American Decades
National Politics: The 1910 Elections
Democratic Resurgence.
The close electoral split between Democrats and Republicans in the years following the Civil War was altered in the elections of 1896. In that year the Republican William McKinley won the presidency with a decisive victory over agrarian Democrat William Jennings Bryan. Thereafter, the Republican Party held a majority of congressional seats for twenty-six of the thirty-four years from 1896 to 1930 and, with only two exceptions, won every presidential election from 1896 until 1932. Except for the 1910s the Republicans dominated American politics for the first third of the twentieth century. From 1910 to 1918 the Democratic Party held a majority of seats in Congress, and Democrat Woodrow Wilson won both presidential elections held during the decade.
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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
