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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Patricia Trinchero who wrote (127473)2/16/2001 12:09:58 PM
From: Neocon  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
The one's passing the laws in the various states were Democrats.



To: Patricia Trinchero who wrote (127473)2/16/2001 12:20:21 PM
From: Neocon  Respond to of 769667
 
ENCYCLOPÆDIA BRITANNICA

Hayes, Rutherford B.


Rutherford B. Hayes, 1877.

b. Oct. 4, 1822, Delaware, Ohio, U.S.
d. Jan. 17, 1893, Fremont, Ohio
in full RUTHERFORD BIRCHARD HAYES 19th president of the United States (1877-81), who brought post-Civil War Reconstruction to an end in the South and who tried to establish new standards of official integrity after eight years of corruption in Washington, D.C. He was the only president to hold office by decision of an extraordinary commission of congressmen and Supreme Court justices appointed to rule on contested electoral ballots.
Hayes was the son of Rutherford Hayes, a farmer, and Sophia Birchard. After graduating from Kenyon College at the head of his class in 1842, Hayes studied law at Harvard, where he took a bachelor of laws degree in 1845. Returning to Ohio, he established a successful legal practice in Cincinnati, where he represented defendants in several fugitive-slave cases and became associated with the newly formed Republican Party. In 1852 he married Lucy Ware Webb, an unusually well-educated and cultured woman for her time. After combat service with the Union army he was elected to Congress (1865-67) and to the Ohio governorship (1868-76).

In 1875, during his third gubernatorial campaign, Hayes attracted national attention by his uncompromising advocacy of a sound currency backed by gold. The following year he became his state's favourite son at the national Republican nominating convention, where a shrewdly managed campaign won him the presidential nomination. Hayes's unblemished public record and high moral tone offered a striking contrast to widely publicized accusations of corruption in the administration of President Ulysses S. Grant (1869-77). An economic depression, however, and Northern disenchantment with Reconstruction policies in the South combined to give Hayes's Democratic opponent, Samuel J. Tilden, a popular majority, and early returns indicated a Democratic victory in the electoral college as well. However, Hayes's campaign managers challenged the validity of the returns from South Carolina, Florida, and Louisiana, and as a result two sets of ballots were submitted from the three states. The ensuing electoral dispute became known as the Tilden-Hayes affair. Eventually a bipartisan majority of Congress created a special Electoral Commission to decide which votes should be counted. As originally conceived, the commission was to comprise seven Democrats, seven Republicans, and one independent, the Supreme Court justice David Davis. Davis refused to serve, however, and the Republican Joseph P. Bradley was named in his place. While the commission was deliberating, Republican allies of Hayes engaged in secret negotiations with moderate Southern Democrats aimed at securing acquiescence to Hayes's election. On March 2, 1877, the commission voted along strict party lines to award all the contested electoral votes to Hayes, who was thus elected with 185 electoral votes to Tilden's 184. The result was greeted with outrage and bitterness by some Northern Democrats, who thereafter referred to Hayes as "His Fraudulency."

As president, Hayes promptly made good on the secret pledges made during the electoral dispute. He withdrew federal troops from states still under military occupation, thus ending the era of Reconstruction (1865-77). His promise not to interfere with elections in the former Confederacy ensured a return there of traditional white Democratic supremacy. He appointed Southerners to federal positions, and he made financial appropriations for Southern improvements. These policies aroused the animosity of a conservative Republican faction known as the Stalwarts, who were further antagonized by the president's efforts to reform the civil service by substituting nonpartisan examinations for political patronage. Hayes's demand for the resignation of two top officials in the New York customhouse (including Chester Arthur, the future president) provoked a bitter struggle with New York senator Roscoe Conkling.

During the national railroad strikes of 1877, Hayes, at the request of state governors, dispatched federal troops to suppress rioting. His administration was under continual pressure from the South and West to resume silver coinage, outlawed in 1873. Many considered this proposal inflationary, and Hayes sided with the Eastern, hard-money (gold) interests. Congress, however, overrode his veto of the Bland-Allison Act (1878), which provided for government purchase of silver bullion and restoration of the silver dollar as legal tender. In 1879 Hayes signed an act permitting women lawyers to practice before the Supreme Court.

Hayes refused renomination by the Republican Party in 1880, contenting himself with one term as president. In retirement he devoted himself to humanitarian causes, notably prison reform and educational opportunities for Southern black youth.

britannica.com



To: Patricia Trinchero who wrote (127473)2/16/2001 12:29:29 PM
From: Neocon  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
Between 1837, when Jackson retired, and 1860, four Democratic presidents--Martin Van Buren, James K. Polk, Franklin Pierce, and James Buchanan--were elected. The Democrats won every presidential election except those of 1840 and 1848. But during the 1840s and '50s the party began to undergo serious internal strains over the issue of slavery and its extension to the Western territories. Southern Democrats, led by Jefferson Davis, insisted on the protection of slavery in all the territories, while Northern Democrats, led by Stephen A. Douglas, advocated the doctrine of popular sovereignty, under which the settlers in a territory could vote to ban slavery from their midst. The party split over the slavery issue in 1860 at its presidential convention in Charleston, S.C. The Northern Democrats nominated Douglas as their presidential candidate, and the Southern Democrats adopted a proslavery stance and nominated John C. Breckinridge as their presidential candidate. This North-South split proved disastrous to the Democrats; the newly formed, antislavery Republican Party won its first national victory under Abraham Lincoln in 1860, receiving a majority of votes in the electoral college because of the split.

From 1860 to 1900 the Democratic Party held the presidency for only eight years, during the two terms of Grover Cleveland (1885-89, 1893-97). In the postwar decades white Southerners associated the Republican Party both with the prosecution of the Civil War and with Radical Reconstruction; these voters subsequently remained firmly Democratic until the mid-20th century. The Democratic Party at this time was basically conservative and agrarian-oriented; its members were opposed to big business and protective tariffs and in favour of cheap-money policies. In 1896 the party once more split disastrously over the free-silver and Populist program of its presidential candidate, William Jennings Bryan, who lost that year's election. Through their support of economic radicalism under Bryan's leadership, the Democrats once again after 1896 became a minority party.

britannica.com



To: Patricia Trinchero who wrote (127473)2/17/2001 8:42:47 AM
From: Zoltan!  Respond to of 769667
 
You are bizarre.

What you are citing is Dem-sponsored racism. It was their system - all of it. Virtually everyone elected in the South as a consequence was a Dem.

The worst you can say about Republicans is that they made a deal which allowed Dems to be themselves, racist.