American Decades
National Politics: Election 1952
Truman's Unpopularity.
Truman did not run for reelection in 1952, his approval ratings in the Gallup poll having dropped to a dismal 30 percent. To test his voter appeal, Truman had placed his name on the New Hamp-shire ballot during the Democratic primaries, but he was defeated by Sen. Estes Kefauver of Tennessee. The defeat was a particularly humiliating one for an incumbent president. Americans were tired of the Korean War, continued inflation, and the kind of pork-barrel government spending that many associated with twenty years of Democratic leadership. Truman's political clout had been further undermined by Sen. Joseph McCarthy and his cronies, whose sensational charges that the Defense Department was harboring Communists were grabbing headlines and politicizing a fearful population.
CHECKERS SPEECH
Many thought the thirty-minute speech to be maudlin, mawkish, and third-rate...
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1950's Government and Politics
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- Cold War: The Bomb
- Cold War: The Korean Conflict
- Cold War: Sputnik
- Government and Business
- Government and Education
- Nationagl Politics: Election 1950
- National Politics: Republican Primaries and Convention 1952
- National Politics: Democratic Primaries and Convention 1952
- National Politics: Election 1952
- National Politics: Election 1954
- National Pollitics: Democratic Primaries and Convention 1956
- National Politics: Republican Convention 1956
- National Politics: Election 1956
- National Politics: Election 1958
- The Press and the Presidency
- Spending and the Federal Government
- Spending at the State and Local Levels
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Government and Politics, 1950–1959
