Warren G. Harding: Notorious Womanizer Nominated by Republicans in 1920
Warren G. Harding was one of
the most unlikely candidates for the
Harding as Editor and
Politician
Born November 2, 1865, Warren
Harding received his education in a one-room schoolhouse. As a young student,
he enjoyed reading and making speeches. He graduated from
Biographers note that Harding
was always insecure and sickly, suffering from indigestion. At age 24, he
suffered a breakdown and checked himself into the
He purchased the bankrupt
newspaper Marion Star and transformed
the journal into a successful state-wide publication in
Harding served the people of
Harding’s Extra-Marital
Affairs
Warren Harding’s marriage to
“Flossie” Kling was an unhappy affair. Mrs. Harding was the driving force
behind the Marion Star and in later
years became devoted to astrology. Their poor marriage relationship led to
Harding’s affairs with other women, two of which lasted several years.
Nan Britton was thirty years
younger than Harding when their affair began. Their illegitimate daughter was
conceived in Harding’s Senate office. The affair continued after Harding won
the presidency with the president and Britton engaging in sexual relations near
his White House office. Harding paid her generous child support which ended
after he died in 1923. Unable to extract money from his estate, she published The President’s Daughter in 1927.
Carrie Phillips was the wife
of one of Harding’s close friends. Their affair lasted 15 years. During the
1920 presidential campaign, the Republican Party sent Phillips and her husband
on a trip to
For all his charm and genuine
compassion for people, Harding’s weaknesses were glaring. Alice Roosevelt
Longworth, who was herself involved in a long affair with Idaho Senator William
Borah, once said, “Harding was not a bad man. He was just a slob.”
Harding the President
The Republican Party
leadership in 1920 was unified by four elements:
A pathological hatred of
Woodrow Wilson
Acute isolationism
Ending Progressivism
Paranoia of
With the recent death of
Teddy Roosevelt, no potential candidates fit the mold to champion the fight
against the League of Nations and return the
Throughout his brief
presidency Harding questioned his fitness as Chief Executive. His own friends
betrayed him with scandal. Out of this would come the infamous
Harding died in
Sources:
Paul F. Boller, Jr., Presidential Campaigns From George
Washington to George W. Bush (
William A. DeGregorio, The Complete Book of
Philip B. Kunhardt, Jr., and
others, The American President (Riverhead
Books, Penguin-Putnam Inc., 1999)
Page Smith, America Enters the World: A People’s History
of the Progressive Era and World War I, Vol. 7 (McGraw-Hill Book Company,
1985)
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