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  2. Apr 15, 2024 · Campaign poster for Robert M. La Follette’s 1924 campaign for the presidency on the new Progressive Party ticket. Issues concerning race, particularly the Ku Klux Klan, also defined the 1924 Progressive campaign.

  3. Progressive Party, (1924), in the United States, a short-lived independent political party assembled for the 1924 presidential election by forces dissatisfied with the conservative attitudes and programs of the Democrats and Republicans. The Progressive Party included liberals, agrarians, Republican progressives, socialists, and labour ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. The Progressives favored a constitutional amendment that would protect congressional legislation from judicial review. They also favored direct popular election of federal judges for a term of no more than ten years, with the election being held without party designation.

  5. Progressive Party Platform of 1924. November 04, 1924. The great issue before the American people today is the control of government and industry by private monopoly. For a generation the people have struggled patiently, in the face of repeated betrayals by successive administrations, to free themselves from this intolerable power which has ...

  6. The party advocated progressive positions such as government ownership of railroads and electric utilities, cheap credit for farmers, the outlawing of child labor, stronger laws to help labor unions, more protection of civil liberties, an end to American imperialism in Latin America, and a referendum before any president could lead the nation in...

  7. Mar 4, 2024 · A new Progressive Party emerged in the presidential election of 1924, largely unrelated to Roosevelts party of 1912 except in name and similar ideas of reform. These new Progressives nonetheless nominated U.S. Senator Robert M. LaFollette of Wisconsin for president and U.S. Senator Burton K. Wheeler of Montana for vice president.

  8. May 17, 2018 · In 1924, a group of Progressives, including former members of the Bull Moose Party, united with railroad union workers, an organization called the Conference for Progressive Political Action (CPPA), the american federation of labor, and the American Socialist Party to support the presidential candidacy of Robert M. La Follette.

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