Moreover, German and Italian Americans felt that the treaty was unfavorable to their former countries. Irish Americans also felt that the votes of the five British regions overseas would provide Britain with unnecessary influence that could force the U.S. to subdue any independence uprisings by the Irish. Despite these sentiments, a majority of Americans favored the treaty. In the Rocky Mountains and on the Pacific Coast, Wilson was welcomed with enthusiasm, since the people there had elected him in 1916. In the Midwest, however, Wilson was met with little optimism due to the presence of German-American influence. In 1920, Wilson won the Nobel Peace Prize for his concept of world peace through the League of Nations. Overall, as Chief of State, President Wilson was viewed as a mixed bag, with some Americans supporting his views and others leery of the effects and outcomes of his …show more content…
Wilson was nominated on the forty-sixth ballot. The Democrats provided a strong Progressive stance for Wilson to run on, known as the “New Freedom” program. The program advocated for stronger antitrust laws, reforms in banking, and reductions in tariffs. It emphasized small enterprise, entrepreneurship, and free-functioning, unregulated, and unmonopolized markets. The Democrats spurned social-welfare and stressed competition. One major aspect of Wilson’s program that supported the Democrats’ ideology was the breakup of large businesses through antitrust