Prohibition Party (United States) Vice Presidential Nominees
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The Prohibition Party (PRO) is a political party in the United States known for its historic opposition to the sale or consumption of alcoholic beverages and as an integral part of the temperance movement. It is the oldest existing third party in the United States and the third-longest active party. Although it was never one of the leading parties in the United States, it was once an important force in the Third Party System during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The organization declined following the enactment of
Prohibition in the United States In the United States from 1920 to 1933, a Constitution of the United States, nationwide constitutional law prohibition, prohibited the production, importation, transportation, and sale of alcoholic beverages. The alcohol industry was curtai ...
but saw a rise in vote totals following the repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment in 1933. However, following World War II it declined with
1948 Events January * January 1 ** The General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) is inaugurated. ** The Constitution of New Jersey (later subject to amendment) goes into effect. ** The railways of Britain are nationalized, to form British ...
being the last time its presidential candidate received over 100,000 votes and
1976 Events January * January 3 – The International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights enters into force. * January 5 – The Pol Pot regime proclaims a new constitution for Democratic Kampuchea. * January 11 – The 1976 Phila ...
being the last time it received over 10,000 votes. The party's platform has changed over its existence. Its platforms throughout the 19th century supported
progressive Progressive may refer to: Politics * Progressivism, a political philosophy in support of social reform ** Progressivism in the United States, the political philosophy in the American context * Progressive realism, an American foreign policy par ...
and Populism, populist positions including women's suffrage, equal racial and gender rights, bimetallism, equal pay, and an income tax. The platform of the party today is Economic progressivism, liberal on economic issues in that it supports Social Security (United States), Social Security, animal rights, and free education, but is social conservatism in the United States, conservative on social issues, such as supporting temperance movement in the United States, temperance, school prayer, and a consistent life ethic, thus making it Communitarianism, communitarian.


History


Foundation

In 1868 and 1869, branches of the International Organisation of Good Templars, a global List of Temperance organizations, temperance organization, passed resolutions supporting the creation of a political party in favor of Prohibition, alcoholic prohibition. From July 29 to July 30, 1868, the sixth National Temperance Convention was held in Cleveland, Ohio, and passed a resolution supporting temperance advocates to enter politics. On May 25, 1869, the Good Templars branch in Oswego, New York, called a meeting to prepare for the creation of a political party in favor of prohibition. Jonathan H. Orne was chosen as chairman and Julius A. Spencer as secretary of the meeting and a committee consisting of John Russell (prohibitionist), John Russell, Daniel Wilkins, Julius A. Spencer, John N. Stearns, and James Black (prohibitionist), James Black was created to organize a national party. On September 1, 1869, almost five hundred delegates from twenty states and Washington, D.C., met at Farwell Hall in Chicago and John Russell was selected to serve as the temporary chairman and James Black as president of the convention. The party was the first to accept women as members and gave those who attended full delegate rights.Gillespie, J. David. ''Challengers to Duopoly: Why Third Parties Matter in the American Two-Party System''. 2012. p. 47 Former anti-slavery activist Gerrit Smith, who had served in the House of Representatives from 1853 to 1854 and had run for president in 1848 United States presidential election, 1848, 1856 United States presidential election, 1856, and 1860 United States presidential election, 1860 with the Liberty Party (United States, 1840), Liberty Party nomination, served as a delegate from New York and gave a speech at the convention. The organization was referred to as either the National Prohibition Party or the Prohibition Reform Party.


Early

On December 9, 1871, a 1872 Prohibition National Convention, national convention was called for February 22, 1872, to nominate a presidential and vice presidential candidate. Chairman Simeon B. Chase, Chief Justice Salmon P. Chase, Gerrit Smith, former Portland Mayor Neal Dow, and John Russell (prohibitionist), John Russell were proposed as presidential nominees and Henry Fish, James Black (prohibitionist), James Black, John Blackman, Secretary Gideon T. Stewart, Julius A. Spencer, and Stephen B. Ransom were proposed for the vice presidential nomination. Black and Russell were given the presidential and vice presidential nominations. The first platform of the organization included support for alcoholic prohibition, the Seventeenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, direct election of Senators, Bimetallism, bimetallic currency, low tariffs, universal suffrage for both men and women of all races, and increased foreign immigration. In 1876, the organization's name was changed to the National Prohibition Reform Party. However, in 1881, Frances Willard, R. W. Nelson, A. J. Jutkins, and George W. Bain formed the Home Protection Party, which was more pro-women's suffrage than the Prohibition Party, but later rejoined the party at the 1882 convention and the organization was renamed to the Prohibition Home Protection Party. However, at the 1884 national convention the organization was renamed to the National Prohibition Party.


Rise

In 1879, Frances Willard became the president of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union and although it had remained non-partisan in the 1876 United States presidential election, 1876 and 1880 United States presidential election, 1880 presidential elections, Willard advocated for a resolution under which the organization would pledge its support to whichever party would support alcoholic prohibition. Willard's attempts in 1882 and 1883 were unsuccessful, but she was successful in 1884 after her opponents left to join Judith Foster's rival Non-Partisan WCTU. During the 1884 United States presidential election, 1884 presidential election the organization sent its resolution to the Republican, Democratic, Greenback, and Prohibition parties and only the Prohibition Party accepted. At the Woman's Christian Temperance Union's 1884 national convention in St. Louis the organization voted 195 to 48 in favor of supporting the Prohibition Party and would continue to support the Prohibition Party until Willard's death in 1898. During 1884 United States presidential election, 1884 election the party nominated John St. John (American politician), John St. John, the former Republican governor of Kansas, who, with the support from Willard and the WTCU, saw the party poll 147,482 votes for 1.50% of the popular vote. However, the party was accused of Spoiler effect, spoiling the election due to Grover Cleveland's margin of victory over James G. Blaine in New York being less than John's vote total there. In 1888 United States presidential election, 1888, the party's presidential nominee, Clinton B. Fisk, was accused of being a possible Spoiler effect, spoiler candidate that would prevent Benjamin Harrison from winning, but Harrison won the election even though he lost the national popular vote. From January to February, 1892, Willard met with representatives from the Farmers' Alliance, People's Party (United States), People's Party, National Reform Party, and the remainder of the Greenback Party in Chicago and St. Louis in an attempt to create a Electoral fusion, fusion presidential ticket, but the organizations were unable to agree to a platform. The People's Party would later fuse with the Democratic Party in the 1896 presidential election. The party suffered a schism at the 1896 United States presidential election, 1896 Prohibition convention between the "narrow gauger" faction which only supported having an alcoholic prohibition plank in the party's platform and the "broad gauger" faction which supported the addition of free silver and women's suffrage planks. After the narrow gaugers successfully chose the presidential ticket and the party platform, the broad gaugers, led by former presidential nominee John St. John, Nebraska state chairman Charles Eugene Bentley, and suffragette Helen M. Gougar, walked out and create and created the breakaway National Party, nominating a rival ticket with Bentley as president and James H. Southgate as vice president. The Prohibition party ticket of Joshua Levering and Hale Johnson had the worst popular vote performance since Neal Dow's 10,364 votes in 1880, but still outperformed the National Party's 13,968 votes. Following the 1896 election most of the members of the National Party became disillusioned with that party and returned to the Prohibition Party, but those who remained reformed into the Union Reform Party and supported Seth H. Ellis and Samuel Nicholson during the 1900 presidential election. At the same time, the Prohibition Party's ideology broadened to include aspects of progressivism. The party contributed to the third-party discussions of the 1910s and sent Charles H. Randall to the 64th United States Congress, 64th, 65th United States Congress, 65th, and 66th United States Congress, 66th Congresses as the representative of California's 9th congressional district. Democrat Sidney J. Catts of Florida, after losing a close Democratic primary, used the Prohibition line to win election as List of Governors of Florida, Governor of Florida in 1916; he remained a Democrat. During the 1916 United States presidential election, 1916 presidential election the party attempted to give its presidential nomination to former Democratic presidential candidate William Jennings Bryan, but he declined the offer via telegram. At the national convention the presidential nomination was given to former Indiana Governor Frank Hanly, but an attempt to make his nomination unanimous was defeated by Eugene W. Chafin, who had served as the presidential nominee in 1908 and 1912, and had supported giving the nomination to former New York Governor William Sulzer. Virgil G. Hinshaw wrote to John M. Parker in an attempt to fuse the Prohibition and Progressive Party (United States, 1912), Progressive parties, but it failed; the Progressives did not nominate a presidential candidate and later disbanded. On February 4, 1918, the Prohibition affiliate in California voted in favor of merging with the National Party (United States), National Party, which was created by pro-war defectors from the Socialist Party of America in 1917.


Decline

On January 16, 1919, the Eighteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, Eighteenth Amendment, which prohibited "intoxicating liquors" in the United States, was ratified by the requisite number of states. Although it was suggested that the organization should be disbanded due to national alcoholic prohibition being achieved, the committee leaders changed the focus of the organization to support the enforcement of prohibition. In 1921, the organization petitioned for any non-citizens who violated the Eighteenth Amendment to be deported and for citizen violators to lose their right to vote. At the 1924 United States presidential election, 1924 national convention the party approved a platform with only two planks, namely, supporting religion in public schools and the assimilation of immigrants. During the 1928 United States presidential election, 1928 presidential election some members of the party, including Chairman D. Leigh Colvin and former presidential nominee Herman P. Faris, considered endorsing Republican Herbert Hoover rather than running a Prohibition candidate and risk allowing Al Smith, who supported ending prohibition, to be elected. However, the party chose to nominate William F. Varney due to its feeling that Hoover was not strict enough on prohibition, although the affiliate in California gave Hoover an additional ballot line and in Pennsylvania the affiliate did not file presidential electors. However, the party became critical of Hoover after he was elected president and during the 1932 presidential election D. Leigh Colvin stated that "The Republican wet plank, supporting the repeal of Prohibition, means that Mr. Hoover is the most conspicuous turncoat since Benedict Arnold." Hoover lost the election, but national prohibition was repealed in 1933, with the Twenty-first Amendment to the United States Constitution, 21st Amendment during the Roosevelt administration.


Post World War II

In 1950, when the party was $5,000 in debt, Gerald Overholt was selected to be the party's chairman. During the 1952 United States presidential election, 1952 presidential election, Overholt and Stuart Hamblen, the presidential nominee, spent $70,000 and the party's debt was increased to $20,000. During the 1954 elections, the affiliates in Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, Indiana, and Michigan lost their ballot access although the party remained successful in Kansas, where the Prohibition sheriff of Jewell County was reelected, and in California, where the attorney general nominee received over 200,000 votes. In 1977, the party changed its name to the National Statesman Party, but Time magazine suggested that it was "doubtful" that the name change would "hoist the party out of the category of political oddity" and it changed its name back to the Prohibition Party in 1980. The Prohibition Party experienced a schism in 2003, as the party's prior presidential candidate, Earl Dodge, incorporated a rival party called the National Prohibition Party in Colorado. An opposing faction nominated Gene Amondson, Gene C. Amondson for president and filed under the Prohibition banner in Louisiana. Dodge ran under the name of the historic Prohibition Party in Colorado, while the Concerns of People Party allowed Amondson to run on its line against Dodge. Amondson received 1,944 votes, nationwide, while Dodge garnered 140. One key area of disagreement between the factions was over who should control payments from a trust fund dedicated to the Prohibition Party by George Pennock in 1930. The fund pays approximately $8,000 per year, and during the schism these funds were divided between the factions. Dodge died in 2007, allowing the dispute over the Pennock funds to finally be resolved in 2014. The party is reported as having only "three dozen fee-paying members". In 2015, the party rejoined the board of the Coalition for Free and Open Elections and became a qualified political party in Mississippi. In the 2016 election, the party nominated James Hedges and qualified for the ballot in three states, Arkansas, Colorado, and Mississippi, and earned 5,514 votes becoming the most successful Prohibition presidential candidate since 1988. The party met via telephone conference in November, 2018 to nominate its 2020 presidential ticket. Bill Bayes of Mississippi, the vice presidential nominee during the 2016 presidential election, was given the nomination on the first ballot over Adam Seaman and Phil Collins. C.L. Gammon of Tennessee was given the vice presidential nomination without opposition. Bayes resigned as the nominee, accusing some party activists of sabotaging his run because they opposed his views. Another telephone conference call was held, during which Gammon was given the presidential nomination and Collins was given the vice presidential nomination. However, Gammon withdrew from the nomination in August 2019 due to health problems, and another telephone conference was held that selected Collins for the presidential nomination and Billy Joe Parker for the vice presidential nomination.


Electoral history


Presidential campaigns

The Prohibition Party has nominated a candidate for president in every election since 1872 and is thus the longest-lived American political party after the Democratic Party (United States), Democrats and Republican Party (United States), Republicans.


House


Notable members

* Joseph E. Anderson (1873−1937), Illinois state legislator and most recent Prohibition Party member of the Illinois General Assembly. *Frances Estill Beauchamp (1860-1923), Kentucky state chair; secretary, national committee *Marie C. Brehm, first legally qualified woman ever to be nominated for vice president *Benjamin Bubar Jr., member of the Maine House of Representatives (1939–1944) *Sidney Johnston Catts, 22nd List of governors of Florida, Governor of Florida (1917–1921) *Samuel Dickie, Chairman of the Prohibition Party (1887–1899) and the 9th Mayor of Albion, Michigan (1896–1897) *Neal Dow, mayor of Portland, Maine (1851–1852; 1855–1856) *Saxe J. Froshaug, member of the Minnesota Senate (1911-1915) *Harvey W. Hardy, mayor of Lincoln, Nebraska (1877–1879) *Frank Hanly, 26th Governor of Indiana (1905–1909) *James Hedges, Tax Assessor for Thompson Township, Pennsylvania (2002–2007) and first elected Prohibitionist in the 21st century *John St. John (American politician), John St. John, 8th List of governors of Kansas, Governor of Kansas (1879–1883) *Charles Hiram Randall, member of the California State Assembly (1911–1912) and Representative from California's 9th congressional district (1915–1921) *Susanna M. Salter, first female mayor in the United States (1887–1888) *Emily Pitts Stevens, joined the Prohibition Party in 1882, and led the movement, in 1888, to induce the Woman's Christian Temperance Union to endorse that party. *Green Clay Smith, Representative from Kentucky's 6th congressional district (1863–1866) and 2nd List of governors of Montana, Territorial Governor of Montana (1866–1869) *Oliver W. Stewart, Chairman of the Prohibition Party (1900–1905) and member of the Illinois House of Representatives (1903–1905) *Frances Willard (suffragist), Frances Willard, one of the founders of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union"Frances E. Willard". 2000. National Women's Hall of Fame. Retrieved on November 18, 2014 fro

*Josephus C. Vines, mayor of Brighton, Alabama


Platform

The Prohibition Party platform, as listed on the party's web site in 2018, includes the following points:


Social issues

* Blue laws prohibiting employers in all fields except public safety from requiring employees to work on the Sabbath * Support for voluntary prayer in public schools * Opposition to attempts to remove religion from the public square * Consistent life ethic ** Anti-abortion ** Opposition to capital punishment ** Opposition to physician-assisted suicide * A Constitutional amendment to ban the government from issuing marriages, which shall be replaced by civil unions between any two adults * Opposition to pornography * Recognition of the contributions of immigrants to the United States * Prohibition on gambling and abolition of all Lotteries in the United States, state lotteries * Prohibition of all non-medicinal drugs, including alcohol and tobacco * Campaigns to promote temperance movement, temperance * A "strict interpretation" of the Second Amendment to the United States Constitution that includes a right to use arms for defense and sport * Anti-vivisectionism, Opposition to testing on animals * Prohibition on use of animals in sport


Economic issues

* Abolition of the United States Federal Reserve and re-establishment of the First Bank of the United States, Bank of the United States * Strict laws against usury * Right-to-work law, Right to work * A fully funded Social Security (United States), Social Security system * A Balanced Budget Amendment * Increased spending on public works projects * Opposition of government financial interference in, or aid to, commerce * Free college education for all Americans * Job training programs paid for by tariffs


Foreign policy issues

* A non-interventionist foreign policy * Eliminating conscription in times of peace * Opposition to military action that violates Just War principles * Fair trade * Use of human rights considerations in determining most favored nation status * A generous policy of asylum for people facing persecution or living in inhumane conditions


Chairmen

In 1867, John Russell became the first chairman of the Prohibition party, with Earl Dodge serving the longest for twenty four years and Gregory Seltzer serving the shortest for one year. * 1867–1872: John Russell (prohibitionist), John Russell * 1872–1876: Simeon B. Chase * 1876–1880: James Black (prohibitionist), James Black * 1880–1884: Gideon T. Stewart * 1884–1887: John B. Finch * 1887–1899: Samuel Dickie * 1900–1905: Oliver W. Stewart * 1905–1908: Charles R. Jones * 1908–1924: Virgil G. Hinshaw * 1924–1925: B. E. P. Prugh * 1925–1932: D. Leigh Colvin * 1932–1947: Edward E. Blake * 1947–1950: Virgil C. Finnell * 1950–1953: Gerald Overholt * 1953–1955: Lowell H. Coate * 1955–1971: E. Harold Munn * 1971–1979: Charles Wesley Ewing * 1979–2003: Earl Dodge * 2003–2005: Don Webb * 2005–2009: Gene Amondson * 2009–2013: Toby Davis * 2013–2014: Gregory Seltzer * 2014–2019: Rick Knox * 2019–2020: Randy McNutt * 2020–present: Phil Collins (politician), Phil Collins


See also

* Alcohol during and after prohibition * Law Preservation Party (New York branch of the Prohibition Party) * List of political parties in the United States * Scottish Prohibition Party * Robert P. Shuler * Social conservatism * Temperance organizations


References


Citations


Primary sources

*


Further reading

* Andersen, Lisa, "From Unpopular to Excluded: Prohibitionists and the Ascendancy of a Democratic-Republican System, 1888–1912", ''Journal of Policy History'', 24 (no. 2, 2012), pp. 288–318. * Cherrington, Ernest Hurst, ed. ''Standard encyclopedia of the alcohol problem'' (5 vol. 1930). * Colvin, David Leigh. ''Prohibition in the United States: a History of the Prohibition Party, and of the Prohibition Movement'' (1926) * McGirr, Lisa. ''The War on Alcohol: Prohibition and the Rise of the American State'' (2015) * Pegram, Thomas R. ''Battling demon rum: The struggle for a dry America, 1800–1933'' (1998)


External links

*
Prohibition Partisan Historical Society
(Official Website)
Prohibition Party
on Facebook *
''Partisan prophets; a history of the Prohibition Party, 1854–1972''
Roger C. Storms {{Prohibition Prohibition Party, 1869 establishments in the United States Christian democratic parties in the United States Conservative parties in the United States Political parties established in 1869 Political parties in the United States, Prohibition Prohibition in the United States Prohibition parties Single-issue political parties Social conservative parties Temperance organizations in the United States