Belva Lockwood was the Equal Rights presidential candidate in both 1884 and 1888. Lockwood was inspired to run in 1884 after reading
Marietta Stow's feminist opinion in a newspaper, which was that women needed to be represented in public office separately from men and with their own candidates. Lockwood shared the belief that male political candidates could not represent women no matter how sympathetic they were to the cause. After becoming a widow at a young age, Lockwood recognized the importance of financial independence and pursued a career in law. Despite the prevailing belief that women were unfit for the legal profession, Lockwood later enrolled in a law school in Washington, D.C. She had to "talk her way into admission to the bar," according to
Jo Freeman. Lockwood was a keen advocate for women's suffrage. In 1884, she wrote to the editor of the ''Woman's Herald of Industry'' that woman should run for office since there was no explicit legislation preventing them from doing so. At the Equal Rights Party's May 16, 1887, Nation Convention in Des Moines, Iowa, members discussed the Equal Rights Party's platform focused on suffrage, pensions for soldiers and sailors, protective tariffs, and free sugar and lumber. The party also sought to repeal the whisky and tobacco tax and oppose taxing unrestricted emigration. The Equal Rights Party's campaign garnered a great deal of media attention. National news outlets reported the nomination, and a widely circulated journal containing satiric cartoons featured Lockwood on its cover. Lockwood received letters from across the country, many of which contained requests to speak to a public audience. She spoke before large crowds at civic associations and state fairs. Not all attention she received was favorable. On the whole, Lockwood received more criticism and mockery in the press than favorable sentiments. Many letters she received contained "nasty bits of character assassination", according to historian Jill Norgren. Her rallies, dubbed "Mother Hubbard parades", were met with resistance, as hecklers would arrive to such events with ribbons mocking Lockwood. Lockwood was also featured as a caricature on a political card which implied a salacious relationship between Lockwood and
Benjamin Butler, a Civil War general and progressive who had supported Lockwood's petition in Congress to allow women to be allowed into the Supreme Court bar. Lockwood continued to be associated with an "unpopular cause", drawing more attention and intrigue than support to her campaign and the Equal Rights Party as a whole. ==Alfred Love and the Des Moines Convention==