, and Populist supporters for U.S. Senate candidate Kevin Zeese, a founder of the PPMD and 2004 press secretary for Ralph Nader. The Maryland Populists also nominated candidates for governor and lieutenant governor of the state.
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