When asked about the name of the most prominent five senators in history, the Senate committee headed by John F. Kennedy included Wisconsin's progressive Republican, Robert La Follette (1855-1925) . La Follett opposed the accession of the United States to the First World War and denounced progressive reforms such as railway regulation, direct election of senators and workers protection, accusing restrictions on freedom of speech during the war We insisted on our own and enthusiastically. He started investigating the teapot dome scandal in the early 1920s, and in 1924 he did campaigning to the president. When La Follette was selected as one of the "five famous people" in 1957, the Kennedy committee told him to "hard and independent" never unraveled from his progressive reform goal An infinite warrior ".
La Follette is represented by one of the two statues of Wisconsin National Statue Hall. The elliptical portrait of La Follette drawn by his cousin Chester La Follette is also hanging in the Senate. Robert M. La Follette House in Maple Bluff, Wisconsin is a historic building in the country. Other people named after La Follette include Madison's La Follette High School and the University of Wisconsin University Madison Robert M. La Follette Public Affairs School.
On 14th June 1855, "Bab La Follette" was born in Robert Marion La Follette in Dane County, Wisconsin. Prior to joining the University of Wisconsin in 1875, it was a farm worker. After four years of graduation, La Follette was accepted. Wisconsin bar was in 1880. He married his university lover Belle Case on December 31, 1881. Robert La Forrett started a political career as a local prosecutor in Dane County in 1881, but the Republican boss objected to thinking that his idea was progressing too much. In 1884, he was elected the House of Representatives, but in most matters he generally voted for the "Partisan Line". In 1890, he was defeated in the democratic election and returned to Madison, Wisconsin.
After his death, La Foret 's wife, Bell Case La Fortrette was still an influential man and editor, watching their sons Phillip and Robert enter the politics. By the mid-1930's, La Follette reformed the state-level progressive party into a form of the Wisconsin Progressive Party. In 1934 and 1936 the party, short, quickly became the state's major political force and elected seven parliamentarians. Their youngest son, Philip Pravelt, was elected governor of Wisconsin, and their eldest son, Robert M. La Follette Jr, took over his senator. La Follette 's daughter, Fora, a famous feminist, a labor activist, married playwright George Middleton. My grandson, Bronson La Follette, served as Minister of Justice of Wisconsin State and served as Wisconsin Governor's 1968 Democratic candidate. Senator and 2016 Presidential candidate Bernie Sanders often compares with La Follette