Campaign Trail Results: Game #742025

This Game:

  • Year: 1948
  • Player Candidate: Thomas Dewey
  • Running Mate: Earl Warren
  • Difficulty Level: Easy
  • Winner Take All Mode?: Yes
  • Game Played:
  • wyrickbrad82
Previous Game Next Game
View overall results, or a specific state:
CandidateElectoral VotesPopular VotesPop. Vote %
---- Thomas Dewey29622,828,74147.12
---- Harry Truman19723,092,31447.67
---- Strom Thurmond381,245,2482.57
---- Henry Wallace/Other01,278,8312.64

Visits:

  • Virginia:2
  • Wisconsin:2
  • Colorado:1
  • Connecticut:1
  • Iowa:1
  • Kentucky:1
  • Minnesota:1
  • Missouri:1
  • Ohio:1
  • West Virginia:1

Answers:

  • Is the House Un-American Activities Committee going too far in its attempts to root out Communist influence, or should it be doing more?
    I support the HUAC, although I do wish it could be a little more aggressive in its rooting out of Communist influence.
  • A wave of strikes and economic turmoil has led to bipartisan support for a new labor law. Do you support Truman's decision to veto the Taft-Hartley Act?
    I support Truman's veto. The National Labor Relations Act was put in place to protect the rights of labor, and it should be respected.
  • The Jewish state of Israel is set to declare its independence on May 15, 1948. Do you support Truman's decision to recognize this new nation?
    I've supported the Israeli state from the beginning. I'm glad that Truman came around, but he absolutely sent the wrong message by vacillating on this issue until the very last moment.
  • To what extent will you emphasize your support for civil rights legislation in New York as you hit the campaign trail?
    My record speaks for itself. For the time being, we just need to keep the party energized and avoid any statements which might be deemed as controversial.
  • To what extent are you prepared to make anti-Communism an issue in this campaign, or to attack Harry Truman on the issue?
    If you'll remember my debate with Harold Stassen, I got this nomination in the first place by remaining above such type of politics.
  • Do you have any comments to make on the Soviet blockade of Berlin, and the airlift in progress to resupply that city?
    I support our current airlift and hope that it leads to an agreeable conclusion.
  • What will be the main focus of your acceptance speech at the Republican Convention?
    Harry Truman is an ineffectual, vacillating, highly unpopular President. We need to hammer on this theme and remind the American people why they need a new leader in the White House.
  • 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 up the Eastern Seaboard, from Maryland all the way to Connecticut.
  • Your party has passed a fairly ambitious and liberal platform which you have supported. However, if the Republican Congress won't pass these laws now, how do you expect to push them forward as President?
    I believe that a Republican Congress, working with a Republican President, will be able to come to accord on the key issues of our time.
  • 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 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?
    We're going to hit the Midwest, from Ohio to Wisconsin and Iowa.
  • Before you head to New York to spend the election day, is there one last place you want to hit on the campaign trail?
    We'll arrive in New York via Ohio and Pennsylvania.
  • 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 absolutely believe that the federal government should be providing funds, to the states of course, for them to apply to education spending on our country's youth.
  • In general, what is your view on the providing of foreign aid to American allies?
    We are the only thing standing between the world and global domination by the Soviets. I'm prepared to take any measure to prevent the advance of Communism.
  • 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.
  • How will you reduce the inflation rate, currently around 10% annually, if you are elected President?
    Corporations have been raising prices much faster than wages have increased, and they are pocketing exorbitant profits as a result. I will fight for the rights of labor, and for better regulation during my next term.
  • What will you do to help resolve the severe housing shortage in this country?
    We are clearly overcrowding our urban areas at the moment. At the very least, we can expand the federal highway system to make more areas accessible to families and developers.
  • What are your views on the current federal budget surplus? Would you attempt to maintain this surplus as President?
    We've run up quite a national debt over the past few years, and rightly so, but now that World War II is over, we should focus on paying down this debt.
  • Do you advocate the international control of nuclear weapons under the United Nations?
    Only if we had clear assurances that other nations would not develop a nuclear bomb, and a means of enforcing those assurances.
  • What do you have to say about your announced running mate, Earl Warren?
    Earl Warren is a great man who represents my views for the future of this country. Now let's get going with this campaign.