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A former president comes home, looks at his handpicked successor, and decides the country needs a completely different Constitution in practice. That’s the spark behind the Election of 1912, and we walk through why Theodore Roosevelt’s break with William Howard Taft becomes more than a party feud. It turns into a real argument about presidential power, federalism, separation of powers, and what “progressive” reform is allowed to look like in a constitutional system.
We trace the lines between three smart contenders with three distinct governing visions: Roosevelt pushing an aggressive national government, Taft defending reform with constitutional restraint, and Woodrow Wilson trying to stake out a middle path while still promising tough antitrust action. We also get into the people around them who feel the pressure most, especially Elihu Root and Henry Cabot Lodge, allies who increasingly resist Roosevelt’s direction even when they admire him personally.
And yes, the drama delivers: Alice Roosevelt campaigning in her husband’s district, Nicholas Longworth paying the price at the ballot box, and the strange electoral details like Arizona placing Taft behind Socialist Eugene Debs. If you like political history that treats leaders as real people while still taking ideas seriously, this one is for you. Subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave a review so more listeners can find the series.
Check Out the Civic Literacy Curriculum!
School of Civic and Economic Thought and Leadership
Center for American Civics
By The Center for American CivicsA former president comes home, looks at his handpicked successor, and decides the country needs a completely different Constitution in practice. That’s the spark behind the Election of 1912, and we walk through why Theodore Roosevelt’s break with William Howard Taft becomes more than a party feud. It turns into a real argument about presidential power, federalism, separation of powers, and what “progressive” reform is allowed to look like in a constitutional system.
We trace the lines between three smart contenders with three distinct governing visions: Roosevelt pushing an aggressive national government, Taft defending reform with constitutional restraint, and Woodrow Wilson trying to stake out a middle path while still promising tough antitrust action. We also get into the people around them who feel the pressure most, especially Elihu Root and Henry Cabot Lodge, allies who increasingly resist Roosevelt’s direction even when they admire him personally.
And yes, the drama delivers: Alice Roosevelt campaigning in her husband’s district, Nicholas Longworth paying the price at the ballot box, and the strange electoral details like Arizona placing Taft behind Socialist Eugene Debs. If you like political history that treats leaders as real people while still taking ideas seriously, this one is for you. Subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave a review so more listeners can find the series.
Check Out the Civic Literacy Curriculum!
School of Civic and Economic Thought and Leadership
Center for American Civics