The difference between what a politician says to gain office and what he does after he wins can be dramatic, like Woodrow Wilson's 1912 promise to a black church official that he was for fair dealing and "advancing the interests of their race." Instead, Wilson advanced segregation soon after he was elected. In 1913 he allowed the Postmaster to remove non-whites from contact with white co-workers and the public. Segregation in other federal agencies followed. Wilson defended the practice by defining segregation as progress.
Wilson had also campaigned for a New Freedom. Instead, he presided over the imprisonment of those who expressed views even vaguely critical of government.
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