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America First Committee

The America First Committee was the foremost pressure group against American entry into the Second World War. Often portrayed as somehow pro-Nazi they were in fact a disparate collection of Old Right Republicans, Mid West populists and left wing pacifists.

One of their most prominent spokesmen was the aviation pioneer Charles Lindbergh. At its peak, the America First Committee had over 800,000 members.

The America First Committee originally had four major principles:

Although a popular cause through the early portion of the Second World War, the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and the subsequent German decleration of war led to the popular feeling that the Second World War was now a defensive war and that America had been provoked into joining. Therefore, the committee was dissolved four days after Pearl Harbor, on December 11, 1941.

Some prominent members of the committee vowed to fight on for the principles the America First Committee stood for, and for others, and founded the America First Party during the war.