Questions 1-3 refer to the excerpt below. "A widely held view of the Republican administrations of the 1920s is that they represented a return to an older order that had existed before Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson became the nation's chief executives. Harding and Coolidge especially are seen as latter-day McKinleys, political mediocrities who peopled their cabinets with routine, conservative party hacks of the kind almost universal in Washington from the end of the Civil War until the early 20th century. In this view, the 1920s politically were an effort to set back the clock." -David A. Shannon, historian, Between the Wars: America, 1919-1941, 1965 Which of the following groups from the 1920s most likely would have supported the perspective of this excerpt? answer choices Business and financial leaders. Democrats and Republicans who supported Progressive reforms. Supporters of reduced government spending and tax cuts. Native-born and older Americans with traditional values.