US midterms: What does GOP stand for? Is it the same as the Republican party? What is the GOP in the USA?
Indeed, the social media for the party in @GOP – with the party often referred to by the letters.
Despite the confusion for some, the GOP is simply a nickname or acronym for the Republican Party.
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Hide AdBut what does the GOP stand for and how did the name come about?
Here’s everything you need to know.
What does GOP stand for?
In American politics, GOP stands for "Grand Old Party" and is often used to describe the Republican Party.
The party was originally known as the Democratic-Republican Party before divisions in the 1830s led to the formation of the stand-alone Republican Party 20 years later.
While there is no definitive answer, the most popular explanation is that a reported coined the nickname.
The original Republican Party was made up mostly of abolitionists opposed to slavery – but following the Civil War, the election of Benjamin Harrison and a majority of Congress in 1888 saw a writer for the Chicago Tribune describe the triumph as an accomplishment by the "Grand Old Party.”
The phrase was shortened and GOP began showing up in stories about Republicans.
Another story about the history of the acronym is that in 1875 they were referred to as a "gallant old party".
Why do the Republicans use the elephant as their symbol?
The mascot of the GOP is an elephant, with 1874 Harper’s Weekly political cartoon by Thomas Nast coining the token as a joke.
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Hide AdThe cartoonists drew the Democrats who were represented as donkey trying to scare the Republican party, which he represented as elephants.
The political cartoon clearly sat with both parties, who adopted the mascots.