Douglas supported the doctorine of popular sovereignty.
Stephen A. Douglas, US senator from Illinois was their candidate in 1860.
Stephen A. Douglas, US senator from Illinois was their candidate in 1860.
Stephen A. Douglas, US senator from Illinois was their candidate in 1860.
The presidential election of 1860 had four candidates. The Republicans were behind Abraham Lincoln. The Democrats were split three ways in a manner of speaking. It would be safe to say the the Northern Democrats backed Senator Stephan Douglas as their nominee.
The northern Democrats supported Stephen A. Douglas for President in 1860, but the southern Democrats withheld support for Douglas. The South demanded that Douglas repudiate the Freeport Doctrine and support a federal slave law. The Douglas supporters pointed out that to do that would drive the northern Democrats into the Republican Party.
Northern Democrats primarily supported Stephen A. Douglas during the 1860 presidential election. They favored a platform that promoted popular sovereignty, allowing territories to decide on the issue of slavery. This stance differentiated them from Southern Democrats, who backed John C. Breckinridge, and reflected the Northern Democrats' focus on unity and compromise amid growing sectional tensions.
Northern Democrats nominated Sen. Stephen A. Douglas of Illinois; Southern Democrats nominated Vice Pres. John C. Breckinridge of Kentucky.
A. As the 1860 presidential election became closer and closer; the Democratic Party split over slavery. Northern Democrats rallied behind Douglas and Southern Democrats supported Dred Scott.
Stephen A. Douglas believed that to keep the presidency in the hands of the Democratic Party, he needed to execute a "southern" strategy. He had to convince southern Democrats that they needed Democratic support in the northern states that gave President Buchanan the White House in 1856. This meant the Democrats had to carry Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Illinois and Indians plus the southern states. Douglas was unable to convince them and southern Democrats focused on sectionalism. This cost them the presidency, and gave the edge to the Republican, Abraham Lincoln. If Douglas had succeeded, there may have not been a Civil War.
John C. Breckinridge was the Democratic Candidate. Abraham Lincoln was the Republican Candidate
The Democratic candidate for president in 1860 was Stephen A. Douglas, a senator from Illinois. The Democratic Party was divided that year, leading to a split in nominations; while Douglas represented the Northern Democrats, John C. Breckinridge, the sitting vice president, was the candidate for the Southern Democrats. This division reflected the growing tensions over slavery and sectionalism in the United States at the time.
The northern democrats selected Stephen Douglas as their candidate. The republican came to the conclusion that Abraham Lincoln would be their best choice as he was a physical representation of the America idea. He was a hard work and self made man. The southern democrats felt Douglas was a traitor and wanted a candidate to defeat the black republicans.