Tag: eleanor roosevelt
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Advise and Dissent: The Short, Controversial Life of the DAC

In the 1950, Democratic liberals were frustrated by conservative Congressional leaders and the ever-popular Ike. So they founded the Democratic Advisory Council to make their voices heard. Was it a success or a failure… or both?
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“Seventeen Days to Victory”: Democrats’ Televised Hollywood Spectacular

A couple weeks before their landslide loss, the Stevenson-Kefauver campaign held a star-studded coast-to-coast gala event. Was it a waste of money… or a preview of future campaigns?
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Courage and Cunning vs. Conservative Crackpottery: The Battle Over the Bricker Amendment

In the mid-1950s, conservative isolationists – whipped up by fears of one-world government – tried to amend the Constitution to take away the President’s authority to negotiate treaties. Kefauver stood up to stop it.
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Campaign 1956, Part 1: If At First You Don’t Succeed…

Undaunted by his loss in 1952, Kefauver tried for the Presidency a second time. This time, though, he’d have company in the primaries. Adlai Stevenson was taking it to the streets.