From Publishers Weekly
Donaldson (Abundance and Anxiety: America 1945 to 1960), an associate professor of history at Xavier University, gets his title by playfully inverting the Chicago Tribune headline made famous by President Truman after his victory in the 1948 presidential election. Unlike Gullan in The Upset That Wasn't (see above), Donaldson concentrates on the issues of the campaign, not the personalities. He focuses on Truman's obstacles: an economy in reconversion, labor unrest and disgruntled farmers. He shows how the GOP "misread its results" when it took control of Congress in 1946 and how Truman turned the tables on the "do nothing [80th] congress." He looks at the third-party candidates, the much "martyred" Henry Wallace and break-away Dixiecrat Strom Thurmond. Donaldson also shows how Truman built coalitions with labor and blacks largely because both groups had "no place to go," while Dewey ran a "lethargic, issueless campaign" that did not attack Truman on either domestic or foreign policy issues. There are also two chapters on the romancing of Dwight D. Eisenhower by both parties. Special emphasis is placed on the evolution of the Democratic Party as it left behind the Solid South and became the party of civil rights. This is a nitty-gritty political handbook to the issues in the election of 1948. Photos.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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From Kirkus Reviews
A new study or the 1948 election that has long been called the greatest upset in American political history. Donaldson, (History/Xavier Univ.) provides persuasive analyses of postwar politics, the tactics of contending political parties that marked the breakup of the old FDR New Deal coalition after WWII. To many voters, ``Plain Harry'' Truman was a drastic letdown after the charismatic and innovative FDR. Truman had little use for New Dealers and was heard to call them ``crackpots'' and ``the lunatic fringe''. He replaced the FDR cabinet with his political cronies and old war buddies. Donaldson finds that only FDR could hold together his unlikely coalition of leftists, liberals, aggressive labor unions, conservative farmers, newly united northern African-Americans, professionals and right-wing southern white supremacists. Truman walked a tightrope between these contending forces. In addition, Donaldson points out that Republicans drew away many old FDR voters who perceived the Yalta conference as a sellout to the Soviet Union. The GOP captured Congress in the 1946 elections as Truman's popularity declined. All polls predicted a Republican landslide in 1948. Truman found he couldnt please all factions and decided to abandon the far leftists and the extreme southern white supremacists, both of whom formed new parties led respectively by Henry Wallace and Strom Thurmond. Truman's feisty ``whistle stop'' train campaign and ``give them hell, Harry'' speeches endeared him to millions of Americans In the west and south and in large cities. He regained many lukewarm voters with no other place to go except to the newly animated Harry. Donaldson argues that the overconfident Dewey lost the election with his bland, boring campaign speeches as much as Truman won it in a close popular vote. An excellent history of a remarkable event in a tumultuous time in America. (For another look at this election, see Harold I. Gullan, The Upset that Wasn't, p. 1432.) --
Copyright ©1998, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
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