Norman Thomas

Norman Mattoon Thomas (November 20, 1884 – February 1, 1933) was the last President-elect of the old United States, former Representative from New York and Presbyterian Minister. Before he could assume office of the President, Thomas was assassinated by the Government of National Salvation on the orders of Douglas MacArthur, an event which marked the beginning of the Red May Revolution and the Second American Civil War.

During his life, Thomas espoused views of peaceful revolution and Christian Socialism, a fact which distanced him from the dominantly atheist and more radical members of the Workers' Party. His personal popularity and openess to compromise with people outside of the radical left spectrum, including dissatisfied liberals and social democrats. Beloved candidate of the masses and unifying figure for the American Socialist movement, Norman Thomas was compared to the forefather of American Socialism Eugene V. Debs. As the result of his tragic death by the hands of counterrevolutionaries, Thomas was described by many researchers as a secular martyr for the American people, especially for the supporters of Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party, who consider themselves as ideological successors to the last President-elect of the Second Republic.

Early years
Norman Thomas was born November 20, 1884, in Marion, Ohio to a family of Presbyterian Minister Weddington Evans Thomas and Emma Williams (née Mattoon). Little is known of Thomas' childhood and adolesence, aside from the fact that he worked as a paper carrier for the Marion Star, an Ohio-based newspaper co-owned by Republican politician Warren G. Harding and Florence Kling Harding.

After he graduated from high school, a pastorate that was accepted by his father allowed Thomas to attend Bucknell University for a year. After leaving Bucknell, he finished his education at Princeton University, graduating magna cum laude in 1905. Among his professors in Princeston was Woodrow Wilson, the future First Secretary of the United States and theorist of the Congressional Government.

In 1905 Thomas helped to establish the Intercollegiate Socialist Society (later renamed to League for Industrial Democracy). Its stated purpose was to "throw light on the world-wide movement of industrial democracy known as socialism."

Norman Thomas' pacifist views and his staunch oppossition to the American involvement in World War I brought him to the ranks of the Socialist Labor Party in 1914, which was the biggest political organization that fully objected to the war. When Socialist Labor figure Morris Hillquit made his campaign for mayor of New York in 1917 on an antiwar platform, Thomas wrote to him expressing his good wishes. To his surprise, Hillquit wrote back, encouraging the young minister to work for his campaign, which Thomas energetically did. In 1922 he became co-director of the League for Industrial Democracy.

Electoral politics
In 1927, Norman Thomas was elected to the US House of Representatives from New York City. During his term as a Congressman, Thomas was arrested in 1930 for his role in demonstrations that took place in the Central Park, New York City. After backlash from the American public and free speech marches in major cities, Norman Thomas was soon released.

Presidential campaign
To an uproarious applause, Norman Thomas was chosen as the Presidential candidate in the 1932 elections with House Minority Leader Upton Sinclair as his running mate as the Workers’ Party ticket to challenge the incumbent President Herbert Hoover.