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GAOL SENTENCE

THE "GROCER" NORRIS CASE

A curious episode in American politics was brought to a close recently by I the United States.Supreme Court when it decided on appeal that one George W Norris, of the State of Nebraska, should go to prison, says the "Manchester Guardian." The story began two years ago, when George W. Norris, the veteran Progressive Republican Senator from Nebraska, was standing for re-election. Senator Norris has devoted his life to the fight against the abuse of financial power in the United States and against the corrupt politics whicn makes that abuse possible. Few individuals in American public life; are hated as bitterly as is Senator Norris by the reactionary elements in American politics;1 . , ■ His opponents, despairing of deieating him in a straight fight when he stood for re-election, tried various oblique methods. They discovered an obscure grocer named George W. Norris and persuaded him to stand against the Senator. George W. Norris. The theory apparently was that the appearance of two George W. Norrises on the same ballot would confuse the electorate, split the vote, and give the election to a third candidate. The ruse was so obvious that it caused an immediate uproar and made the re-election of the real Senator Norris a certainty. It developed subsequently that grocer Norris had never participated in politics before this sudden decision to stand for the Senate and, indeed, was so little interested in politics that he had'sometimes failed even to vote. He was apparently a dupe in-the' affair. It is interesting to se that the victim in the subsequent tegal proceedings was grocer Norris and hot the men who persuaded him to stand for office. "Those men are still at large.- -.'. ' ' -

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19370608.2.171

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CXXIII, Issue 134, 8 June 1937, Page 16

Word Count
285

GAOL SENTENCE Evening Post, Volume CXXIII, Issue 134, 8 June 1937, Page 16

GAOL SENTENCE Evening Post, Volume CXXIII, Issue 134, 8 June 1937, Page 16

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