New Nationalism

E292819

New Nationalism was Theodore Roosevelt’s 1912 Progressive-era political philosophy advocating strong federal regulation of the economy, social welfare reforms, and the use of government power to promote social justice and curb corporate abuses.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
New Nationalism canonical 3

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (48)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Progressive Era ideology
United States political doctrine
political philosophy
advocatedBy Theodore Roosevelt
associatedWith 1912 United States presidential election
Progressive Party (Bull Moose) of 1912
surface form: Bull Moose Party
contrastsWith New Freedom domestic program
surface form: New Freedom

Woodrow Wilson’s 1912 program
country United States of America
surface form: United States
describedAs Theodore Roosevelt’s 1912 Progressive-era political philosophy
emphasizes federal intervention in the economy
regulation of large corporations
social justice
strong national government
welfare of the people
firstMajorArticulation Osawatomie speech
firstMajorArticulationDate August 31, 1910
firstMajorArticulationPlace Osawatomie, Kansas
goal control of trusts through federal regulation rather than breakup
subordination of property rights to human welfare
hasKeyConcept centralized federal authority over big business
expansion of social welfare responsibilities of the state
protection of workers and consumers
use of executive power for reform
hasProponent Herbert Croly
historicalPeriod Progressive Era
inception 1910
influenced Progressive Party
surface form: Progressive Party platform of 1912
influencedBy Herbert Croly’s ideas
Progressive movement in the United States
mainFocus curbing corporate abuses
social welfare reforms
strong federal regulation of the economy
use of government power to promote social justice
opposedTo laissez-faire capitalism
unregulated corporate power
politicalPosition progressive
proposedBy Theodore Roosevelt
relatedTo American progressivism
trust-busting policies of Theodore Roosevelt
significantYear 1912
supports conservation of natural resources
direct democracy reforms
graduated income tax
labor rights
regulation of interstate corporations
social insurance
women’s suffrage

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (3)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Progressive Party platformName New Nationalism
subject surface form: Progressive Party (United States, 1912)
Square Deal domestic program influenced New Nationalism
subject surface form: Square Deal