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Let the People Rule: Theodore Roosevelt and…
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Let the People Rule: Theodore Roosevelt and the Birth of the Presidential Primary (edition 2016)

by Geoffrey Cowan (Author)

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73None363,818 (2.67)None
History. Nonfiction. The colorful, dramatic, and surprising story of four crucial months in Teddy Roosevelt's 1912 campaign that fundamentally altered the American political process. Between February 24, 1912, when TR came out of political retirement to challenge William Howard Taft for the Republican Party's nomination for president, and June 23 of that year, Roosevelt and his supporters created and benefited from thirteen new presidential primaries, the first in the nation's history. Stressing the importance of primaries, TR's campaign theme became "the right of the people to rule." Though Roosevelt won about 70 percent of the delegates selected by public vote, it was not enough to overcome the power of party bosses and entrenched interests. He walked out of the convention to create the Bull Moose Party but then shocked many of his strongest supporters by excluding all black delegates from the Deep South. Let the People Rule shows how the political and social turmoil of that landmark year changed politics in ways that provide important lessons for America today.… (more)
Member:alisonchris
Title:Let the People Rule: Theodore Roosevelt and the Birth of the Presidential Primary
Authors:Geoffrey Cowan (Author)
Info:W. W. Norton & Company (2016), Edition: 1, 424 pages
Collections:Your library, Kindle Collection, Chris read in 2017
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Tags:History, Kindle, Nonfiction, U.S. History

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Let the People Rule: Theodore Roosevelt and the Birth of the Presidential Primary by Geoffrey Cowan

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History. Nonfiction. The colorful, dramatic, and surprising story of four crucial months in Teddy Roosevelt's 1912 campaign that fundamentally altered the American political process. Between February 24, 1912, when TR came out of political retirement to challenge William Howard Taft for the Republican Party's nomination for president, and June 23 of that year, Roosevelt and his supporters created and benefited from thirteen new presidential primaries, the first in the nation's history. Stressing the importance of primaries, TR's campaign theme became "the right of the people to rule." Though Roosevelt won about 70 percent of the delegates selected by public vote, it was not enough to overcome the power of party bosses and entrenched interests. He walked out of the convention to create the Bull Moose Party but then shocked many of his strongest supporters by excluding all black delegates from the Deep South. Let the People Rule shows how the political and social turmoil of that landmark year changed politics in ways that provide important lessons for America today.

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