The Republican Party Explained (1854-2016)
From
Abraham Lincoln to
Donald Trump, the history of the
GOP.
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Script:
To understand the context of
Republican voters settling on Donald Trump, let's take a look at the history of the GOP.
The Grand Old
Party was formed by antislavery forces in the 1850’s.
Back then, the
Republican party was actually the progressive party in
American politics. The first Republican
President was Abraham Lincoln, who was elected in what political scientists say was the first of three critical elections in
American history. Before
Lincoln was even inaugurated, seven southern slaveholding states had seceded from the
Union, setting the stage for the
Civil War. Lincoln and the
Republicans in congress who controlled the Union won that war and freed the slaves. But after
Lincoln was assassinated, during reconstruction, the
Republican Party punished former leaders of the
Confederacy by not allowing them to vote or hold office, and gave former slaves the right to vote. This turned whites in the south against the Republican Party for the next
100 years and led to
the creation of the Klu Klux Klan and
Jim Crow laws that enforced segregation and took the vote away from blacks.
In 1896 the second critical election in American history gave
William McKinley the presidency and the Republicans large majorities in both houses of congress. This time-period cemented the Republicans as the party of low taxes, conservative social policies, and anti-government intervention in the economy, although legendary President
Theodore “
Teddy” Roosevelt tried to push the Party in a more progressive direction.
Fast-forward to after the stock market crash of 1929 when the country was in the depths of the
Great Depression, but the Republicans refused to take direct government intervention to help the economy, leading to the third critical election in American history, in 1932, when
Democrat Franklin D. Roosevelt and his
New Deal Coalition defeated incumbent Republican
President Herbert Hoover by 413 electoral votes. “That the only thing we have to fear is fear itself.”
Roosevelt then enacted the most progressive social programs in history, won reelection three times, and led the US to an eventual victory in
WWII.
The Republican-controlled congress never wanted to be out of power for that long again, so they approved the twenty-second amendment to the constitution, which limited presidents to just two terms in office.
After the war Roosevelt’s
Democratic successor
Harry Truman integrated the
U.S. military - a move that angered many white southern
Democrats who began switching to the Republican Party.
In
1952, Republican
Dwight D. Eisenhower - the
World War II Supreme Allied Commander - became President. His centrist governing style went a long way toward normalizing Roosevelt’s expanded role for the federal government.
In
1964 Democratic
President Lyndon Johnson signed the
Civil Rights Act which was intended to end discrimination, especially in the south. This moment, more than any other, defined the parties as we still know them today, with the Democrats coming full circle from being the party of the Confederacy 100 years earlier, to ultimately embracing diversity and equal rights; whereas the Republican Party shifted significantly to the right on social issues as it happily took in the many white voters abandoning the Democrats.
This shift was on full display, as 11 southern states voted for the Republican
Richard Nixon.
Six years after
Nixon’s Presidency ended in disgrace after the
Watergate scandal, the Republicans finally had a leader they could be proud of in the former actor and
Governor of California Ronald Reagan.
Reagan took advantage of a bad economy and the
Iran hostage crisis to defeat sitting
President Jimmy Carter in a landslide and became the father of modern conservatism with deep tax cuts and a massive buildup of the U.S. military that helped facilitate the fall of the
Soviet Union.
Reagan was followed by his Republican
Vice President,
George H.W. Bush, who helped cement many of Reagan’s signature policies.
Bill Clinton’s democratic presidency was dangerous for Republicans in that he was a charismatic white southerner capable of making inroads with the Republican base, so to counter his appeal, they highlighted his infidelities, a tactic that was largely successful in tainting his presidency despite
Clinton’s success in building a strong economy and securing a relatively peaceful world
...