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William Jennings Bryan
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All You Need Is Love
The complex history, career, and legacy of one of America's most popular speakers and reformers.
by
Ronald Steel
via
New York Review of Books
on
June 22, 2006
American Populists Used to Run Against Tariffs. It Could Happen Again.
William Jennings Bryan stoked a worker revolt against protectionism that led to the first income tax.
by
Tony Annett
via
Washington Post
on
April 9, 2025
History Warns Us About Cabinet Members Like RFK Jr.
If RFK is confirmed, he is likely to fail for reasons similar to those for past political choices for the cabinet.
by
Dan McLaughlin
via
The New Republic
on
February 8, 2025
The Scopes Trial and the Two Visions of US Democracy
A new history revisits “the Trial of the Century” and its legacy in contemporary politics.
by
Michael Kazin
via
The Nation
on
September 30, 2024
A Return to Gompers
Sean O’Brien’s speech at the RNC may represent a return to nonpartisan realpolitik for unions. But does that reflect labor's strength or its decline?
by
Dustin Guastella
via
Jacobin
on
July 17, 2024
The Craziest Convention in American History
Think this year’s Democratic convention is going to be nuts? One hundred years ago, Democrats took 103 ballots—and more than two weeks—to choose a candidate.
by
Walter Shapiro
via
The New Republic
on
June 24, 2024
The South’s Resistance to Vaccination Is Not As Incomprehensible As It Seems
The psychological forces driving “red COVID” have deep historical roots.
by
Angie Maxwell
,
Rebecca Onion
via
Slate
on
October 1, 2021
What Made Gilded Age Politics So Acrimonious?
Fearful of increasing participation, elites of the era attempted to rein in democracy.
by
Chris Lehmann
via
The New Republic
on
June 21, 2021
Eugene Debs Believed in Socialism Because He Believed in Democracy
Eugene Debs’s unswerving commitment to democracy and internationalism was born out of his revulsion at the tyranny of industrial capitalism.
by
Shawn Gude
via
Jacobin
on
September 2, 2020
partner
Bernie Sanders’s Campaign is Over, but His Populist Ideas Will Survive
Suspending his presidential campaign might be the best way to advance Sanders’s movement, but it could leave some supporters bitter.
by
Robert B. Mitchell
via
Made By History
on
April 9, 2020
The Myth of 'Populism'
It's the transatlantic commentariat’s favorite political put-down. It’s also historically illiterate.
by
Anton Jäger
via
Jacobin
on
January 3, 2018
Now More Than Ever, We Need Less History
The “now more than ever” tendency is everywhere.
by
William Hogeland
via
William Hogeland blog
on
July 8, 2017
The Five Most Powerful Populist Uprisings in U.S. History
Populism stretches through the American experience.
by
Robert W. Merry
via
The American Conservative
on
April 15, 2017
Trump Isn't the Apotheosis of Conservatism
Writers like Rick Perlstein miss the ways in which Trump’s rise is a story of discontinuity.
by
David Frum
via
The Atlantic
on
April 15, 2017
Donald Trump and the Return of the 1920s
We are again caught between nationalists longing for an imagined past, and activists invoking ideals the nation has not attained.
by
Richard Yeselson
via
The Atlantic
on
December 30, 2015
A Warning for Democrats From the Gilded Age and the 1896 Election
Effective Republican organizing and intraparty divisions among Democrats solidified GOP political dominance until the 1930s.
by
Adam M. Silver
via
The Conversation
on
April 22, 2025
No, President Trump, the Income Tax Wasn’t A Mistake. But It Was an Accident.
Trump claimed that the income tax was passed for “reasons unknown to mankind” and caused the Great Depression. Here’s the real history.
by
Jesse Eisinger
via
ProPublica
on
April 8, 2025
How It Became Wrong for Nations to Conquer Others
It’s only a century since US diplomats first persuaded the world that it’s wrong for countries to annex their neighbours.
by
Kerry Goettlich
via
Aeon
on
March 13, 2025
Tokens of Culture
On the medallic art of the Gilded Age.
by
James Panero
via
The New Criterion
on
December 12, 2024
partner
Will Grover Cleveland's Second Term Foreshadow Trump's Future?
The only president before Trump to win, lose, and win again ended up decimating his own party during his second term.
by
Luke Voyles
via
Made By History
on
November 21, 2024
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