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Parties > Party 347

About the Prohibitionist Party
The prohibition party was an evangelical Christian party with a key policy focus on the prohibition of alcoholic beverages. It was founded in 1869 and remains intact today (making it the oldest extant minor party in America). Its time of largest national political influence was in 1888 and 1892, when its presidential candidate won 2.2 percent of the vote. The party had little national success (only one congressman from the Prohibition Party ever won an election), but it had success at the local and county level, including by running the first successful female mayoral candidate in US history. In 1917, a national constitutional amendment (the 18th) was passed, banning the sale and manufacture of alcohol, supported by a majority of both Democratic and Republican senators, and all 48 states (at the time) except Connecticut and Rhode Island. Prohibitionist Charles Hiram Randall was in Congress at the time of the amendment’s passage (Randall ran for congress with the nomination of multiple parties). He also notably voted against the declaration of war on Germany in World War I. In 1933, the 21st amendment invalidated the 18th amendment, and the prohibition party entered an extreme decline. Today the party has no elected representatives at the federal or state level, only winning one election in the 21st century: the tax assessor of a Pennsylvania township (who ran unopposed).

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