NON-PARTISAN LEAGUE
:''For the adjective used to describe various United States organizations and elections, see nonpartisan.
The 'Non-Partisan League' (NPL) was a political organization founded in 1915 in the United States by former Socialist party organizer A. C. Townley. The Non-Partisan League advocated state control of mills, grain elevators, banks and other farm-related industries in order to reduce the power of corporate political interests from Minneapolis, Minnesota. It originated in North Dakota, but eventually spread throughout the American Midwest and Pacific Northwest during the Progressive Era and was briefly organized as a national party. It also spread northward into Canada, running in provincial elections and providing some of the basis for the Cooperative Commonwealth Federation in Saskatchewan and the Progressive Party of Canada. The NPL goat served as the League's mascot. It was known as "The Goat that Can't be Got."[1]
The NPL achieved its greatest success in North Dakota.
Its origins date from 1915, a time when small farmers felt exploited by out-of-state milling companies, the railroads, and the eastern capital markets. Rumors spread at an American Society of Equity meeting in Bismarck that a state legislator named Treadwell Twichell had told a group of farmers to "go home and slop the hogs." Twichell later said that his statement was misinterpreted. In fact, Twichell had been instrumental in previous legislative reforms to rescue the state from turn of the century boss rule by Alexander MacKenzie and the Northern Pacific Railroad. Ironically or not, the phrase was to become a rallying cry among large numbers of disaffected constituents.
Attending the meeting was Townley, a failed flax farmer from Beach, North Dakota. Townley and a friend, Fred Wood, drew up a radical political platform that addressed many of the farmers' concerns on Wood's kitchen table. Soon, Townley was traveling the state in a borrowed Model T Ford signing up NPL members for a payment of $6 in dues. Farmers were receptive to Townley's ideas and joined in droves.
The party, supported by a groundswell of "six-dollar suckers", ran its slate as Republican candidates in the 1916 elections. It won control of the state legislature and elected a farmer, Lynn Frazier, as governor with 79% of the vote. After the 1918 elections, in which the NPL won control of both houses of the legislature, a significant portion of the party's platform was enacted. State-run agricultural enterprises such as the North Dakota Mill and Elevator and the Bank of North Dakota were mandated. A graduated state income tax distinguishing between earned and unearned income, a state hail insurance fund, and a workmen's compensation fund that assessed employers were established. In addition, the device of popular recall of elected officials was enacted.
The party's initial success was short-lived. A drop in commodity prices at the close of WWI together with an untimely drought caused an agricultural depression. As a result, the new state-owned industries ran into financial trouble, and the private banking industry, smarting from the loss of its influence in Bismarck, rebuffed the NPL when it tried to raise money through state-issued bonds, calling the state bank and elevator "theoretical experiments" that might easily fail. Moreover, the NPL's lack of governing experience led to perceived infighting and corruption. Newspapers and business groups portrayed the NPL as inept and disastrous for the state's future. The socialist origins of the NPL and its widely-publicized isolationist leanings during WWI also compromised its popular appeal. In 1921, after an investigation of the state bank showed it to be insolvent,
Frazier became the first U.S. state governor, and the only one until California's Gray Davis in 2003, to be recalled.
The decade of the 1920's was relatively prosperous for farmers, and the NPL's popularity receded. But the populist undercurrent that fueled the party's meteoric growth resurged with the coming of the Great Depression and the Dust Bowl conditions of the 1930's. The NPL's William "Wild Bill" Langer was elected to the governorship in 1932 and 1936 (the two terms separated by his declaration of North Dakota's secession from the United States in 1934, and a jail term), and served in the U.S. Senate from 1940 until his death in 1959.
Many remnants of the NPL's short reign continue today, including the state bank and state mill in North Dakota. Perhaps the most radical of the populist reforms, prohibition of corporate farming, was enacted in 1932 by statewide initiative and remains a cornerstone of the state's economic landscape. Although it began as a faction within the Republican Party in 1915, the NPL merged with the Democratic Party of North Dakota in 1956.
1. Morlan, Robert L. (1955) "Political Prairie Fire: The Nonpartisan
League, 1915-1922", University of Minnesota Press,
Minneapolis.
2. Lipset, Seymour M. (1971) "Agrarian Socialism", University of California Press, Berkeley.
★ Conference for Progressive Political Action
★ nonpartisan, adj.
★ North Dakota Democratic-NPL Party
★ Politics of North Dakota
★ Progressive Party of Canada
★ United Farmers
★ A. C. Townley
1.
'Unequal Contest: Bill Langer and His Political Enemies', , Robert, Vogel, Crain Grosinger Publishing, 2004, 0-9720054-3-9
★ North Dakota Democratic-NPL Party Website
★ North Dakota State University Institute for Regional Studies Nonpartisan League Collection
★ Northern Lights - docudrama of the forming of the Non-Partisan League in North Dakota
The 'Non-Partisan League' (NPL) was a political organization founded in 1915 in the United States by former Socialist party organizer A. C. Townley. The Non-Partisan League advocated state control of mills, grain elevators, banks and other farm-related industries in order to reduce the power of corporate political interests from Minneapolis, Minnesota. It originated in North Dakota, but eventually spread throughout the American Midwest and Pacific Northwest during the Progressive Era and was briefly organized as a national party. It also spread northward into Canada, running in provincial elections and providing some of the basis for the Cooperative Commonwealth Federation in Saskatchewan and the Progressive Party of Canada. The NPL goat served as the League's mascot. It was known as "The Goat that Can't be Got."[1]
The NPL achieved its greatest success in North Dakota.
Its origins date from 1915, a time when small farmers felt exploited by out-of-state milling companies, the railroads, and the eastern capital markets. Rumors spread at an American Society of Equity meeting in Bismarck that a state legislator named Treadwell Twichell had told a group of farmers to "go home and slop the hogs." Twichell later said that his statement was misinterpreted. In fact, Twichell had been instrumental in previous legislative reforms to rescue the state from turn of the century boss rule by Alexander MacKenzie and the Northern Pacific Railroad. Ironically or not, the phrase was to become a rallying cry among large numbers of disaffected constituents.
Attending the meeting was Townley, a failed flax farmer from Beach, North Dakota. Townley and a friend, Fred Wood, drew up a radical political platform that addressed many of the farmers' concerns on Wood's kitchen table. Soon, Townley was traveling the state in a borrowed Model T Ford signing up NPL members for a payment of $6 in dues. Farmers were receptive to Townley's ideas and joined in droves.
The party, supported by a groundswell of "six-dollar suckers", ran its slate as Republican candidates in the 1916 elections. It won control of the state legislature and elected a farmer, Lynn Frazier, as governor with 79% of the vote. After the 1918 elections, in which the NPL won control of both houses of the legislature, a significant portion of the party's platform was enacted. State-run agricultural enterprises such as the North Dakota Mill and Elevator and the Bank of North Dakota were mandated. A graduated state income tax distinguishing between earned and unearned income, a state hail insurance fund, and a workmen's compensation fund that assessed employers were established. In addition, the device of popular recall of elected officials was enacted.
The party's initial success was short-lived. A drop in commodity prices at the close of WWI together with an untimely drought caused an agricultural depression. As a result, the new state-owned industries ran into financial trouble, and the private banking industry, smarting from the loss of its influence in Bismarck, rebuffed the NPL when it tried to raise money through state-issued bonds, calling the state bank and elevator "theoretical experiments" that might easily fail. Moreover, the NPL's lack of governing experience led to perceived infighting and corruption. Newspapers and business groups portrayed the NPL as inept and disastrous for the state's future. The socialist origins of the NPL and its widely-publicized isolationist leanings during WWI also compromised its popular appeal. In 1921, after an investigation of the state bank showed it to be insolvent,
Frazier became the first U.S. state governor, and the only one until California's Gray Davis in 2003, to be recalled.
The decade of the 1920's was relatively prosperous for farmers, and the NPL's popularity receded. But the populist undercurrent that fueled the party's meteoric growth resurged with the coming of the Great Depression and the Dust Bowl conditions of the 1930's. The NPL's William "Wild Bill" Langer was elected to the governorship in 1932 and 1936 (the two terms separated by his declaration of North Dakota's secession from the United States in 1934, and a jail term), and served in the U.S. Senate from 1940 until his death in 1959.
Many remnants of the NPL's short reign continue today, including the state bank and state mill in North Dakota. Perhaps the most radical of the populist reforms, prohibition of corporate farming, was enacted in 1932 by statewide initiative and remains a cornerstone of the state's economic landscape. Although it began as a faction within the Republican Party in 1915, the NPL merged with the Democratic Party of North Dakota in 1956.
| Contents |
| References |
| See also |
| Notes and references |
| External links |
References
1. Morlan, Robert L. (1955) "Political Prairie Fire: The Nonpartisan
League, 1915-1922", University of Minnesota Press,
Minneapolis.
2. Lipset, Seymour M. (1971) "Agrarian Socialism", University of California Press, Berkeley.
See also
★ Conference for Progressive Political Action
★ nonpartisan, adj.
★ North Dakota Democratic-NPL Party
★ Politics of North Dakota
★ Progressive Party of Canada
★ United Farmers
★ A. C. Townley
Notes and references
1.
'Unequal Contest: Bill Langer and His Political Enemies', , Robert, Vogel, Crain Grosinger Publishing, 2004, 0-9720054-3-9
External links
★ North Dakota Democratic-NPL Party Website
★ North Dakota State University Institute for Regional Studies Nonpartisan League Collection
★ Northern Lights - docudrama of the forming of the Non-Partisan League in North Dakota
This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.
psst.. try this: add to faves
Featured Companies
| Great Time Travel | |
| Sheraton Vancouver Airport Hotel | |
| Optimum 1 Travel | |
| Aquaworld Cancun |

العربية
中国
Français
Deutsch
Ελληνική
हिन्दी
Italiano
日本語
Português
Русский
Español