From the beginning

 

Abolishing slavery. Free speech. Women's suffrage. In today's stereotypes, none of

These sounds like a typical Republican issue, yet they are instances the Republican

Party, in opposition to the Democratic Party, adopted early on.

 

Reducing the government. Streamlining the bureaucracy. Returning power to the states.

These issues don't sound like they would be the promises of the party of Lincoln, the

party that fought to preserve the national union, but they are, and logically so. With a

core belief in the idea of the primacy of individuals, the Republican Party, since its

inception, has been at the forefront of the fight for individuals' rights in opposition to a

large, bloated government.

 

The Republican Party has always thrived on challenges and difficult positions. Its present

role as leader of the revolution in which the principles of government are being

re-evaluated is a role it has traditionally embraced.

 

At the time of its founding, the Republican Party was organized as an answer to the

divided politics, political turmoil, arguments and internal division, particularly over

slavery, that plagued the many existing political parties in the United States in 1854. The

Free Soil Party, asserting that all men had a natural right to the soil, demanded that the

government re-evaluate homesteading legislation and grant land to settlers free of

charge. The Conscience Whigs, the "radical" faction of the Whig Party in the North,

alienated themselves from their Southern counterparts by adopting an anti-slavery

position. And the Kansas-Nebraska Act, which allowed territories to determine whether

slavery would be legalized in accordance with "popular sovereignty" and thereby nullify

the principles of the Missouri Compromise, created a schism within the Democratic

Party.

 

A staunch Anti-Nebraska Democrat, Alvan E. Bovay, like his fellow Americans, was

disillusioned by this atmosphere of confusion and division. Taking advantage of the

political turmoil caused by the Kansas-Nebraska Act, Bovay united discouraged

members from the Free Soil Party, the Conscience Whigs and the Anti-Nebraska

Democrats. Meeting in a Congregational church in Ripon, Wis., he helped establish a

party that represented the interests of the North and the abolitionists by merging two

fundamental issues: free land and preventing the spread of slavery into the Western

territories. Realizing the new party needed a name to help unify it, Bovay decided on the

term Republican because it was simple, synonymous with equality and alluded to the

earlier party of Thomas Jefferson, the Democratic-Republicans.

 

On July 6, 1854, in Jackson, Mich., the Republican Party formally organized itself by

holding its first convention, adopting a platform and nominating a full slate of candidates

for state offices. Other states soon followed, and the first Republican candidate for

president, John C. Frémont, ran in 1856 with the slogan "Free soil, free labor, free

speech, free men, Frémont."

 

Even though he ran on a third-party ticket, Frémont managed to capture a third of the

vote, and the Republican Party began to add members throughout the land. As tensions

mounted over the slavery issue, more anti-slavery Republicans began to run for office

and be elected, even with the risks involved with taking this stance. Republican Sen.

Charles Sumner of Massachusetts experienced this danger firsthand. In May 1856, he

delivered a passionate anti-slavery speech in which he made critical remarks about

several pro-slavery senators, including Andrew F. Butler of South Carolina. Sumner

infuriated Rep. Preston S. Brooks, the son of one of Butler's cousins, who felt his family

honor had been insulted. Two days later, Brooks walked into the Senate and beat Sumner

unconscious with a cane. This incident electrified the nation and helped to galvanize

Northern opinion against the South; Southern opinion hailed Brooks as a hero. But

Sumner stood by his principles, and after a three-year, painful convalescence, he

returned to the Senate to continue his struggle against slavery.

 

The first Republican

 

With the election of Abraham Lincoln in 1860, the Republicans firmly established

themselves as a major party capable of holding onto the White House for 60 of the next

100 years. Faced with the first shots of the Civil War barely a month after his

inauguration, preserving the Union was Lincoln's greatest challenge--and no doubt his

greatest achievement. But it was by no means his only accomplishment.

 

Amid the fierce and bloody battles of the Civil War, the Lincoln administration

established the Department of Agriculture, the Bureau of Internal Revenue and a

national banking system. Understanding the importance of settling the frontier, as well as

having a piece of land to call your own, Lincoln passed the Homestead Act, which

satisfied the former Free Soil members by offering public land grants. Hoping to

encourage a higher level of education, Lincoln also donated land for agricultural and

technical colleges to the states through the Land Grant College Act, which established

universities throughout the United States.

 

Fully sensitive to the symbolism of their name, the Republicans worked to deal the death

blow to slavery with Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation and the passage, by a

Republican Congress, of the 13th Amendment, which outlawed slavery. Hoping to

permanently turn back the Democratic advance in the South, immediately after the Civil

War the Republican Congress continued to push through legislation to extend the full

protection of civil rights to blacks.

 

During Reconstruction, the mostly Democratic South, which had seceded from both the

Union and Congress, struggled to regain its footing. Meanwhile, the Republicans took

advantage of their majority and passed several measures to improve the quality of life

for blacks throughout the entire Union. First the Republicans passed a Civil Rights Act in

1866 recognizing blacks as U.S. citizens. This act hoped to weaken the South by denying

states the power to restrict blacks from testifying in a court of law or from owning their

own property.

 

Continuing to take advantage of their majority, Republicans proposed the 14th

Amendment, which became part of the Constitution in 1868, stating: "All persons born or

naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the

United States and of the state wherein they reside. No state shall make or enforce any

law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor

shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law;

nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws."

 

That same year the Republican Congress also passed the National Eight Hour Law,

which, though it applied only to government workers, brought relief for overworked

federal employees by limiting the work day to eight hours.

 

Leading the way on the issues

 

Some people have argued that Republicans fought to give blacks equal rights and then

the vote as a way of wresting control of the South away from the Democrats. While it is

true that almost all blacks voted Republican, these were very dangerous and

controversial issues at the time. For whatever reason, many Republican politicians risked

their careers on that period's "third rail" of politics and managed to not only abolish

slavery, but eventually even established a black's right to vote as well. In fact, many

blacks even held elected office and were influential in state legislatures. And, in 1869, the

first blacks entered Congress as members of the Republican Party, establishing a trend

that was not broken until 1935 when the first black Democrat finally was elected to

Congress.

 

Meanwhile, Republicans continued being elected to the White House. In 1868, Civil War

hero Ulysses S. Grant won the presidency easily and was re-elected in 1872. Although he

seemed a bit bewildered by the transition from the military life of a general to being

president, under Grant the Republican commitment to sound money policies continued,

and the Department of Justice and the Weather Bureau were established. The

Republicans in Congress continued to boldly set the agenda, and in 1870 they proposed

and passed the 15th Amendment, which guaranteed voting rights regardless of race,

creed or previous condition of servitude. Setting another precedent two years later, the

Republican Congress turned its sights toward women's issues and authorized equal pay

for equal work performed by women employed by federal agencies.

 

It was around this time that the symbol of the elephant for the Republican Party was

created by Thomas Nast, a famous illustrator and caricaturist for The New Yorker. In

1874, a rumor that animals had escaped from the New York City Zoo coincided with

worries surrounding a possible third-term run by Grant. Nast chose to represent the

Republicans as elephants because elephants were clever, steadfast and controlled when

calm, yet unmanageable when frightened.

 

But, embracing a tradition established by George Washington and the Republican Party,

which had gone on record opposing a third term for any president, President Grant did

not run for re-election in 1876. Instead, in one of the most bitterly disputed elections in

American history, Republican Rutherford B. Hayes won the presidency by the margin of

one electoral vote. After the election, cooperation between the White House and the

Democratic-controlled House of Representatives was nearly impossible. Nevertheless,

Hayes managed to keep his campaign promises. He cautiously withdrew federal troops

from the South to allow them to shake off the psychological yoke of being a conquered

land, took measures to reverse the myriad inequalities suffered by women in that period

and adopted the merit system within the civil service.

 

Not surprisingly, the Republican appeal held in 1880 when the party won its sixth

consecutive presidential election with the election of the Civil War hero James A.

Garfield and also managed to regain small majorities in both the House and the Senate.

Following Garfield's assassination, Chester A. Arthur succeeded to the Oval Office and,

in 1883, oversaw the passage of the Pendleton Act through Congress. This bill classified

about 10 percent of all government jobs and created a bipartisan Civil Service

Commission to prepare and administer competitive examinations for these positions. As

dreary as this bill sounds, it was important because it made at least part of the

government bureaucracy a professional work force.

 

Suddenly the Republicans' fortunes changed, and embarking on a decade-long period of

quick reversals, the Republicans lost the 1884 election. But by this time the party had

firmly established itself as a permanent force in American politics by not only preserving

the Union and leading the nation through the Reconstruction, but by also striking a chord

of greater personal autonomy within the national psyche. Yet while the presidency was

regained for one term with the 1888 election of Benjamin Harrison, with the

re-emergence of the South from the destruction of the Civil War the Republicans were

shut out for the first time since the Civil War in the election of 1892, as the Democrats

won control of the House, the Senate and the presidency.

 

Republican voters returned to their party with the 1896 election, electing William

McKinley to the White House. His term was the start of a consecutive four-term

Republican possession of the White House.

 

The bull moose

 

Assuming the presidency when McKinley was assassinated in 1901, President Theodore

Roosevelt busied himself with what he considered to be the most pressing issue, ensuring

the Republican principle of competition in a free market. To do so, Roosevelt used the

Sherman Anti-Trust Act, passed in 1890 under Republican President Benjamin Harrison,

to successfully prosecute and break up several large business monopolies.

 

In 1903, Roosevelt became involved with foreign policy, supporting revolutionaries who

then formed the Republic of Panama. His actions in Panama resulted in the treaty that

permitted construction of the Panama Canal. In 1905, Roosevelt--who popularized the

West African phrase "Speak softly and carry a big stick" to explain his view on foreign

policy--successfully negotiated the Treaty of Portsmouth, ending the conflict between

Russia and Japan. Roosevelt's accomplishments as a peacemaker earned him the Nobel

Peace Prize and the distinction of being the first American to receive this award.

 

Roosevelt easily won a second term and proceeded to continue to stand by his principles.

Roosevelt, who was constantly bucking public prejudice, appointed the Cabinet's first

Jewish member, Oscar Strauss. Then, in 1906, after reading Upton Sinclair's The Jungle,

Roosevelt instructed Congress to pass laws concerning meat inspection and pure food

and drug legislation. Two years later he placed 150 million acres of forest land into

federal reserves and organized a National Conservation Conference. Believing in the

importance of work, Roosevelt was also responsible for creating the Department of

Labor.

 

Although his immense popularity almost guaranteed that he could be elected to a third

term, following precedent, Roosevelt retired, allowing William Taft to become the next

Republican to hold the presidential office.

 

Discord struck the Republican Party in the 1912 election as Teddy Roosevelt,

dissatisfied with President Taft, led his supporters on the "Bull Moose" ticket against

the president. Playing to the advantage of a split Republican vote, as they would again 80

years later, the Democrats won the election with Woodrow Wilson. When Wilson ran for

re-election in 1916, he promised to keep the United States out of World War I. Yet

shortly after his re-election, the United States stepped onto the European battleground

and entered the war. By mid-1918 the Republican Party won control of Congress as

Wilson's popularity began to wane because World War I dragged on.

 

Republican women

 

Standing in sharp contrast to the two existing political parties' present stereotypes

regarding minorities and women, once again the Republican Party was the vanguard in

relation to women. In 1917, Jeannette Rankin, a Montana Republican, became the first

woman to serve in the House. Committed to her pacifist beliefs, she was the only member

of Congress to vote against entry into both World War I and World War II.

 

Shortly after Ms. Rankin's election to Congress, the 19th Amendment was passed in

1919. The amendment's journey to ratification had been a long and difficult one. Starting

in 1896, the Republican Party became the first major party to officially favor women's

suffrage. That year, Republican Sen. A. A. Sargent of California introduced a proposal in

the Senate to give women the right to vote. The proposal was defeated four times in the

Democratic-controlled Senate. When the Republican Party regained control of Congress,

the Equal Suffrage Amendment finally passed (304-88). Only 16 Republicans opposed the

amendment.

 

When the amendment was submitted to the states, 26 of the 36 states that ratified it had

Republican-controlled legislatures. Of the nine states that voted against ratification,

eight were controlled by Democrats. Twelve states, all Republican, had given women full

suffrage before the federal amendment was finally ratified.

 

The Republicans trip

 

During the Roaring Twenties, three successive Republican presidents kept a lid on

government spending and taxes: Warren G. Harding (1921-1925), who, according to A

Short History of the American Nation, balanced the budget and reduced the national debt

by an average of more than $500 million per year; Calvin Coolidge (1925-1929) and

Herbert Hoover (1929-1933), who was the last businessman to make the successful

transition to president. While Republicans controlled the White House and Congress, the

U.S. economy expanded as free enterprise stimulated business and industry. The

Republicans' sound money policies brought growing prosperity and steadily cut the

federal debt.

 

In 1929, the Wall Street crash signaled disaster for the Republicans as President Hoover

emerged as the scapegoat for the Great Depression. Despite his creation of the

home-loan banks and the Reconstruction Finance Corporation to save the American

financial structures, Hoover's anti-Depression efforts went unheeded as people turned to

the Democrats for a "New Deal."

 

Under Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal, the federal government gained power and size

while deficit spending rose as a result of increased government involvement in the

economy.

 

Renewing the party

 

The next 20 years were a time of rebuilding for the Republican Party. This effort included

establishing a greater role for women. Launching a tradition that the RNC chairman and

co-chairman be of opposite sex, in 1937, Marion E. Martin was named first assistant

chairman of the Republican National Committee. Three years later, the Republican Party

became the first major political party to endorse an equal rights amendment for women in

its platform.

 

In the post-Depression era, five presidential terms were shared by only two presidents.

The Democrats ignored the two-term tradition upheld by the Republican Party and

allowed Roosevelt to run for and win an unprecedented four terms. Following Roosevelt's

death, Vice President Harry S Truman became president. It was not until 1946, with the

80th Congress, that the Republicans won a majority in both the Senate and the House.

Notably, it was this Congress that produced the first balanced federal budget since

Republican Herbert Hoover was president.

 

With the Truman administration held responsible for failure to arbitrate a crippling steel

strike, escalating inflation and the Korean War, in 1950 the renewed Republican Party

made strong gains in Congress.

 

Two years later World War II hero Dwight D. Eisenhower was elected president,

carrying the party to its first presidential victory in almost 25 years. During Eisenhower's

two terms, the nation quickly recovered from the economic strain of the war. Focusing on

rebuilding the nation and re-establishing its pre-eminence, as well as his party's, he

established the Interstate Highway System and forged ahead with America's space

exploration program. Continuing the Republicans' commitment to women, in 1953 he

appointed a woman, Oveta Culp Hobby, as the first secretary of his newly created

Department of Health, Education and Welfare.

 

The Eisenhower administration also made special efforts to enforce the 1954 Brown vs.

The Board of Education Supreme Court decision that declared "separate but equal"

school accommodations unconstitutional. On the heels of implementing this decision

through the protection of the National Guard, Eisenhower completed formal integration

of blacks in the armed forces. Charged with upholding the rights of blacks, Eisenhower

appointed a Civil Rights Commission and created a civil rights division in the Justice

Department. All of these actions culminated in the Civil Rights Act of 1957, which gave

the attorney general power to obtain injunctions to stop Southern registrars and officials

from interfering with blacks seeking to register and vote.

 

Turmoil

 

Eisenhower's vice president, Richard Nixon, lost the 1960 presidential election to John F.

Kennedy by the narrowest margin in U.S. history, and, with the establishment of the

Camelot mystique, it seemed the Republican Party was again at an ebb in the political

tide. Yet four years later, Sen. Barry Goldwater emerged to revitalize the grass-roots

strength of the GOP with his energy and his laissez-faire principles, and despite losing

the presidential election to Lyndon B. Johnson, the Republican Party slowly

re-established itself.

 

In 1968, Nixon led the party to victory in a hard-fought presidential contest. In the next

four years, Nixon established his place in history as an expert in foreign affairs. He

firmly believed that the United States had a form of government that was better than any

other system, and therefore, the United States should play a major role in world politics

in order to protect American interests as well as to promote our values. He opened

relations with mainland China, which not only led 20 years later to a major market for

American products but also fundamentally altered the Cold War strategic balance. He

ended the U.S. involvement in Vietnam--a war that had torn this country apart. He

dramatically improved American security through his policy of detente with the USSR,

which led to the signing of the ABM and other arms control treaties.

 

Domestically, Nixon brought inflation under control by implementing the traditional

Republican policy of fiscal control and by the innovative tactic of cutting the dollar loose

from the gold standard. In addition, The Clean Air Act, which began the process of

environmental controls in the United States, was crafted and passed under the Nixon

administration. His administration also promoted America's manned space program.

 

Nixon won a landslide victory in 1972, carrying every state except Massachusetts. In

1973, Spiro Agnew resigned as Vice President while under investigation for corruption

during his term in the 1960s as county executive of Baltimore County, Maryland. Using

provisions of the 25th Amendment, President Nixon appointed House Republican Leader

Gerald R. Ford to the vice presidency. When Nixon resigned in the wake of the

Watergate scandal in 1974, Ford assumed the presidency, selecting former Gov. Nelson

Rockefeller as his vice president.

 

Under the Ford administration, the United States regained its confidence in politics and in

the integrity of national government. At the same time, America's double-digit inflation

rate was cut in half, taxes were cut significantly and the role of municipal and state

governments was enhanced by reducing federal government expansion. However, the

country's first appointed president was denied election to office in 1976 by a narrow loss

to Jimmy Carter.

 

A new renaissance

 

In 1980, Ronald Reagan ran for president promising a "New Federalism." On the theory

that local governments reflected both the will and the wisdom of the citizenry better than

the remote bureaucracy-ridden government in Washington, Reagan planned to transfer

some functions of the federal government to the states.

 

Both the past and the future of the Republican Party were represented in Reagan's

election to the presidency. Appealing to the same conservative constituency that had

been attracted to Barry Goldwater, he also captivated a broad spectrum of America with

his easygoing and reassuring manner. His sense of humor lightened the pessimism

pervading America--as when John Hinckley Jr. shot him in the chest. Although seriously

wounded, as Reagan was wheeled into the operating room for emergency surgery, he told

the team of doctors that he hoped they were all Republicans.

 

His sincerity and strength led to an emotional tidal wave at the polls. Reagan restored

America's pride in itself. As he once commented, "America's best days are yet to come.

Our proudest moments are yet to be. Our most glorious achievements are just ahead.

America remains what Emerson called her 150 years ago, 'The country of tomorrow.'

What a wonderful description and how true."

 

Continuing the Republican tradition of leading the way in furthering the position of

women, Reagan's first term included several notable appointments. He selected Sandra

Day O'Connor as the first female Supreme Court justice, Elizabeth Dole as the first

female secretary of transportation and Jeane Kirkpatrick as the first female U.S.

representative to the United Nations. With Dole, Kirkpatrick and Margaret Heckler as

the secretary of health and human services, it was also the first time in history three

women served concurrently in a president's Cabinet.

 

In his 1984 re-election, President Reagan received the largest Republican landslide

victory in history. Under the leadership of President Reagan and his successor, George

Bush, the United States experienced the longest economic expansion period in its

history--more than 20.7 million new jobs were created as a result. His steadfastness in

the face of the communist threat led to the surprising--to all but himself--collapse of

communism in 1989. Reaching milestones economically and diplomatically, President

Reagan, "The Great Communicator," earned his place in history among our greatest

presidents.

 

Although Reagan was a hard act to follow, President Bush's leadership was proven when

he lay a solid groundwork for U.S. policy in such critical areas as nuclear disarmament,

free trade, the Middle East peace process and the future of NATO. Relying on his

illustrious military experience, he brought together an unprecedented coalition to

maintain the forces of law in the Persian Gulf region. In the wake of Operation Desert

Storm, President Bush's popularity soared to record levels. As a result of his leadership

after the war, a delegation from Israel sat face to face with Palestinians for the first time

in thousands of years.

 

Unfortunately President Bush was blamed for a worldwide economic slowdown triggered

by the collapse of the Soviet Union and involving the transition of the global economy

from an industrial base to a high-technology base, and he was unsuccessful in his bid for

re-election in 1992. Nearly 20 percent of voters were drawn to the blunt anti-government

candidacy of Ross Perot, and another 43 percent elected "New Democrat" Bill Clinton,

who promised to reinvent government.

 

The Republicans look toward the future

 

After Haley Barbour's election as chairman of the Republican National Committee in

January of 1993, the party began concentrating on organizing its grass-roots strength.

Focusing on the principles that had historically made the Republicans a strong party,

Barbour emphasized individual freedom, personal responsibility and reduced

government. As a result of that work, House Republican members and candidates

together created the Contract With America , a bold agenda of 10 specific pieces of

legislation based on Republican principles of individual liberty, economic opportunity,

limited and effective government, personal responsibility and strong security. All told,

367 candidates signed the Contract With America to bring fundamental change to the

way business is conducted in the people's House of Representatives.

 

On November 8, 1994, the American people responded to the Republican promise of

concrete change and voted for a new American majority in the greatest midterm majority

swing of the 20th century. After 40 years of a Democratic-controlled Congress,

Republicans gained majorities in both the House and Senate, as well as a majority of the

states' governorships for the first time in two decades. Not a single incumbent

Republican governor, senator or representative lost.

 

The swearing in of the 104th Congress marked the start of the process of change

embodied in the Contract With America. For example, Republicans have made Congress

abide by the same laws it imposes on the rest of us; commissioned the first independent

audit of the Congress in history; cut Congress' budget by at least 10 percent--more than

$200 million; eliminated three congressional committees, 25 subcommittees and one of

every three committee staff jobs; imposed term limits on committee chairs and the

speaker; planned a balanced budget reducing the deficit to zero in seven years without

raising taxes; and worked to protect, preserve and improve Medicare.

 

The actions of the 104th Congress not only promise to fundamentally alter the way that

Washington, and indeed the nation, works, they also signal the continuation of a long

Republican history of offering fresh ideas and principled approaches to the challenges

facing our nation.

 

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