Alfred
Mossman Landon was born in West Middlesex, Pennsylvania,
on September 9, 1887. He grew up in Ohio and moved with
his family to Kansas when he was seventeen. Landon was a
key figure in the U.S. Republican party in the 1930s and
ran unsuccessfully for president in 1936.
"Alf" Landon first entered the national political arena
in 1912, campaigning for Theodore
Roosevelt, who was that year the Progressive
party candidate for president. Landon continued to be
associated with progressive politics within the Republican
party. In 1932, Landon was elected governor of Kansas, and
two years later he was the only incumbent Republican governor
to be reelected in an otherwise Democratic landslide. This
success made Landon a strong candidate to oppose President
Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1936.
Landon is often described as a fiscal conservative who
nevertheless believed that government must also address
social issues. Landon respected and admired FDR and accepted
much of the New Deal but objected that it was hostile to
business and involved too much waste. At the end of the
campaign, Landon accused FDR of acquiring so much power
that he was subverting the Constitution. Yet, Landon proved
to be an inept campaigner who rarely left his front porch
and did not participate in the Republican primaries. Most
of the attacks on FDR and social security during the 1936
election were developed by Republican campaigners rather
than Landon. Although he won 17,000,000 votes, Landon carried
only two states, Maine and Vermont, and FDR's win was the
most crushing electoral victory since 1820.
Following his defeat, Landon retired from national politics
and finished out his term as governor of Kansas. Later in
life he was often asked his opinion, and he did not hesitate
to take strong stands.
In the 1930s, he disagreed with Republicans who supported
the Neutrality Act; he feared it would mislead Nazi Germany
into thinking the United States was unwilling to fight.
In World War II he argued
against lend-leasing military equipment, urging instead
that Britain be given $5 billion outright. After the war,
he backed the Marshall Plan while opposing high domestic
spending. In 1961, he urged the U.S. to join the European
Common Market. Later in the 1960s, Landon backed President
Lyndon Johnson on Medicare and other Great Society programs.
In November 1962, when he was asked to describe his political
philosophy, Landon said: ''I would say practical progressive,
which means that the Republican party or any political party
has got to recognize the problems of a growing and complex
industrial civilization. And I don't think the Republican
party is really wide awake to that.''
(1)
He died October 12, 1987. His daughter Nancy Landon
Kassebaum was elected U.S. senator from Kansas in 1978 and reelected in 1984
and 1990.
Notes:
- "Alf Landon: G.O.P. Standard Bearer
Dies." Obituary. New York Times. October 13,
1987. Internet on-line. Available From http://www.nytimes.com/learning/general/onthisday/bday/0909.html.
Sources:
"Alf Landon." Grolier Multimedia Encyclopedia.
Internet on-line. Available From http://gi.grolier.com/presidents/aae/side/landon.html.
"Alf Landon, G.O.P. Stand-Bearer, Dies at 100."
New York Times. 13 October1987. Internet on-line.
Available From
http://www.nytimes.com/learning/general/onthisday/bday/0909.html.
Boyer, Paul, et al. The Enduring Vision: A History
of the American People. Boston: Houghton Mifflin,
2000, 725-26.
Kavanagh, Dennis. ed. A Dictionary of Political Biography:
Who's Who in Twentieth Century World Politics. New
York: Oxford University Press, 1998, 280.