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During the tumultuous factional politics of the middle 1920s, Minor was a loyalist to the faction headed by C.E. Ruthenberg, John Pepper, and Jay Lovestone. Minor had been disappointed by the watering down of the "Negro Equality" proposal the Communists submitted to the founding convention of the Farmer–Labor Party in 1924.
In 1920, the five Socialist members of the New York state assembly were expelled from it by a vote of 140 to 6, partially in response to their support for the strikes. [72]: 52, 65–66 [73] By its end, the wave of strikes had led to the passage of the first rent laws in the country and fundamentally shifted tenant-landlord relations. However ...
In July 1920, Palmer's once-promising Democratic Party bid for the U.S. presidency failed. [12] Wall Street was bombed on September 16, 1920, near Federal Hall National Memorial and the JP Morgan Bank. Although both anarchists and communists were suspected as being responsible for the bombing, ultimately no individuals were indicted for the ...
Ramsay MacDonald, head of the short-lived Labour government of 1924 Grigory Zinoviev, head of the Executive Committee of the Comintern A cartoon from Punch, published after the letter was released, depicting a caricatured Bolshevik wearing a sandwich board with the slogan "Vote for MacDonald and me"
1920: The ABC of Communism (with Evgenii Preobrazhensky) 1920: On Parliamentarism; ... Bukharin was a cartoonist who left many cartoons of contemporary Soviet ...
Political cartoon by Dr. Seuss depicting Japanese Americans as sleeper agents ready to attack the United States from within following the attack on Pearl Harbor. While a student at Dartmouth College in the 1920s, Theodor Seuss Geisel drew cartoons for the campus's humor magazine, the Dartmouth Jack-O-Lantern, some of which contain anti-black racist and anti-Semitic elements.
The Daily Worker was a newspaper published in Chicago founded by communists, socialists, union members, and other activists. [1] Publication began in 1924. [2] It generally reflected the prevailing views of members of the CPUSA; it also reflected a broader spectrum of left-wing opinion.
August 1: Otto Messmer adapts the animated cartoon character Felix the Cat into a comic strip. [33] September 16: Syd Nicholls's Fatty Finn makes its debut. It will run until July 1977. December 8: The first issue of Jungle Jinks magazine is published. It will last a mere two years. [34] [35] The Scottish comics magazine The Vanguard makes its ...