Election Name: | 1952 Republican Party presidential primaries |
Country: | United States |
Flag Year: | 1912 |
Type: | primary |
Ongoing: | no |
Previous Election: | 1948 Republican Party presidential primaries |
Previous Year: | 1948 |
Next Election: | 1956 Republican Party presidential primaries |
Next Year: | 1956 |
Election Date: | March 11 to June 3, 1952 |
Votes For Election: | 1,206 delegates to the 1952 Republican National Convention |
Needed Votes: | 604 (majority) |
Color1: | FF8080 |
Delegate Count1: | 595 |
Candidate1: | Dwight D. Eisenhower |
Home State1: | Kansas |
States Carried1: | 5 |
Popular Vote1: | 2,050,708 |
Percentage1: | 26.3% |
Color2: | 8080FF |
Delegate Count2: | 500 |
Candidate2: | Robert A. Taft |
Home State2: | Ohio |
States Carried2: | 5 |
Popular Vote2: | 2,794,736 |
Percentage2: | 35.8% |
Color4: | A05A2C |
Delegate Count4: | 81 |
Candidate4: | Earl Warren |
Home State4: | California |
States Carried4: | 1 |
Popular Vote4: | 1,349,036 |
Percentage4: | 17.3% |
Color5: | 37C871 |
Delegate Count5: | 20 |
Candidate5: | Harold Stassen |
Home State5: | Minnesota |
States Carried5: | 1 |
Popular Vote5: | 881,702 |
Percentage5: | 11.3% |
Republican nominee | |
Before Election: | Thomas E. Dewey |
After Election: | Dwight D. Eisenhower |
From March 11 to June 3, 1952, delegates were elected to the 1952 Republican National Convention.
The fight for the 1952 Republican nomination was largely between popular General Dwight D. Eisenhower (who succeeded Thomas E. Dewey as the candidate of the party's liberal eastern establishment) and Senator Robert A. Taft of Ohio, the longtime leader of the conservative wing. Foreign policy during the Cold War was a major point of contention, with Eisenhower taking an interventionist stance and Taft favoring greater caution and avoidance of foreign alliances. Eisenhower tended to accept many of the social welfare aspects of the New Deal, to which Taft was adamantly opposed.
Two other major candidate for the nomination, though never challenging Eisenhower or Taft, were Governor of California and Dewey's 1948 running-mate Earl Warren, and former Governor of Minnesota Harold Stassen, who had contended for the nomination in 1948 as well.
Taft, who was 62 when the campaign began and running his third presidential campaign, freely admitted that this would be his last chance to win the nomination. Taft's weakness, which he was never able to overcome, was the fear of many party bosses that he was too conservative and controversial to win a presidential election. The primaries were ultimately inconclusive, and the nomination was decided by a contest over delegates from Texas and Georgia; led by Dewey and Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., the Eisenhower campaign won a vote of the whole convention to award the contested delegates to Eisenhower, who carried the first ballot. The episode was reminiscent of the 1912 Republican National Convention forty years prior, where Taft's father won the nomination over Theodore Roosevelt by similar means.
In the general election on November 4, Eisenhower and his running mate, Senator Richard Nixon of California, defeated the Democratic party's ticket of Governor Adlai Stevenson II of Illinois, and Senator John Sparkman of Alabama.
Beginning in 1932, during a period which political historians would later call the "Fifth Party System," United States politics were dominated by the Democratic Party and its New Deal coalition of laborers and labor organizations, racial and religious minorities (especially Jews, Catholics, and African Americans), liberal white Southerners, and intellectuals. delivered consistent victories for the Democratic Party at the presidential and congressional level. Entering the 1952 election campaign, no Republican had been elected president since Herbert Hoover in 1928. Republicans had only won a single national election during the period, in the 1946 elections to the 80th United States Congress.
Following their victory in 1946, Republicans were hopeful to win back the White House in 1948. With the progressive and Southern wings of the Democratic Party bolting from the presidential ticket and popular Governor of New York Thomas E. Dewey leading their ticket for the second consecutive campaign, most expected a Republican victory but were surprised by the re-election of President Harry S. Truman in one of the biggest upsets in the history of presidential elections.
Having lost the presidency three times, Dewey declined to make a fourth run. Instead, the leading candidates were Dewey's main rivals for the 1948 nomination, Senator Robert A. Taft of Ohio and former Governor Harold Stassen of Minnesota, and his 1948 running mate, Governor of California Earl Warren.
See main article: Draft Eisenhower movement. During the 1948 campaign, James Roosevelt and Americans for Democratic Action attempted to draft popular World War II general Dwight D. Eisenhower, then Chief of Staff of the Army, to replace President Truman on the Democratic Party ticket. Eisenhower, who commanded the Allied Expeditionary Force in the invasions of Normandy and Germany, remained broadly popular and admired across the country without regard for political position or region. However, Eisenhower repeatedly declined to seek the Democratic nomination ahead of the 1948 convention and issued a Shermanesque statement removing himself from consideration on July 5, 1948.[1] Repeated efforts to ignore his statement failed when Roosevelt admitted that a draft would not succeed to convince Eisenhower, and the party nominated Truman instead.
By 1951, with Truman's popularity polling at record lows, both parties attempted to draft Eisenhower once again. However, since the 1948 election, he had been increasingly drawn toward the Republican Party. Dewey and Senator Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. of Massachusetts led efforts to convince Eisenhower to run as a Republican and, through a series of organizations financed and led by Charles F. Willis, Stanley M. Rumbough Jr., and Harold E. Talbott, established a draft effort with over 250,000 members nationwide. Personal friends and former military colleagues were also involved in the Republican draft effort. They were motivated at least partly by Eisenhower's broad appeal, which they felt Stassen and Taft lacked, and his support for post-war international organizations like the United Nations and North Atlantic Treaty Organization, which Taft opposed or supported to a more limited extent than Eisenhower. With Taft leading the field in late 1951, Eisenhower's reluctance to run declined, and on January 6, 1952, he permitted Lodge to publicly reveal that he considered himself a Republican.
The following leaders were candidates for the 1952 Republican presidential nomination:
These candidates participated in multiple state primaries or were included in multiple major national polls.
Candidate | Most recent position | Home state | data-sort-type="date" | Campaign | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
data-sort-value="Eisenhower" scope="row" | Dwight D. Eisenhower | Supreme Allied Commander of NATO (1951–1952) President of Columbia University (1948–1953) | Accepted draft: June 4, 1952 Nominated at convention: July 11, 1952 (Campaign) | ||
Robert A. Taft | United States Senator from Ohio (1939–1953) Ohio State Senator (1931–1933) Speaker of the Ohio House of Representatives (1926–1927) | data-sort-value="03-04-2016" | Announced campaign: October 16, 1951 Defeated at convention: July 11, 1952 (Campaign) | ||
Earl Warren | Governor of California (1943–1953) California Attorney General (1939–1943) District Attorney of Alameda County (1925–1939) | data-sort-value="03-04-2016" | Announced: November 1951 (Campaign) | ||
Harold Stassen | President of the University of Pennsylvania (1948–1953) Governor of Minnesota (1939–1943) | data-sort-value="03-04-2016" | (Campaign) | ||
Douglas MacArthur | General of the Army (1944–1964) Commander of the United Nations Command and Governor of the Ryukyu Islands (1950–1951) Commander of the Far East Command (1947–1951) | data-sort-value="03-04-2016" | |||
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.
The following persons were listed in two or more major national polls or were the subject of media speculation surrounding their potential candidacy, but declined to actively seek the nomination.
Poll source | Publication | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gallup[3] | July 17, 1949 | 20% | 21% | 13% | 21% | 12% | 9% | 16% | 5% | ||
Gallup[4] | Nov. 6, 1949 | 12% | 25% | – | 19% | 15% | 10% | 13% | 6% | ||
Gallup[5] | Apr. 5, 1950 | 15% | 37% | – | 12% | 17% | 5% | 9% | 8% | ||
Gallup[6] | Sep. 26, 1950 | 14% | 42% | – | 14% | 15% | 6% | 3% | 6% | ||
Gallup[7] | Dec. 16, 1950 | 16% | 35% | – | 8% | 24% | 10% | 2% | 5% | ||
Gallup[8] | Apr. 13, 1951 | 14% | 38% | – | 9% | 22% | 10% | 3% | 4% | ||
Gallup | May 1951 | 30% | – | 10% | 22% | 13% | |||||
Gallup[9] | Dec. 23, 1951 | 9% | 30% | 14% | 3% | 28% | 11% | 3% | 2% | ||
9% | – | 21% | 6% | 34% | 19% | 7% | 4% | ||||
11% | 35% | – | 3% | 32% | 13% | 4% | 2% | ||||
Gallup[10] | Feb. 12, 1952 | 5% | 33% | 14% | 5% | 33% | 8% | – | 2% | ||
Gallup[11] | Mar. 2, 1952 | 5% | 33% | 14% | 6% | 34% | 6% | – | 2% | ||
Gallup[12] | Apr. 8, 1952 | 3% | 37% | 12% | 4% | 34% | 9% | – | 1% | ||
Gallup[13] | May 1, 1952 | 3% | 44% | 10% | 3% | 33% | 6% | – | 1% | ||
Gallup[14] | June 4, 1952 | 2% | 43% | 9% | 3% | 36% | 6% | – | 1% | ||
Gallup[15] | June 21, 1952 | – | 44% | 10% | 3% | 35% | 7% | – | 1% | ||
Gallup[16] | July 1, 1952 | – | 46% | 10% | 3% | 35% | 5% | – | 1% | ||
In late 1951, Eisenhower supporters increased their efforts to draft the general by establishing a campaign organization in New Hampshire, the first state to hold a popular election for delegates. Governor Sherman Adams endorsed the effort and became the New Hampshire campaign manager for the Draft Eisenhower campaign. On January 6, at the same press conference revealing Eisenhower was a Republican, Senator Lodge formally submitted the general's name in the New Hampshire primary. The draft movement soon gained the endorsement of twenty-four newspapers, led by The New York Times. A Draft Eisenhower rally at Madison Square Garden on February 8 drew a crowd far larger than the arena's capacity; shortly after, Eisenhower privately affirmed that he would contest the presidency, if nominated by the Republicans.
On March 11, Eisenhower won the New Hampshire primary over Taft by a margin of 12 percent, sweeping all fourteen delegates.
However, from there until the Republican Convention the primaries were divided fairly evenly between the two men, and by the time the convention opened the race for the nomination was still too close to call.
Statewide contest won by candidates[17]
Date | Pledged delegates | Contest | Robert A. Taft | Dwight Eisenhower | Harold Stassen | Earl Warren | Douglas MacArthur | Other/Uncommitted |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
March 11 | 14 | New Hampshire primary | 38.59% | 14 50.25% | 7.08% | - | 3.48% | 0.6% |
March 18 | 28 | Minnesota | 8.22% | 4 37.07% | 24 44.23% | 1.83% | 0.47% | 8.18% |
April 1 | Nebraska | 36.33% | 30.15% | 24.29% | 0.85% | 3.41% | 4.97% | |
30 | Wisconsin | 24 40.63% | - | 21.85% | 6 33.77% | - | 3.75% | |
April 8 | 0 | Illinois | 73.56% | 11.59% | 12.19% | 0.22% | 0.59% | 1.85% |
April 15 | 0 | New Jersey | 35.54% | 60.64% | 3.66% | 0.07% | 0.10% | - |
April 22 | Pennsylvania | 15.23% | 73.62% | 10.25% | 0.27% | 0.51% | 0.12% | |
April 29 | Massachusetts | 29.69% | 68.68% | 0.29% | 0.41% | 0.61% | 0.32% | |
May 6 | 56 | Ohio | 56 78.79% | - | 21.21% | - | - | - |
May 13 | West Virginia | 78.52% | - | 21.48% | - | - | - | |
May 16 | Oregon | 6.74% | 64.55% | 2.47% | 16.48% | 6.96% | 3.80% | |
June 3 | California | 33.61% | - | - | 66.39% | - | - | |
South Dakota | 50.32% | 49.68% | - | - | - | - | ||
Italics indicate a write-in candidacy.
Primaries total popular vote results:
When the 1952 Republican National Convention opened in Chicago, most political experts rated Taft and Eisenhower as neck-and-neck in the delegate vote totals. Eisenhower's managers, led by Governor Dewey and Massachusetts Senator Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., accused Taft of "stealing" delegate votes in Southern states such as Texas and Georgia. They claimed that Taft's leaders in these states had illegally refused to give delegate spots to Eisenhower supporters and put Taft delegates in their place. Lodge and Dewey proposed to evict the pro-Taft delegates in these states and replace them with pro-Eisenhower delegates; they called this proposal "Fair Play". Although Taft and his supporters angrily denied this charge, the convention voted to support Fair Play 658–548, and Taft lost many Southern delegates; this decided the nomination in Eisenhower's favor. However, the mood at the convention was one of the most bitter and emotional in American history; in one speech Senator Everett Dirksen of Illinois, a Taft supporter, pointed at Governor Dewey on the convention floor and accused him of leading the Republicans "down the road to defeat", and mixed boos and cheers rang out from the delegates. In the end Eisenhower took the nomination on the first ballot; to heal the wounds caused by the battle he went to Taft's hotel suite and met with him. The Convention then chose young Senator Richard Nixon of California as Eisenhower's running mate; it was felt that Nixon's credentials as a slashing campaigner and anti-Communist would be valuable. Most historians now believe that Eisenhower's nomination was primarily due to the feeling that he was a "sure winner" against the Democrats; most of the delegates were conservatives who would probably have supported Taft if they felt he could have won the general election. The balloting at the Republican Convention went: (Richard C. Bain and Judith H. Parris, Convention Decisions and Voting Records, pp. 280–286):
Freshman California Senator Richard Nixon was nominated for Vice President, also with notable Dewey's support. Republican politicians thought that his political experience, aggressive style (he was known as strongly anti-communist) and political base on the West would help political newcomer Eisenhower.[18]