During his
poorly attended, virus-ridden June campaign event in Tulsa, Oklahoma, Donald
Trump once again pulled out the GOP’s favorite meme, that the Republican Party
was the “party of Lincoln.” Republicans love this claim because it fits so
nicely into the grade school lessons most people remember—that is Abraham
Lincoln was elected president in 1860 on the GOP ticket and reelected again in
1864 on behalf of the Grand Old Party.
Republican Lincoln ran for reelection with Democrat Johnson as his running mate. |
When
confronted with that fact today, the GOP simply claims they temporary changed
the party’s name for that one election. It wasn’t that simple. The National
Union Party was comprised of both Republicans and Democrats.
Party Schisms
This bizarre fact of history came about because by 1864 a political schism slashed through the Republican Party. First, Lincoln was a dark horse candidate that no one in the party ever expected to rise to be their presidential nominee. Even after his election, Lincoln never really received the full support of his party.
One reason for
that was a faction of the party called the Radical Republicans who were strong
proponents of abolition, the enfranchisement of blacks, and—after secession—ensuring
the South paid dearly for its treason. They disliked Lincoln and his call for a
gentle reintegration of the South after the war. And in a political case of you
can't win for losing, many Republicans were outraged by Lincoln's Emancipation
Proclamation, especially since four Union states— Maryland, Missouri, Delaware,
and Kentucky—were still slave states. Those who opposed Lincoln's policies demanded
he step down after his first term.
On the other
side of the aisle, the Democratic Party was experiencing its own policy split.
Before the war, the Democrats were the party of the South and of slavery. After
the Southern secession, those Democrats who remained loyal to the Union were
split into two categories—the War Democrats who supported Lincoln’s war to
force the South’s return into the Union, and the Copperheads, or Peace
Democrats, who opposed the war and demanded a peace settlement with the South.
For the 1864
presidential election, both parties experienced so much division it was
impossible for the traditional two-party balloting to take place. The Radical
Republicans formed a separate party, the Radical Democracy Party, and nominated
John C. Frémont, famed explorer and the Republican presidential nominee in the
1856 election. War Democrat John Cochrane, a former Union Army general, was his
running mate.
Other War Democrats joined Republicans in
forming the National Union Party, which nominated Lincoln for president with
War Democrat Johnson as his running mate.
The Democratic Party, now largely a Copperhead party, nominated former Major General George McClelland, whom Lincoln had fired as head of the Union Army, as its presidential nominee.
National Union campaign poster |
Couldn't Win as a Republican
As much as today’s GOP likes to describe itself as “the party of Lincoln,” the truth is Lincoln faced losing reelection if he ran solely on a Republican Party platform. Many of the National Unionists would not vote for a Republican candidate. Robert Jefferson Breckinridge, chairman of the National Union Party’s convention, declared to Lincoln, “As a Union party I will follow you to the ends of the earth, and to the gates of death. But as an Abolition party, as a Republican party, as a Whig party, as a Democratic party, as an American [Know-Nothing] party, I will not follow you one foot.”
The Radical
Republican’s attempt to win the presidency did not last long. Realizing that
his third-party candidacy might hand the White House over to McClelland and the
Democrats, Frémont withdrew from the race. McClelland himself did not agree
with the Copperheads’ platform demanding a peace settlement with the
Confederacy, but the National Unionists used that platform to discredit the
one-time hero of the Union.
Lincoln won
reelection by a landslide. The Republicans and the Democrats of the National
Union Party returned to their former entities, as did the Radical Republicans
and the Copperheads. By the end of April 1865, Lincoln would be dead,
assassinated by John Wilkes Booth. But, for the few remaining months of his
presidency, Lincoln was not a Republican president or a Democratic president,
but a National Union president supported openly by members from both
traditional national parties.
So, when today’s GOP claims to be “the party of Lincoln,” they are simply wrong. Lincoln transcended any one party. Unlike Trump, Lincoln was a president for the nation.
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