After the U.S. air strikes against Syria in April, some questioned whether     Donald Trump              has abandoned his campaign platform of “America First.”          The phrase has              elicited comparisons with language used by the American First Committee, the powerful isolationist group founded in 1940 to oppose any material     support for Britain in its war against Nazi Germany. But it wasn’t the     first political movement to use the slogan.



      Thompson served three terms as Chicago’s mayor, from 1915 to 1923 and then     again from 1927 to 1931. When campaigning for his first term, Thompson     stumped on his image as a cowboy (his wealthy father owned a ranch), a     former star athlete, and a can-do alderman.



      In 1926, Thompson marshaled together a new faction in the Illinois     Republican Party: America First. Voters expecting detailed positions     against corruption or gangs were instead treated to promises of big     infrastructure projects and pledges to fight against American involvement     with the World Court and the League of Nations (which, incidentally, Hearst     also hated). Thompson’s education platform pledged to purge textbooks of     British propaganda, which disregarded “Polish, German, Irish, and other     heroes” of the American Revolution, and demeaned George Washington.     Thompson obsessed over one college textbook that dared label Washington “a     rebel.”



      The Democrats themselves distributed racist campaign literature, and Dever,     a former judge, failed to mobilize voters. Thompson won his reelection bid.



      In Thompson’s defense, Hearst chided the mayor’s detractors, writing in a     Chicago Herald-Examiner editorial, “Undermining patriotism was no cause for     laughter.” Voters, however, had tired of Thompson’s culture war, which went     as far as demanding that Chicago’s flag have five-pointed “American” stars.              The six-pointed stars, according to Big Bill, were British.