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1 Latte Liberals: Donald Peterson and the Birth of the New Politics
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Published:August 2013
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Abstract
Outraged by the Vietnam War, Donald Peterson helped launch the “Dump Johnson Movement” and convince Eugene McCarthy to challenge LBJ for the Democratic nomination. His role in McCarthy's insurgent campaign and leadership of the Wisconsin delegation at the 1968 Democratic Convention changed Peterson from an anonymous grassroots activist into a minor celebrity. Following the convention, Peterson became a key figure in the New Politics Movement. Comprised of educated, middle class activists, New Politics liberals rejected the Cold War and made controversial social issues more prominent than economic matters. Due to their organizational prowess, these middle class activists slowly displaced working class Democrats and their issues during the 1970s.
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