American Decades
National Politics: The 1912 Democratic Nomination Race
Wilson Triumphs.
The Democrats held their national nominating convention in Baltimore on 25 June-2 July. As the opening day approached, Speaker of the House James Beauchamp "Champ" Clark of Missouri held the lead in delegates. A former editor, Clark had been a supporter of William Jennings Bryan's populist agrarian politics. Among Clark's challengers was Woodrow Wilson, a relative newcomer to national politics. Though Wilson, a former president of Princeton University, had won the governorship of New Jersey in 1910 with the backing of conservative Democratic bosses, he had proved to be much more liberal than New Jersey party| Senate | 62nd Congress |
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1910's Government and Politics
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- America and World Affairs: Dollar Diplomacy
- America and World Affairs: The Mexican Revolution
- America at War: from Neutrality to Belligerency
- America At War: Governing the Home Front
- America At War: The Aef in Europe
- America At War: Wilson's Peace Plan
- Domestic Radicalism: The Red Scare
- Electoral Reform
- Feminism: The Fight for Suffrage
- Fighting "Jim Crow": The Battle for Racial Equality
- Government and Agriculture
- Government and Business
- Government and Immigration
- Government and Labor
- Legislating Temperance: Prohibition
- National Politics: The 1910 Elections
- National Politics: The 1912 Republican Nomination Race
- National Politics: The 1912 Progressive Party Convention
- National Politics: The 1912 Democratic Nomination Race
- National Politics: The 1912 Elections
- National Politics: The 1914 Elections
- National Politics: The 1916 Republican Nomination Race
- Chapter 2 - Section 23
- Chapter 2 - Section 24
- Chapter 2 - Section 25
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Government and Politics, 1910–1919
