Difference between revisions of "Movement conservative"
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− | A '''movement conservative''' | + | {{See also|List of Conservative or pro-Conservative Hollywood stars}} |
+ | [[File:Phyllis speaking in 1983.jpg|thumb|right|340px|Activist [[Phyllis Schlafly]], sometimes known as the "[[First Lady of conservatism]]." Her bestselling book ''[[A Choice Not an Echo]]'' was called in 2023 the "canonical text of movement conservatism."<ref>https://www.nationalreview.com/corner/chris-christies-straight-talk/</ref>]] | ||
+ | [[File:Larry McDonald.jpg|thumb|right|Conservative Rep. [[Larry McDonald]] (D-GA), shot down by the [[communist]] [[Soviet Union]] in [[KAL007]].]] | ||
+ | [[File:Robert A. taft painting.jpg|thumb|right|225px|Sen. [[Robert A. Taft]], prominent leader of the [[Old Right]].]] | ||
+ | A '''movement conservative''' advocates for across-the-board [[conservative]] principles, without exception. This is in contrast with [[Republican in name only|cafeteria, single-issue, or self-serving]] approaches. Movement conservatives, unlike cafeteria conservatives, understand that conservative philosophy is a coherent whole, and thus it is untenable to discard part of it without discarding all of it. '''''Movement conservatives favor [[charity]] and [[logic]] rather than self-centered behavior''''' and therefore reject the teachings of [[Ayn Rand]], who advocated [[selfishness]], and fully oppose the [[liberal]] agenda. | ||
− | Simply put, a movement conservative is a conservative who seeks to help others, and the nation, by | + | Simply put, a movement conservative is a [[conservative]] who seeks to help others, and the nation, by advocating and defending the logical and beneficial conservative approach. A movement conservative is not primarily seeking political gain for him or herself, but advocates the insights and values of [[conservatism]] for the benefit of others. |
Movement conservatives include: | Movement conservatives include: | ||
− | *[[Irish]] Statesman [[Edmund Burke]], who sided with the [[American]] colonists while in the [[British]] [[Parliament]] at the time of the [[American Revolution]], and who opposed the [[atheist]]ic, [[anarchy|anarchist]] [[French Revolution]]. | + | *[[Irish]] Statesman [[Edmund Burke]], who sided with the [[American]] colonists while in the [[British]] [[Parliament]] at the time of the [[American Revolution]], and who opposed the [[atheist]]ic, [[anarchy|anarchist]] [[French Revolution]]. [[American]]s "snuff the approach of [[tyranny]] in every tainted breeze," Burke praised. |
− | *Activist [[Phyllis Schlafly]], who invented [[grassroots]] activism to move the [[United States]] markedly more [[conservative]]. | + | *Activist [[Phyllis Schlafly]], who invented [[grassroots]] activism to move the [[United States]] markedly more [[conservative]], and was prophetic on social issues. |
− | *Congressman [[John Ashbrook]], who | + | *Congressman [[Thomas Massie]] (R-KY), a leader on many issues who lives [[off-the-grid]] while opposing the [[global warming]] alarmism; an [[MIT]] graduate. |
− | *Congressman [[Larry McDonald]], M.D., praised as "the most principled man in Congress" by [[Ron Paul]] but was shot down by the [[communism|communist]] [[Soviet Union]] while in flight on [[KAL 007]]. | + | *Congressman [[John Ashbrook]], who challenged [[globalist]] [[Richard Nixon]] in his primary in 1972. |
+ | *Congressman [[Larry McDonald]], M.D., praised as "the most principled man in [[Congress]]" by [[Ron Paul]] but was shot down by the [[communism|communist]] [[Soviet Union]] while in flight on [[KAL 007]]. | ||
+ | *Congressman [[Madison Cawthorn]] (R-NC), [[homeschooled]] to become the youngest congressman in 2020, outspoken critic of [[Worst College Majors]] and [[liberals]], defeated for reelection by an all-out retaliation by the [[Establishment]]. | ||
*Journalist [[Robert Novak]] | *Journalist [[Robert Novak]] | ||
*Liberty University founder [[Jerry Falwell]] | *Liberty University founder [[Jerry Falwell]] | ||
*U.S. Senator [[Robert Taft]] of [[Ohio]] | *U.S. Senator [[Robert Taft]] of [[Ohio]] | ||
− | * | + | *[[Saint Paul|St. Paul]], author of the largest number of letters in the [[New Testament]] and a [[conservative]] hardliner on many issues. |
− | + | *[[Paul Weyrich]], founder of the Free Congress Foundation<ref>Weyrich also co-founded the Heritage Foundation and the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC).</ref> | |
− | *[[Paul Weyrich]], founder of the Free Congress Foundation | + | *[[Robert Welch]], co-founder of the [[John Birch Society]] |
*Congressman and [[Vice President]] nominee [[Jack Kemp]] | *Congressman and [[Vice President]] nominee [[Jack Kemp]] | ||
*Commentator [[Pat Buchanan]] | *Commentator [[Pat Buchanan]] | ||
*Columnist and economist [[Thomas Sowell]] | *Columnist and economist [[Thomas Sowell]] | ||
*Former [[Alabama]] Supreme Court Chief Justice [[Roy Moore]] | *Former [[Alabama]] Supreme Court Chief Justice [[Roy Moore]] | ||
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{{TOC left}}{{clear}} | {{TOC left}}{{clear}} | ||
− | == Honorable Mention == | + | ==Honorable Mention== |
− | + | [[File:Perry Wilbon Howard, II.jpg|thumb|right|200px|1923 picture of [[Perry Wilbon Howard, II]].]] | |
+ | [[File:William R. Moore Tennessee.png|thumb|right|200px|Portrait of [[William Robert Moore]].]] | ||
+ | [[File:Brazilla Carroll Reece RNC 1946.jpg|thumb|right|200px|[[B. Carroll Reece]] in 1946.]] | ||
* [[Stephen Miller]], top advisor to President [[Donald Trump]] | * [[Stephen Miller]], top advisor to President [[Donald Trump]] | ||
− | *U.S. Senator [[Jesse Helms]] of [[North Carolina]] | + | * Former Governor of [[Alaska]] [[Sarah Palin]] |
+ | * U.S. Senator [[Jesse Helms]] of [[North Carolina]] | ||
* Supreme Court Justice [[Clarence Thomas]] | * Supreme Court Justice [[Clarence Thomas]] | ||
* President [[Ronald Reagan]] | * President [[Ronald Reagan]] | ||
* Attorney General and Alabama U.S. Senator [[Jeff Sessions]] | * Attorney General and Alabama U.S. Senator [[Jeff Sessions]] | ||
− | * | + | * [[Perry W. Howard, II]], leader of the [[Mississippi]] black-and-tan Republicans who supported Robert A. Taft for president in the [[United States presidential election, 1952|1952 presidential election]] |
+ | * [[Entrepreneur]] and Republican congressman [[William R. Moore]],<ref>[https://voteview.com/person/6657/william-robert-moore MOORE, William Robert (1830-1909)]. ''Voteview''. Retrieved December 18, 2021.</ref> who was one of seven GOP representatives to vote against the [[Pendleton Civil Service Reform Act]] and is the namesake of the William R. Moore College of Technology | ||
+ | * Senator [[Roscoe Conkling]], leader of congressional [[Stalwart]]s and pro-hard money fiscal conservative who opposed civil service reform and resigned from the [[U.S. Senate]] over it. | ||
+ | * Senator [[George Frisbie Hoar]], a [[Radical Republican]] and staunch conservative on fiscal/economic issues<ref>Fascinating Politics (February 17, 2021). [https://fascinatingpolitics.com/2021/02/17/george-frisbie-hoar-an-honorable-senator/ George Frisbie Hoar: An Honorable Senator]. ''Mad Politics: The Bizarre, Fascinating, and Unknown of American Political History''. Retrieved November 11, 2021.</ref> | ||
* [[Ken Cuccinelli]], [[Attorney General]] of [[Virginia]] | * [[Ken Cuccinelli]], [[Attorney General]] of [[Virginia]] | ||
* U.S. Senator [[Rand Paul]] of [[Kentucky]] | * U.S. Senator [[Rand Paul]] of [[Kentucky]] | ||
* U.S. Senator [[Ted Cruz]] of [[Texas]] | * U.S. Senator [[Ted Cruz]] of [[Texas]] | ||
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* Former U.S. Representative for [[Minnesota]]'s 6th District, [[Michele Bachmann]] | * Former U.S. Representative for [[Minnesota]]'s 6th District, [[Michele Bachmann]] | ||
− | * U.S. Representative for [[Iowa]]'s 4th District, [[Steve King]] | + | * Former U.S. Representative for [[Iowa]]'s 4th District, [[Steve King]] |
* U.S. Representative for [[Ohio]]'s 4th District, [[Jim Jordan]] | * U.S. Representative for [[Ohio]]'s 4th District, [[Jim Jordan]] | ||
* Heritage President and former Senator [[Jim DeMint]] of [[South Carolina]] | * Heritage President and former Senator [[Jim DeMint]] of [[South Carolina]] | ||
− | * | + | * Former talk-radio host [[Rush Limbaugh]] |
* Activist [[Alan Keyes]] | * Activist [[Alan Keyes]] | ||
* Columnist [[Ann Coulter]] | * Columnist [[Ann Coulter]] | ||
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* U.S. Representative for [[Georgia]]'s 9th District, [[Doug Collins]] | * U.S. Representative for [[Georgia]]'s 9th District, [[Doug Collins]] | ||
* U.S. Senator [[Marsha Blackburn]] of [[Tennessee]] | * U.S. Senator [[Marsha Blackburn]] of [[Tennessee]] | ||
* Activist and executive [[Steve Bannon]] | * Activist and executive [[Steve Bannon]] | ||
− | *Supreme Court Justice [[Antonin Scalia]] | + | * Supreme Court Justice [[Antonin Scalia]] |
− | *[[Howard Phillips]] | + | * [[Howard Phillips]] |
− | *Author [[William F. Buckley]] | + | * Author [[William F. Buckley]] |
+ | *Diplomat [[Clare Boothe Luce]], a prominent Republican Party figure, [[traditional values]] advocate, and fierce anti-communist | ||
+ | *U.S. Representative [[Brazilla Carroll Reece]] of [[Tennessee]], who led the [[Reece Committee]]'s investigation of [[subversion]] among tax-exempt foundations | ||
+ | *U.S. Representative [[Edith Nourse Rogers]] of [[Massachusetts]], a long-term congresswoman who was elected as a strong conservative and led the crusade against fascism in the 1930s and communism in the 1940s/50s<ref>[https://history.house.gov/People/Listing/R/ROGERS,-Edith-Nourse-(R000392)/ ROGERS, Edith Nourse]. ''US House of Representatives: History, Art & Archives''. Retrieved September 25, 2021.</ref> | ||
+ | *U.S. Representative [[H. R. Gross|Harold Royce "H. R." Gross]] of [[Iowa]],<ref>FascinatingPolitics (April 15, 2020). [https://fascinatingpolitics.com/2020/04/15/mc-index-scores-of-people-i-have-profiled/ MC-Index Scores of People I Have Profiled]. ''Mad Politics: The Bizarre, Fascinating, and Unknown of American Political History''. Retrieved August 8, 2021.</ref> a fierce opponent of government waste<ref>FascinatingPolitics (August 8, 2018). [https://fascinatingpolitics.com/2018/08/08/h-r-gross-parsimonious-penny-pincher/ Mad Politics: The Bizarre, Fascinating, and Unknown of American Political History H.R. Gross: Parsimonious Penny-Pincher]. ''Mad Politics: The Bizarre, Fascinating, and Unknown of American Political History''. Retrieved August 8, 2021.</ref> | ||
+ | *Political theorist [[Russell Kirk]] | ||
+ | *U.S. Senator [[Paul Fannin]] of [[Arizona]]<ref>[https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members/paul_fannin/403975 Sen. Paul Fannin]. ''GovTrack.us''. Retrieved May 15, 2021.</ref> | ||
==America First Agenda Movement Conservatives== | ==America First Agenda Movement Conservatives== | ||
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*[[Donald Trump]] | *[[Donald Trump]] | ||
*[[Michael Flynn]] | *[[Michael Flynn]] | ||
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*[[Sebastian Gorka]] | *[[Sebastian Gorka]] | ||
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*[[Ben Carson]] | *[[Ben Carson]] | ||
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===House of Representatives=== | ===House of Representatives=== | ||
− | + | *[[Mo Brooks]] | |
− | *[[Mo Brooks]] | + | |
*[[Andy Biggs]] | *[[Andy Biggs]] | ||
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*[[Debbie Lesko]] | *[[Debbie Lesko]] | ||
*[[Tom McClintock]] | *[[Tom McClintock]] | ||
*[[Lauren Boebert]] | *[[Lauren Boebert]] | ||
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*[[Kat Cammack]] | *[[Kat Cammack]] | ||
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*[[Byron Donalds]] | *[[Byron Donalds]] | ||
*[[Andrew Clyde]] | *[[Andrew Clyde]] | ||
*[[Jody Hice]] - Retiring to unseat RINO [[Brad Raffensberger]] as Georgia Secretary of State | *[[Jody Hice]] - Retiring to unseat RINO [[Brad Raffensberger]] as Georgia Secretary of State | ||
*[[Marjorie Taylor Greene]] | *[[Marjorie Taylor Greene]] | ||
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*[[Jim Banks]] | *[[Jim Banks]] | ||
*[[Thomas Massie]] | *[[Thomas Massie]] | ||
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*[[Andy Harris]] | *[[Andy Harris]] | ||
+ | *[[Vicky Hartzler]] - will run for Senator of Missouri | ||
*[[Matt Rosendale]] | *[[Matt Rosendale]] | ||
*[[Yvette Herrell]] | *[[Yvette Herrell]] | ||
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*[[Ted Budd]] - Will run for Senator of North Carolina | *[[Ted Budd]] - Will run for Senator of North Carolina | ||
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*[[Warren Davidson]] | *[[Warren Davidson]] | ||
*[[Scott Perry]] | *[[Scott Perry]] | ||
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*[[Diana Harshbarger]] | *[[Diana Harshbarger]] | ||
− | * | + | *Tim Burchett |
+ | *John Rose | ||
*[[Mark E. Green]] | *[[Mark E. Green]] | ||
*[[Louie Gohmert]] | *[[Louie Gohmert]] | ||
*[[Lance Gooden]] | *[[Lance Gooden]] | ||
*[[Ronny Jackson]] | *[[Ronny Jackson]] | ||
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*[[Chip Roy]] | *[[Chip Roy]] | ||
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===Others=== | ===Others=== | ||
− | *[[Ron DeSantis]] | + | *[[Ron DeSantis]] – Incumbent Governor of Florida |
− | + | *[[Kelly Tshibaka]] – Challenging RINO Senator [[Lisa Murkowski]] | |
− | + | *[[J.D. Vance]] – Likely Republican to replace outgoing RINO incumbent [[Rob Portman]], Vance is a story of success. He lived with his drug abusing and physically abusive parents. Then he credits his grandparents for rescuing him and turning his life around. Vance then joined the Marine Corps then he got into Yale Law School and then he pinned his famous book, Hillbilly Elegy. | |
− | *[[Kelly Tshibaka]] | + | *Sean Parnell (Pennsylvania Politician) - Running for nomination to replace retiring RINO incumbent [[Pat Toomey]] |
− | *[[J.D. Vance]] | + | |
− | * | + | |
*[[Kelli Ward]] | *[[Kelli Ward]] | ||
− | *[[Joe Kent]] | + | *[[Joe Kent]] – Primary Challenger to RINO [[Jaime Herrera Beutler]] |
− | * | + | *Cory Mills – Challenger to Stephanie Murphy |
− | * | + | *Chuck Gray – member of the Wyoming House of Representatives, running against [[Liz Cheney]] |
+ | *[[Jimmy Duncan]] | ||
+ | *[[John Hostettler]] | ||
==See also== | ==See also== |
Revision as of 20:08, February 9, 2024
A movement conservative advocates for across-the-board conservative principles, without exception. This is in contrast with cafeteria, single-issue, or self-serving approaches. Movement conservatives, unlike cafeteria conservatives, understand that conservative philosophy is a coherent whole, and thus it is untenable to discard part of it without discarding all of it. Movement conservatives favor charity and logic rather than self-centered behavior and therefore reject the teachings of Ayn Rand, who advocated selfishness, and fully oppose the liberal agenda.
Simply put, a movement conservative is a conservative who seeks to help others, and the nation, by advocating and defending the logical and beneficial conservative approach. A movement conservative is not primarily seeking political gain for him or herself, but advocates the insights and values of conservatism for the benefit of others.
Movement conservatives include:
- Irish Statesman Edmund Burke, who sided with the American colonists while in the British Parliament at the time of the American Revolution, and who opposed the atheistic, anarchist French Revolution. Americans "snuff the approach of tyranny in every tainted breeze," Burke praised.
- Activist Phyllis Schlafly, who invented grassroots activism to move the United States markedly more conservative, and was prophetic on social issues.
- Congressman Thomas Massie (R-KY), a leader on many issues who lives off-the-grid while opposing the global warming alarmism; an MIT graduate.
- Congressman John Ashbrook, who challenged globalist Richard Nixon in his primary in 1972.
- Congressman Larry McDonald, M.D., praised as "the most principled man in Congress" by Ron Paul but was shot down by the communist Soviet Union while in flight on KAL 007.
- Congressman Madison Cawthorn (R-NC), homeschooled to become the youngest congressman in 2020, outspoken critic of Worst College Majors and liberals, defeated for reelection by an all-out retaliation by the Establishment.
- Journalist Robert Novak
- Liberty University founder Jerry Falwell
- U.S. Senator Robert Taft of Ohio
- St. Paul, author of the largest number of letters in the New Testament and a conservative hardliner on many issues.
- Paul Weyrich, founder of the Free Congress Foundation[2]
- Robert Welch, co-founder of the John Birch Society
- Congressman and Vice President nominee Jack Kemp
- Commentator Pat Buchanan
- Columnist and economist Thomas Sowell
- Former Alabama Supreme Court Chief Justice Roy Moore
Honorable Mention
- Stephen Miller, top advisor to President Donald Trump
- Former Governor of Alaska Sarah Palin
- U.S. Senator Jesse Helms of North Carolina
- Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas
- President Ronald Reagan
- Attorney General and Alabama U.S. Senator Jeff Sessions
- Perry W. Howard, II, leader of the Mississippi black-and-tan Republicans who supported Robert A. Taft for president in the 1952 presidential election
- Entrepreneur and Republican congressman William R. Moore,[3] who was one of seven GOP representatives to vote against the Pendleton Civil Service Reform Act and is the namesake of the William R. Moore College of Technology
- Senator Roscoe Conkling, leader of congressional Stalwarts and pro-hard money fiscal conservative who opposed civil service reform and resigned from the U.S. Senate over it.
- Senator George Frisbie Hoar, a Radical Republican and staunch conservative on fiscal/economic issues[4]
- Ken Cuccinelli, Attorney General of Virginia
- U.S. Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky
- U.S. Senator Ted Cruz of Texas
- Former U.S. Representative for Minnesota's 6th District, Michele Bachmann
- Former U.S. Representative for Iowa's 4th District, Steve King
- U.S. Representative for Ohio's 4th District, Jim Jordan
- Heritage President and former Senator Jim DeMint of South Carolina
- Former talk-radio host Rush Limbaugh
- Activist Alan Keyes
- Columnist Ann Coulter
- U.S. Representative for Georgia's 9th District, Doug Collins
- U.S. Senator Marsha Blackburn of Tennessee
- Activist and executive Steve Bannon
- Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia
- Howard Phillips
- Author William F. Buckley
- Diplomat Clare Boothe Luce, a prominent Republican Party figure, traditional values advocate, and fierce anti-communist
- U.S. Representative Brazilla Carroll Reece of Tennessee, who led the Reece Committee's investigation of subversion among tax-exempt foundations
- U.S. Representative Edith Nourse Rogers of Massachusetts, a long-term congresswoman who was elected as a strong conservative and led the crusade against fascism in the 1930s and communism in the 1940s/50s[5]
- U.S. Representative Harold Royce "H. R." Gross of Iowa,[6] a fierce opponent of government waste[7]
- Political theorist Russell Kirk
- U.S. Senator Paul Fannin of Arizona[8]
America First Agenda Movement Conservatives
Trump Administration
House of Representatives
- Mo Brooks
- Andy Biggs
- Debbie Lesko
- Tom McClintock
- Lauren Boebert
- Kat Cammack
- Byron Donalds
- Andrew Clyde
- Jody Hice - Retiring to unseat RINO Brad Raffensberger as Georgia Secretary of State
- Marjorie Taylor Greene
- Jim Banks
- Thomas Massie
- Andy Harris
- Vicky Hartzler - will run for Senator of Missouri
- Matt Rosendale
- Yvette Herrell
- Ted Budd - Will run for Senator of North Carolina
- Warren Davidson
- Scott Perry
- Diana Harshbarger
- Tim Burchett
- John Rose
- Mark E. Green
- Louie Gohmert
- Lance Gooden
- Ronny Jackson
- Chip Roy
Others
- Ron DeSantis – Incumbent Governor of Florida
- Kelly Tshibaka – Challenging RINO Senator Lisa Murkowski
- J.D. Vance – Likely Republican to replace outgoing RINO incumbent Rob Portman, Vance is a story of success. He lived with his drug abusing and physically abusive parents. Then he credits his grandparents for rescuing him and turning his life around. Vance then joined the Marine Corps then he got into Yale Law School and then he pinned his famous book, Hillbilly Elegy.
- Sean Parnell (Pennsylvania Politician) - Running for nomination to replace retiring RINO incumbent Pat Toomey
- Kelli Ward
- Joe Kent – Primary Challenger to RINO Jaime Herrera Beutler
- Cory Mills – Challenger to Stephanie Murphy
- Chuck Gray – member of the Wyoming House of Representatives, running against Liz Cheney
- Jimmy Duncan
- John Hostettler
See also
References
- ↑ https://www.nationalreview.com/corner/chris-christies-straight-talk/
- ↑ Weyrich also co-founded the Heritage Foundation and the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC).
- ↑ MOORE, William Robert (1830-1909). Voteview. Retrieved December 18, 2021.
- ↑ Fascinating Politics (February 17, 2021). George Frisbie Hoar: An Honorable Senator. Mad Politics: The Bizarre, Fascinating, and Unknown of American Political History. Retrieved November 11, 2021.
- ↑ ROGERS, Edith Nourse. US House of Representatives: History, Art & Archives. Retrieved September 25, 2021.
- ↑ FascinatingPolitics (April 15, 2020). MC-Index Scores of People I Have Profiled. Mad Politics: The Bizarre, Fascinating, and Unknown of American Political History. Retrieved August 8, 2021.
- ↑ FascinatingPolitics (August 8, 2018). Mad Politics: The Bizarre, Fascinating, and Unknown of American Political History H.R. Gross: Parsimonious Penny-Pincher. Mad Politics: The Bizarre, Fascinating, and Unknown of American Political History. Retrieved August 8, 2021.
- ↑ Sen. Paul Fannin. GovTrack.us. Retrieved May 15, 2021.
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