*** Welcome to piglix ***

Republican Party presidential primaries, 1948

Republican Party presidential primaries, 1948
United States
← 1944 March 9 to June 1, 1948 1952 →
  Earl Warren Portrait, half figure, seated, facing front, as Governor.jpg HaroldStassenOfficialOil.jpg Robert a taft.jpg
Candidate Earl Warren Harold Stassen Robert A. Taft
Home state California Minnesota Ohio
Contests won 1 4 1
Popular vote 771,295 627,321 464,741
Percentage 27.0% 22.0% 16.3%

  ThomasDewey.png LeverettSaltonstall.jpg
Candidate Thomas E. Dewey Riley A. Bender Leverett Saltonstall
Home state New York Illinois Massachusetts
Contests won 2 1 1
Popular vote 330,799 324,029 72,191
Percentage 11.6% 11.3% 2.5%

  Herbert Emery Hitchcock.jpg
Candidate Herbert E. Hitchcock
Home state South Dakota
Contests won 1
Popular vote 45,463
Percentage 1.6%

1948RepublicanPartyPresidentialPrimaries.svg
Results map by state.

Previous Republican nominee

Thomas E. Dewey

Republican nominee

Thomas E. Dewey


Thomas E. Dewey

Thomas E. Dewey

The 1948 Republican presidential primaries were the selection process by which voters of the Republican Party chose its nominee for President of the United States in the 1948 U.S. presidential election. The nominee was selected through a series of primary elections and caucuses culminating in the 1948 Republican National Convention held from June 21 to June 25, 1948, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Both major parties courted general Dwight Eisenhower, the most popular general of World War II. Eisenhower's political views were unknown in 1948. He was, later events would prove, a moderate Republican, but in 1948 he flatly refused the nomination of any political party.

With Eisenhower refusing to run, the contest for the Republican nomination was between New York Governor Thomas E. Dewey, former Minnesota Governor Harold Stassen, General Douglas MacArthur, Ohio Senator Robert A. Taft and California Governor Earl Warren. Governor Dewey, who had been the Republican nominee in 1944, was regarded as the frontrunner when the primaries began. Dewey was the acknowledged leader of the GOP's powerful eastern establishment; in 1946 he had been re-elected Governor of New York by the largest margin in state history. Dewey's handicap was that many Republicans disliked him; he often struck observers as cold, stiff and condescending. Senator Taft was the leader of the GOP's conservative wing. He opened his campaign in 1947 by attacking the Democratic Party's domestic policy and foreign policy. In foreign policy, Taft was a non-interventionist who opposed many of the alliances the U.S. government had made with other nations to fight the Cold War with the Soviet Union; he believed that the nation should concentrate on its own problems and avoid "imperial entanglements". On domestic issues, Taft and his fellow conservatives wanted to abolish many of the New Deal social welfare programs that had been created in the 1930s; they regarded these programs as too expensive and harmful to business interests. Taft had two major weaknesses: he was seen as a plodding, dull campaigner, and he was viewed by most party leaders as being too conservative and controversial to win a presidential election. Taft's support was limited to his native Midwestern United States and parts of the Southern United States.


...
Wikipedia

...