Showing posts with label John Breckinridge Tenney. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Breckinridge Tenney. Show all posts

Saturday, August 17, 2019

Myra Tanner Weiss











Myra Tanner Weiss, May 17, 1917 (Salt Lake City, Utah) – September 13, 1997 (Indio, Calif.)

VP candidate for Socialist Workers Party (aka Militant Workers Party aka Workers Party) (1952, 1956, 1960)

Running mate with nominee (1952, 1956, 1960): Farrell Dobbs (1907-1983)

Popular vote (1952): 10,312 (0.02%)
Popular vote (1956): 7,797 (0.01%)
Popular vote (1960): 40,175 (0.06%)
Electoral vote (1952, 1956): 0/531
Electoral vote (1960): 0/537

The campaign (1952):

Farrell Dobbs was once again nominated for President by the Socialist Workers Party, as he would be in 1956 and 1960. In all three elections his running mate was Myra Tanner Weiss, marking the first time in American history any party nominated the same ticket three elections in a row.

Long a SWP activist in the Los Angeles area, Weiss moved to New York in 1952 and worked as writer for the Militant. Her selection as a running mate was a balancing of the ticket in the sense that Myra and her husband Murry were considered from the Right wing of the Party and had their own distinct following.

The overly long 1952 SWP platform was anti-Stalin, anti-war, proposed the creation of a Labor Party, and demanded an end of the domestic anti-Communist persecutions by the US government.

They were on the ballot in seven states and performed poorly in all of them: New Jersey (0.16%), Wisconsin (0.08%), Minnesota (0.04%), New York (0.03%), Pennsylvania (0.03%), Michigan (0.02%) and Washington (0.01%).

The campaign (1956):

The Party had lost a number of members in the Detroit and Cleveland areas due a leadership dispute involving the definition and direction of Trotskyism.

With the death of Stalin in 1953 and Khrushchev's de-Stalinization efforts underway, the SWP openly courted refugees from the Communist Party USA who were looking for a new political home.

Weiss, ever the purist Trotskyite, attacked the CPUSA as much as she was the major political parties. One news source said she "condemned American Communists as complacent champions of bureaucracy and both Democrats and Republicans as 'big business' parties."

In a miserable election year for third parties in general, the SWP had a result that was more miserable than most. They were on the ballot in only four states but also waged a write-in campaign in California (0.00%): New Jersey (0.16%), Minnesota (0.08%), Pennsylvania (0.04%), and Wisconsin (0.04%).

The campaign (1960):

A small faction had left SWP in 1958 in a disagreement over the 1956 Hungarian Revolution. The official Party line did not support the suppression of Hungarians on Trotskyist grounds. The Cuban Revolution was already starting to create further divisions within the SWP, especially as younger political activist recruits joined their ranks.

Murry Weiss suffered a stroke in 1960 around the same time the Weiss' were distancing themselves from the Party. It was dawning on Myra that SWP had some gender issues in their organization and that Marxist men could be just as sexist as capitalist men.

The CPUSA endorsed the Kennedy/Johnson ticket and in doing so took a swipe at the SWP: " ... it would be a still greater error to adopt a negative, defeatist, 'curses-on-both-your-houses' position" as this would "only encourage 'stay-at-home' moods and feed such sects as the SLP or the Trotskyites [i.e. the SWP], who render only lip service to socialist aims."

By the next election Murry and Myra Weiss would no longer be members of the Socialist Workers Party. Eventually they became involved with the Freedom Socialist Party.

The 1960 election results were, relatively speaking, a big upswing for the SWP. The Party was on the ballot in 11 states with New Jersey continuing to be their best showing at 0.41%. They finished with 0.20% in New York and Minnesota.

Election history:
1945 - Mayor of Los Angeles, Calif. (Nonpartisan) - defeated
1948 - US House of Representatives (Calif.) (Independent) - defeated
1949 - Mayor of Los Angeles, Calif. (Nonpartisan) - defeated
1950 - Los Angeles Board of Education (Nonpartisan) - defeated
1950 - US House of Representatives (Calif.) (Independent) - defeated
1953 - Mayor of Los Angeles, Calif. (Nonpartisan) - defeated

Other occupations: author, waitress, migrant worker, cannery worker, labor organizer

Buried: ?

Notes:
One of her opponents in the 1949 mayoral election was Jack B. Tenney, who she later competed with
 in 1952 when he was the VP nominee for the Christian Nationalist Party.
Suffered a severe stroke ca. 1992 and died in a nursing home.
Joined the Workers Party in Salt Lake City 1935, became a founding member of the Socialist
 Workers Party 1938.
Organizer of the Los Angeles SWP 1942-1952.
Brooklyn College BA 1969, NYU MA 1972
Originally studied to be a chemist but realized she might be employed to create weapons so she
 dropped that field of study.
Dropped out of SWP ca. 1963, was part of the Committee for a Revolutionary Socialist Party
 1978-1980, then joined the Freedom Socialist Party.
#11 on the "Most Famous Person Named Myra" list on playback.fm
Was socially and politically connected with Lyndon Larouche in the 1960s.
" ...Murray and Myra were typical party leaders, intolerant to a fault and convinced of their own
 intellectual and political superiority to everybody else. At a big cocktail party in the 1950s, Junius
 was having a pleasant chat with Alger Hiss who spotted Myra Tanner Weiss. Also at the party was a
 left-wing Labour Party MP who Hiss mischievously decided to introduce to Myra. He brought the
 two together and within a matter of minutes the two of them were castigating each other loudly and
 had drawn a circle of onlookers about them, as if a fist-fight was going on. Hiss stood on the
 sidelines enjoying the spectacle thoroughly."--Synopsis of an interview with Junius Scales.
Descended from Mormon pioneers.

Tuesday, August 13, 2019

Harry Flood Byrd Sr.






 With Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson




Harry Flood Byrd Sr., June 10, 1887 (Martinsburg, W. Va.) – October 20, 1966 (Berryville, Va.)

VP candidate for America First Party (1952)

Running mate with nominee: Douglas MacArthur (1880–1964)

Popular vote: 233 (0.00%)
Electoral vote: 0/531

The campaign:

Fired General Douglas MacArthur was the belle of the ball for the Right wing in 1952, but the extreme conservatives were unable to unite in his name. MacArthur was nominated by the Christian Nationalist Party, Constitution Party, America First Party, and endorsed by Mary Kennery's American Party. Each group had different running mates and in some cases multiple "substitute" Vice-Presidential candidates in the same party. MacArthur was on the ballot twice running under two different party names in some places. The General never accepted any of the nominations, but on the other hand did not take legal steps to remove himself from the ballot.

Lar Daly (1912-1978) who would become better known in future elections as a perennial candidate garbed in an Uncle Sam costume, had been an activist to help Gen. MacArthur gain the Republican nomination in several election cycles including in 1952. When that failed he turned his efforts to running the General on the America First Party ticket in August. The name of the party was originally what the Christian Nationalist Party called itself, but Daly made it clear his organization had no connection with Gerald L.K. Smith.

Daly took the liberty of nominating Sen. Harry Flood Byrd Sr. (without any consultation) as the General's running mate. Byrd was an influential Virginia Democrat who was considered Right wing, anti-union, and pro-segregation. He was spending 1952 with a focus on his re-election to the Senate and had once again watched his name be put into nomination for the Presidential nomination at the Democratic convention only to watch it go down in flames. Byrd did not endorse Truman in 1948 and would not endorse Stevenson in 1952, primarily due to their progressive views on civil rights.

The America First Party of 1952's emblem was the turkey, which is rather fitting for a ticket named MacArthur/Byrd.

Daly, as the mouthpiece for the AFP, called for the use of atomic weapons to end the Korean War, a withdrawal of the US from the United Nations, and was "100 per cent behind" Sen. Joseph McCarthy's efforts to persecute Communists.

Unlike MacArthur, Byrd actually took steps to have his name removed from the AFP ticket by  making a formal request Sept. 3, 1952.

On Oct. 11 Lar Daly announced the MacArthur for President Committee had been changed to the MacArthur for Eisenhower and America First Committee. He endorsed Eisenhower and said he would work to have MacArthur appointed Secretary of State. But it was too late to have the MacArthur/Byrd ticket removed from the ballot in Missouri, where they would be competing for votes with the MacArthur/Tenney ticket.

In Missouri the America First Party Presidential ticket won 233 votes. As near as I can ascertain all of their other votes across the nation were write-ins. Most modern sources have consolidated all of the various little splinter MacArthur political parties into a generic "MacArthur/Byrd" category but it was actually the Christian Nationalist Party ticket with Jack B. Tenney, a case in which the VP nominee was actually enthusiastic, where the old General gained the strongest following, such as it was.

Election history:
1915-1925 - Virginia State Senate (Democratic)
1926-1930 - Governor of Virginia (Democratic)
1932 - Democratic nomination for US President - defeated
1933-1965 - US Senate (Democratic)
1944 - Democratic nomination for US President - defeated
1948 - Democratic nomination for US President - defeated
1952 - Democratic nomination for US President - defeated
1956 - US President (States' Rights Party of Kentucky) - defeated
1956 - US President (Independent (Miss., SC)) - defeated
1960 - US President (Democratic) - defeated

Other occupations: newspaper publisher, apple orchard manager, turnpike operator 1908-1918, Virginia State Fuel Commissioner 1918

Buried: Mount Hebron Cemetery (Winchester, Va.)

Notes:
Member of the Byrd political dynasty in Virginia and a leader of the "Byrd Organization."
Born in the same community just two weeks apart from his fellow VA Senator Absolom Willis
 Robertson (Rev. Pat Robertson's father)
Episcopalian
Family moved to Winchester, Va. when he was an infant.
Brother of Admiral Richard Evelyn Byrd, Jr.
Retired from the Senate Nov. 1965 for health reason, died of cancer Oct. 1966.
In 1960 received 15 Electoral College votes from one faithless and 14 unpledged electors for
 President (1 Okla., 8 Miss., 6 Ala.)

Monday, August 12, 2019

John Breckinridge Tenney




 Tenney appearance in Walla Walla, Wash.









John Breckinridge Tenney, April 1, 1898 (St. Louis, Mo.) – November 4, 1970 (Glendale, Calif.)

VP candidate for Christian Nationalist Party (1952)

Running mate with nominee: Douglas MacArthur (1880–1964)

Popular vote: 10,790 (0.01%)
Electoral vote: 0/531

The campaign:

Fired General Douglas MacArthur was the belle of the ball for the Right wing in 1952, but the extreme conservatives were unable to unite in his name. MacArthur was nominated by the Christian Nationalist Party, Constitution Party, America First Party, and endorsed by Mary Kennery's American Party. Each group had different running mates and in some cases multiple "substitute" Vice-Presidential candidates in the same party. MacArthur was on the ballot twice running under two different party names in some places. The General never accepted any of the nominations, but on the other hand did not take legal steps to remove himself from the ballot.

The Christian Nationalist Party was still under the control of Gerald L.K. Smith-- Disciples of Christ minister, former isolationist now promoting fighting international communism, fascist sympathizer, anti-Semite, white supremacist, and Holocaust denier. Long an admirer of Gen. Douglas MacArthur, Smith would not allow the old soldier to fade away and the Party nominated him for President whether he wanted it or not.

For Vice-President the CNP nominated John Breckinridge "Jack" Tenney. A former Leftist Democrat and socialist sympathizer who was actually investigated himself in the late 1930s for being "subversive" changed gears overnight in 1944-- and became famous as a Republican Red-hunter who pushed a policy to require loyalty oaths from public employees. In June 1952 Jack B. Tenney had lost the Republican primary for Congress in his California district. Gerald L.K. Smith had backed him but Sen. Richard Nixon supported the eventual winner. Apparently Tenney was a bit extreme even for  Nixon.

So with no congressional campaign to run, and with MacArthur declining to participate, Tenney threw himself into the election with an anti-Communist and anti-Semitic message. It was basically the VP nominee's campaign.

The Party stated they were making efforts to obtain ballot status in 19 states but fell a bit short. They made the cut in Arkansas, Missouri, New Mexico, North Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, and Washington. Two electors in New Mexico announced they were backing out. The CNP also launched an energetic write-in effort, mainly in California.

The MacArthur/Tenney ticket had a fairly miserable showing but it was more successful than the other Right-wing MacArthur parties. Well over half of their count (not including write-ins) came from Washington State, where the CNP placed third with 7290 votes (0.66%). Tenney had actually spent time campaigning in the Evergreen State.

Election history:
1937-1943 - California State Assembly (Democrat)
1943-1955 - California State Senate (Democratic/Republican)
1944 - Republican primary for US Senate (Calif.) - defeated
1949 - Republican primary for US Senate (Calif.) - defeated
1949 - Mayor of Los Angeles, Calif. - defeated
1952 - Republican primary for US House of Representatives (Calif.) - defeated
1954 - Republican primary for California State Senate - defeated
1962 - Republican primary for US House of Representatives (Calif.) - defeated

Other occupations: composer, musician, attorney, soldier in WWI, FDR elector (Calif.) 1940, Chair of the California Committee on Un-American Activities 1941-1949, Chair of the California Senate Factfinding Subcommittee on Un-American Activities, City Attorney for Cabazon, Calif., author of several virulently anti-Communist and anti-Semitic books

Buried: Montecito Memorial Park (Colton, Calif.)

Notes:
Composer of "Mexicali Rose"
Family moved to California ca. 1908.
Moved to Banning, Calif. 1959. Last lived in Grand Terrace, Calif.

Sunday, August 11, 2019

Vivien Kellems









Vivien Kellems, June 7, 1896 (Des Moines, Iowa) – January 25, 1975 (Santa Monica, Calif.)

VP candidate for Constitution Party (1952)

Running mate with nominee: Douglas MacArthur (1880–1964)

Popular vote: 3089 (0.00%)
Electoral vote: 0/531

The campaign:

Fired General Douglas MacArthur was the belle of the ball for the Right wing in 1952, but the extreme conservatives were unable to unite in his name. MacArthur was nominated by the Christian Nationalist Party, Constitution Party, America First Party, and endorsed by Mary Kennery's American Party. Each group had different running mates and in some cases multiple "substitute" Vice-Presidential candidates in the same party. MacArthur was on the ballot twice running under two different party names in some places. The General never accepted any of the nominations, but on the other hand did not take legal steps to remove himself from the ballot.

The Constitution Party formed in August 1952 and immediately fell into disarray when some of the founding members walked out when it was clear the Party had a prevailing anti-Semitic attitude. MacArthur and Sen. Harry Flood Byrd Sr. were nominated without their permission. Byrd managed to have his name removed before the ticket made it to the ballot box. Vivien Kellems was registered as the VP nominee in Texas and Colorado and in California was promoted as the Vice-Presidential write-in candidate.

Apparently this was all orchestrated without the approval of Kellems. She was a noted protester and resister of income tax since 1943. Her book Toil, Taxes and Trouble (New York: E. P. Dutton) was published in this election year. In 1952 she was concentrating on her Senate race in Connecticut, where Kellems was forced to run as a write-in candidate under the Independent Republican banner.

MacArthur/Kellems won 2181 votes in Colorado (0.35%) placing third, 730 votes in Texas (where they faced off with MacArthur/Tenney of the Christian Nationalist Party). If sources are to be believed the MacArthur/Kellems ticket also won 178 write-in votes in California.

Election history:
1942 - Republican primary for US House of Representives (Conn.) - defeated
1950 - Republican primary for US Senate (Conn.) - defeated
1952 - US Senate (Conn.) (Independent Republican) - defeated
1954 - Governor of Connecticut (Independent Republican) - defeated
1956 - US Senate (Conn.) (Independent) - defeated
1958 - US Senate (Conn.) (Independent) - defeated
1962 - Republican primary for US Senate (Conn.) - defeated
1965 - US Senate (Conn.) (Independent) - defeated

Other occupations: Founded Kellems Cable Grips, Inc. 1927, co-chaired Connecticut’s Citizens Committee for Goldwater-Miller in 1964.

Buried: ?

Notes:
After her death the government demanded $265,000 in back taxes from her heirs.
Winner of the 1942 primary was Claire Booth Luce. The animosity between Luce and Kellems, both
  candidates being tart-tongued with acid humor, made national news.
Winner of 1954 Governor race was Abraham Ribicoff.
Winner of 1956 Senate race was Prescott Bush.
Winner of 1958 Senate race was Thomas Dodd. Ironically her papers are archived at the Archives &
  Special Collections at the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center in Storrs, Conn.
Was raised in Eugene, Ore.
Supported the Equal Rights Amendment.
"As an aside, I think it’s strange that Ayn Rand ranks higher in the pantheon of lady libertarians than
 Kellems. Kellems is far more likable, writes better, and actually did all the stuff Rand only wrote
 about!"--J. Arthur Bloom