Campaign Trail Results: Game #1090886

This Game:

  • Year: 1948
  • Player Candidate: Harry Truman
  • Running Mate: Alben Barkley
  • Difficulty Level: Normal
  • Winner Take All Mode?: Yes
  • Game Played:
  • davidhanna98012
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View overall results, or a specific state:
CandidateElectoral VotesPopular VotesPop. Vote %
---- Thomas Dewey40525,235,11851.27
---- Harry Truman12618,575,38937.74
---- Henry Wallace/Other05,404,78010.98
---- Strom Thurmond000.00

Visits:

  • Nevada:3
  • New Mexico:3
  • Kansas:1
  • Mississippi:1
  • Missouri:1
  • Nebraska:1
  • Utah:1
  • West Virginia:1

Answers:

  • A wave of strikes and economic turmoil has led to bipartisan support for a new labor law. The Taft-Hartley Act, limiting the power of labor unions, has been placed on your desk. Will you sign this bill or veto it?
    Sign it. Labor actions in the steel and coal industries nearly paralyzed our economy, and the public is fed up.
  • The Jewish state of Israel is set to declare its independence on May 15, 1948. Will your Administration recognize this new nation?
    We will not recognize Israel. There's no way we can divert resources from Europe to defend that nation, and we would be seriously jeopardizing our relations with oil-producing Arab states.
  • A young, liberal Senate candidate from Minnesota named Hubert Humphrey is pushing for a civil rights plank in the Democratic platform. You can either encourage this movement or nip it in the bud.
    Our chances are bad enough without instigating a Southern walkout from our convention. This kind of thing will have to wait until our position is a little stronger.
  • Do you stand by your decision to implement a loyalty program for employees of the federal government? Do you believe that Communist infiltration is a serious threat right now?
    I'm prepared to go even further on this issue. I will personally oversee a sweeping investigation of the State Department, Department of Defense, and other agencies which are prone to infiltration.
  • The Soviet Union has blocked West Berlin from receiving any supplies from Western Europe. What are your thoughts on this situation?
    We need to do whatever it takes to ensure that Berlin is adequately supplied. We cannot further embolden Soviet aggression by retreating from the agreed-upon boundaries in our 1945 settlement.
  • Is there anything you can say during your acceptance speech at the national convention to shake this race up?
    We need to go after Thomas Dewey hard. I haven't heard him take a serious stand on any major issue of our time, and this country needs a true leader.
  • You are making a whistle-stop tour of the country to promote your candidacy. What region will you visit over the next two weeks?
    We're going to hit the West Coast, and especially California.
  • You are calling for a pretty far-reaching platform as you campaign, but the current Congress has refused to consider many of your proposals. How will things be different in your next term if you are elected?
    When I get elected, we're going to get a Democratic Congress with me. That's how it's done.
  • You are making a whistle-stop tour of the country to promote your candidacy. What region will you visit over the next two weeks?
    I'm going through the Plains and Mountain states. I could personally talk to a third of the voters in that region, as sparsely populated as it is.
  • You are making a whistle-stop tour of the country to promote your candidacy. What region will you visit over the next two weeks?
    I'm going through the Plains and Mountain states. I could personally talk to a third of the voters in that region, as sparsely populated as it is.
  • You are making a whistle-stop tour of the country to promote your candidacy. What region will you visit over the next two weeks?
    I'm going through the Plains and Mountain states. I could personally talk to a third of the voters in that region, as sparsely populated as it is.
  • Before you head to Missouri to spend the election day, is there one last place you want to hit on the campaign trail?
    Let's go to Ohio and Michigan.
  • What are your views on the expansion of Social Security?
    I've never been comfortable with the Social Security program, and I would like to see it rolled back.
  • Would you support an act that would allocate federal funds for the construction of low-income housing?
    I'm not comfortable with committing the federal government to the area of home construction, especially with all of the other responsibilities it has taken on over the past two decades.
  • What are your views on a federal health insurance program?
    We should not have the federal government involving itself in the health care business. Private enterprise has built an outstanding health care system and will continue to do so in the future.
  • Do you support the federal funding of primary education, and if so, in what form?
    I'm opposed to the provision of federal funds for primary education. It will inevitably lead to other forms of interference in what should be a state and local matter.
  • In general, what is your view on the providing of foreign aid to American allies?
    I support this kind of thing in limited cases where there is a clear threat. But I'm worried about some of the ill-defined, open ended commitments we are getting ourselves into with other countries, and with the United Nations.
  • What do you think about the proposed Constitutional Amendment to limit the President to two terms in office?
    There should not be a limit on how many terms a President can serve. This is why we have an election every four years -- to gauge the will of the American people.
  • What are your views, in general, on the Marshall Plan?
    The Marshall Plan is a waste of resources, and will slow the development of Europe by forcing nations to rely on foreign subsidies, rather than rebuilding their own economies.
  • Is the House Un-American Activities Committee going too far in its attempts to root out Communist influence, or should it be doing more?
    The HUAC is a necessary defender of American values, and I don't see anything to criticize in its current conduct.
  • How will you reduce the inflation rate, currently around 10% annually, if you are elected President?
    We have already passed the Taft-Hartley Act and a modernized system of price supports for food, and their effect can clearly be seen in the drop in inflation since 1947. I'm confident this trend will continue.
  • What will you do to help resolve the severe housing shortage in this country?
    It has taken a couple of years after the end of the war, but I can already see that many new houses are being built by private developers to resolve this shortage, and I can only predict that this trend will continue without any special action by the government.
  • What do you think about proposals for the federal government to build an expansive interstate highway system?
    I'm not so sure about this. Such a system will surely displace many existing towns and neighborhoods, and provide an entirely new area for federal interference in local matters.
  • What are your thoughts on the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1948? Do you support federal farm programs in general?
    Maybe as a Great Depression measure, these price supports for farm products were necessary. But now, I cannot see a reason why farmers shouldn't have to make an honest living like everyone else.
  • Given the Soviet threat, do you support the Selective Service Act which has been passed, even if it may lead to a peacetime draft?
    In the world we live in now, we need to remain vigilant, lest we see the world overwhelmed by Communist expansion. I think this measure is, unfortunately, a necessary one.