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Benjamin Butler's controversial record as a Union general, party-switcher, and promoter of various reform schemes, in addition to his odd looks, made him one of the more colorful characters of the late-19th century. In 1884, he was nominated for president by the Greenback-Labor and Antimonopoly parties. This cartoon by Thomas Nast interprets Butler's penchant for changing parties as self-serving, calculated efforts to secure political power for his own ends. The poster on the upper-left side announces his candidacy as a confidence game (swindle) and plays on the word "fusion" (meaning a coalition of political groups agreeing to back a single candidate or slate) by adding "confusion." In reality, though, the candidate's articulated political principles were fairly consistent over time. |
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