Party standpoints (user search)
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  Party standpoints (search mode)
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Author Topic: Party standpoints  (Read 4388 times)
timburt
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« on: November 09, 2004, 09:02:37 PM »

I used to be puzzled by the fact that, with few exceptions, States that were strongly Democratic 100 years ago - basically, the South - are now rock-ribbed Republican, and vice versa (New England).In fact, hard as it is to imagine now, the Republicans were originally the party of the Left in America, formed to oppose at least the extension, if not the existence, of slavery. The most fiercely Radical politicians of those days (Ben Wade, Thaddeus Stevens et. al.) were all in the Republican Party, as would Michael Moore and Ralph Nader have been, if they had been alive then. Conversely, the slave interests - the most reactionary force in the country - were all Democrats and George Bush and John Ashcroft would have been in there with them. Some one should write a book on how the two parties gradually swapped places in the political spectrum - or has someone already done so? If so, can someone point me to it? Any comments? 
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