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1948 Republican Party presidential primaries

From March 9 to June 1, 1948, voters of the Republican Party elected delegates to the 1948 Republican National Convention, in part to choose the party nominee for president in the 1948 United States presidential election.

1948 Republican Party presidential primaries

← 1944 March 9 to June 1, 1948 1952 →

1,092 delegates to the Republican National Convention
547 (majority) votes needed to win
 
Candidate Thomas E. Dewey Harold Stassen Robert A. Taft
Home state New York Minnesota Ohio
Delegate count 434 157 224
Contests won 2 4 1
Popular vote 330,799 627,321 464,741
Percentage 11.6% 22.0% 16.3%

     Dewey      Taft      Stassen      Various[a]

Previous Republican nominee

Thomas E. Dewey

Republican nominee

Thomas E. Dewey

The 1948 Republican National Convention was held from June 21 to June 25, 1948, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. New York Governor Thomas E. Dewey was nominated for president and California Governor Earl Warren was nominated for vice president.[1] Dewey and Warren went on to lose the general election to the Democratic Party's ticket of incumbent President Harry S. Truman and Kentucky senator Alben W. Barkley

Candidates edit

Both the Republican Party and the Democratic Party courted Dwight D. Eisenhower, the most popular United States general of World War II. Eisenhower's political views were unknown in 1948. He was, later events would prove, a moderate Republican, but in 1948 he flatly refused the nomination of any political party.

With Eisenhower refusing to run, the contest for the Republican nomination was between New York Governor Thomas E. Dewey, former Minnesota Governor Harold Stassen, General Douglas MacArthur, Ohio Senator Robert A. Taft and California Governor Earl Warren. Governor Dewey, who had been the Republican nominee in 1944, was regarded as the frontrunner when the primaries began. Dewey was the acknowledged leader of the GOP's powerful eastern establishment; in 1946 he had been re-elected Governor of New York by the largest margin in state history. Dewey's handicap was that many Republicans disliked him; he often struck observers as cold, stiff and condescending. Senator Taft was the leader of the GOP's conservative wing. He opened his campaign in 1947 by attacking the Democratic Party's domestic policy and foreign policy. In foreign policy, Taft was a non-interventionist who opposed many of the alliances the U.S. government had made with other nations to fight the Cold War with the Soviet Union; he believed that the nation should concentrate on its own problems and avoid "imperial entanglements". On domestic issues, Taft and his fellow conservatives wanted to abolish many of the New Deal social welfare programs that had been created in the 1930s; they regarded these programs as too expensive and harmful to business interests. Taft had two major weaknesses: he was seen as a plodding, dull campaigner, and he was viewed by most party leaders as being too conservative and controversial to win a presidential election. Taft's support was limited to his native Midwestern United States and parts of the Southern United States.

The "surprise" candidate of 1948 was Stassen, the former "boy wonder" of Minnesota politics. Stassen had been elected governor of Minnesota at the age of 31; he resigned as governor in 1943 and served in the United States Navy in World War II. In 1945 he had served on the committee which created the United Nations. Stassen was widely regarded as the most "liberal" of the Republican candidates, yet as the primaries continued he was criticized for being vague on many issues.

The following political leaders were candidates for the 1948 Republican presidential nomination:

Major candidates edit

These candidates participated in multiple state primaries or were included in multiple major national polls.

Competing in primaries edit

Candidate Most recent position Home state Campaign
Thomas E. Dewey   Governor of New York
(1943–54)
 
New York
 
(Campaign)
Douglas MacArthur   General of the Army
(1944–64)
 
New York
Leverett Saltonstall   U.S. Senator
from Massachusetts

(1945–67)
 
Massachusetts
Harold Stassen   Governor
of Minnesota

(1939–43)
 
Minnesota
(Campaign)
Robert A. Taft   U.S. Senator
from Ohio

(1939–53)
 
Ohio
Announced campaign: October 24, 1947[2]
(Campaign)
Arthur Vandenberg   U.S. Senator
from Michigan

(1928–51)
 
Michigan
Earl Warren   Governor of California
(1943–53)
 
California

Bypassing primaries edit

The following candidates did not actively campaign for any state's presidential primary, but may have had their name placed on the ballot by supporters or may have sought to influence to selection of un-elected delegates or sought the support of uncommitted delegates.

Candidate Most recent position Home state
Raymond Baldwin   U.S. Senator
from Connecticut

(1946–49)
 
Connecticut
Dwight H. Green   Governor
of Illinois

(1941–49)
 
Illinois
Edward Martin   U.S. Senator
from Pennsylvania

(1947–59)
 
Pennsylvania
Joseph Martin Jr.   Speaker of the House
(1947–49)
 
Massachusetts
B. Carroll Reece   Chairman of the RNC
(1946–48)
 
Tennessee

Favorite sons edit

The following candidates ran only in their home state's primary or caucus for the purpose of controlling its delegate slate at the convention and did not appear to be considered national candidates by the media.

Polling edit

National polling edit

Graph of opinion polls conducted
Source Publication
Thomas Dewey
Douglas MacArthur
Leverett Saltonstall
Harold Stassen
Robert Taft
Arthur Vandenberg
Earl Warren
Gallup Apr. 1945 59% 7% 1% 15% 2% 4% 1%
Gallup Jan. 1946 38% 6% 2% 27% 4% 4% 1%
Gallup Mar. 1946 37% 3% 1% 33% 3% 6% 1%
Gallup Apr. 1946 35% 5% 1% 34% 3% 5%
Gallup July 1946 38% 6% 28% 4% 7%
Gallup July 1946 37% 4% 1% 25% 5% 8% 6%
Gallup Oct. 1946 40% 5% 1% 22% 6% 7% 6%
Gallup Nov. 1946 52% 2% 1% 17% 2% 9% 5%
Gallup Feb. 1947 45% 3% 18% 8% 8% 3%
Gallup Apr. 1947 51% 2% 15% 7% 10% 3%
Gallup June 1947 50% 3% 15% 9% 9% 4%
Gallup Jan. 1948 33% 10% 12% 13% 5% 5%
Gallup Mar. 1948 37% 12% 1% 15% 12% 13% 6%
Gallup Mar. 1948 34% 19% 1% 15% 12% 13% 3%
Gallup Apr. 1948 29% 16% 31% 9% 10% 2%
Gallup Apr. 1948 24% 12% 37% 8% 13% 2%
Gallup June 1948 33% 11% 26% 10% 13% 2%

Source:[3]

Primary campaign edit

New Hampshire: March 9 edit

Dewey declined to enter the campaign actively while the New York legislature remained in session. In New Hampshire, that meant Dewey relied on the state's Governor, Charles M. Dale, and other supporters to deliver the eight-person delegation to his column. His campaign spent only $9,000.[4]

The result was inconclusive. Dewey took six of the state's eight delegates, and the most popular Dewey delegate outpolled the most popular Stassen delegate by 28,000 votes to 21,000.[4]

Wisconsin: April 6 edit

Wisconsin had proven decisive in 1944 by eliminating Wendell Willkie from the campaign after a poor showing; in 1948, it evolved into a contest between native son Douglas MacArthur and neighbor Harold Stassen of Minnesota. Dewey, maintaining his front-runner approach, remained in Albany and nearly declined to enter the primary, submitting his name only halfheartedly at the last minute.[5]

The Stassen campaign benefited from the large Scandinavian population and the support of Senator Joseph McCarthy, while MacArthur, still in Tokyo, was supported by the La Follette family, the Milwaukee Sentinel, and many of Dewey's 1944 campaigners.[5] McCarthy, a Catholic, criticized MacArthur for his remarriage and divorce; the attack was aimed at the state's large Catholic population.[5] Stassen also succeeded by appealing to both young and liberal voters (through internationalist foreign policy) and conservative and ethnic voters (by calling for a national ban on the Communist Party). In an indirect attack on Dewey, he noted that forty percent of the nation's communists resided in New York.[5]

Though he did not initially campaign in the state, Dewey was weakened by Wisconsin; the leading candidates and other enemies, like former Congressman Hamilton Fish III, had the opportunity to attack him while he remained in New York.[5] Dewey briefly entered the fray in the final days, delivering speeches at Kenosha and Appleton College, and issuing a statewide radio broadcast on April 1 to criticize Stassen's proposed ban on communists, famously arguing, "You can't shoot an idea with a gun."[5]

Stassen won a triumph over MacArthur, taking nineteen delegates to the General's eight. Dewey was shut out, though he captured ten delegates in Oklahoma.[6]

Nebraska: April 13 edit

 
A political cartoon depicts Dewey, Taft, and Stassen fighting in the Nebraska primary; other contenders look on as a matronly elephant, symbolizing the Party, urges unity.

One week after Wisconsin, Stassen again bested Dewey in Nebraska. Dewey had made a much stronger effort there, having left Wisconsin early to deliver a foreign policy speech in Lincoln. The two were joined on the campaign trail in Nebraska by Senator Robert A. Taft, entering his first primary.[6] Given a break in the Senate schedule for Lincoln's birthday, Taft campaigned in Nebraska, as well as Indiana, Illinois, Minnesota, and Colorado in the span of one week.[7]

Taft was unpopular in the state over his opposition to farm subsidies[b] and unable to campaign until Senate business concluded; he likely preferred to bypass the state altogether. His hand was forced, however, by an independent committee which placed the names of all candidates on the ballot and Senator Hugh A. Butler, who offered Taft the support of his political organization and personally planned a three-day campaign trip for him; he reluctal.[8] The result was disaster for Taft, who finished a distant third (with only twice the vote of the non-candidate Vandenberg) and a boost for Stassen, who won a clean victory over Dewey.[8]

Now with clear momentum, Stassen appeared to be the favorite for the nomination; he led in the Gallup poll for the first time and was the betting favorite to win the crucial Oregon primary, his next showdown with Dewey.[6] Faced with the definite prospect of a third failed presidential campaign, the press began to write Dewey off. "Although he is not a tragic figure," wrote the liberal magazine The Nation, "there is an element of tragedy in his collapse as a leading contender. ... [H]e has pursued such a cautious course and been so clearly motivated by ambition that he stands for nothing and has no real friends."[6]

Dewey thus decided to stake his political career on Oregon and left for the state on April 20, to establish a campaign and barnstorm for votes.[9]

Ohio: May 4 edit

In January, Stassen made a serious violation of political etiquette by challenging a candidate in his home state.[10] Though Taft personally appealed to Stassen to desist for both candidacies' sakes, the Minnesotan pressed forward with a January 25 announcement that he would controversially file in Ohio, angering Taft and his conservative supporters.[10] Stassen reasoned that he must campaign in the state, since he relied entirely on popular support without establishment backing.[10] After losing Nebraska, Taft hurried home, where he would campaign from April l7 until primary day, speaking eight to ten times per day.[10]

Stassen focused his strength by running a slate of only twenty-three delegates out of a possible fifty-three. Only one, a respected former Ohio Supreme Court justice, ran at-large; the other twenty-two ran in carefully selected districts in the urban centers of Akron, Cleveland, Dayton, and Youngstown. Stassen presumed that voters in these districts would oppose Taft for his sponsorship of the anti-union Taft-Hartley Act.[10]

Taft ridiculed Stassen for vagueness on the issues and took a firm stance in response against universal military training. He proudly spoke in favor of Taft-Hartley and also noted his public housing and education aid bills.[10] Taft's public relations advisor L. Richard Guylay utilized a radio campaign based on the principles of Gustave Le Bon, targeting veterans, young voters, and even union members with a direct appeal to emotion.[11]

The primary was a resounding victory for Taft. Out of the twenty-two district races, Stassen won only nine. His sole delegate at-large finished last. Taft was particularly gratified by the support in industrial regions and told Newsweek that he had received a "new lease on life." Stassen had been dealt his first major blow and permanently alienated the conservative wing of the party in the process.[10] Privately, however, Taft acknowledged Ohio as a Pyrrhic victory; the effort strained his health and budget and gave Dewey a major leg up on both exhausted candidates,.[10]

Oregon: May 21 edit

Beginning after his loss in Nebraska, Dewey prepared for a final stand in Oregon; he proclaimed to advisors that his political career was at stake.[12] Oregon was the only remaining state in which he would compete directly with Stassen for delegates elected by the voters.[c] He had established a campaign strategy in the crucial state in July 1947 with Herbert Brownell and local campaign veteran Ralph Moores, but by March, Moores warned Dewey that the campaign was adrift, and that it would be "desperately hard" to regain the advantage over Stassen.[12]

Dewey enlisted support from various lobbyists and groups, including Winthrop Aldrich, the Brooklyn Real Estate Board, the New York American Federation of Labor, Detroit Edison, the Michigan Alumni Association, Detroit Edison, and the Railroad Brother; he was even backed by lobbyists from the Minnesota Rose Society in Stassen's home state.[12] The campaign established several interest group-specific campaigns, including those for sportsmen, teachers, dentists, lawyers, osteopaths, and farmers. Among those constituencies targeted were the state's 12,000 black voters, who received mailings paying tribute to Dewey's efforts for a landmark anti-discrimination law and practice of race-blind hiring in state employment.[12]

Dewey arrived in the state personally on May 1, campaigning throughout the state; within the first week, he met 35,000 voters.[12] By May 12, Dewey forces had spent $71,000 in the state, most raised by Harold Talbott of the Chrysler Corporation. The campaign would ultimately spend around $150,000, triple the state record, on billboards, radio spots, newspaper advertisements, and half-hour broadcasts.[12] The day before the primary, the Dewey campaign ran a telegram to every physician in the state, written by a former Stassen supporter who had soured on the candidate over socialized medicine.[12]

Stassen, exhausted from his campaign in Ohio, found himself on the defensive for the first time and returned to Oregon earlier than he had planned. His opponents now criticized him for being vague on the issues, including Taft-Hartley, universal military training, and reciprocal tariffs.[12]

Radio debate edit

In the final week of the campaign, Stassen returned to anti-communism, the issue which had boosted his campaign to the forefront.[13] Stassen attacked Dewey for a "soft, coddling policy" on communism in the United States and challenged him to a direct debate on the issue—the first ever head-to-head radio debate between two presidential candidates.[14] Dewey accepted, and as the challenged party, chose the format, topic, and rules; the debate would be broadcast nationally on 900 stations from a quiet studio at KEX Portland. The single topic: "Shall the Communist Party be outlawed in the United States?"[14] The debate was heard by an estimated 40–80 million listeners throughout the country, one of the largest audiences in history.[14]

During the debate, Stassen read credited his wartime service and world travels for his belief than an international Communist network demanded immediate, punitive response. Dewey responded with an extemporaneous criticism of the Mundt-Nixon Bill as a "grievous error," and pointed to the fact that Canada had banned communism but still hosted an international espionage ring in the Russian embassy.[14]

In his concluding remarks, Dewey delivered the most famous lines of the night:[14]

"I am unalterably, wholeheartedly, and unswervingly against any scheme to write laws outlawing people because of their religion, political, social, or economic ideas. I am against it because it is a violation of the Constitution of the United States and the Bill of Rights, and clearly so. I am against it because it is immoral and nothing but totalitarianism itself. I am against it because I know from a great many years experience in the enforcement of the law that the proposal wouldn't work, and instead would rapidly advance the cause of Communism in the United States and all over the world. ... Stripped to its naked essentials, this is nothing but the method of Hitler and Stalin. It is thought control, borrowed from the Japanese war leadership. It is an attempt to beat down ideas with a club. It is a surrender of everything we believe in."

Dewey won the primary by just under 10,000 votes;[15] Stassen no longer had a direct path to the nomination and had failed at establishing himself as the clear popular favorite.[10] Though Stassen had entered the primaries as the presumable heir to Wendell Willkie as the leader of liberal Republicans, the debate over communism had flipped his and Dewey's positions.[15] He now entered negotiations with Taft to block Dewey's nomination at the convention.[10]

Statewide contests by winner edit

Date Pledged delegates Contest Earl Warren Harold Stassen Robert A. Taft Thomas E. Dewey Douglas MacArthur Arthur H. Vandenberg Joseph W. Martin Unpledged/Other
March 9 8 New Hampshire primary - 2
21,000[d]
- 6
28,000
[d]
- - - -
April 6 27 Wisconsin - 19
39.37%
-
25.16%
8
33.98%
- - -
April 13 0 Illinois[16]
(Results)
- 0.47% 0.21% 0.29% 2.00% - - 96.90%[e]
? Nebraska
0.95%
?
43.54%

11.62%
2
34.54%

3.71%

5.16%

0.49%
-
April 20 0 New Jersey
0.16%

34.79%

5.52%

41.38%

8.00%

5.75%

0.71%
-
April 27 Massachusetts - - - - - - - 100%[f]
Pennsylvania - 31.47% 5.88% 29.82% 7.07% 3.42% - 17.46%[g]
May 4 53 Ohio - 9
43.21%
44
56.79%
- - - - -
May 11 West Virginia - 83.17% - - - - - -
May 21 Oregon - 47.56% - 51.79% - - - -
June 1 California 100% - - - - - - -
South Dakota - - - - - - - 100%[h]
  • Italics - Write-In Vote

Primaries total popular vote results:[17]

Convention edit

The 1948 Republican National Convention was held in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It was the first presidential convention to be shown on television. As the convention opened, Dewey was seen as having a large lead in the delegate count. His major opponents – Taft, Stassen, and Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg of Michigan – met in Taft's hotel suite to plan a "stop-Dewey" movement. However, a key obstacle soon developed when the three men refused to unite behind a single candidate to oppose Dewey. Instead, all three men simply agreed to try to hold their own delegates in the hopes of preventing Dewey from obtaining a majority. This proved to be futile, as Dewey's efficient campaign team gathered up the delegates they needed to win the nomination. After the second round of balloting, Dewey was only 33 votes short of victory. Taft then called Stassen and urged him to withdraw from the race and endorse him as Dewey's main opponent. When Stassen refused, Taft wrote a concession speech and had it read at the start of the third ballot; Dewey was then nominated by acclamation. Dewey then chose popular Governor Earl Warren of California as his running mate. Following the convention, most political experts in the news media rated the GOP ticket as an almost-certain winner over the Democrats.

The tally:
Ballot 1 2
NY Governor Thomas E. Dewey 434 515
OH Senator Robert A. Taft 224 274
Frm. MN Governor Harold Stassen 157 149
MI Senator and President pro tem Arthur Vandenberg 62 62
CA Governor Earl Warren 59 57
House Speaker Joseph Martin 18 10
General Douglas MacArthur 11 7

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Kalb, Deborah (2016-02-19). Guide to U.S. Elections - Google Books. ISBN 9781483380353. Retrieved February 19, 2016.
  2. ^ Patterson 1972, p. 382.
  3. ^ "US President - R Primaries (Polling)". OurCampaigns. 19 Aug 2015. Retrieved 30 Mar 2020.
  4. ^ a b Smith 1982, p. 486.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Smith 1982, pp. 486–487.
  6. ^ a b c d Smith 1982, p. 488.
  7. ^ Patterson 1972, p. 387.
  8. ^ a b c Patterson 1972, pp. 404–05.
  9. ^ Smith 1982, p. 489.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Patterson 1972, pp. 405–407.
  11. ^ Patterson 1972, p. 397.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h Smith 1982, pp. 488–491.
  13. ^ Smith 1982, pp. 492.
  14. ^ a b c d e Smith 1982, pp. 492–93.
  15. ^ a b Smith 1982, p. 494.
  16. ^ Illinois Blue Book 1947-1948. Illinois Secretary of State. p. 747. Retrieved 29 March 2020.
  17. ^ Our Campaigns - US President - R Primaries Race - Feb 01, 1948

Notes edit

  1. ^ Favorite sons received the support of Connecticut (Raymond Baldwin), New Jersey (Alfred Driscoll), Michigan (Arthur Vandenberg), California (Earl Warren), Illinois (Dwight Green), and Tennessee (Carroll Reece). Speaker of the House Joseph W. Martin from Massachusetts won the Rhode Island delegation. In the popular vote, Warren won California, Leverett Saltonstall won Massachusetts, and political unknowns Riley A. Bender and R. W. Hitchcock won Illinois and South Dakota, respectively. New Hampshire elected an unpledged slate of delegates.
  2. ^ He blundered by repeating that position in Omaha during his February swing through the West.[8]
  3. ^ In New Jersey and Pennsylvania, both Dewey and Stassen were on the ballot, but the vote was merely advisory; the delegates were elected separate from the popular vote.
  4. ^ a b The listed total vote was that recorded for the top delegate on that candidate's ticket.
  5. ^ 96.9% of the vote went to businessman Riley A. Bender, the only candidate on the ballot.
  6. ^ 100% of the vote was for Leverett Saltonstall.
  7. ^ 17.46% of the vote was for Governor Edward Martin.
  8. ^ 100% of the vote was for R.W. Hitchcock.

Further reading edit

  • Bowen, Michael (2011). The Roots of Modern Conservatism: Dewey, Taft, and the Battle for the Soul of the Republican Party.
  • Kirby, Alec; Dalin, David G.; Rothmann, John F. (2013). Harold E. Stassen: The Life and Perennial Candidacy of the Progressive Republican.
  • Patterson, James T. (1972). Mr. Republican: A Biography of Robert A. Taft. Boston, Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 9780395139387.
  • Pietrusza, David (2011). 1948: Harry Truman's Improbable Victory and the Year that Changed America. Union Square Press.
  • Reinhard, David W. (1983). The Republican Right Since 1945.
  • Smith, Richard Norton (1982). Thomas Dewey and His Times. ISBN 9780671417413.
  • Werle, Steve (2015). Stassen Again. St. Paul: Minnesota Historical Society Press.

1948, republican, party, presidential, primaries, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, hel. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources 1948 Republican Party presidential primaries news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed May 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message From March 9 to June 1 1948 voters of the Republican Party elected delegates to the 1948 Republican National Convention in part to choose the party nominee for president in the 1948 United States presidential election 1948 Republican Party presidential primaries 1944 March 9 to June 1 1948 1952 1 092 delegates to the Republican National Convention547 majority votes needed to win Candidate Thomas E Dewey Harold Stassen Robert A TaftHome state New York Minnesota OhioDelegate count 434 157 224Contests won 2 4 1Popular vote 330 799 627 321 464 741Percentage 11 6 22 0 16 3 First place by first instance voteFirst place by convention roll call Dewey Taft Stassen Various a Previous Republican nomineeThomas E Dewey Republican nominee Thomas E DeweyThe 1948 Republican National Convention was held from June 21 to June 25 1948 in Philadelphia Pennsylvania New York Governor Thomas E Dewey was nominated for president and California Governor Earl Warren was nominated for vice president 1 Dewey and Warren went on to lose the general election to the Democratic Party s ticket of incumbent President Harry S Truman and Kentucky senator Alben W Barkley Contents 1 Candidates 1 1 Major candidates 1 1 1 Competing in primaries 1 1 2 Bypassing primaries 1 2 Favorite sons 2 Polling 2 1 National polling 3 Primary campaign 3 1 New Hampshire March 9 3 2 Wisconsin April 6 3 3 Nebraska April 13 3 4 Ohio May 4 3 5 Oregon May 21 3 5 1 Radio debate 4 Statewide contests by winner 5 Convention 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Notes 7 2 Further readingCandidates editBoth the Republican Party and the Democratic Party courted Dwight D Eisenhower the most popular United States general of World War II Eisenhower s political views were unknown in 1948 He was later events would prove a moderate Republican but in 1948 he flatly refused the nomination of any political party With Eisenhower refusing to run the contest for the Republican nomination was between New York Governor Thomas E Dewey former Minnesota Governor Harold Stassen General Douglas MacArthur Ohio Senator Robert A Taft and California Governor Earl Warren Governor Dewey who had been the Republican nominee in 1944 was regarded as the frontrunner when the primaries began Dewey was the acknowledged leader of the GOP s powerful eastern establishment in 1946 he had been re elected Governor of New York by the largest margin in state history Dewey s handicap was that many Republicans disliked him he often struck observers as cold stiff and condescending Senator Taft was the leader of the GOP s conservative wing He opened his campaign in 1947 by attacking the Democratic Party s domestic policy and foreign policy In foreign policy Taft was a non interventionist who opposed many of the alliances the U S government had made with other nations to fight the Cold War with the Soviet Union he believed that the nation should concentrate on its own problems and avoid imperial entanglements On domestic issues Taft and his fellow conservatives wanted to abolish many of the New Deal social welfare programs that had been created in the 1930s they regarded these programs as too expensive and harmful to business interests Taft had two major weaknesses he was seen as a plodding dull campaigner and he was viewed by most party leaders as being too conservative and controversial to win a presidential election Taft s support was limited to his native Midwestern United States and parts of the Southern United States The surprise candidate of 1948 was Stassen the former boy wonder of Minnesota politics Stassen had been elected governor of Minnesota at the age of 31 he resigned as governor in 1943 and served in the United States Navy in World War II In 1945 he had served on the committee which created the United Nations Stassen was widely regarded as the most liberal of the Republican candidates yet as the primaries continued he was criticized for being vague on many issues The following political leaders were candidates for the 1948 Republican presidential nomination Major candidates edit These candidates participated in multiple state primaries or were included in multiple major national polls Competing in primaries edit Candidate Most recent position Home state CampaignThomas E Dewey nbsp Governor of New York 1943 54 nbsp New York nbsp Campaign Douglas MacArthur nbsp General of the Army 1944 64 nbsp New YorkLeverett Saltonstall nbsp U S Senatorfrom Massachusetts 1945 67 nbsp MassachusettsHarold Stassen nbsp Governorof Minnesota 1939 43 nbsp Minnesota Campaign Robert A Taft nbsp U S Senatorfrom Ohio 1939 53 nbsp Ohio Announced campaign October 24 1947 2 Campaign Arthur Vandenberg nbsp U S Senatorfrom Michigan 1928 51 nbsp MichiganEarl Warren nbsp Governor of California 1943 53 nbsp CaliforniaBypassing primaries edit The following candidates did not actively campaign for any state s presidential primary but may have had their name placed on the ballot by supporters or may have sought to influence to selection of un elected delegates or sought the support of uncommitted delegates Candidate Most recent position Home stateRaymond Baldwin nbsp U S Senatorfrom Connecticut 1946 49 nbsp ConnecticutDwight H Green nbsp Governorof Illinois 1941 49 nbsp IllinoisEdward Martin nbsp U S Senatorfrom Pennsylvania 1947 59 nbsp PennsylvaniaJoseph Martin Jr nbsp Speaker of the House 1947 49 nbsp MassachusettsB Carroll Reece nbsp Chairman of the RNC 1946 48 nbsp TennesseeFavorite sons edit The following candidates ran only in their home state s primary or caucus for the purpose of controlling its delegate slate at the convention and did not appear to be considered national candidates by the media Businessman Riley A Bender of Illinois R W Hitchcock of South DakotaPolling editNational polling edit Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues Graph of opinion polls conducted Source Publication Thomas Dewey Douglas MacArthur Leverett Saltonstall Harold Stassen Robert Taft Arthur Vandenberg Earl WarrenGallup Apr 1945 59 7 1 15 2 4 1 Gallup Jan 1946 38 6 2 27 4 4 1 Gallup Mar 1946 37 3 1 33 3 6 1 Gallup Apr 1946 35 5 1 34 3 5 Gallup July 1946 38 6 28 4 7 Gallup July 1946 37 4 1 25 5 8 6 Gallup Oct 1946 40 5 1 22 6 7 6 Gallup Nov 1946 52 2 1 17 2 9 5 Gallup Feb 1947 45 3 18 8 8 3 Gallup Apr 1947 51 2 15 7 10 3 Gallup June 1947 50 3 15 9 9 4 Gallup Jan 1948 33 10 12 13 5 5 Gallup Mar 1948 37 12 1 15 12 13 6 Gallup Mar 1948 34 19 1 15 12 13 3 Gallup Apr 1948 29 16 31 9 10 2 Gallup Apr 1948 24 12 37 8 13 2 Gallup June 1948 33 11 26 10 13 2 Source 3 Primary campaign editNew Hampshire March 9 edit Dewey declined to enter the campaign actively while the New York legislature remained in session In New Hampshire that meant Dewey relied on the state s Governor Charles M Dale and other supporters to deliver the eight person delegation to his column His campaign spent only 9 000 4 The result was inconclusive Dewey took six of the state s eight delegates and the most popular Dewey delegate outpolled the most popular Stassen delegate by 28 000 votes to 21 000 4 Wisconsin April 6 edit Wisconsin had proven decisive in 1944 by eliminating Wendell Willkie from the campaign after a poor showing in 1948 it evolved into a contest between native son Douglas MacArthur and neighbor Harold Stassen of Minnesota Dewey maintaining his front runner approach remained in Albany and nearly declined to enter the primary submitting his name only halfheartedly at the last minute 5 The Stassen campaign benefited from the large Scandinavian population and the support of Senator Joseph McCarthy while MacArthur still in Tokyo was supported by the La Follette family the Milwaukee Sentinel and many of Dewey s 1944 campaigners 5 McCarthy a Catholic criticized MacArthur for his remarriage and divorce the attack was aimed at the state s large Catholic population 5 Stassen also succeeded by appealing to both young and liberal voters through internationalist foreign policy and conservative and ethnic voters by calling for a national ban on the Communist Party In an indirect attack on Dewey he noted that forty percent of the nation s communists resided in New York 5 Though he did not initially campaign in the state Dewey was weakened by Wisconsin the leading candidates and other enemies like former Congressman Hamilton Fish III had the opportunity to attack him while he remained in New York 5 Dewey briefly entered the fray in the final days delivering speeches at Kenosha and Appleton College and issuing a statewide radio broadcast on April 1 to criticize Stassen s proposed ban on communists famously arguing You can t shoot an idea with a gun 5 Stassen won a triumph over MacArthur taking nineteen delegates to the General s eight Dewey was shut out though he captured ten delegates in Oklahoma 6 Nebraska April 13 edit nbsp A political cartoon depicts Dewey Taft and Stassen fighting in the Nebraska primary other contenders look on as a matronly elephant symbolizing the Party urges unity One week after Wisconsin Stassen again bested Dewey in Nebraska Dewey had made a much stronger effort there having left Wisconsin early to deliver a foreign policy speech in Lincoln The two were joined on the campaign trail in Nebraska by Senator Robert A Taft entering his first primary 6 Given a break in the Senate schedule for Lincoln s birthday Taft campaigned in Nebraska as well as Indiana Illinois Minnesota and Colorado in the span of one week 7 Taft was unpopular in the state over his opposition to farm subsidies b and unable to campaign until Senate business concluded he likely preferred to bypass the state altogether His hand was forced however by an independent committee which placed the names of all candidates on the ballot and Senator Hugh A Butler who offered Taft the support of his political organization and personally planned a three day campaign trip for him he reluctal 8 The result was disaster for Taft who finished a distant third with only twice the vote of the non candidate Vandenberg and a boost for Stassen who won a clean victory over Dewey 8 Now with clear momentum Stassen appeared to be the favorite for the nomination he led in the Gallup poll for the first time and was the betting favorite to win the crucial Oregon primary his next showdown with Dewey 6 Faced with the definite prospect of a third failed presidential campaign the press began to write Dewey off Although he is not a tragic figure wrote the liberal magazine The Nation there is an element of tragedy in his collapse as a leading contender H e has pursued such a cautious course and been so clearly motivated by ambition that he stands for nothing and has no real friends 6 Dewey thus decided to stake his political career on Oregon and left for the state on April 20 to establish a campaign and barnstorm for votes 9 Ohio May 4 edit In January Stassen made a serious violation of political etiquette by challenging a candidate in his home state 10 Though Taft personally appealed to Stassen to desist for both candidacies sakes the Minnesotan pressed forward with a January 25 announcement that he would controversially file in Ohio angering Taft and his conservative supporters 10 Stassen reasoned that he must campaign in the state since he relied entirely on popular support without establishment backing 10 After losing Nebraska Taft hurried home where he would campaign from April l7 until primary day speaking eight to ten times per day 10 Stassen focused his strength by running a slate of only twenty three delegates out of a possible fifty three Only one a respected former Ohio Supreme Court justice ran at large the other twenty two ran in carefully selected districts in the urban centers of Akron Cleveland Dayton and Youngstown Stassen presumed that voters in these districts would oppose Taft for his sponsorship of the anti union Taft Hartley Act 10 Taft ridiculed Stassen for vagueness on the issues and took a firm stance in response against universal military training He proudly spoke in favor of Taft Hartley and also noted his public housing and education aid bills 10 Taft s public relations advisor L Richard Guylay utilized a radio campaign based on the principles of Gustave Le Bon targeting veterans young voters and even union members with a direct appeal to emotion 11 The primary was a resounding victory for Taft Out of the twenty two district races Stassen won only nine His sole delegate at large finished last Taft was particularly gratified by the support in industrial regions and told Newsweek that he had received a new lease on life Stassen had been dealt his first major blow and permanently alienated the conservative wing of the party in the process 10 Privately however Taft acknowledged Ohio as a Pyrrhic victory the effort strained his health and budget and gave Dewey a major leg up on both exhausted candidates 10 Oregon May 21 edit Beginning after his loss in Nebraska Dewey prepared for a final stand in Oregon he proclaimed to advisors that his political career was at stake 12 Oregon was the only remaining state in which he would compete directly with Stassen for delegates elected by the voters c He had established a campaign strategy in the crucial state in July 1947 with Herbert Brownell and local campaign veteran Ralph Moores but by March Moores warned Dewey that the campaign was adrift and that it would be desperately hard to regain the advantage over Stassen 12 Dewey enlisted support from various lobbyists and groups including Winthrop Aldrich the Brooklyn Real Estate Board the New York American Federation of Labor Detroit Edison the Michigan Alumni Association Detroit Edison and the Railroad Brother he was even backed by lobbyists from the Minnesota Rose Society in Stassen s home state 12 The campaign established several interest group specific campaigns including those for sportsmen teachers dentists lawyers osteopaths and farmers Among those constituencies targeted were the state s 12 000 black voters who received mailings paying tribute to Dewey s efforts for a landmark anti discrimination law and practice of race blind hiring in state employment 12 Dewey arrived in the state personally on May 1 campaigning throughout the state within the first week he met 35 000 voters 12 By May 12 Dewey forces had spent 71 000 in the state most raised by Harold Talbott of the Chrysler Corporation The campaign would ultimately spend around 150 000 triple the state record on billboards radio spots newspaper advertisements and half hour broadcasts 12 The day before the primary the Dewey campaign ran a telegram to every physician in the state written by a former Stassen supporter who had soured on the candidate over socialized medicine 12 Stassen exhausted from his campaign in Ohio found himself on the defensive for the first time and returned to Oregon earlier than he had planned His opponents now criticized him for being vague on the issues including Taft Hartley universal military training and reciprocal tariffs 12 Radio debate edit In the final week of the campaign Stassen returned to anti communism the issue which had boosted his campaign to the forefront 13 Stassen attacked Dewey for a soft coddling policy on communism in the United States and challenged him to a direct debate on the issue the first ever head to head radio debate between two presidential candidates 14 Dewey accepted and as the challenged party chose the format topic and rules the debate would be broadcast nationally on 900 stations from a quiet studio at KEX Portland The single topic Shall the Communist Party be outlawed in the United States 14 The debate was heard by an estimated 40 80 million listeners throughout the country one of the largest audiences in history 14 During the debate Stassen read credited his wartime service and world travels for his belief than an international Communist network demanded immediate punitive response Dewey responded with an extemporaneous criticism of the Mundt Nixon Bill as a grievous error and pointed to the fact that Canada had banned communism but still hosted an international espionage ring in the Russian embassy 14 In his concluding remarks Dewey delivered the most famous lines of the night 14 I am unalterably wholeheartedly and unswervingly against any scheme to write laws outlawing people because of their religion political social or economic ideas I am against it because it is a violation of the Constitution of the United States and the Bill of Rights and clearly so I am against it because it is immoral and nothing but totalitarianism itself I am against it because I know from a great many years experience in the enforcement of the law that the proposal wouldn t work and instead would rapidly advance the cause of Communism in the United States and all over the world Stripped to its naked essentials this is nothing but the method of Hitler and Stalin It is thought control borrowed from the Japanese war leadership It is an attempt to beat down ideas with a club It is a surrender of everything we believe in Dewey won the primary by just under 10 000 votes 15 Stassen no longer had a direct path to the nomination and had failed at establishing himself as the clear popular favorite 10 Though Stassen had entered the primaries as the presumable heir to Wendell Willkie as the leader of liberal Republicans the debate over communism had flipped his and Dewey s positions 15 He now entered negotiations with Taft to block Dewey s nomination at the convention 10 Statewide contests by winner editDate Pledged delegates Contest Earl Warren Harold Stassen Robert A Taft Thomas E Dewey Douglas MacArthur Arthur H Vandenberg Joseph W Martin Unpledged OtherMarch 9 8 New Hampshire primary 221 000 d 628 000 d April 6 27 Wisconsin 1939 37 25 16 833 98 April 13 0 Illinois 16 Results 0 47 0 21 0 29 2 00 96 90 e Nebraska 0 95 43 54 11 62 234 54 3 71 5 16 0 49 April 20 0 New Jersey 0 16 34 79 5 52 41 38 8 00 5 75 0 71 April 27 Massachusetts 100 f Pennsylvania 31 47 5 88 29 82 7 07 3 42 17 46 g May 4 53 Ohio 943 21 4456 79 May 11 West Virginia 83 17 May 21 Oregon 47 56 51 79 June 1 California 100 South Dakota 100 h Italics Write In VotePrimaries total popular vote results 17 Earl Warren 771 295 26 99 Harold Stassen 627 321 21 96 Robert A Taft 464 741 16 27 Thomas E Dewey 330 799 11 58 Riley A Bender 324 029 11 34 Douglas MacArthur 87 839 3 07 Leverett Saltonstall 72 191 2 53 R W Hitchcock 45 463 1 59 Edward Martin 45 072 1 58 Unpledged delegates 28 854 1 01 Arthur H Vandenberg 18 924 0 66 Dwight D Eisenhower 5 014 0 18 Harry S Truman 4 907 0 17 Henry A Wallace 1 452 0 05 Joseph W Martin 974 0 03 Convention editThe 1948 Republican National Convention was held in Philadelphia Pennsylvania It was the first presidential convention to be shown on television As the convention opened Dewey was seen as having a large lead in the delegate count His major opponents Taft Stassen and Senator Arthur H Vandenberg of Michigan met in Taft s hotel suite to plan a stop Dewey movement However a key obstacle soon developed when the three men refused to unite behind a single candidate to oppose Dewey Instead all three men simply agreed to try to hold their own delegates in the hopes of preventing Dewey from obtaining a majority This proved to be futile as Dewey s efficient campaign team gathered up the delegates they needed to win the nomination After the second round of balloting Dewey was only 33 votes short of victory Taft then called Stassen and urged him to withdraw from the race and endorse him as Dewey s main opponent When Stassen refused Taft wrote a concession speech and had it read at the start of the third ballot Dewey was then nominated by acclamation Dewey then chose popular Governor Earl Warren of California as his running mate Following the convention most political experts in the news media rated the GOP ticket as an almost certain winner over the Democrats The tally Ballot 1 2NY Governor Thomas E Dewey 434 515OH Senator Robert A Taft 224 274Frm MN Governor Harold Stassen 157 149MI Senator and President pro tem Arthur Vandenberg 62 62CA Governor Earl Warren 59 57House Speaker Joseph Martin 18 10General Douglas MacArthur 11 7See also edit1948 Democratic Party presidential primariesReferences edit Kalb Deborah 2016 02 19 Guide to U S Elections Google Books ISBN 9781483380353 Retrieved February 19 2016 Patterson 1972 p 382 US President R Primaries Polling OurCampaigns 19 Aug 2015 Retrieved 30 Mar 2020 a b Smith 1982 p 486 a b c d e f Smith 1982 pp 486 487 a b c d Smith 1982 p 488 Patterson 1972 p 387 a b c Patterson 1972 pp 404 05 Smith 1982 p 489 a b c d e f g h i j Patterson 1972 pp 405 407 Patterson 1972 p 397 a b c d e f g h Smith 1982 pp 488 491 Smith 1982 pp 492 a b c d e Smith 1982 pp 492 93 a b Smith 1982 p 494 Illinois Blue Book 1947 1948 Illinois Secretary of State p 747 Retrieved 29 March 2020 Our Campaigns US President R Primaries Race Feb 01 1948 Notes edit Favorite sons received the support of Connecticut Raymond Baldwin New Jersey Alfred Driscoll Michigan Arthur Vandenberg California Earl Warren Illinois Dwight Green and Tennessee Carroll Reece Speaker of the House Joseph W Martin from Massachusetts won the Rhode Island delegation In the popular vote Warren won California Leverett Saltonstall won Massachusetts and political unknowns Riley A Bender and R W Hitchcock won Illinois and South Dakota respectively New Hampshire elected an unpledged slate of delegates He blundered by repeating that position in Omaha during his February swing through the West 8 In New Jersey and Pennsylvania both Dewey and Stassen were on the ballot but the vote was merely advisory the delegates were elected separate from the popular vote a b The listed total vote was that recorded for the top delegate on that candidate s ticket 96 9 of the vote went to businessman Riley A Bender the only candidate on the ballot 100 of the vote was for Leverett Saltonstall 17 46 of the vote was for Governor Edward Martin 100 of the vote was for R W Hitchcock Further reading edit Bowen Michael 2011 The Roots of Modern Conservatism Dewey Taft and the Battle for the Soul of the Republican Party Kirby Alec Dalin David G Rothmann John F 2013 Harold E Stassen The Life and Perennial Candidacy of the Progressive Republican Patterson James T 1972 Mr Republican A Biography of Robert A Taft Boston Houghton Mifflin ISBN 9780395139387 Pietrusza David 2011 1948 Harry Truman s Improbable Victory and the Year that Changed America Union Square Press Reinhard David W 1983 The Republican Right Since 1945 Smith Richard Norton 1982 Thomas Dewey and His Times ISBN 9780671417413 Werle Steve 2015 Stassen Again St Paul Minnesota Historical Society Press Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1948 Republican Party presidential primaries amp oldid 1179363471, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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