Truman Defeats Dewey

Front Cover
University Press of Kentucky, 2014 M07 11 - 304 pages

Fifty years ago Harry S. Truman pulled off the greatest upset in U.S. political history. With his party split on both the left and the right, and facing a formidable Republican opponent in New York governor Thomas E. Dewey, the Missourian was thought to have little chance of remaining in the White House.

But politics in the postwar years were changing dramatically. Truman and his advisers successfully read those changes: their strategy focused on building a coalition of organized labor, African Americans in large northern cities, and traditional liberals—and ignoring protests from the conservative South.

Donaldson argues that Dewey did nearly as much to lose the election as Truman did to win it. Dewey entered the campaign so overconfident that he refused to confront Truman on the issues. The Republicans, certain of a mandate from the public after the midterm elections of 1946, prepared to disassemble the New Deal. Yet they suffered from even more severe internal division than the Democrats.

The 1948 presidential campaign was a watershed event in the history of American politics. It encompassed Truman's rousing "Give 'em Hell Harry" speeches and intriguing behind-the-scenes political maneuvering. It was the first election after Roosevelt's death and the last before the advent of television. It marked the new political prominence of African American voters and organized labor, as well as the South's declining influence over the Democratic Party.

 

Contents

Introduction
1
1 Had Enough? The Elections of 1946
5
2 Clark Clifford and Democratic Party Campaign Strategy
20
3 The Eightieth Congress and the Qyestion of Mandate
29
4 Henry Wallace and the Split of the Democratic Left
49
The Origins of Conflict
61
6 The ADA and the Splintering of Postwar Liberalism
80
7 The Loosening of Old Chains
91
11 The DoNothing Eightieth Congresss Second Session
145
12 The Republicans Nominate Dewey
150
13 The Democrats Nominate Truman
157
14 The Campaigns
167
15 The Democratic Party Factions and the Election
184
16 Postelection Analysis
204
Notes
221
Bibliography
254

8 The End of Southern Dominance in the Democratic Party
112
9 The Eisenhower Phenomenon
123
10 The Democrats and the Eisenhower Diversion
136

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About the author (2014)

Gary A. Donaldson, associate professor of history at Xavier University, is the author of Abundance and Anxiety: America 1945 to 1960 and America at War Since 1945: Foreign Policy and Politics in Korea, Vietnam and the Gulf War.

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