Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
A campaign advertisement for the 1927 Chicago mayoral election supporting William Hale Thompson bearing the phrase "America First" As a slogan in American political discourse, "America First" originated from the nativist American Party in the 1850s. [10] The motto has been used by both Democratic and Republican politicians in the United States.
"America First and America Efficient" – Charles Evans Hughes "He has kept us out of war." – Woodrow Wilson 1916 U.S. presidential campaign slogan "He proved the pen mightier than the sword." – Woodrow Wilson 1916 U.S. presidential campaign slogan "War in the East, Peace in the West, Thank God for Woodrow Wilson."
America First Credit Union, a credit union in Utah, United States; America First Event Center, a multi-purpose arena in Cedar City, Utah, United States; America First with Nicholas J. Fuentes, a political commentary show hosted by Nick Fuentes that started in 2017; America First with Sebastian Gorka, a syndicated radio show that debuted in 2019
America is not a sports team and winning in the stock market is not the definition of success for America. "America First" is not a slogan; it is a guiding principle. MAGA is about honoring our ...
- slogan of Abraham Lincoln and the National Union Party during the 1864 presidential election, arguing in favor of retaining Lincoln as president during the American Civil War. The slogan has since been adopted by various incumbents during times of crisis, most famously by Franklin D. Roosevelt in the 1944 presidential election during World ...
Marketing Modernization in a Political Context. In the 1960s, the first mass media campaign was launched for the John F. Kennedy vs. Richard Nixon election. Until this point, mass media was used ...
Trump’s America First credo was never so much a coherent foreign policy doctrine as a useful slogan. Starting with his 2016 campaign, Trump embraced a more isolationist strain in American ...
The theme was Harding's own slogan "America First". Thus the Republican advertisement in Collier's Magazine for October 30, 1920, demanded, "Let's be done with wiggle and wobble." The image presented in the ads was nationalistic, using catch phrases like "absolute control of the United States by the United States," "Independence means ...