Home > Journals > Michigan Law Review > MLR > Volume 1 > Issue 6 (1903)
Abstract
The convention system of nominating candidates for public office is, in a great degree, peculiar to the United States. England has in recent years borrowed in part our caucus, but as late as 1893, a writer in the American Law Regisieri says: "A nomination is made in the British dominions by a paper filed by one person and one or a very few seconders." Nor have we always had the convention system here. The first national nominating convention was held in Baltimore, by the anti- Masonic party, on September 26, 1831.
Recommended Citation
Alonzo H. Tuttle,
Limitations upon the Power of the Legislature to Control Political Parties and Their Primaries,
1
Mich. L. Rev.
467
(1903).
Available at:
https://repository.law.umich.edu/mlr/vol1/iss6/5