((Never knew that... oh well, thank's for telling me!))
Yes, you'll have to wait until 1937 if you keep his current DoB.
((Never knew that... oh well, thank's for telling me!))
((So now we have two (McCahill can't run, he's too young) Federals and two Republicans announced; good!))
May I ask both Secretary Horshington and Vice President Ritter what their platforms are?
No offense taken Mr. Walsh, I read the amendment wrong going to revise my vote.
I vote no on the 1921 Bill of Rights.
Furthermore, I would like to announce that I will be running for President under the Republican banner.
I put myself forward to the Republican Party as the voice of reason and moderation. As can be seen so clearly by Mr. Jarvis' outright attacks on the Jim Crow laws, less is being done to resolve the problem, rather than more. The Southern people have fled from Jarvis, and for good reason, too; he has attempted to usurp those rights of the states that he holds so dear, in an attempt to force upon the South something it is not yet ready for. The very idea that Federal intervention will do anything other than exacerbate the situation is nonsense and foolhardy. The Southern states must tackle the issue at their own pace, and any rash actions by any outside parties will cause Southerners to lash out against the very thought of granting Negroes civil rights, for they will associate such a thought not with the pursuit of happiness, but rather with the usurpation of states' rights by a cold, uncaring, unrepresentative Washington.
((Alright, time for some radical Southern politicking...))
((I can resist no longer, I'm Back!))
William F. Stewart
Representative from Mississippi
The Stewarts had been an Oxford Legend for many years, no one was quite sure where or how he got his money or who he was beforehand but when Rhett Stewart rode into the town with 2000 dollars in gold in 1862 wanting to buy somthing from everybody in a war ravaged town no one complained. His grandson William (b.1889) took a common path for those of the Southern Gentry class, who were niether the Plantation Barons or the Poor Yeoman, and studied law at The University of Mississippi. He was supposed to graduate Law School in 1914 but was drafted to fight in the Great War in 1913. Returning home in 1918 he completed his law degree by the spring of 1919. Primarily using his war record and his position in the Gentry (A Social class able to mingle with both the Plantation Barons and the Yeoman) he was elected as representative from a rural congressional district in Mississippi in 1924.
Party: Republican
Idealogical Issues: Pro-States Rights, Pro-Flat Tax
Born: Mar. 22. 1889
Position: Representative from Mississippi's 2nd District
Alma Matter: University of Mississippi
Hometown: Oxford Mississippi
OOC: It is so awesome you are back! Welcome back! I can't wait to see the unlimited southern rage.
((Great to see all these Southerners joining us once again!))
((Also don't forget to vote for the 1921 Bill of Rights http://http://forum.paradoxplaza.com/forum/showthread.php?530282-The-Presidents-1836-1936-An-Interactive-US-AAR/page463))