56 results

  • Subject is exactly "progressive politics"
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McDonald writes to Addams endorsing the possibility of Moors being appointed Ambassador to Mexico.
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Addams sends Ickes a paper with a suggestion that she received.
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A screed about Albert Beveridge's letter warning Progressives against turning back to old parties that calls out "traitors" to the Party.
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Beveridge sends Addams a news clipping claiming that she is a traitor to the Progressive Party and later discusses plans to secure woman suffrage from the Wilson administration.
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Beveridge sends Addams an article in the Indianapolis News that reports she is leaving the Progressive Party and asks her to refute the charge.
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The article reports that Jane Addams is distancing herself from the Progressive Party, advocating for nonpartisan municipal elections.
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Hibben sends the Executive Committee of the Progressive National Party a memorandum regarding the next year's congressional campaign.
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Hibben provides a detailed explanation for his resignation from the Progressive National Service, citing the dysfunction and inadequacies of the Chief of Service, Frances Kellor.
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Kellogg asks Addams to critique a draft of the annual report of The Survey and sends a short biography that will appear with her name on the staff list.
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Kellogg asks Zueblin for a statement on the relations of capital to labor.
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Also known as A Progressive Labor Policy

Zueblin argues that a deliberate labor policy from the Progressive Party is the key to its survival.
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Kellogg reports on recent work that has been done while Addams is abroad.
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A memorandum regarding the subdivision of the Department of the Progressive Service and an effort to confront the issue of race relations.
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Spingarn writes to Kellogg that he is eager to help the Progressive Service and offers a suggestion on how best he might do that.
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Kellogg asks Commons to do some work for the Progressive Party.
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Lewis writes Addams about the agenda of the upcoming meeting of the Legislative Reference Committee of the Progressive National Service.
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Pinchot invites Addams to a meeting in February regarding the future of the Progressive Party.
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Kellor informs Roosevelt that his pick for the Progressive Party's National Committee violates the decisions made at the party convention about who was eligible and who was tasked with making the selection.
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Draper announces the formation of the Progressive Party's Legislative Bureau, its composition, and its duties.
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The New York Herald warns that businessmen may be sorry they chose Woodrow Wilson over Theodore Roosevelt, claiming Wilson was untrained and unfamilar with the needs of business.
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Lewis writes Addams about Progressive Party organization and funding and encloses minutes of a recent meeting (not found).
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Roosevelt encloses letters (not found) about the appointment of Helen Longstreet to the Progressive National Committee.
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Baker writes Addams about his concerns of the leadership and direction of the Progressive Party, arguing that it may not be that different from the Democratic Party in terms of the character of the leadership.
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McCarthy sends Addams information (not found) about a bill related to the use of schoolhouses.
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Roosevelt discusses the Progressive Party and trusts with Pinchot.