President Theodore Roosevelt had helped modernize the Presidency's relationship with the press by giving them a briefing room. His son would help revolutionize the Presidency's relationship with the entire nation by convincing Olson to do a series of radio broadcasts upon taking office, during which Olson put his considerable rhetorical skills to work making the case to the American public on why the actions the Olson Administration had taken were necessary.
Our boy's a good speaker? Excellent.
The idea of resurrecting the old Confederacy was touted but when Long took the floor, he had a different idea. He made the argument that the South couldn't survive without the rest of the country and the rest of the country needed the South. Instead he called for a new regime, one that better maintained the traditions and liberties that (white) America had held so dear for so long. The current government was under the sway of social liberals and socialists and thus was no longer legitimate. A new government was needed.
Ah, Long wants not just to secede, but to entirely replace us. I suppose that was inevitable. He's bold, I'll give him that. But well, we already knew that. Only a bold man would wrangle the South into agreeing with a flat wealth cap.
Following Long's speech, in a much anticipated moment, Speaker John Nance Garner took the floor. Garner started his speech listing the many grievances he had with President Olson and the many times he had opposed him. But then he came to a crucial moment… "But legislative defeat is not a reason for insurrection. The loss of an election is no reason for treason." He then gave an impassioned defense of the American experiment and called upon the informal convention to reject Long's words and instead vote to subject itself to the laws of the Federal Government.
Good man. Good man. Very nice to see someone match Long word for word.
While certainly an eloquent speech, it would fail to move the New Orleans convention, which would by a strong majority vote to call for a new constitution. Garner would storm out of the building, returning to Texas.
Sad, but expected.
A day later the Governor of Texas acknowledged Olson's order to mobilize the National Guard, with Virginia and Kentucky soon following suit, being the only Southern states to do so.
Daaaamn. Very nice, I'm very happy to have Texas on-side. Kentucky and Virginia are nice too. Especially Virginia for the symbolic value. Robert E. Lee is supposed to have fought for the Confederates because he couldn't bear to fight against his home state of Virginia, who went Confederate. Now we have his spirit on our side, metaphorically. Texas also means Eisenhower doesn't face a similar dilemma, though the man's enough of a professional that I doubt it'd make him switch sides. I mean, if MacArthur, the egotistical prat, is sticking with us while Arkansas is presumably with Long, then Eisenhower's definitely in no danger. I expect we also have Missouri, which means Omar Bradley. Maybe I'm just overvaluing this though. Patton's from California, much as he vigorously attempts to convince you otherwise with his image, and he's apparently with Long in Kaiserreich.
Anyway, of note is that that's 3 of the 4 states that Byrd won, missing only Oklahoma. Definitely seems like the Dixiecrats weren't quite ready to jump ship for real in the end.
The red flag would fly across America!
In your dreams, Reed.
John Lewis and much of the AFL leadership would leave Chicago and instead call for a peaceful resolution. While Lewis didn't go so far as to fully enforce the Olson Administration, he did call for strikes that hampered the deployment of Federal forces to come to an end so that the Federal Government could focus on the "murderous, authoritarian Longites in the South".
Good. Long's splintering even more. Though, I think 'endorse' was meant instead of 'enforce'.
[X] Concentrate forces and push on Chicago to knock the CSA out of the war
The advantage here is the fact that we have the National Guard and they don't, plus we managed to evacuate the federal armouries in at least one state in good order thanks to Eisenhower's cool head. Hopefully we're better-armed and better-organised, and striking while the iron is hot will prevent them from doing too much to rectify either of those weaknesses. Maybe we won't knock them out, but we'll regain some of our crucial industry at the very least.
Politically, validates those governors who were mobilising to take out the Red Guards, rooting them a bit more firmly to our side. I, egh, can't entirely blame them for doing that. It's understandable that they'd be afraid.