black people
a free market
Republican Party
The Republican Party
During the Great Depression, the Republican Party largely opposed the New Deal, advocating instead for a return to traditional principles of limited government and individualism. They proposed measures such as tax cuts, reduced government spending, and a focus on voluntary cooperation among businesses rather than government intervention. Some Republicans, like Herbert Hoover, emphasized the importance of local and state relief efforts rather than federal programs. Overall, their alternative was centered on promoting economic recovery without extensive federal involvement.
I would say no.
The south did not support the newly formed Republican Party because ,the party wanted to end slavery. The south used a great deal of slave labor to cultivate crops like cotton.
The Republican party of the 1950's and 60's was much different than the 1860's version. FDR's New Deal caused most African Americans to start moving to the Democrats; and after the GOP lost many elections because of the New Deal, it started moving to the right under leaders such as Senator Robert Taft. The Conservative Democrats from the South joined these Republicans in opposition to New Deal policies, and the modern parties as we know them were formed.
Republican
The New Deal coalition was broken up by Presidential Election of 1968. Divisiveness in the Democrat Party led to a resurgence in Republican popularity.
Most continued to vote Republican, the party of Abraham Lincoln.- NovaNet Answer <^_^>
Nathan Deal is a member of the Republican Party. He served as the Governor of Georgia from 2011 to 2019 and previously held positions as a U.S. Congressman and a state legislator. Throughout his political career, he has focused on issues such as economic development and education reform.
I personally feel that the modern agression of Sesame Street played a great deal in the support of the advancing communist party known as the Republicans.