Farmer-Labor Party

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This is an article on the national Farmer-Labor Party of the United States. For an article on the Minnesota branch of the party, see Minnesota Farmer-Labor Party.

The first modern Farmer-Labor Party in the United States emerged in Minnesota in 1918. Economic dislocation caused by American entry into the war put agricultural prices and workers' wages into imbalance with rapidly escalating retail prices during the war years, and farmers and workers sought to make common cause in the political sphere to redress their grievances.

Contents

[edit] Labor Party of the United States

The other primary contributing stream to the Farmer-Labor movement was the Labor Party movement. An International Association of Machinists strike in Bridgeport developed into a Labor Party in five Connecticut towns in the summer of 1918 and the powerful Chicago Federation of Labor adopted the cause of a Labor Party in the fall of that same year. Similar independent Labor Party movements emerged in New York, Pennsylvania, Minnesota, Ohio, and North Dakota. These state and local organizations joined together in November 1919 in Chicago to form the Labor Party of the United States. [1] [2]

One important gathering that was a precursor to the establishment of a national Farmer-Labor Party was the Cooperative Congress, held in Chicago on Feb. 12, 1920. The gathering included participants from the cooperative movement, farmers organizations, trade unions, and the Plumb Plan League. The congress elected a 12 person All-American Farmer-Labor Cooperative Commission. The event was closely reported in the pages of The Liberator by Robert Minor. [3] [4] [5]

[edit] Farmer-Labor Party of the United States

In July 1920, the Labor Party of the United States changed its named to the Farmer-Labor Party. It nominated Utah lawyer Parley Parker Christensen for President of the United States. Christensen finished particularly strongly in Washington, netting over 77,000 votes in that state alone. [6] In total, Christensen received over 265,000 votes from voters of the 19 states in which the Farmer-Labor Party was on the ballot. [7] Also during the 1920 election, the Farmer Labor Party candidate for the United States Senate in Washington state, C.L. France received 25% of the vote, coming in second place. This was the best performance by the Farmer Labor Party in a state election outside Minnesota, which would soon become its main stronghold. The party's candidate for Governor of New York was Dudley Field Malone, the former Democratic Collector of the Port of New York, who achieved 49,953 votes in the that race, versus 171,907 for the Socialist candidate Joseph Cannon. However Rose Schneiderman, the party's candidate for the New York seat in the 1920 Senatorial election only received 15,086 votes versus 151,246 for Socialist Jakob Panken. [8]

In November of 1921, as part of a lengthy world tour, Parley Parker Christensen obtained two interviews with Lenin in Moscow. The official organ of the Farmer-Labor Party was a newspaper published in Chicago called The New Majority. Editor of this paper was Robert Buck, a Fitzpatrick-Nockles loyalist.

The 1922 Convention of the Farmer-Labor Party was attended by 72 delegates, representing organizations in 17 states. Victor Berger, Seymour Stedman, and Otto Branstetter attended the proceedings as fraternal delegates of the Socialist Party of America. The convention decided to transform the FLP organization into a federated body of labor organizations on the model of the British Labour Party.

The Farmer-Labor Party sent delegates to the 2nd Conference of the Conference for Progressive Political Action, which met Dec. 11-12, 1922 in Cleveland. The conference defeated a motion to establish an independent political party by a vote of 52-64, with the Socialist and Farmer-Labor Party delegations on the short side. At the close of the conference, the Farmer-Labor Party delegation announced that they would no longer affiliate with the CPPA. [9]

In March of 1923, the Farmer-Labor Party of Chicago broke away from the CPPA and decided to proceed to the immediate formation of a national Farmer-Labor political organization. Circa May, over the signature of J.G. Brown of the Farmer-Labor Party of the United States there was issued a call for a "Monster Political Convention of the Workers of America to meet in Chicago on July 3. The convention call was issued to trade unions, state Farmer-Labor Parties, the Non-Partisan League, the Socialist Party, and the Workers Party, The FLP was frustrated with the timidity of the CPPA and the refusal of that organization to enter into independent electoral politics and sought to establish a national organization through other means. The Workers Party was anxious to participate in the FLP Convention as part of their United Front strategy. The Socialist Party on the other hand, was extremely hesitant. The SPA carefully considered this matter at its May 19-23, 1923, New York Convention before declining to participate in the FLP Convention, instead seeing the CPPA as the vehicle for a new Labor Party. [10]. [11]

In the middle of June 1923, a subcommittee of the Central Executive Committee of the Workers Party of America met with a sub-committee of the Farmer-Labor Party. These two small groups agreed that if sufficient workers should be represented by delegates to the July 3 Conference, the Farmer-Labor Party should be supplanted by a Federated Farmer-Labor Party, and the National Committee of the Farmer-Labor Party replaced by a new National Executive Committee. The number of organizational members sending delegates necessary for the critical mass necessary to trigger this transformation was agreed by the two subcommittess to be 500,000. It was also agreed that the July 3 Conference should pass a general statement of principles and a resolution calling for the recognition of Soviet Russia. If the 500,000 threshold was not achieved, an Organization Committee for the new federated FLP would instead be established.[12]

[edit] Federated Farmer-Labor Party

The July 1923 Conference of the FLP was attended by approximately 540 delegates. The Workers Party seems to have made every effort to capture a majority at the gathering. At the convention itself, it used a disciplined caucus system, with groups of ten on the floor led by a group captain. [13] The Workers Party delegates to the July 3 Conference were guided by a steering committee of the Central Executive Committee. During debate on the organization plan at the conference, C.E. Ruthenberg made a speech in which he asked the Farmer-Labor Party delegates what they wanted, stating that any concessions would be agreed to save the sacrifice of a federated Farmer-Labor Party itself. Five out of seven seets on the National Executve Committee of the new organization were offered to the Farmer-Labor Party. In response, the convention was adjourned and the Farmer-Labor Party delegates went into a closed caucus. This caucus returned with a resolution proposing to exclude the Workers Party from the conference and to ask the conference to accept the 1921 program and constitution of the Farmer-Labor Party without changes. This proposal was made on the floor of the conference by John Fitzpatrick of the Chicago Federation of Labor, who stated that "it would be suicide" to unite "with any organization which advocated other than lawful means to bring about a political change." This resolution was tabled by a vote of approximately 500-40, prompting a walkout by John Fitzpatrick and a group of delegates sharing his views. [14]

The Workers Party gained a majority for its program and established a "Federated Farmer-Labor Party" at this convention. Structural iron worker Joseph Manley, a son-in-law of William Z. Foster although a factional loyalist to John Pepper, was elected as National Secretary of the organization. The WPA's Chicago labor paper, The Voice of Labor, was turned over to the FFLP and became its official organ, The Farmer-Labor Voice. [15]

The notion of a "Federated Farmer-Labor Party" closely paralleled the organizational ideal for a third party then currently being advanced, the Socialist Party -- an organization modelled upon the British Labour Party to which political organizations (like the WPA and the SPA) might affiliate without losing their independent organizational identity. The Socialist Party sought the establishment of an American "Labor Party" via the CPPA -- and failed. The Workers Party successfully "captured" the Farmer-Labor Party organization, only to lose the allegiance of the mass organizations that they with which they so eagerly desired to unite.


[edit] Conference -- St. Paul, MN -- March 11-12, 1924

A Conference of the Farmer-Labor Party was held in St. Paul on March 11-12, 1924, at which it was decided to hold its next National Convention on June 17 in that same city. A convention call was issued for that gathering, which called for farmer, labor, and political organizations to send delegates provided that they subscribed to a five point "tentative program" that called for public ownership, governent banking, public control of all natural resources, restoration of civil liberties, and the abolition of the use of the injunction in labor disputes. An effort was made by some members of the Farmer-Labor Party of the United States to merge the convention of the FLP with that of the Conference for Progressive Political Action, an attempt which was unsuccessful. This group also attempted to remove all national political parties from the convention call -- the intended effect being to exclude the Workers (Communist) Party from participation. This effort failed as well.

There was pressure placed on the Farmer-Labor Party to purge itself of Communists and to postpone its next convention until July 4, 1924, so that it might meet jointly with that of the Conference for Progressive Political Action. On March 18, 1924, National Secretary Jay G. Brown wrote to the National Committee asking for a vote on the question of holding a convention on July 4 at Cleveland. This convention was not called. Brown resigned as National Secretary, to be replaced on a temporary basis by Robert M. Buck, who soon resigned as well. National Chairman W.M. Piggott then appointed Bert Martin as National Secretary and headquarters were moved from Chicago to Denver. [16] [17]

[edit] Convention -- St. Paul, MN -- June 17-19, 1924

The June 1924 Convention of the Farmer-Labor Party (in which the Federated Farmer-Labor Party participated as a member organization) was attended by over 500 delegates representing 26 states. The convention discussed the upcoming run of Sen. Robert LaFollette, Sr for President. LaFollette, a bitter opponent of the Workers Party of America, did not seek the endorsement of the convention, which proceeded to nominate its own candidates for President and Vice President of the United States -- Duncan McDonald and William Bouck, respectively. The National Committee of the FLP met in Cleveland on July 4 and elected delegates to the Conference for Progressive Politiical Action. W.M. Piggott of Utah was re-elected as National Chairman and Bert Martin of Denver as National Secretary. On July 10, 1924, after the endorsement of LaFollette by the CPPA at Cleveland, a majority of the National Executive Committee withdrew the nominations of MacDonald and Bouck and pledged support to an independent campaign of the Workers Party. By the end of 1924, the Federated FLP had ceased to exist.

[edit] Farmer-Labor Party of the United States

The demise of the Federated Farmer-Labor Party did not mean an end to the Farmer-Labor Party movement, however. The regular Farmer-Labor Party continued to exist at the state level, with state and local organizations in Minnesota, Colorado, Utah, Illinois, Kentucky, Montana, New York, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Missouri, Washington, the Dakotas, and elsewhere. The national organization continued under the leadership of National Chairman W.M. Piggott and National Secretary Bert Miller. The group's 1920 Presidential candidate, Parley Parker Christensen, attended the Dec. 12, 1924, meeting of the National Committee of the Conference for Progressive Political Action and was made a member of the committee of arrangements for the CPPA's forthcoming Feb. 21-22, 1925, Conference. A Convention of the loyal members of the Farmer-Labor Party was called for that same time and place, where it aimed to cooperate with the CPPA in the formation of a labor party.

[edit] Subsequent history

There were subsequent attempts to reconstitute a Farmer-Labor Party into the 1930's, without the participation of either the CPUSA or the Socialist Party. Frank Webb was the remnant party's candidate in 1928. For the 1932 Presidential election, Jacob Coxey campaigned as the Farmer-Labor Party candidate in a few states. In neither election did the party receive more than 8,000 votes. [18] [19] The Farmer-Labor Party continued to exist as a successful state party in Minnesota until 1944, when it merged with the Democratic Party of that state to form the Minnesota Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party (DFL).

[edit] Famous Members

  • Elmer Austin Benson - U.S. Senator from Minnesota, 1935-1936; Governor of Minnesota, 1937-1939
  • Magnus Johnson - U.S. Senator from Minnesota, 1923-1925; U.S. Representative from Minnesota, 1933-1935
  • Ernest Lundeen - U.S. Representative from Minnesota, 1917-1919 & 1933-1937, U.S. Senator from Minnesota, 1937-1940
  • Floyd B. Olson - Governor of Minnesota, 1931-1936
  • Hjalmar Petersen - Governor of Minnesota, 1936-1937f
  • Henrik Shipstead - U.S. Senator from Minnesota, 1923-1941 (switched to the Republican Party during the 1940 election and served another term as a Republican)

[edit] Organizations establishing the Federated Farmer-Labor Party

  • Buffalo Trades and Labor Council
  • Detroit Federation of Labor
  • Farmer-Labor Publishing Co.
  • Farmer-Labor Party of Kentucky, Ohio and Washington
  • Independent Workmen's Circle
  • Labor Party of Los Angeles
  • Non-Partisan Leagues of California and South Dakota
  • Progressive Party of Nebraska
  • Socialist Party of Minnesota
  • United Farmers' Educational League
  • Western Progressive Farmers' League
  • Wisconsin Womens' Progressive Association
  • Workers Party of America

[edit] Sources

  1. ^ The Labor Party Convention. by A.S. Carm. Published in The Weekly People, Socialist Labor Party, v. 29, no. 36 (Dec. 6, 1919), pg. 1.x
  2. ^ Work, John M. (Oct. 20, 1919). "Rethinking the Labor Party". Milwaukee Leader 8 (268): 2. Retrieved on September 27, 2006. 
  3. ^ http://www.marxisthistory.org/history/usa/parties/flp/1920/0400-minor-yankeeconv.pdf
  4. ^ Solon DeLeon and Nathan Fine (eds.), The American Labor Year Book, 1929. (NY: Rand School of Social Science, 1929), pg. 144;
  5. ^ Theodore Draper, American Communism and Soviet Russia. (NY: Viking, 1960), pp. 29-30.
  6. ^ http://uselectionatlas.org/RESULTS/stats.php?year=1920&f=1&off=0&elect=0
  7. ^ http://uselectionatlas.org/RESULTS/national.php?year=1920
  8. ^ Johnson, Willis Fletcher; Roscoe C. E. (Roscoe Conkling Ensign) Brown, Walter Whipple Spooner, Willis Holly (1922). History of the State of New York, Political and Governmental. The Syracuse Press, 347 - 348, 350. 
  9. ^ James Oneal, American Communism, (NY: Rand Book Store, 1927), pg. 162.
  10. ^ Theodore Draper, American Communism and Soviet Russia, pg. 39
  11. ^ James Oneal, American Communism, pp. 162-163.
  12. ^ C.E. Ruthenberg, "Report of the Central Executive Committee," in The Second Year of the Workers Party of America. (Chicago: Literature Department, WPA, 1924), pg. 17.
  13. ^ James Oneal, American Communism, (NY: Rand Book Store, 1927), pp. 168-169.
  14. ^ C.E. Ruthenberg, "Report of the Central Executive Committee," in The Second Year of the Workers Party of America. (Chicago: Literature Department, WPA, 1924), pp. 18-19.
  15. ^ Theodore Draper, American Communism and Soviet Russia, pg. 75.
  16. ^ Solon DeLeon and Nathan Fine (eds.), The American Labor Year Book, 1925. (NY: Rand School of Social Science, 1925), pp. 145-148
  17. ^ Daily Worker, March 13, 1924, pg. 2.
  18. ^ http://uselectionatlas.org/RESULTS/national.php?year=1928&minper=0&f=1&off=0&elect=0
  19. ^ http://uselectionatlas.org/RESULTS/national.php?year=1932&minper=0&f=1&off=0&elect=0

[edit] External links

[edit] Contemporary accounts

[edit] Later accounts

[edit] Further reading

  • Carroll, Mollie Ray. Labor and Politics. Boston and New York: Houghton Mifflin, 1923.
  • Cravens, Hamilton. The Emergence of the Farmer-Labor Party in Washington Politics, 1919-1920, Pacific Northwest Quarterly, Volume 57, October 1966. pp. 148-157.
  • Dobbs, Farrell. Marxist Leadership in the U.S.: Revolutionary Continuity - Birth of Communist Movement, 1918-1922. New York: Monad Press, 1983.
  • Fine, Nathan. Labor and Farmer Parties in the United States, 1828 - 1928. New York: Russell and Russell, 1961.
  • Gieske, Millard L. Minnesota Farmer-Laborism: The Third Party Alternative. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1979.
  • Montgomery, David. The Farmer-Labor Party, a chapter in Paul Buhle and Alan Dawley, editors, American Workers from the Revolution to the Present. Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 1985.
  • Murray, Robert. Red Scare: A Study in National Hysteria, 1919-1920. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1955.
  • Shapiro, Stanley. Hand and Brain: The Farmer-Labor Party of 1920, Labor History, Volume 26, No. 3, Summer 1985. pp. 405-422.
  • Valelly, Richard M. Radicalism in the states; the Minnesota Farmer-Labor Party and the American political economy. Foreword by Martin Shefter. The University of Chicago Press, Chicago. 1989.
  • Zieger, Robert H. Republicans and Labor: 1919-1929. Lexington: University of Kentucky Press, 1969.

[edit] Contemporary publications