Huey Long













YOUR LINK HERE:


http://youtube.com/watch?v=fEkL_dcLAwM



The Daily Dose provides microlearning history documentaries like this one delivered to your inbox daily: https://dailydosedocumentary.com • We strive for accuracy and unbiased fairness, but if you spot something that doesn’t look right please submit a correction suggestion here: https://forms.gle/UtRUTvgMK3HZsyDJA • Learn more: https://dailydosedocumentary.com/huey... • Subscribe for daily emails: https://subscribe.dailydosenow.com/ • Become a Patron:   / dailydosenow   • Follow us on social media: • Twitter:   / thedailydose18   • Facebook:   / thedailydosenow   • Click to subscribe on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/DailyDoseDo... • #documentary #history #biography • Today's Daily Dose short biography film covers the life and governance of Huey Long. The filmmaker has included the original voice over script to further assist your understanding: • Today on The Daily Dose, Huey Long. • Born in 1893 Winnfield Louisiana, Huey Long worked as a salesman while attending Tulane University Law School in New Orleans, passing the Louisiana bar exam without graduating. Campaigning for governor against the “Old Regulars” in the Republican-controlled, post-Reconstruction government of Louisiana, Long coined the phrase Every man a king, but no one wears a crown;” a phrase later adopted by Democratic presidential candidate William Jennings Bryan. Winning the gubernatorial race of 1928, which made Long the youngest elected governor of Louisiana at only 35 years of age, during his whirlwind campaign, Long punched 62-year-old incumbent governor Oramel H. Simpson in the face during a chance encounter at the Roosevelt Hotel, after Simpson called Long a liar. • Nicknamed “The Kingfish” by his critics, who saw him as little more than a fascist-style demagogue, once in office, Long consolidated power by firing hundred of his opponents in the state’s bureaucracy, filling vacancies with patronage appointments, who were expected to pay a portion of their salary to his campaign fund. Taking office at a time when Louisiana ranked at the bottom of U.S. literacy rates—with a mere 300 miles of paved roads—Long built schools and an impressive number of highways within the state, at the same time cracking down on illegal gambling and prostitution in New Orleans through the use of National Guard raids and arrests, narrowly escaping impeachment when the Louisiana state legislature accused him of nepotism, political patronage, bribery and even murder. After losing an early investment in oil and gas in the Standard Oil Company, Long went after the oil giant during his term as governor, before winning a seat in the U.S. Senate on September 9th, 1930, against Democratic incumbent Senator Joseph E. Ransdell. • After President Franklin D. Roosevelt proposed his New Deal for America in 1933, Long called FDR’s programs insufficiently radical, proposing instead his “Share Our Wealth” program in 1934, advocating for massive federal spending through a wealth tax and wealth redistribution. Poised for a 1936 presidential bid, Long was assassinated at the Louisiana State Capitol Building by Carl Weiss, who was subsequently shot some 60 times by Long’s bodyguards nicknamed the “Cossacks” or “skullcrushers.” Following his death, Huey Long left behind a political dynasty, including his wife, Senator Rose McConnell Long, his son, Senator Russell B. Long and his brother, Governor Earl Long, making the life and governance of Huey Long, one of the last American dictators in 20th century politics. • And there you have it, Huey Long, today on The Daily Dose.

#############################









Content Report
Youtor.org / YTube video Downloader © 2025

created by www.youtor.org