[This has been a particularly crazy last year/decade/eternity, but it’s not the first nutty presidential campaign and election. 100 years ago was certainly another, so this week I’ll AmericanStudy a handful of 1924 election contexts, leading up to some reflections on this year’s electoral results!]
On how
three Republican nominees for the Vice Presidency exemplify electoral chaos.
1)
Frank Lowden: Up until the ratification
of the 25th Amendment in 1967, if wasn’t required for a former
Vice President and newly sworn-in President like Calvin Coolidge to nominate a
new Vice President, and so Coolidge didn’t do so when he ascended to the
presidency in August 1923. That meant that for much of 1923 and 1924 Coolidge
was seeking the Republican nomination and reelection to the presidency with no
Vice Presidential nominee, and thus that the 1924
Republican National Convention in Cleveland needed to name such a nominee
alongside Coolidge. Coolidge’s choice was Frank O. Lowden, a
former U.S. Representative from and Governor of Illinois who had himself sought
the presidency in 1920. But perhaps because he had lost that nomination to
the Harding-Coolidge ticket, or perhaps because he had his own future
presidential ambitions (and did run again in the
1928 Republican primaries), Lowden turned down the nomination.
2)
Charles Dawes: With Coolidge’s own choice for
VP out of the running, the convention delegates as a whole settled on a new
nominee, the lawyer and businessman, World
War I officer, and Harding administration official (in the role of the first director of
the Bureau of the Budget) Charles
Dawes. During his time as Coolidge’s VP Dawes would become best known for drafting
a WWI reparations plan, known as the Dawes Plan,
for which he received the 1925
Nobel Peace Prize. But Coolidge clearly never warmed to Dawes as his VP, as
illustrated by the president’s failure to support Dawes’ signature domestic
achievement: Dawes championed the McNary-Haugen
Farm Relief Bill and helped it pass Congress, but Coolidge
vetoed the bill not once but twice (in 1926
and 1927). And when Coolidge announced he would not seek reelection in 1928
and Dawes was rumored as a possible candidate, Coolidge told delegates that he
would consider any nomination of Dawes as a personal insult.
3)
Charles Curtis: Herbert Hoover ended up the Republican
presidential nominee in 1928, and Dawes was likewise passed over as a Vice
Presidential nominee despite his continued interest in the role. Instead, the Republican
National Convention in Kansas City chose Kansas Senator Charles
Curtis as Hoover’s VP nominee. The choice of Curtis reflected a second consecutive
RNC with a contested vice presidential nomination process that was separate from,
and perhaps even more combative than, the presidential nomination. But at the
same time, Curtis was a hugely significant symbolic choice—as an enrolled
member of the Kaw Nation, he was (and remains to this day) the
only Native American ever to serve as Vice President. Another way that the
chaos of these 1920s elections mirrors some of the factors that have made our
own current campaign and election unusual and groundbreaking!
Next 1924
contexts tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What
do you think? Other crazy elections you’d highlight, or thoughts on this one
you’d share?
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