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Populism has been a strong component of North American and Latin American political history. In Latin America several charismatic leaders emerged, while in the United States, the formation of such political parties during the late 1800s and early 1900s as the Populist Party, the United States Greenback Party, the Single Tax movement of Henry GeorgeHenry George ( September 2, 1839 October 29, 1897) was an American political economist, and the most influential proponent of the " Single Tax" on land. His Life Born in Philadelphia, George went to sea at age 16 before eventually settling in California., the United States Progressive PartyThe United States Progressive Party refers to three distinct political parties in 20th-century United States politics. The first Progressive Party The first was formed by Theodore Roosevelt in 1912. Roosevelt ran against President Taft in the Republican p, the Farmer-Labor PartyFarmer-Labor Party was a political party of Minnesota. It was started in 1918. The party had a good deal of success in Minnesota. Three governors and four United States Senators of Minnesota were Farmer-Labor candidates. The party platform called for: pro, the Share Our WealthShare Our Wealth was a movement begun during the Great Depression by Huey Long, governor and later senator from Louisiana. In February, 1934, Senator Huey Long announced during a nationwide radio address that he was forming the Share Our Wealth Society, d movement of Huey LongHuey Pierce Long ( August 30, 1893 September 10, 1935), known as The Kingfish was an American politician; he was governor of Louisiana ( 1928- 1932), Senator ( 1932- 1935) and a presidential hopeful before his assassination. He is often alleged to have ha, and the Union PartyUnion Party is the name of more than one party: Faroe Islands Union Party United States United States Union Party.. Some early left-wing populist parties directly fed into the later emergence of the Socialist movement, while other populists have taken on a more right-wing character, such as Father Charles Coughlin.
Populism is still alive and well in various countries around the world. Examples of populists in the modern era include Pauline Hanson in Australia, Winston Peters in New Zealand, Jean-Marie Le Pen in France, Carl I. Hagen in Norway, William Jennings Bryan, Huey Long, Paul Wellstone, Howard Dean and John Edwards in the United States, Aung San Suu Kyi in Burma/ Myanmar, Silvio Berlusconi in Italy, Jörg Haider in Austria, Lula in Brazil and Preston Manning in Canada and Hugo Chavez in Venezuela.
Populism continues to be a force in modern American politics. The 1992 and 1996 third-party Presidential campaigns of Ross Perot, the Presidential campaign in the 1992 Democratic primary of Jerry Brown, the 2003 California gubernatorial campaign of Arnold Schwarzenegger, and the 2004 Presidential campaign of former Vermont governor Howard Dean, are all widely seen as modern manifestations of the populist phenomenon.