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OPINION

Are Democrats' About to Repeat Their 1924, 1968 Nightmares?

historic presidential politics united states democratic convention

Decorations at the 1968 Democratic National Convention. American Flags decorate the International Amphitheatre in Chicago, Illinois. (Vintage image taken from color slide.) (Gerald T. Coli/Dreamstime.com)

Scot Faulkner By Monday, 22 July 2024 11:55 AM EDT Current | Bio | Archive

Prior to President Joe Biden ending his 2024 re-election campaign the Democrats worst nightmare was reliving their chaotic 1968 Chicago Convention.

But now, it may be reliving their chaotic 1924 Chicago Convention.

Biden’s departure unleashes countless questions.

What was the final incentive to get him to quit the race? If so, who delivered it?

Was money involved. If so, how much?

Will there be a reckoning for all those in government and the media who were far from candid about Biden’s mental and physical condition?

If Biden is losing as a candidate, how cynical and anti-democratic is it to ignore the will of 14.4 million primary voters?

If Biden is faltering badly, should he remain in office as our president?

When the Democrats convene in Chicago on Aug. 19, their 1968 convention riots and chaos hangs over them.

President Lyndon B. Johnson (LBJ) dropped out of his re-election campaign after narrowly winning the New Hampshire primary against Minnesota Senator Eugene McCarthy (49%-42%). Sen. Robert F. Kennedy (RFK) announced his candidacy on March 16.

Meanwhile, LBJ was being hammered by "CBS Evening News" Anchor, Walter Cronkite, for mishandling the Vietnam War.

It didn't take long for Johnson to understand the walls were closing in and only his departure would allow his wing of the party to prevail.

On March 31, 1968, Johnson withdrew his candidacy.

Less than a month later, on April 27, his Vice President, Hubert Humphrey announced he was running.

Following RFK’s assassination on June 5, 1968, the schism among the Democrats was irreconcilable. Tumult on the Convention floor was echoed in riots on the streets.

Southern Democrats broke off to support Alabama Governor George Wallace’s third-party candidacy. The internal strife among Democrats opened the door for Republican Richard Nixon to gain the presidency.

The 1924 Democratic Convention was far worse than 1968.

When Democrats convened on June 24,1924 in Chicago they were in total disarray.

New York Governor, Al Smith, led among mainstream Democrats.

Some delegates were still loyal to failed 1920 candidate James Cox.

Unfortunately, the "progressive" and southern delegates were vehemently anti-Catholic and would do anything to stop the Catholic Smith.

They rallied around former Wilson Treasury Secretary William McAdoo.

McAdoo was a true southerner, born in Georgia during the Civil War.

Rumors that McAdoo was a member of the Ku Klux Klan were bolstered by a huge Klan presence in Chicago.

Sensing opportunity in the three-way race, 28 other candidates entered the convention with pledged delegates.

The first ballot had McAdoo with a strong lead: 431.5 delegates to Smith’s 241.

Cox was a distant third with 59 delegates. The other candidates were in single digits.

The convention deadlocked. Tempers flared.

The tumult on the convention floor was echoed in the KKK’s mass demonstrations on behalf of McAdoo on the streets around the hall with what has become known as the "Klanbake."

More ballots followed with little movement.

It would take 103 ballots through July 9 before the exhausted delegates chose former West Virginia Congressman John W. Davis as their nominee.

It was the longest convention in American history.

The Democrats couldn’t recover in time for the general election.

President Calvin Coolidge was elected with 382 electoral votes from 35 states.

Davis carried 12 states with 136 electoral votes. Progressive Third-Party candidate, Senator Robert La Follette, carried his home state of Wisconsin with 13 electoral votes. Democrats may be facing a similar fate if they can't rally around Vice President Kamala Harris.

Democrats’ 2024 factions are as irreconcilable as those of 1968 and 1924. They are only held together by their hatred of Donald J. Trump. Radical left-adherents, under their "progressive" banner, are already falling in line behind Harris.

Others within the party point to horrendous polling on their policies and the terrible Biden-Harris record.

They also remember that Harris dropped out of the 2020 race in December 2019 because she polled less than one percent among Democrats.

Harris’s unprofessional image, word salads, and droves of staffers leaving her dysfunctional operation weigh against her viability.

Election variables are shifting every day, and even every hour.

What is certain is that Democrats are heading for a tumultuous time in Chicago 2024.

Scot Faulkner is the best-selling author of "Naked Emperors: The Failure of the Republican Revolution." He also served as the first chief administrative officer of the U.S. House, and was director of personnel for the Reagan campaign and went on to serve in the presidential transition team and on the White House staff. During the Reagan administration, he held executive positions at the FAA, the GSA, and the Peace Corps. Read Scot Faulker's reports — More Here.

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ScotFaulkner
Democrats’ 2024 factions are as irreconcilable as those of 1968 and 1924. They're only held together by their hatred of Donald J. Trump. Radical left-adherents, under their "progressive" banner, are already falling in line behind Harris. Harris dropped out of the 2020 race.
coolidge, kkk, progressive
771
2024-55-22
Monday, 22 July 2024 11:55 AM
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