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Elmer A. Benson
Elmer A. Benson
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Elmer Austin Benson (September 22, 1895 – March 13, 1985) was an American lawyer and politician from Minnesota. In 1935, Benson was appointed to the U.S. Senate following the death of Thomas Schall.[2] He served as the 24th governor of Minnesota, defeating Republican Martin Nelson in a landslide in Minnesota's 1936 gubernatorial election. He lost the governorship two years later to Republican Harold Stassen in the 1938 gubernatorial election.[3]

Key Information

Education

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Born in 1895 in Appleton, Minnesota, Benson studied law at William Mitchell College of Law (then the St. Paul College of Law) and served for a year in the U.S. Army during World War I. He never practiced law after returning from active duty, choosing instead to pursue a banking and business career.

Olson's ally

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"Farmer-Labor Goals," an article by Benson for the Champion of Youth, published October 1936

Benson was a close ally of Governor Floyd B. Olson, another member of the Farmer-Labor Party, who helped orchestrate Benson's political rise. Olson appointed Benson state Commissioner of Securities before choosing him to replace Thomas D. Schall in the United States Senate after Schall's death in December 1935. Benson served in the 74th congress, until November 3, 1936.

Governor of Minnesota

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After Olson's premature death from cancer in 1936 and the interregnum of Lieutenant Governor Hjalmar Petersen, Benson stepped into the breach and was elected the 24th governor of Minnesota by the largest margin in state history. He served as the 24th governor of Minnesota from January 4, 1937, to January 2, 1939. His defeat by a record margin in 1938 is seen as the beginning of the end of the Farmer-Labor Party as an independent political force and a setback for progressive politics in Minnesota. In 1940, he ran for the United States Senate against Henrik Shipstead, an incumbent senator who defected from the Farmer-Labor Party to join the Republicans. Benson took second place, receiving 25% of the vote, in a race that also involved a Democrat, while Shipstead was reelected. He ran for the Senate for the last time in 1942, losing to Republican Joseph H. Ball in a four-way race.

DFL Party

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Benson was also the chief figure behind a schism within the DFL Party in Minnesota between 1946 and 1948. The DFL (Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party) had been created in 1944 with the merging of the Minnesota Democratic Party and the Farmer-Labor Party. Benson and his supporters actively took control of the party's main committee in 1946, but were displaced by the supporters of Hubert H. Humphrey (then the mayor of Minneapolis) in 1948. The influence of Humphrey and his supporters had grown significantly within the party between 1946 and 1948 due to Humphrey's popularity and his work through the ADA, the state farm co-ops, and support from the national arm of the CIO. Humphrey's group of supporters—which included such future DFL political stars as Arthur Naftalin, Orville Freeman, and Walter Mondale—wrested control of the DFL from Benson's supporters at a February 1948 party convention. Humphrey's later successful Senate campaign signaled a significant victory for his faction within the fledgling DFL Party and the defeat of Benson's candidates in the DFL primaries. The 1948 schism eventually led Benson and his supporters to leave the DFL.

Death

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Before ill health drove him from the public arena, Benson became a force within the short-lived Progressive Party, managing the 1948 presidential campaign of its candidate, Henry Wallace. Benson died in 1985 in Minneapolis, and is buried at the Appleton Cemetery in the town of his birth, Appleton, Minnesota.

Further reading

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Elmer Austin Benson (September 22, 1895 – March 13, 1985) was an American lawyer and politician who served as the 24th from January 4, 1937, to January 2, 1939, representing the Farmer-Labor Party, and briefly as a senator from December 1935 to November 1936. Born on a farm in Appleton, , to Norwegian immigrant parents, Benson attended public schools, graduated from the St. Paul College of Law in 1918, and served in the U.S. Army during before returning to practice law and enter banking in his hometown. Rising through the ranks of the progressive Farmer-Labor movement, he managed Floyd B. Olson's successful 1930 gubernatorial campaign, served as state treasurer from 1933 to 1935, and acted as relief administrator, implementing emergency measures to aid farmers and unemployed workers amid the . Appointed to the Senate following the death of Republican Thomas D. Schall, Benson aligned with priorities but prioritized radical economic restructuring. As , he expanded state relief programs, established a public-owned bank to counter private banking failures, and intervened decisively in labor disputes—such as refusing to renew the license of the anti-union Pinkerton agency and deploying the to safeguard striking workers in Albert Lea—which prioritized labor over business interests and provoked backlash from conservative factions. Benson openly advocated replacing capitalism with a "cooperative commonwealth" emphasizing worker and farmer control, reflecting his commitment to systemic economic overhaul, though his administration faced charges of fiscal mismanagement and ties to radical elements that alienated moderate voters and contributed to his landslide defeat by Republican Harold in 1938.

Early Life and Education

Birth and Upbringing

Elmer Austin Benson was born on September 22, 1895, in Appleton, a small rural town in Swift County, , to Norwegian immigrant parents Thomas Helgesen Benson and Dora Jacobson Benson. The Benson family resided on a farm in this agricultural region, where , corn, and production dominated local livelihoods amid the economic volatility of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Swift County, established in 1870 and named for a Dakota War figure, exemplified the challenges of frontier farming, with settlers confronting issues like soil exhaustion, fluctuating grain prices, and dependence on rail monopolies for transport—conditions that spurred early experiments among Norwegian-American homesteaders. Benson's upbringing in this environment exposed him to immigrant values of frugality and communal self-help, rooted in his parents' transition from Norway's agrarian traditions to Minnesota's prairie homesteads, where family labor sustained small-scale operations without large-scale mechanization until the . The Progressive Era's farm crises, including the 1890s deflation and 1910s wheat market disruptions, marked Benson's formative years, fostering a community ethos of mutual aid through grain elevators and creameries that emphasized practical resilience over external dependencies. His family's Norwegian heritage, common among Swift County's 20% Scandinavian population by 1900, reinforced patterns of kin-based cooperation, as census data from the era document immigrant clusters pooling resources for land clearance and crop diversification.

Formal Education and Early Career

Benson attended public schools in for his early education before pursuing higher studies. In 1918, he graduated from St. Paul College of Law—predecessor to Mitchell Hamline School of Law—with a . He enlisted as a private in the United States Army during , serving from 1918 to 1919. Admitted to the bar upon completion of his legal studies, Benson chose not to practice law, instead entering business. In 1922, Benson returned to his birthplace of Appleton, Minnesota, to take up banking as cashier of the Farmers & Merchants State Bank, a rural institution focused on agricultural lending. Over the following years, he managed financial operations in small-town settings, including credit extension to farmers during the economic pressures on , such as falling prices and burdens that led to widespread foreclosures. This role honed his practical knowledge of cooperatives and rural credit systems without ideological overlay.

Political Rise

Involvement with Non-Partisan League

Elmer A. Benson joined the Non-Partisan League (NPL) in 1918, during a period of post-World War I agricultural distress characterized by falling wheat prices and farmer indebtedness in the Upper Midwest. The NPL, founded in 1915 by Arthur C. Townley, sought to empower farmers against corporate monopolies in grain trading, railroads, and banking through state-owned enterprises such as terminal elevators, flour mills, and farm banks, aiming to secure fair prices and reduce middlemen costs. Influenced by his father Tom Benson, an early NPL member in Swift County, Minnesota, the younger Benson aligned with these reformist goals, viewing government intervention as a counter to exploitative market structures dominated by out-of-state interests. In Swift County, Benson assumed local leadership roles within NPL-affiliated efforts starting in the early , amid ongoing farm depressions exacerbated by and credit shortages. Returning to his hometown of Appleton in after and legal training, he worked as a banker while organizing farmer cooperatives and mobilizing rural support for NPL platforms, which emphasized collective marketing and state regulation to stabilize incomes. By the mid-, these activities had fostered a robust agrarian base in the Seventh Congressional District, though NPL initiatives like proposed state mills faced legislative defeat, highlighting tensions between reformist ambitions and entrenched opposition from interests. Benson played a key role in the 1932–1933 Farmers' Holiday movement in west-central Minnesota, including Swift County, where he helped coordinate strikes involving product embargoes and road blockades to withhold farm goods from market and compel price supports amid the Great Depression's foreclosure crisis. The movement, led by figures like Milo Reno's national Farmers' Holiday Association, temporarily halted thousands of foreclosures through militant tactics, providing short-term relief to indebted producers by delaying auctions and negotiating moratoriums. However, these interventions yielded mixed empirical results: while they offered immediate debt deferrals, they distorted local markets by reducing supply and inflating short-term prices unsustainably, and broader NPL-backed experiments elsewhere, such as North Dakota's facilities, encountered operational inefficiencies and financial losses due to mismanagement and competition from private entities. Critics, including agricultural economists, argued that such coercive measures undermined long-term incentives for productivity without addressing root causes like federal and global oversupply.

Alignment with Farmer-Labor Party

Benson forged a close alliance with Minnesota Governor in the early 1930s, serving as a key figure representing farmers within the Farmer-Labor Party's coalition of agrarian populists and urban laborers. , who orchestrated Benson's ascent, appointed him state commissioner of securities in 1933 and commissioner of banks later that year, roles in which Benson oversaw financial regulations amid the , including bank closures and depositor protections to stabilize the economy. These positions aligned Benson with the party's emphasis on government intervention to counter economic distress faced by farmers and workers. As Olson's ally, Benson advocated for the Farmer-Labor platform that fused rural populism—such as aid for struggling farmers—with labor union priorities, including expanded relief and state-funded projects to combat joblessness. The platform sought funding through progressive taxation on wealthier interests, reflecting the party's push for redistributive policies during widespread hardship, with Minnesota's unemployment rate exceeding 30% by 1933. A pivotal moment came at the Farmer-Labor state convention, where the party adopted the Cooperative Commonwealth Platform, endorsing government ownership of key industries like banking and utilities to supplant private capitalist control—a shift Benson supported as a rising party influencer. This rhetoric provoked immediate conservative opposition, with critics decrying its socialist elements as a to free enterprise, though proponents viewed it as pragmatic response to Depression-era failures of unregulated markets. Benson's endorsement helped solidify the party's leftward turn, positioning him as a bridge between Olson's leadership and subsequent radical elements within the organization.

U.S. Senate Service

Appointment to Vacancy

Following the death of U.S. Senator Thomas D. Schall on December 19, 1935, from injuries sustained in a hit-and-run accident outside the Senate office building, Governor appointed Elmer A. Benson to fill the vacancy on December 27, 1935. Schall, a Republican who had served since , left an unexpired term ending January 3, 1937. Olson, facing his own terminal stomach cancer diagnosis, selected Benson—a loyal Farmer-Labor Party (FLP) activist, state banking commissioner since 1933, and prior securities commissioner—to maintain progressive influence in the Senate amid Republican dominance in Minnesota politics. This appointment aligned with Olson's strategy to bolster the FLP, which had fused agrarian with urban labor support, positioning Benson as a temporary but ideologically committed placeholder rather than a long-term contender. Benson served from December 27, 1935, until January 3, 1937, a period of just over one year during the 74th . His tenure yielded minimal legislative output, with congressional records showing few sponsored bills or resolutions, primarily focused on farm relief measures reflective of FLP priorities, though none achieved significant passage amid the short timeframe and partisan dynamics. As a New Deal supporter, Benson backed federal initiatives like Social Security, yet faced criticism from advocates for not sufficiently challenging expanding federal authority, a view held by contemporaries wary of centralized power encroaching on local . Benson did not seek election in the November 1936 special election, which Republican Guy V. Howard won to complete the term.

Tenure and Positions

Benson served in the United States from December 27, 1935, to November 3, 1936, filling the vacancy left by the of Republican Senator Thomas D. Schall, as appointed by . During this abbreviated term in the 74th , he consistently aligned with President Franklin D. Roosevelt's agenda, advocating federal interventions to address the Great Depression's impacts on labor and agriculture. His positions emphasized expanded government relief programs, reflecting the Farmer-Labor Party's platform of economic redistribution and support for the unemployed through increased taxation on corporations and high earners. In proceedings, Benson backed appropriations for ongoing agencies, including those facilitating relief efforts and agricultural stabilization, amid debates over mounting federal deficits that reached $3.6 billion by fiscal year 1936. Critics, including fiscal conservatives, contended that such endorsements perpetuated —totaling over 3% of GDP annually—without commensurate boosts to productivity, as industrial output stagnated and hovered above 16% nationally during his service. Benson's advocacy extended to rural infrastructure, where he pressed for federal prioritization of to modernize farming operations, though implementation data from the nascent Rural Electrification Administration showed only modest penetration in , with fewer than 10% of farms electrified by 1936. Empirical indicators of Minnesota's agricultural sector underscored limited short-term gains from these federal stances: despite measures, farm foreclosures exceeded 10,000 annually statewide through 1936, and net farm income remained below levels at approximately $150 per farm, attributable in part to persistent commodity price and unaddressed by policy scale. Benson's brief record, unconstrained by reelection pressures, prioritized ideological commitment to state intervention over balanced budgeting, differing from more centrist Democrats who later tempered expansions amid the 1937 recession. He resigned his seat to pursue the governorship, forgoing a special election bid.

Governorship

1936 Election and Inauguration

Elmer A. Benson, the Farmer-Labor Party candidate, won the gubernatorial election on November 3, 1936, defeating Republican Martin A. Nelson in a . Benson secured 680,342 votes, or 61.17% of the total, while Nelson received 431,841 votes, comprising 38.83%; no Democratic candidate contested the race. The victory capitalized on widespread discontent from the , with Minnesota's unemployment rates remaining elevated—statewide figures had reached 29% in 1932 and exceeded 25% in urban areas like into the mid-1930s. Benson's campaign platform blended support with more radical proposals aimed at providing relief to farmers, workers, and the unemployed, reflecting the Farmer-Labor Party's peak influence at the time. This electoral success marked the party's strongest showing, capturing nearly all state offices and signaling strong rural and labor backing amid economic hardship, though it later fueled perceptions of extremism leading to backlash. Benson was inaugurated as Minnesota's 24th on , 1937, assuming office during a period of persistent economic distress, with still affecting over 20% of the workforce in many regions. The transition followed the death of predecessor and Benson's brief U.S. Senate tenure, positioning him to pursue ambitious reforms in a state reeling from Depression-era challenges.

Key Legislative Initiatives

During the 1937 legislative session, Governor Benson advanced an expansive agenda emphasizing social welfare expansions and state intervention in the . Key measures included liberalizing old-age assistance by increasing grants and shifting county shares to state funding, thereby broadening eligibility and benefit levels for elderly Minnesotans amid Depression-era hardships. compensation benefits were similarly enhanced to provide greater support for the jobless, aligning with federal frameworks but tailored to state needs. These reforms, financed through higher income taxes on corporations and the wealthy, immediately extended aid to thousands facing economic distress, though they markedly elevated state expenditures without long-term structural reforms to employment markets. Benson also secured passage of bills establishing the state planning board to coordinate economic development and resource allocation, a body that produced reports on and welfare needs through the late 1930s. Complementary legislation created a state to develop low-cost projects and a unified department of social welfare to centralize administration of relief, pensions, and unemployment programs, streamlining delivery but centralizing control under state oversight. Additional initiatives approved included a system for state employees to professionalize government operations, state-owned terminal grain elevators to aid farmers' marketing, and a state plant to reduce reliance on private suppliers. Pro-labor measures under Benson's push reinforced workers' organizing rights, contributing to rapid union expansion in industries like timber and , though they coincided with heightened strike activity that temporarily disrupted production in northern . These legislative outcomes reflected the Farmer-Labor Party's platform for public ownership elements in utilities and banking, but several bolder proposals—such as a for low-cost financing—failed amid legislative resistance, limiting the scope of radical restructuring. Overall, the session's outputs boosted short-term efforts, serving over 100,000 individuals through combined welfare channels by late 1937, yet amplified budget pressures via new taxes including a temporary sales levy.

Administrative Challenges and Economic Policies

Benson's administration encountered significant administrative hurdles due to a Republican-controlled , which blocked many of his more extreme legislative proposals despite his power and executive actions. The 1937 session saw repeated clashes, with the rejecting or diluting bills for expanded public ownership and worker protections, forcing Benson to rely on administrative orders and special sessions that yielded limited results. This gridlock stemmed from bipartisan resistance to the Farmer-Labor Party's radical agenda, including accusations of overreach in appointing party loyalists to state positions and using executive authority to support strikes, such as deploying the to protect union activities. Economically, Benson pursued expansive and social programs modeled on initiatives, including increased old-age assistance, aid for the blind, expansion, and to combat Depression-era hardship, financed primarily through progressive taxation targeting large es and high-income earners rather than broad-based levies. These measures eliminated homestead taxes for relief but raised corporate and inheritance taxes to fund a state planning board and ventures, aiming to redistribute resources toward farmers and laborers. However, such policies faced immediate pushback, as business leaders contended they eroded incentives by signaling state hostility toward private enterprise, with reports of and stalled industrial projects attributed to fears of in sectors like and utilities. Conservatives, including Republican legislators, criticized the emphasis on direct aid as fostering long-term dependency over self-reliance, pointing to empirical patterns in other states where similar relief expansions correlated with reduced private hiring and wage growth amid national recovery signals by 1938. The cumulative effect manifested in Benson's 1938 electoral defeat to Republican , who secured 49.8% of the vote to Benson's 32.3%, reflecting voter preference for moderation as the national economy rebounded from the 1937 recession through federal stimulus and revival. This outcome underscored causal links between sustained radical spending—despite fiscal balancing via targeted taxes—and diminished confidence, as evidenced by contemporaneous analyses from chambers of commerce decrying policy uncertainty as a drag on gains.

Post-Governorship and Party Involvement

Defeat and Immediate Aftermath

In the , 1938, gubernatorial election, incumbent Farmer-Labor governor Elmer A. Benson lost to Republican challenger Harold E. Stassen by a margin of 49.88% to 39.02%, a sharp decline from Benson's 58.2% victory in 1936. This outcome reflected broader national Republican gains in the midterm elections, where the GOP captured 81 additional seats in the amid voter fatigue with policies. Locally, dissatisfaction stemmed from administrative scandals in the state relief system, including allegations of and inefficiency, which eroded support among former Farmer-Labor constituencies like urban workers and farmers. Benson's reduced vote share—dropping by nearly 20 percentage points—signaled a backlash against his administration's aggressive interventions, such as expanded and confrontational labor stances, which alienated moderates seeking a "middle path" as promised by the young Stassen. In response, Benson and aligned party leaders initiated internal introspection, attributing the loss partly to factional dissent exposed during the from Hjalmar Petersen, a more conservative Farmer-Labor figure whom Benson narrowly defeated. Efforts focused on consolidating the party's radical wing by sidelining perceived right-leaning elements, though these measures failed to reverse the empirical trend of halved electoral viability in key districts. Following the inauguration of Stassen on January 2, 1939, Benson transitioned to private law practice in St. Paul, leveraging his experience from earlier legal work in banking and real estate. He publicly critiqued Democratic Party alternatives as insufficiently transformative for agrarian and labor interests, arguing they diluted the independent progressive agenda central to Farmer-Labor identity. This stance underscored short-term resistance to accommodation with national Democrats, prioritizing ideological purity amid the party's accelerating decline.

Role in DFL Merger and Later Activities

In April 1944, Benson, as a leading figure in the Farmer-Labor Party, facilitated the merger with the Democratic Party to form the Democratic-Farmer-Labor (DFL) Party, primarily to bolster support for President Franklin D. Roosevelt's re-election amid wartime unity efforts against Republican opposition. The merger negotiations involved Benson coordinating with Democratic leaders, including figures like Oscar Ewing, but encountered resistance from anti-communist Democrats wary of integrating the Farmer-Labor's more radical elements, which included suspected leftist influences. Despite his reluctance, Benson viewed the alliance as a pragmatic step to preserve progressive influence, though it diluted the Farmer-Labor's independent socialist-leaning identity. Following the merger, Benson briefly secured control of the DFL's state in 1946, positioning his Farmer-Labor faction to steer the party. However, by 1948, Humphrey's rising anti-communist, centrist Democratic allies displaced Benson's group in a contentious battle, effectively purging or marginalizing leftist holdovers from the Farmer-Labor wing to align the DFL with national Democratic priorities like Truman's stance. Benson criticized the merger's trajectory as a betrayal of core Farmer-Labor principles, responding by breaking from the DFL to chair the national Progressive Party and back Henry Wallace's third-party presidential bid, which opposed and U.S. intervention in Korea. This split deepened internal divisions, with Benson's faction suffering electoral defeats that cemented the DFL's centrist shift under Humphrey. Benson's later involvement remained peripheral after retiring from active in 1951 due to issues, with no documented leadership roles in DFL affairs or major advocacy campaigns in the and . His enduring progressive views, including opposition to evident in his 1940s activities, aligned with broader anti-war sentiments but exerted negligible influence as the DFL consolidated around moderate positions.

Controversies

Allegations of Communist Sympathies

During his tenure as governor and in subsequent campaigns, Elmer A. Benson faced accusations from political opponents and media outlets of maintaining close associations with members of the (CPUSA), particularly through advisors and organizers within the Farmer-Labor Party (FLP). Republican critics, including Ray P. Chase, published pamphlets such as Are They Communists or Catspaws? in 1938, alleging that Benson's inner circle included individuals with direct CPUSA ties and portraying him as unwittingly or deliberately advancing communist agendas under the guise of progressive reforms. These claims highlighted figures like Clarence Hathaway, a prominent Minnesota CPUSA leader in the 1920s who later edited the and maintained influence in FLP circles, fostering relationships with governors and Benson himself. Benson consistently denied personal membership in the CPUSA, emphasizing his independent populist roots and framing alliances as part of the strategy—a CPUSA tactic from the mid-1930s promoting cooperation with non-communist leftists against and . Nonetheless, the FLP under Benson permitted open CPUSA infiltration, with party members serving as skilled organizers and advisors, which opponents argued constituted ideological subversion rather than mere policy overlap. This tolerance extended to hosting CPUSA-aligned events and endorsements, despite efforts to downplay such links publicly due to widespread voter aversion to . Verifiable associations carried significant political costs, as evidenced by the FLP's electoral decline; the 1938 gubernatorial race, where Benson lost decisively to , was swayed by red-baiting campaigns that linked the party's radicalism to Soviet influence, alienating moderate voters and contributing to the FLP's fragmentation. While Benson later reflected on knowing expelled CPUSA figures like Hathaway without endorsing their full ideology, critics contended that such hospitality eroded the party's credibility, prioritizing short-term alliances over long-term viability amid rising anti-communist sentiment. These allegations differed from critiques of policy outcomes by centering on purported personal and organizational vulnerabilities to Stalinist maneuvering within the FLP apparatus.

Criticisms of Radical Policies

Benson's advocacy for sweeping state intervention in the elicited accusations of fiscal irresponsibility, as his administration pursued aggressive spending on relief programs amid the lingering effects of the . In his January 10, 1937, address to the , Benson outlined a program that included $60 million in new expenditures for unemployment insurance, , and agricultural stabilization, while condemning private industry's "inability to supply even our most elementary needs." Critics, particularly from and Republican circles, argued that such expansions—financed through higher taxes and borrowing—burdened the state budget without addressing root causes like market overproduction, potentially leading to deficits that strained public finances in an era of limited revenue growth. Agricultural policies under Benson, building on prior Farmer-Labor moratoriums on foreclosures, were faulted for distorting free markets and failing to prevent ongoing farm distress despite substantial aid. While national farm bankruptcies peaked at over 10 per 10,000 farms in 1933 and subsequently declined, Minnesota's sector continued to grapple with plummeting prices and heavy debts, with gross farm income falling sharply in the early due to surpluses and reduced demand. Opponents contended that state interventions, rather than incentivizing efficiency or diversification, prolonged dependency on government supports, as evidenced by the persistence of foreclosures—totaling 2,866 farms lost between 1922 and 1932—and inadequate recovery in commodity sectors by the late . Benson's rhetoric against capitalist shortcomings further alarmed detractors, who warned it could drive exodus and stifle private investment essential for long-term growth. The governor's emphasis on government planning to supplant market failures was seen as fostering an anti- climate, with expanded raising risks in patronage-heavy distribution. While initiatives like old-age pensions offered tangible short-term to vulnerable populations, conservative analysts highlighted their unsustainability absent robust private-sector expansion, noting subsequent administrations' need to eliminate inherited deficits through and . This critique contrasted sharply with sympathetic left-leaning accounts that overlooked fiscal trade-offs in favor of ideological praise for equity gains.

Later Years and Death

Personal Reflections and Writings

In later years, Benson authored reflective pieces, including the 1971 article "Politics in My Lifetime" published in Minnesota History, where he portrayed the Farmer-Labor Party as a populist coalition rooted in workers' and farmers' interests, formed by both socialists and nonsocialists in response to early 20th-century agrarian unrest, rather than a purely socialist endeavor. He critiqued the Democratic and Republican parties alike for evolving into a bipartisan establishment that sidelined radical voices and workers' priorities after , forming a cold-war consensus that excluded progressive reforms. These self-justifications emphasized the party's alignment with gains under Roosevelt, such as expansions he advocated in 1937, while downplaying internal ideological tensions that historical records, including party platform debates and factional splits, indicate involved significant socialist influences beyond mere . Benson's 1973 oral history interview further defended the Farmer-Labor Party's establishment through ties to the and movements like the Farmers' Holiday, framing it as a defender of rural and labor economic interests against corporate dominance, with endorsements of principles as evidence of pragmatic . He expressed reservations about the merger forming the Democratic-Farmer-Labor (DFL) Party, regretting its dilution of independent radicalism, a view he reiterated in later reflections criticizing figures like for steering the party toward national Democratic alignment. Empirical outcomes post-merger, including the DFL's electoral moderation and policy shifts toward urban by the 1950s—evident in reduced emphasis on initiatives and increased Cold War —substantiated his concerns, as the party distanced itself from the agrarian radicalism central to his vision, contributing to the eclipse of third-party progressivism in . Throughout his post-governorship life, Benson remained married to Frances Miller, whom he wed in , and raised two children while sustaining into the 1970s, including correspondence and speeches archived in his papers up to 1978 that upheld worker-centered critiques amid national political shifts. His reflections consistently justified past associations with left-wing causes as principled stands against and , though contemporary accounts and declassified records on party infiltrations highlight how such ties fueled perceptions of ideological overreach that alienated broader electorates.

Death and Burial

Elmer A. Benson died on March 13, 1985, at age 89 in , , at following a prolonged decline in health attributed to complications from that had forced his retirement from public life in 1951. Benson was buried in Appleton Cemetery in Appleton, Swift County, Minnesota, the community of his birth.

References

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