The Responsible Electorate: Rationality in Presidential Voting, 1936-1960 |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 18
Page 115
... Nixon was exceptionally narrow . And , for the first time since 1928 , Kennedy's Roman Catholic faith made the religion of one of the presidential candi- dates a major preoccupation of the campaign . As virtually every account of the ...
... Nixon was exceptionally narrow . And , for the first time since 1928 , Kennedy's Roman Catholic faith made the religion of one of the presidential candi- dates a major preoccupation of the campaign . As virtually every account of the ...
Page 121
... Nixon as tightly as possible , hammering him as the spiritual descendant of McKinley , Harding , Hoover , Landon , and Dewey . " 13 Nixon , by contrast , took a different tack . As Stanley Kelley puts it : " Vice President Nixon tried ...
... Nixon as tightly as possible , hammering him as the spiritual descendant of McKinley , Harding , Hoover , Landon , and Dewey . " 13 Nixon , by contrast , took a different tack . As Stanley Kelley puts it : " Vice President Nixon tried ...
Page 132
... Nixon . Yet among voters who cited most other foreign- policy concerns , Nixon and Kennedy were about even ; and the problem of defense and preparedness apparently was a Democratic argument . The smaller number of prospective voters who ...
... Nixon . Yet among voters who cited most other foreign- policy concerns , Nixon and Kennedy were about even ; and the problem of defense and preparedness apparently was a Democratic argument . The smaller number of prospective voters who ...
Contents
AN ECHO | 1 |
2 STANDPATTERS SWITCHERS NEW VOTERS | 9 |
MAINTAINING THE NEW DEAL COALITION 20 | 29 |
Copyright | |
3 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
1936 Democratic 1952 Republican Administration Angus Campbell approve campaign candidate Catholic cent chapter consolidation of AIPO cratic D-R R-R defection Demo Democratic party Democratic voters dential Dewey difference disapproved doubtless elec election of 1952 election to election electorate farm Gallup indicate interviewed issue Key's Korean labor less level of interest major-party majority moved Negroes Nixon nonvoters opinion P. E. Converse partisan party lines party loyalty party switching Patterns of presidential percentages persons policy preferences policy views political system polls popular Post-election report Pre-election preference preceding election President presidential election presidential preference presidential voting preference probably problem proportion rates recall relation to response Republican party Republican voters Response D-D R-D response to question Richard Nixon Roosevelt Roper sample shifters split-ticket vote standpatters Stevenson Survey Research Center switchers Switches in presidential switching voters tion Truman V. O. Key W. E. Miller Warren E Willkie World War III