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“When It Comes to the Lion, Business Between Ben and Jim, It’s Nip and Tuck”

Topic:
Butler and Blaine
Source:
Harper's Weekly
Cartoonist:
Thomas Nast
Date:
September 6, 1884, p. 575
Click for image enlargement and complete HarpWeek explanation >
Thomas Nast drew several cartoons for Harper's Weekly during the 1884 presidential campaign which featured Republican nominee James Blaine and Greenback-Labor nominee Benjamin Butler in tandem. Both men were seeking to make inroads into the Irish working-class constituency of the Democratic party, so they denounced Great Britain at every turn: for its "unfair" competition in American markets, policies toward Ireland, and imperialist expansion into the Western Hemisphere. The catch-phrase for criticism of British foreign policy by American politicians was called "twisting the lion's tail" (the lion was a symbol of Great Britain).
Click for image enlargement and complete HarpWeek explanation >

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