The Answer:
The Donkey— Presidential
candidate Andrew Jackson
was the first Democrat ever to be associated with the donkey symbol.
His opponents during the election of 1828 tried to label
him a "jackass" for his populist beliefs and slogan, "Let the people
rule." Jackson was entertained by the notion and ended up using it to
his advantage on his campaign posters.
But cartoonist Thomas
Nast is credited with making the donkey the recognized symbol
of the Democratic Party.
It first appeared in a cartoon in Harper's Weekly
in 1870, and was supposed to represent an anti-Civil War faction. But
the public was immediately taken by it and by 1880 it had already
become the unofficial symbol of the party.
The Elephant— Political
cartoonist Thomas Nast
was also responsible for the Republican Party elephant. In a
cartoon that appeared in Harper's Weekly in 1874,
Nast drew a donkey clothed in lion's skin, scaring away all the
animals at the zoo. One of those animals, the elephant, was labeled
"The Republican Vote." That's all it took for the elephant to become
associated with the Republican Party.
See the official sites of the Republican National Committee
and the Democratic
National Committee for more information.
—The Editors
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