Exploring the life and leadership of Populist Marion Butler
(1863-1938), James Hunt offers new insight into the challenges of
American reform politics.
The son of North Carolina farmers and a graduate of the University
of North Carolina, Butler displayed an early proclivity for
agrarian reform. By age twenty-eight he led the Farmers' Alliance
of North Carolina; two years later he was elected president of the
national Alliance. Butler served in the U.S. Senate as a Populist
from 1895 to 1901 and was chairman of the national Populist Party
during the critical presidential elections of 1896 and 1900. In
1896 he helped engineer the remarkable collaboration in which
Populist Tom Watson ran for vice president alongside Democratic
presidential nominee William Jennings Bryan.
Departing from earlier portrayals of Butler as a political
opportunist, Hunt shows him to be a genuine reformer who upheld
Populist tenets in the face of enormous opposition from Democrats,
Republicans, and even members of his own party. A dynamic
individual with enormous capacity to mobilize and motivate, Butler
sought throughout his career to convert his reform ideals, through
politics, into law. His long and, ultimately, losing efforts
illuminate the limitations of Populism as an ideology and as a
political movement.