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FROM
THE BEGINNING REPUBLICANS STOOD FOR FREEDOM
Abolishing
slavery. Free Speech, Womens Suffrage. In todays stereotypes,
none of these sounds like a typical Republican issue, yet they are
stances the Republican Party, in opposition to the Democratic Party,
adopted early on.
Reducing
the government. Streamlining the bureaucracy. Returning power to
the states. These issues do not sound like they would be the promises
of the party of Lincoln, the party that fought to preserve the national
union, but they are, and logically so. With a core belief in the
idea of the primacy of individuals, the Republican Party, since
its inception, has been at the forefront of the fight for individuals
rights in opposition to a large, bloated government.
The
Republican Party has always thrived on challenges and difficult
positions. Its present role as leader of the revolution in which
the principles of government are being re-evaluated is a role it
has traditionally embraced.
At
the time of its founding, the Republican Party was organized as
an answer to the divided politics, political turmoil, arguments
and internal division, particularly over slavery, that plagued the
many existing political parties in the United States in 1854. The
Free Soil Party, asserting that all men had a natural right to the
soil, demanded that the government re-evaluate homesteading legislation
and grant land to settlers free of charge. The Conscience Whigs,
the radical faction of the Whig Party in the North,
alienated themselves from their Southern counterparts by adopting
an anti-slavery position. And the Kansas-Nebraska Act, which allowed
territories to determine whether slavery would be legalized in accordance
with popular sovereignty and thereby nullify the principles
of the Missouri Compromise, created a schism within the Democratic
Party.
A staunch
Anti-Nebraska Democrat, Alvan E. Bovay, like his fellow Americans,
was disillusioned by this atmosphere of confusion and division.
Taking advantage of the political turmoil caused by the Kansas-Nebraska
Act, Bovay united discouraged members from the Free Soil Party,
the Conscience Whigs and the Anti-Nebraska Democrats. Meeting in
a Congregational church in Ripon, Wis., he helped establish a party
that represented the interests of the North and the abolitionists
by merging two fundamental issues: free land and preventing the
spread of slavery into the Western territories. Realizing the new
party needed a name to help unify it, Bovay decided on the term
Republican because it was simple, synonymous with equality and alluded
to the earlier party of Thomas Jefferson, the Democratic-Republicans.
On
July 6, 1854, in Jackson, Mich., the Republican Party formally organized
itself by holding its first convention, adopting a platform and
nominating a full slate of candidates for state offices. Other states
soon followed, and the first Republican candidate for president,
John C. Fremont, ran in 1856 with the slogan Free soil, free
labor, free speech, free men, Fremont.
Even
though he ran on a third-party ticket, Fremont managed to capture
a third of the vote, and the Republican Party began to add members
throughout the land. As tensions mounted over the slavery issue,
more anti-slavery Republicans began to run for office and be elected,
even with the risks involved with taking this stance. Republican
Sen. Charles Sumner of Massachusetts experienced this danger firsthand.
Sumner infuriated Rep. Preston S. Brooks, the son of one of Butlers
cousins, who felt his family honor had been insulted. This incident
electrified the nation and helped to galvanize Northern opinion
against the South; Southern opinion hailed Brooks as a hero. But
Sumner stood by his principles, and after a three year, painful
convalescence, he returned to the Senate to continue his struggle
against slavery.
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ORIGIN
OF THE REPUBLICAN ELEPHANT
This
symbol of the party was born in the imagination of cartoonist Thomas
Nast and first appeared in Harpers Weekly on November 7, 1874.
An
1860 issue of Railsplitter and an 1872 cartoon in Harpers
Weekly connected elephants with Republicans, but it was Nast who
provided the party with its symbol.
Oddly,
two unconnected events led to the birth of the Republican
Elephant. James Gordon Bennetts New York Herald raised the
cry of
Caesarism in connection with the possibility of a third
term try for President Ulysses S. Grant.
While
the illustrated journals were depicting Grant wearing a crown, the
Herald involved itself in another circulation-builder in an entirely
different, nonpolitical area. This was the Central Park Menagerie
Scare of 1874, a delightful hoax perpetrated by the Herald. They
ran a story, totally untrue, that the animals in the zoo had broken
loose and were roaming the wilds of New Yorks Central Park
in search of prey.
Cartoonist
Thomas Nast took the two examples of the Herald enterprise and put
them together in a cartoon for Harpers Weekly. He showed an
ass (symbolizing the Herald) wearing a lions skin (the scary
prospect of Caesarism) frightening away the animals in the forest
(Central Park). The caption quoted a familiar fable: An ass
having put on a lions skin roamed about in the forest and
amused himself by frightening all the foolish animals he met within
he wanderings.
One
of the foolish animals in the cartoon was an elephant, representing
the Republican vote not the party, the Republican vote
which was being frightened away from its normal ties by the phony
scare of Caesarism. In a subsequent cartoon on November 21, 1874,
after the election in which the Republicans did badly, Nast followed
up the idea by showing the elephant in a trap, illustrating the
way the Republican vote had been decoyed from its normal allegiance.
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THE
ORIGIN OF GOP
A favorite
of headline writers, GOP dates back to the 1870s and 80s.
The abbreviation was cited in a New York Herald story on October
15, 1884; The G.O.P. Doomed, shouted the Boston Post
.
But
what GOP stands for has changed with the times. In 1875 there was
a citation in the Congressional Record referring to this gallant
old party, and, according to Harpers Weekly, in the
Cincinnati Commercial in 1876 to Grand Old Party.
Perhaps
the use of the G.O.M. for Britains Prime Minister
William E. Gladstone in 1882 as the Grand Old Man stimulated
the use of GOP in the United States soon after.
In
early motorcar days, GOP took on the term get out and push.
During the 1964 presidential campaign, Go-Party was
used briefly, and during the Nixon Administration, frequent references
to the generation of peace had happy overtones. In line
with moves in the 70s to modernize the party, Republican leaders
took to referring to the grand old party, harkening
back to a 1971 speech by President Nixon at the dedication of the
Eisenhower Republican Center in Washington, D.C.
Indeed,
the grand old party is an ironic term, since the Democrat
Party was organized some 22 years earlier in 1832.
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REPUBLICAN
PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES
REPUBLICAN
PARTY, one of the two major United States political parties, founded
by a coalition in 1854. The coalition was composed of former members
of the Whig, Free-Soil, and Know-Nothing parties, along with Northern
Democrats who were dissatisfied with their partys conciliatory
attitude on the slavery issue (see Free-Soil Party; The early Republicans
were united in their opposition to extending slavery into the Western
territories. In 1856 they nominated John Charles Fremont for the
presidency. He won about a third of the popular vote, but alienated
many potential supporters by his failure to oppose immigration.
The
Republicans joined the Democrats as one of the nations two
major parties in the late 1850s. They gained support as concern
grew in the North over Southern influence in Washington, D.C., and
they reassured the antiforeign Know-Nothings that they cared about
the social impact of immigration. In1860 their candidate, Abraham
Lincoln, was elected to the presidency; the Southern states reacted
by seceding from the Union, and the country was plunged into the
Civil War (1861-1865).
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