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16 votes
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How the Simulmatics Corporation invented the future
2 votes -
In the decades before the American civil war, violence broke out in Congress too
7 votes -
How the Democratic party went from being the party of slavery and white supremacy to electing Barack Obama
5 votes -
How Southern socialites rewrote civil war history
3 votes -
Was the 2004 US election in Ohio unfairly tipped to Bush?
5 votes -
Ask Historians: How did Lincoln's political agenda on slavery change before and during the war?
8 votes -
What were the main issues in US politics from it's founding to when slavery became an important issue/the Civil War and what were the 2 parties of then about?
Admittedly that's 90 years of history but I've always wondered about what was the politics of the US back then, because I've never really known about them. The parts I'm most interested in are:...
Admittedly that's 90 years of history but I've always wondered about what was the politics of the US back then, because I've never really known about them.
The parts I'm most interested in are:
Why did it take until 1832 for the state legislatures to reach a consensus on how to elect people to the electoral college? I know states' rights are a big theme in US politics, but it seems really strange that it would take them 55 years to figure out how to pick the president, even if early on, that role was a lot less powerful.
Why were there so many parties before the US settled on the Democratic and Republican parties (although they have changed plentifully thanks to the US's 2-party political system where everyone needs to bundle up into 2 large coalitions or risk turning the US into a 1-party state.)
Why did they switch so often? From my count there are:
4 main parties being:
The Democratic-Republicans vs the federalists
The Whigs and National Republicans vs the (Jacksonian) Democrats
3 3rd parties being:
The anti-masonic party
The know nothing party/cult according to wiki apparently
The free soil/anti-slavery party
(Also in 1820 there was effectively no election, in 1824, 4 people of the same party all ran for president at once, in 1836 the same thing happened and 4 Whigs ran at once, but with Democratic opposition and 3 actually won votes while one just coasted off south Carolina. Why?)
Why were there so many large parties and what were all these parties about?
5 votes -
Is the state of West Virginia unconstitutional?
10 votes -
The case for reparations: We've had 250 years of slavery, 90 years of Jim Crow, 60 years of separate but equal and 35 years of racist housing policy. Without addressing this, the US can't move on
32 votes -
How white backlash controls American progress: Backlash dynamics are one of the defining patterns of the country’s history
8 votes -
Huey Long, the dictator of Louisiana
3 votes -
How the Kent State massacre marked the start of America's polarization
11 votes -
Political ships of Theseus | The American party switch
7 votes -
This isn't the first time a crisis has come during election year. So how have we dealt with things like this before?
8 votes -
Abraham Galloway, spy for the Union
2 votes -
How Iran's Qassem Soleimani became a US target
4 votes -
The Hamilton Hustle
5 votes -
Ronald Reagan’s “October Surprise” plot was real after all
16 votes -
How a Chase Bank chairman helped the deposed shah of Iran enter the US
5 votes -
How the Republican party went from Abraham Lincoln to Donald Trump
8 votes -
Raise the Dead - A six part series on the (US) 1960 election and its stunning parallels to 2016
8 votes -
1968 Democratic National Convention Chicago police riots
4 votes -
The metastasizing cancer of the Southern Strategy
12 votes -
When workers stopped Seattle
6 votes -
The case for reparations
7 votes -
When white supremacists overthrew a government - The Wilmington insurrection of 1898
9 votes -
This land is whose land? Indian country and the shortcomings of settler protest.
4 votes -
Mankind, unite!
6 votes -
An Election Held Hostage? - 1991
4 votes -
The lighting budget of Thomas Jefferson
5 votes -
Noam Chomsky - The Right Turn (1986)
9 votes -
Economic update: The great American purge
6 votes -
The suffocation of American democracy
8 votes -
Hunter S. Thompson in Chicago, 1968: The battle for the Democratic Party’s soul
12 votes -
Victoria Woodhull: The first American woman to run for President — 150 years ago
10 votes