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Antisaloon

Antisaloon refers to individuals and organizations dedicated to opposing the sale and consumption of alcoholic beverages. Rooted in 19th-century temperance reform, antisaloon movements argued that alcohol abuse caused social ills such as crime, poverty, domestic violence, and health problems. They sought to reduce or eliminate saloon venues and alcohol availability through moral suasion, social reform, and political action. In many countries, antisaloon activism was closely tied to religious groups, women's associations, and labor organizations.

Within the United States, the Anti-Saloon League emerged as a leading political arm of the movement in

Prohibition remained in effect in the United States until the 21st Amendment repealed it in 1933. Anti-saloon

the
late
19th
and
early
20th
centuries.
It
pioneered
a
strategy
of
winning
legislative
votes
by
lobbying
lawmakers
and
orchestrating
broad
national
and
state
campaigns,
sometimes
with
the
aim
of
constitutional
prohibition.
Its
effectiveness
contributed
to
the
passage
of
national
prohibition
and
enforcement
measures
in
the
United
States
through
the
18th
Amendment
(1919)
and
the
Volstead
Act
(1919-1920).
The
League
operated
alongside
other
temperance
groups,
such
as
the
Women’s
Christian
Temperance
Union.
activism
continued
in
various
forms
after
repeal,
shifting
focus
to
regulation,
public
health,
and
later
alcohol
policy.
The
term
antisaloon
is
less
commonly
used
today,
but
the
movement
influenced
public
policy
debates
on
alcohol
that
persisted
in
different
regions
and
eras.
In
a
broader
sense,
antisaloon
describes
the
broader
temperance
and
prohibition
movements
that
advocate
reducing
or
banning
alcohol
sales
and
access.