When Roosevelt decided not to run for a third term, he hand-picked his close friend William Howard Taft as his successor, but was bitterly disappointed with Taft’s performance in the White House, prompting him to reconsider walking away. When mainstream Republicans rejected Roosevelt’s presidential candidacy in favor of Taft in 1912, Roosevelt and his supporters left to form a new party: the Progressives, also known as the “Bull Moose” party.
As a third-party candidate without an established base of support, Roosevelt needed to appeal to as many voters as he could—including women, in the states where they already had the right to vote. The Progressives were far more welcoming to women than either of the major parties: When they met in Chicago in early August 1912 for their convention, the reformer and suffragist leader Jane Addams was one of two people chosen to second Roosevelt’s nomination. Later that month, during a campaign speech in Vermont, Roosevelt made the party’s position official, stating that “We recognize that..there should be equality of right, between men and women, and we are therefore for equal suffrage for men and women.”
Democrat Woodrow Wilson won the 1912 election, but the Bull Moose party’s openness to women proved a crucial stepping stone in the path toward suffrage. The Progressive-led state legislature in Illinois granted women the right to vote in 1913, becoming the first state east of the Mississippi River to do so.
Later Years
Roosevelt continued to embrace the cause of women’s suffrage at the national level, advocating on behalf of the proposed suffrage amendment years before Wilson, Congress and most other prominent politicians got on board. In May 1913, he appeared at an event organized by 10 suffrage organizations at the Metropolitan Opera House in New York, sitting next to Anna Howard Shaw, then-president of the National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA) and delivering an hour-long speech in support of the cause.
When women in Roosevelt’s home state of New York finally won the right to vote in late 1917, he congratulated them and encouraged them to fulfill their patriotic duty during World War I. By the war’s end, President Wilson would finally voice his support for the women’s suffrage amendment, which Congress passed in June 1919, five months after Roosevelt’s death.
While Theodore Roosevelt’s views on suffrage—especially in his post-presidency years—were advanced for the time, they were tempered by his strictly traditional view of the importance of the woman’s family role and duties and therefore did not drive him to robust action as many of his other core beliefs had. Writing to Florence Schloss Guggenheim in 1916, he made this clear: “If I believed that the average woman would not do her duty as wife and mother better and not worse and would not recognize that these duties in the home must normally remain the primary duties, whether women do or do not have the vote, then I would not believe in giving them votes."