No video

The American Presidential Election of 1948

  Рет қаралды 423,009

Mr. Beat

Mr. Beat

8 жыл бұрын

The Ultimate American Presidential Election Book: Every Presidential Election in American History (1788-2020) is now available! amzn.to/3aYiqwI
Mr. Beat's band: electricneedler...
Mr. Beat on Twitter: / beatmastermatt
Donate to Mr.Beat for prizes: / iammrbeat
The 41st episode in a very long series about the American presidential elections from 1788 to the present. In 1948, the Democratic Party splinters into three factions, and everyone predicts Truman stands no chance. Finally, Dewey defeats Truman.
Feeling extra dorky? Then visit here:
www.countingthe...
The 41st Presidential election in American history took place on November 2, 1948. After Franklin Roosevelt died, Harry Truman took over, and soon after Nazi Germany surrendered to the Allied forces. Now, all eyes were on the Pacific theater of the war.
Truman took action and decided to drop the first and only atomic bombs ever dropped on another country. He did it to end the war quickly and try to save the lives of millions of both Americans and Japanese who would have kept on fighting otherwise. While today people still debate whether or not the action was justified, it’s hard to deny how bold the move was by Truman. And it worked. Japan finally surrendered shortly after Americans dropped two atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The war was over, and this time Truman made it a point to not make the same mistakes that were made after World War One.
Truman had a very low approval rating- it seemed not nearly as many Americans liked him like they did FDR. Not only that, several people in his own political party were turning against him. They tried to get Dwight Eisenhower, the World War II hero and former Chief of Staff of the United States Army, to be the nominee instead of Truman. But they failed, as Eisenhower refused to run. Eventually the Democrats went ahead and went with Truman as their nominee, with Alben Barkley, the Senate Minority Leader, as his running mate.
Though Truman tried to moderate his civil rights positions, some Democrats were like “nuh-uh” and walked out of the Democratic Convention. They started a new political party, called the States’ Rights Democratic Party. Members of this party became known as Dixiecrats. The Dixiecrats wanted to keep the policy of racial segregation in the South allow states to keep their infamous Jim Crow laws. They nominated Strom Thurmond, the governor of South Carolina and the guy who led the walkout of the Democratic convention, for President, and Fielding Wright, the Governor of Mississippi, as his running mate. Fielding Wright? More like Fielding Wrong. Haha Sorry, bad joke.
Anyway, it wasn’t just the Dixiecrats who left the Democratic Party. Some Democrats argued that Truman’s civil rights reforms didn’t do enough for blacks. They wanted more. Former Vice President Henry Wallace, who, remember, would have been President if it weren’t for Truman taking his place in the 1944 election, disagreed with Truman on many issues. In fact, Truman had fired Wallace from his position as the Secretary of Commerce after Wallace talked trash about Truman’s foreign policy. Wallace opposed the Truman Doctrine and wanted to get rid of the House Un-American Activities Committee, which he thought violated civil liberties. Wallace also called for more regulation against giant corporations and an expanded welfare state. Naturally, opponents called him a secret Communist.
Wallace and his supporters also left the Democratic Party to form a third Progressive Party, called the, um, Progressive Party. Can’t we get more creative with names? Again, this was not the same Progressive Party as Teddy Roosevelt or Robert La Follette...it was a new one. This Progressive Party officially nominated Wallace as their nominee, with Glen Taylor, a senator from Idaho, as his running mate. Taylor had earned a reputation as being that one weird politician in DC. A guy known as the “singing cowboy” because he would sing songs and ride his horse up the steps of the Capitol, not at the same time, mind you.
So Wallace and Taylor were definitely unique. When they campaigned, they made a point of speaking to racially integrated audiences, even in the South, and because of that, Southerners sometimes threw food like eggs and tomatoes at them.
Oh crap, I spent so much time talking about Democrats and former Democrats that I almost forgot about the Republicans. Well, they tried for Dwight Eisenhower, too, but after Eisenhower declined, many familiar names stood out for the nomination. Thomas Dewey, Robert Taft, Arthur Vandenburg, and Harold Stassen, who were all in the running in 1944, and some who didn’t run in 1944, notably Earl Warren, the governor of California. The Republicans decided to play it safe and go once again with Thomas Dewey, he was still governor of New York. They nominated Warren as his running mate.

Пікірлер: 962
@iammrbeat
@iammrbeat 4 жыл бұрын
_The Ultimate American Presidential Election Book: Every Presidential Election in American History (1788-2020)_ is now available! amzn.to/3aYiqwI
@gibberish1014
@gibberish1014 3 жыл бұрын
Is it safe to assume you're writing your video for 2020?
@brianjonker510
@brianjonker510 3 жыл бұрын
As a follow up it would be nice to do a series on the change in Congress during each election cycle. Perhaps only from 1900 to present
@patriotsman6511
@patriotsman6511 10 ай бұрын
Remember pearl harbor!
@redjirachi1
@redjirachi1 5 жыл бұрын
Truman's face holding up the "Dewey Defeats Truman" newspaper is the original trollface
@williampremo3096
@williampremo3096 4 жыл бұрын
John Porteous not the Trib's finest hour.
@haroldlawson8771
@haroldlawson8771 4 жыл бұрын
John Porteous trump need to talk a photo with the Newsweek Hillary thing
@TapOnX
@TapOnX 3 жыл бұрын
I know it's highly unlikely, but imagine the meltdown if Trump (or Pence) somehow manages to invalidate enough mail-in ballots to get the second term.
@joshuapittman4663
@joshuapittman4663 3 жыл бұрын
@@TapOnX then trump should hold up a computer monitor that says that Biden wins... In all seriousness, that would be a bad look for the US and as someone who voted trump, I think it’d be best if he just conceded.
@jerrypayne4870
@jerrypayne4870 3 жыл бұрын
@@joshuapittman4663 all the Trumpsters will call you RINO
@wallymcallister5831
@wallymcallister5831 4 жыл бұрын
I was seven and my parents voted for Dewey. I didn’t want him because all of my classmates were saying if he became President we would have to go to school on Saturdays.
@psilvakimo
@psilvakimo 4 жыл бұрын
I heard that Dewey lost because women didn't like his mustache.
@adriankwok1406
@adriankwok1406 4 жыл бұрын
Going to school on Saturdays? And I thought Stalin was bad.
@swingrfd
@swingrfd 4 жыл бұрын
@@psilvakimo "“Good gracious! He looks like the little man on the wedding cake."---overheard by Alice Roosevelt Longworth at the Republican convention. She repeated it everywhere during the campaign and often gets credit for saying it first.
@birdstudios978
@birdstudios978 3 жыл бұрын
Wally McAllister well then 1948 was the smallest upset in american history then
@JamesK7911
@JamesK7911 3 жыл бұрын
Lol I love the way kids have a political saying even if they don’t realize it or their reasoning isn’t the strongest 😂 I remember when I was 10 years old and in 5th grade during the 2012 election, a lot of us kids didn’t want Mitt Romany to be president because we didn’t feel like he was as energetic as Barack Obama 😂 which had nothing to do with politics whatsoever
@michaelmilam7285
@michaelmilam7285 3 жыл бұрын
It always amazes me that Strom Thourmond stayed around in the Senate until he was 100 years old in 2003
@manbehindacameras1617
@manbehindacameras1617 3 жыл бұрын
Term limits!!!!!
@filledwithvariousknowledge2747
@filledwithvariousknowledge2747 Жыл бұрын
And people complain about how old Biden is in office. That’s some serious double standards
@mountaineernews2
@mountaineernews2 Жыл бұрын
Very interesting i how it happens again
@mooganify
@mooganify Жыл бұрын
Thank you for making me go down this rabbit hole
@doomer704
@doomer704 Жыл бұрын
​@@filledwithvariousknowledge2747two wrong doesn't make one right. Biden is still visibly senile.
@Josh-nt4qt
@Josh-nt4qt 3 жыл бұрын
You knew Eisenhower was gonna get elected when both parties tried to get him to run
@cb41503
@cb41503 Жыл бұрын
I recently watched an interview between the channel vloging through history and Susan Eisenhower, she said the the biggest challenge for her granddad wasn't winning the election, it was getting the republican nomination
@anthonychaboude1548
@anthonychaboude1548 3 жыл бұрын
If Dewey was more aggressive in his style, he could’ve actually won. He was an effective governor and was a good man in all, but was more worried on winning then discussing the issues
@inigobantok1579
@inigobantok1579 2 жыл бұрын
I mean aren't we all like that when something is at stake prioritize the front not the back
@rich355
@rich355 2 жыл бұрын
I think Dewey took the wrong lesson away from the 1944 election. He probably assumed that going too aggressive against FDR was what hurt him, so he figured taking a lowkey campaign would translate to higher poll numbers as everyone would probably remain angry at Truman. If he took the strategy of 1944 and applied it to 1948, I'm not sure if he would have won, but he probably would have gotten a higher percentage of the popular vote.
@idiocrat3744
@idiocrat3744 Жыл бұрын
@@rich355 If he got a slight increase, he would've won by the electoral vote, as many states were won by Truman with less than one percent.
@xenophonanthony2791
@xenophonanthony2791 Жыл бұрын
@@rich355 To be fair, he wanted to change the campaign methods by criticizing Truman, but his advisors and his wife opposed to that idea.
@alex_flamer
@alex_flamer 2 жыл бұрын
6:38 if the internet had been around back then, this picture of Truman with the newspaper would have been one of the biggest memes of the year!
@JohnParks-zc1pn
@JohnParks-zc1pn 8 ай бұрын
It was circulated widely just the same.
@alessiodelcastillo1613
@alessiodelcastillo1613 3 жыл бұрын
Henry Wallace was the OG Bernie Sanders
@Levitationable
@Levitationable 2 жыл бұрын
lol.
@stephenquinn3447
@stephenquinn3447 2 жыл бұрын
*Eugene V Debs has entered the chat*
@akorn9943
@akorn9943 2 жыл бұрын
@@stephenquinn3447 Bernie is a huuuge Debs fan too
@windynate1826
@windynate1826 2 жыл бұрын
@@stephenquinn3447 James Weaver has entered the chat
@earthball2024
@earthball2024 Жыл бұрын
@@akorn9943 *Theodore Roosevelt Has Entered The Chat*
@wrecklessfilmsofficial
@wrecklessfilmsofficial 5 жыл бұрын
Reading about Truman, he is one of the best and most honest presidents. He didn't accept special pensions from the government after he left office and he actually became broke. He was the poorest president. He was hated at the time but historians agree he was actually really forward thinking for the time and strated the anti segregation days of the democrats.
@camacaron06
@camacaron06 4 жыл бұрын
Smittinator If he didn’t nuke japan, Japan would’ve done chemical attacks on California, which was planned by Japan
@penmuni3833
@penmuni3833 4 жыл бұрын
He also ordered to kill nearly quarter of a million civilians by Atomic bomb. No amount of praise will be enough for the redemption of his soul.
@danstark5071
@danstark5071 4 жыл бұрын
Pen Muni it was either that or invade Japan, which would have a death toll of around 1 million Americans
@camacaron06
@camacaron06 4 жыл бұрын
Dan Stark Couldn’t have said it better myself.
@hocolate271
@hocolate271 4 жыл бұрын
@@danstark5071 That doesn't make it right. There is a difference between the deaths of civilians and the deaths of soldiers (although to be fair, is there really when the soldiers were forcibly conscripted?). The innocent Japanese civilians who were liquidated by the bombs weren't complicit in the actions of their government, and they neither agreed nor deserved to have their lives sacrificed for potential peace, or even to save a number of lives down the road who they had nothing to do with. The trolley problem is actually a difficult problem, although some other people will still try their hardest to convince otherwise. But my view is that sheer numbers don't overrule right and wrong. Consent, rights and responsibilities are much more significant in making moral decisions, even if ignoring them yields a more "good" outcome overall. I think more people should recognise a distinction between "good or bad" and "right or wrong".
@mdnave5807
@mdnave5807 6 жыл бұрын
Lol the greatest upset in American history but then you realize it was made before November 8th 2016
@morgankingsley4992
@morgankingsley4992 6 жыл бұрын
I would actually say this was bigger. I think about a fifth of the polls expected a Trump win or a close race at the very least. So a Trump victory wasn't THAT unexpected if you were paying attention. However, nobody expected a Truman win for even a second. That beats 2016
@12KevinPower
@12KevinPower 4 жыл бұрын
@Hardwork1994 ! Also2016 Election was probably the first election in awhile where Urbanities preferred one candidate and Rural Folks preferred another. So.... Clinton did receive more popular votes...it was concentrated in cities/urban places and not in swing states.
@JohnGoetzGaming
@JohnGoetzGaming 4 жыл бұрын
@@morgankingsley4992 I dunno about that. NYT had it 95% Clinton at the start of the night and even if Trump won EVERY swing state he was still going to lose. Amazingly PA, MI, AND WI were marked as "lean democratic" on sites like RCP. plus there was so much more data in 2016 and I can't remember the last time polls were so wrong. So it seemed far more unlikely for pundits to get it wrong in 2016 than in 1948
@MFPhoto1
@MFPhoto1 4 жыл бұрын
@@JohnGoetzGaming The pundits got the 2016 election wrong because they did not understand basic statistical analysis. When the polls show Candidate A with 48% of the vote and Candidate B with 46%, with the remainder undecided, and the standard error (or margin of error) is 4%, what that means is that there is a 95% likelihood of Candidate A's total being between 44% and 52%, and Candidate B between 42% and 50%. Note the overlap? That is pretty much what happened between Clinton and Trump in Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Wisconsin. Yet the pundits claimed Clinton had the lead. It was no lead. It was a tie. And the final vote was well within the standard error, though Trump had a slight edge of less than 1% in each state.
@JohnGoetzGaming
@JohnGoetzGaming 4 жыл бұрын
@@MFPhoto1 She led by a lot more than 2% in those states. They weren't even marked as swing States. They were marked as leaning democratic. And there was talk of Texas, SC, Georgia, NC, FL, AZ and several others going for her. People thought this would be the death of the Republicans
@MeesterTweester
@MeesterTweester 3 жыл бұрын
- The Chicago Tribune was going to give Truman a plaque of their faulty headline for the 25th anniversary of the election, but Truman died a year before that. - Dewey was the last major candidate to have facial hair. - Truman ended up being the poorest president after he left office, struggling for money, enough so that and act was passed to pay former presidents.
@asheep7797
@asheep7797 2 жыл бұрын
hey bfdi guy
@MeesterTweester
@MeesterTweester 2 жыл бұрын
@@asheep7797 Hi
@Diamond-OSCandMarblestuff
@Diamond-OSCandMarblestuff 8 ай бұрын
Well that's intresting
@MM22966
@MM22966 27 күн бұрын
Poorer than Grant?
@wazkangz955
@wazkangz955 3 жыл бұрын
Even though Wallace has some weird social quirks, he’s often overlooked by many lifelong Democrats, was basically Bernie before Bernie was Bernie. Man wanted to socialize healthcare and provide insurance to all Americans in the 1940’s, bold.
@metroidnerd9001
@metroidnerd9001 2 жыл бұрын
The same thing could be said about Glen Taylor. He was very similar to Wallace policy-wise, and he was almost expelled from the Idaho Democratic Party for running with Wallace and the Progressive Party.
@Benjifan2000
@Benjifan2000 9 ай бұрын
I'm pretty sure Wallace is one of Bernie's heroes as well as Eugene Debs.
@tugboat2030
@tugboat2030 Жыл бұрын
A very underrated election in American History. The Cold War, Civil Rights, communism, and the post-war economy all rolled into one election. Plus the surprise winner as the kicker.
@Westportlad
@Westportlad 7 жыл бұрын
The more I research about Henry Wallace the more I noticed that my views correspond with Wallace. He's an interesting man, but I'll be the first to say that he was a bit of a weirdo.
@iammrbeat
@iammrbeat 7 жыл бұрын
He was definitely a weirdo, and I definitely also love many of the views he had.
@brianevans6328
@brianevans6328 6 жыл бұрын
Henry Wallace himself later retracted many of his foreign policy views. He said he had been too trusting of Stalin and the Soviets.
@paisleepunk
@paisleepunk 5 жыл бұрын
Either Dewey or Wallace for me
@19Szabolcs91
@19Szabolcs91 3 жыл бұрын
Meh, the Truman doctrine was the correct choice. In fact I am convinced that if Truman got to be a president earlier, and the US just let the Soviet Union fall during the war instead of propping them up and giving them Eastern Europe to destroy, plunder and economically ruin, we wouldn't have had the Cold war. FDR's friendliness with Stalin is the main reason I don't consider him anywhere near the best presidents in US history despite the New Deal being pretty good.
@quincybear5807
@quincybear5807 3 жыл бұрын
Truman was the beginning of the end of are Country
@domundtgregor6683
@domundtgregor6683 4 жыл бұрын
6:36 kinda weird to see that at the time New York was super red republican, while Texas was democratic blue
@magiccitymelkite6161
@magiccitymelkite6161 3 жыл бұрын
New York didn't always go Republican though, the native son Dewey was very popular there though as he was the sitting Governor. The Democratic Party had a stranglehold on the South because Republicans were blamed for the severe economic depression in the South during the post-Civil War Reconstruction when Republicans were in power. Black voters were also blamed for it because they voted the Republicans into power. Hence keeping black people and other Republicans from voting or holding office in the South became very popular because people didn't want to return to the hardships of Reconstruction. An older guy I know told me his grandmother's stories of living through both Southern Reconstruction here in Alabama and as well as the Great Depression and she said the hard times of Reconstruction were worse. Even more than being bitter against the Party of Lincoln over the Civil War fear kept the average white Southerner, most of whom had no historical connection to slavery, voting Democrat was the fear of a return to the hard times of Reconstruction if blacks or other Republicans ever held power in the South again, and the Democrats used this fear to their advantage. The further you get into the 20th Century the more people with living memory of Reconstruction start dying off and the South becomes slowly less racist and slowly more willing to vote Republican.
@zainmudassir2964
@zainmudassir2964 3 жыл бұрын
Republican party was relatively progressive until 1960s
@magiccitymelkite6161
@magiccitymelkite6161 3 жыл бұрын
@@zainmudassir2964 The keyword being relative. They were still more conservative than today's GOP in many ways, it's just that since the 1960s the Democratic Party has changed more rapidly than the Republicans. Also, we are hyper-polarized today. Back then there were liberal and conservative wings in both parties with a lot of people in the center and elected officials in both parties often reflected the culture of their region.
@buncha3arrows195
@buncha3arrows195 3 жыл бұрын
New York did also used to be a swing state back then
@Rainb0wzNstuff
@Rainb0wzNstuff 3 жыл бұрын
@@buncha3arrows195 How long was it a swing state?
@williampremo3096
@williampremo3096 4 жыл бұрын
This wasn't really an upset. The poll saying Dewey was ahead was skewed heavily to the Republican burbs. Truman had support from working class because he came from there.
@DavidHutchinson0713
@DavidHutchinson0713 3 жыл бұрын
Well, the polls were still pretty young back then. Also, experts actually _warned_ the pollsters that their tactic of favoring certain places and demographics will screw them over in this election, but the latter ignored it. The pollsters also ended up becoming overconfident, calling the election for Dewey long before Election Day. Many of the supporters that pushed Truman to victory really made their choice to support him around the last fortnight before Election Day, in no small part thanks to the president's aggressive late whistle-stop train campaign tour.
@warron24
@warron24 3 жыл бұрын
It wasn't just a few polls that had people thinking Truman was toast. It was common sense. The Democrat party was fractured and people figured Dewey was a lock to win New York because he was a very popular governor. (New York was the most important state to win at the time.)
@bonghunezhou5051
@bonghunezhou5051 3 жыл бұрын
@@warron24 Dewey ended up winning NY because, unlike 1944 and 1940, the state's then-influential Liberal Party declined to give Truman its ballot line. As well, carrying the State with the most EC votes has mattered less, it seems (1948, 1968, 1976, 2000, 2004, 2016; the winner failed to carry the biggest prize in the aforementioned elections).
@cameronlingo2969
@cameronlingo2969 2 жыл бұрын
From my understanding, the issue was they conducted the poll by telephone. In 1948, telephones were common, but far from universal, and by and large wealthier Americans had them and poorer Americans didn't, and the poorer Americans tended to support Truman vs. wealthier Americans supporting Dewey.
@jamellfoster6029
@jamellfoster6029 2 жыл бұрын
Thankfully Truman could empathize with regular working class & middle class people (like myself & my family)...
@MFPhoto1
@MFPhoto1 4 жыл бұрын
I remember my grandmother telling me that a lot of people voted against Dewey because of his mustache. True!
@westerosi27
@westerosi27 4 жыл бұрын
I believe her
@faithlesshound5621
@faithlesshound5621 4 жыл бұрын
Nixon supposedly lost a lot of support due to appearing on TV with "five o'clock shadow," while JFK did not. "Politics is show business for ugly people." Well, not quite. It may be as much a beauty as talent contest. A psychologist at the University of Birmingham claims to be able to predict who will most elections just by showing the candidates' pictures to people who have not heard of them: even children in another country.
@MFPhoto1
@MFPhoto1 4 жыл бұрын
@@faithlesshound5621 Nixon also did not want to wear makeup. He thought it was unmanly.
@faithlesshound5621
@faithlesshound5621 4 жыл бұрын
@@MFPhoto1 That makes sense if you remember the "pink scare." Nixon had worked with Sen. McCarthy, who "outed" homosexuals as well as communists. Eisenhower had been persuaded to ban the latter from federal employment. So Nixon would have been hypersensitive to being called effeminate.
@MFPhoto1
@MFPhoto1 4 жыл бұрын
@@jetstream6389 He does look like Brian Donlevy. www.imdb.com/name/nm0002046/?ref_=tt_rv_t4
@vn43twelve
@vn43twelve 7 жыл бұрын
It's genuinely so wonderful that you make these videos and put in so much work!
@iammrbeat
@iammrbeat 7 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much. I love making them :)
@morgankingsley4992
@morgankingsley4992 6 жыл бұрын
Strom Thurmond has the lowest popular vote percent out of any candidate who won at least one state. I think he is the only one to do so while not hitting at least 5 percent
@nick56677
@nick56677 4 жыл бұрын
He is probably one of the longest running political ppl in history. He was SC's governor and later Senator until he died in 2003 at 100 years old
@haroldlawson8771
@haroldlawson8771 4 жыл бұрын
Heath N Alf Landon was 100 too
@swingrfd
@swingrfd 4 жыл бұрын
The states that he carried were not hotbeds of universal suffrage.
@faithlesshound5621
@faithlesshound5621 4 жыл бұрын
Yet he managed to get 39 Electoral College votes, while Wallace had none for a similar number of popular votes. That shows the advantage of localised over national support. Also, in those pre-civil rights days, he won in black-majority states where very few blacks were allowed to vote. Much like South Africa at that time. The lasting legacy of Thurmond's campaign was the stars and cross version of the Confederate Flag, which his Dixiecrat party disinterred for his campaign.
@chrisdugas1226
@chrisdugas1226 4 жыл бұрын
@@haroldlawson8771 Yeah, but Thurmond was still in office as a senator at the age of 100, Landon wasn't.
@gheorghitaalsunculitei9146
@gheorghitaalsunculitei9146 4 жыл бұрын
In 1948 election Texas was the most solid Democratic state in entire USA
@bonghunezhou5051
@bonghunezhou5051 3 жыл бұрын
OK was even more so, but TX was right up there then.
@evanshiong3557
@evanshiong3557 2 жыл бұрын
At that time Texas was the state that the Democrats had to win in order to win the presidency. Between 1952 and 1992, the only Democrat to win Texas but lose the election was Hubert Humphrey. The 3 most Republican leaning states were Oregon Vermont and California.
@keltoumnoury
@keltoumnoury 3 жыл бұрын
*candidates used to be so badass, they don't like someone they just leave the party and make their own!! Such fighters, i wish it was still like that*
@Rex-lo7xk
@Rex-lo7xk 3 жыл бұрын
the useless channel hit the folks
@Benjifan2000
@Benjifan2000 9 ай бұрын
I mean, there's Bernie, who was never a part of a party until he was basically forced to join the Democrats in 2016.
@rockstarsharma53
@rockstarsharma53 7 жыл бұрын
(Trump holds up newspaper): Clinton defeats Trump
@ka4500
@ka4500 5 жыл бұрын
@@ah_libra I think that's what she I refearing to
@evanmusial6155
@evanmusial6155 5 жыл бұрын
It’s ironic that you said that this was the greatest upset in election history and you released two months before they new greatest upset according to most people. 😂👍🏻
@thequestioner5916
@thequestioner5916 5 жыл бұрын
If you actually google it clinton defeats trump newspaper images alot of clinton defeats trump will come up
@andrewsutherland133
@andrewsutherland133 4 жыл бұрын
I'm not a trump supporter, but I watch some of the SNL skits at the time and laugh at how cocky they got. My faviorite line is, "Now the Canidates. Mr. Trump and--can we say it?" "Probably" "PRESIDENT CLINTON"
@oltedders
@oltedders 4 жыл бұрын
@@evanmusial6155 Another unelected Republican president. Why is that?
@fanyfan7466
@fanyfan7466 4 жыл бұрын
Man I wish Wallace was president at one point. His platform was incredible
@mikelynch7271
@mikelynch7271 4 жыл бұрын
America would be a far Greater country
@philipcone357
@philipcone357 4 жыл бұрын
Henry Wallace knew what FDR wanted to do....
@nickyg4788
@nickyg4788 3 жыл бұрын
It is entirely possible that there wouldn't have even been a cold war if he had won. And that doesn't even include the grand platform of human rights he would've pushed.
@alisonmcrae1281
@alisonmcrae1281 3 жыл бұрын
@@philipcone357 that's why they stopped him. They are still doing it today.
@burningphoenix6679
@burningphoenix6679 3 жыл бұрын
I do too, but at the time Truman was the best choice.
@evanarroyo1384
@evanarroyo1384 2 жыл бұрын
I adore Truman. I live in Puerto Rico, and my friend introduced me to a book called “Harry Truman and Puerto Rico: the failed decolonisation project” and you really see his fiery passion for self determination especially after freeing the Philippines, he wanted to do the same here, but the governor wanted a neutral spot where they could still be Puerto Ricans but also enjoy the best from USA as a protectorate
@JulianEaton
@JulianEaton 4 жыл бұрын
Great coverage of Henry Wallace's campaign. He's too often a forgotten figure.
@TykusBalrog
@TykusBalrog 3 жыл бұрын
I wonder if the reason why Truman sought for desegregation was because the US had the spotlight aimed at them after WW2. Suddenly they were the superpower that all of the western world looked to because of the cold war. And as they did, they critisized the US for having segregation. It makes sense that Truman would want to change that, even if he himself was a racist. Because he obviously needed to convince the world that the US were the good guys and the Soviets were the bad guys. But as long as the US had Japanese internment camps and segregation, that was difficult. They seemed like just another bad guy. So that had to change.
@bonghunezhou5051
@bonghunezhou5051 3 жыл бұрын
There seems to be a basis for that (BTW, the internment camps in the American interior were US INTERNMENT CAMPS - just as the concentration camps in the central and eastern Europe were Nazi concentration camps!).
@Benjifan2000
@Benjifan2000 9 ай бұрын
I think I remember hearing that FDR wanted to start desegregation but never had the chance.
@libertyann439
@libertyann439 4 жыл бұрын
All the countries Truman helped rebuild turned out to have better health care than we did. We could sure use Henry Wallace today!
@MegaVergan
@MegaVergan 7 жыл бұрын
Would this now be the second biggest election upset in American history?
@iammrbeat
@iammrbeat 7 жыл бұрын
Yes
@rockstarsharma53
@rockstarsharma53 6 жыл бұрын
MegaVergan Mr. Beat: And here are the results. Clinton won! Children: Yay!!! Mr. Beat: Just kidding LOL HOW AWESOME THAT WOULD HAVE SOUNDED
@dapenguin4637
@dapenguin4637 6 жыл бұрын
No
@Minecraftrok999
@Minecraftrok999 5 жыл бұрын
No, Trump was given a 27% chance of winning the presidency on election day. That's an upset, but not that big.
@MoonlightXYZ
@MoonlightXYZ 5 жыл бұрын
I was thinking either way with 2016.
@greenlamp9219
@greenlamp9219 4 жыл бұрын
"the biggest upset in american election history" *2016* 'hold my huffpost polster prediction chart'
@Debre.
@Debre. 3 жыл бұрын
Huffpost pundits not understanding basic statistical analysis doesn't mean it was a huge upset. Anyone looking at the data honestly knew it was going to be a close election.
@MeesterTweester
@MeesterTweester 3 жыл бұрын
cuz some of the polls were garbage lol. I would say Truman had worse chances
@aufstrebendeseegurke8143
@aufstrebendeseegurke8143 2 жыл бұрын
So impressive that a presidential candidate from 1948 (!) served as US Senator in the 21st century.
@williamthomas5215
@williamthomas5215 28 күн бұрын
Just so you’re aware. Strom Thurmond was still in the senate in 2003. He died in office at 100
@darreljones8645
@darreljones8645 5 жыл бұрын
I'm also a music aficionado, and it sounds like you're using songs popular in the year of the election as background music on all these election videos.
@giantsfan1420
@giantsfan1420 3 жыл бұрын
Did you know that Thurmond lived to the age of 100
@McIntosh1581
@McIntosh1581 7 жыл бұрын
It looks like we just had a repeat of this election.
@michaelheeheejackson7255
@michaelheeheejackson7255 7 жыл бұрын
McIntosh1581 Yep. Except the parties were swapped around.
@houstonburnside8985
@houstonburnside8985 6 жыл бұрын
McIntosh1581 yup
@darkchocolate3390
@darkchocolate3390 6 жыл бұрын
I was thinking to myself in 2016 "If Hillary screws up she's going to join Dewey" but did not think that it'll actually happen until then.
@paisleepunk
@paisleepunk 5 жыл бұрын
Hillary and Dewey are pissed off losers
@SiVlog1989
@SiVlog1989 5 жыл бұрын
Probably, although the main difference is in this one Truman won in both the Electoral College and the popular vote. Trump only won the vote that mattered, the electoral college
@mkl62
@mkl62 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for posting. November 13, 1948. The day that my paternal grandmother turned 62. And this was her first birthday as a first time grandmother as my aunt (father's sister) and her husband had welcomed their first child (daughter) into the world the previous July.
@nick56677
@nick56677 4 жыл бұрын
Strom Thurmond was SC's Governor and later Senator until 2003! He was 100 years old when he stepped down.
@Diamond-OSCandMarblestuff
@Diamond-OSCandMarblestuff 8 ай бұрын
Stepped down by dying
@nick56677
@nick56677 8 ай бұрын
@@Diamond-OSCandMarblestuff He stepped down as Senator in January 2003 and died later that summer in June 2003
@Diamond-OSCandMarblestuff
@Diamond-OSCandMarblestuff 8 ай бұрын
@@nick56677 oh
@hushthecipher
@hushthecipher 2 жыл бұрын
Truman is underrated in my opinion. It's a shame the Fair Deal never got passed and that he was unpopular in his time.
@naggu1243
@naggu1243 6 жыл бұрын
Henry Wallace. Best Wallace
@declannewton2556
@declannewton2556 4 жыл бұрын
That title goes to George.
@DrEight-dg7xt
@DrEight-dg7xt 4 жыл бұрын
@@declannewton2556 Racist
@declannewton2556
@declannewton2556 4 жыл бұрын
@@DeezNuts-sx9jd George Wallace should have been made president
@daniyalsabri9992
@daniyalsabri9992 4 жыл бұрын
Declan Newton-Maharaj He was a segregationist, confederate supporter, and a terrible person. No he shouldn’t have been
@WTMNNJR
@WTMNNJR 4 жыл бұрын
What about David Wallace. He owns Dundee Mifflin.
@JustSomeCow
@JustSomeCow 2 ай бұрын
“I will be president. It is written in the stars.” -Thomas Dewey
@frankmeason1766
@frankmeason1766 5 жыл бұрын
Thomas Dewey the original Hillary Clinton
@Lightningkuriboh
@Lightningkuriboh 4 жыл бұрын
Frank Meason that’s henry clay sir
@shawnmichaelduncan5951
@shawnmichaelduncan5951 4 жыл бұрын
He was liked.
@lesego20
@lesego20 4 жыл бұрын
What about Al Gore in the 2000 elections?
@Frogger-by1cu
@Frogger-by1cu 3 жыл бұрын
They both represented New York
@leviathan2515
@leviathan2515 3 жыл бұрын
now he’s joe biden
@Bryan-tk3cn
@Bryan-tk3cn 7 жыл бұрын
sounds like the 2016 election.
@iammrbeat
@iammrbeat 7 жыл бұрын
+Bryan Braga Somewhat!
@Frogger-by1cu
@Frogger-by1cu 6 жыл бұрын
Granted Gary Johnson was no Storm Thurmond lol. I don't know if anyone will ever be quite like Storm.
@Frogger-by1cu
@Frogger-by1cu 6 жыл бұрын
On a random note Gary Johnson does remind me of the singing cowboy
@psychonaut1502
@psychonaut1502 Жыл бұрын
Dewey had the smoothest voice of any presidential candidate. He sounds like an old fashioned radio host.
@thegodfather1907
@thegodfather1907 4 жыл бұрын
I'm just loving these videos buddy, can't get enough of them.
@aznluvr7
@aznluvr7 4 жыл бұрын
Great video, I love these, although your is President Tier list is painful.
@brandonmartinez8217
@brandonmartinez8217 6 жыл бұрын
I would've voted for Wallace
@naggu1243
@naggu1243 6 жыл бұрын
Brandon Martinez same
@paisleepunk
@paisleepunk 5 жыл бұрын
I would Dewey
@joaovitormatos8147
@joaovitormatos8147 5 жыл бұрын
I think that's the point. Wallace's platform is really a platform for the 21st century, America simply wasn't ready for him
@marcadammer482
@marcadammer482 5 жыл бұрын
Same, Wallace was great
@mrlukeh3155
@mrlukeh3155 5 жыл бұрын
I would Dewey.
@aaronluna4779
@aaronluna4779 10 ай бұрын
1:52 Stalin is furry, confirmed
@tonydean6684
@tonydean6684 3 жыл бұрын
You're wrong about Henry Wallace - he was not simply called a communist, he was a great admirer of the communists. He objected to a hard line against the Soviet Union, at a time when Stalin was murdering millions.
@Cool-123
@Cool-123 11 ай бұрын
Why does the picture of Strom Thurmond you chose make him look like gigachad lmao😂
@sandramorey2529
@sandramorey2529 4 жыл бұрын
I was 3 weeks away from my 8th birthday and I remember this so well. My family were progressives and we didn't campaign for Truman but for Henry Wallace who had been Roosevelt's VP the first time he ran. He was aced out the Dem. convention. Claude Pepper was about to put his name in for nomination for VP when whomever was in charge closed the meeting. Peppa was in his 90's and it took him too long to get to the podium so Wallace was not nominated. It is interesting to think about how the world would be different had Wallace been the one to take over after Roosevelt died in office. No atomic bomb would have been dropped on Japan. Wallace was a great VP and many of Roosevelt's ideas came from him, Eleanor and Roosevelt's personal secretary, Francis (forget her last name). We walked precincts, attended rallies did fund raisers, but history does what history does. VOTE!
@quincybear5807
@quincybear5807 3 жыл бұрын
And ever since the Democratic Partys has been fucking us in the ass. The backstabbing of Wallace was the beginning of the end. Now they rust rig elections
@richarddougherty9725
@richarddougherty9725 4 жыл бұрын
While Truman was admittedly racist in his youth, and possibly in his personal feelings throughout his life, his writings seem to show that he took the role of president seriously. After seeing the way Black soldiers were being treated after WWII, and feeling he was president of all of the people, he felt that supporting Civil Rights was a necessity. It hurt him politically, as I am sure you will mention (I am typing this paused at 2:32). It is interesting to me the thought that he actually took his job so seriously that he was able to look past his biases. I don't know if that was just him trying to sound good, but I don't even think he would have tried to sound good when he was a younger man.
@bonghunezhou5051
@bonghunezhou5051 3 жыл бұрын
Truman was indeed conflicted in racial matters beyond his youth; though he desegregated the armed forces and supported a strong (for its time) civil rights agenda for his party and country, he would react negatively to the ciivil rights movements of the '50s and '60s.
@inigobantok1579
@inigobantok1579 Жыл бұрын
Dude was born in the deep south as you go where segregation was as common in culture
@evanshiong3557
@evanshiong3557 2 жыл бұрын
This is the last election where New York voted for the Republican and Texas voted for the Democrat.
@ThomasTHEONEANDONLY
@ThomasTHEONEANDONLY 2 жыл бұрын
Truman wasn’t considered racist enough by the Dixiecrats.
@brianevans6328
@brianevans6328 6 жыл бұрын
Truman took on both the segregationists on the right in his party, and the Communist appeasers on the left in his party. By doing so he virtually assured defeat for himself, except that the voters had the last word. He showed a backbone, something severely lacking in most elected official today.
@nickyg4788
@nickyg4788 3 жыл бұрын
Wallace being outed from being FDR's VP in his last administration is one of the great disasters of American history.
@quincybear5807
@quincybear5807 3 жыл бұрын
The Democratic Party What do you expect Wish they taught stuff like this to kids today
@horacioelconserjeopina3956
@horacioelconserjeopina3956 2 жыл бұрын
Nope, a commie sympathizer
@LucasStalloneTesla18
@LucasStalloneTesla18 Жыл бұрын
It was because he was a secret communist
@cb41503
@cb41503 Жыл бұрын
No, it was the greatest decision they could have made, so we wouldn't have 2 communist presidents
@katanabluejay
@katanabluejay 4 жыл бұрын
Truman was a better president than FDR
@mikelynch7271
@mikelynch7271 4 жыл бұрын
NOT
@burningphoenix6679
@burningphoenix6679 3 жыл бұрын
@@mikelynch7271 Truman basically had many of the same policies as FDR, he just wasn’t naive to the communist threat and didn’t put people in internment camps. So yeah. I’d say he was better than FDR
@morgankingsley4992
@morgankingsley4992 5 жыл бұрын
Missippi voting for Thurmond was the strongest state of any victory since WW2 and the highest ever state win for a third party, with him getting 87.2 percent of the vote there. The closest is Goldwater in 1948, with the same state but "only" 87.1 percent
@morgankingsley4992
@morgankingsley4992 5 жыл бұрын
1964 oops
@burningphoenix6679
@burningphoenix6679 3 жыл бұрын
I mean, they kind of cheated by having Strom falsely listed as the democratic nominee.
@morgankingsley4992
@morgankingsley4992 3 жыл бұрын
@@burningphoenix6679 I do think that with how much hatred the south had for civil rights, especially deep ones, thurmond would have won Mississippi, Alabama, and south Carolina even as a third party candidate. But with a much lower run, like 60 or something
@emperorpalpatine2531
@emperorpalpatine2531 3 жыл бұрын
The fact that Strom Thurmond was able to run for president as a grown ass man, and then continue to get elected to the senate for decades until 2003 is why term limits should exist, or at least be presented.
@Zuriyi
@Zuriyi Жыл бұрын
Who else think that Strom looks like Putin
@GiveMeYourFACE9089
@GiveMeYourFACE9089 2 жыл бұрын
Dwight Eisenhower - WWII Hero General Dude Excellent summary
@jahsiahbowie1120
@jahsiahbowie1120 3 жыл бұрын
I wonder how different US/Soviet relations would be if Henry Wallace became president
@windynate1826
@windynate1826 2 жыл бұрын
not that different honestly
@NicklasZandeVGCP2001
@NicklasZandeVGCP2001 2 жыл бұрын
In my opinion, the GOP was always going to lose the '48 Election no matter what. Because they couldn't accept that times had changed. Like FDR or not, he was the most successful President in the 20th Century. His New Deal changed the American relation with the government, especially Social Security. And so running against that was certainly not going to work no matter if it was a moderate like Dewey, or a conservative like Taft, it had become a third rail issue that nobody touches. And also, they ran the same candidate who lost in the last election, which has almost never worked in most elections. Just ask Adlai Stevenson how that worked out for him. And Truman tying himself to FDR was a great strategy, as it pretty much ensured his victory, as surprising as it seemed.
@neutral7786
@neutral7786 Жыл бұрын
A good point. Also the fact that FDR saved the country from The great depression and the country still hadn't recovered from that, maybe Thomas dewey's lazy and boring campaign was making them understand that there could be another Great depression if they elected him as President, especially when Harry truman said the same thing in his campaign ¨The communists are rooting for a GOP victory because they know it would bring on another Great depression¨.
@hellorandomperson0
@hellorandomperson0 3 жыл бұрын
Truman: **appears** Japan: Why do I hear boss music?
@CARL_093
@CARL_093 Жыл бұрын
actually its 3 atom bomb During world war II, Tokyo was intended as the 3rd target for a nuclear weapon if the Japanese still refused to surrender. They did surrender after Nagasaki was bombed so the 3rd bomb was not used. That ended the war in the Pacific.
@princeabi7920
@princeabi7920 4 жыл бұрын
“Greatest upset” 16’ might of topped that
@rolandsquire6555
@rolandsquire6555 3 жыл бұрын
It's cute that people think 2016 was a bigger upset than this
@wtfmond7723
@wtfmond7723 Жыл бұрын
Map at 7:21 broke my brain because of the colors I was so confused 😂
@xenophonanthony2791
@xenophonanthony2791 Жыл бұрын
I like Dewey, but I would wonder how Civil Rights would go without Warren on the court.
@matthewk4930
@matthewk4930 4 жыл бұрын
The nukes DID NOT end the WWII. The USSR invading Manchuria did. The nukes were used simply as a way to demonstrate to the Soviets not to go too far. Truman hated Communists above even Japanese people (he called them slopes and Japs). Please stop repeating cold-war propaganda.
@k.w.powell6393
@k.w.powell6393 4 жыл бұрын
Did Stalin have a navy that could invade Japan? With no navy and a small air force why would Japan surrender to the soviets?
@matthewk4930
@matthewk4930 4 жыл бұрын
@@k.w.powell6393 In the context of the war, Japan was only able to acquire the resources to wage war through their possessions in Manchuria at the end..All other supply lines were broken. The Japanese War Cabinet is known to have been ready to handle a navel assault and amphibious landing of the mainland, but ONLY if able to resupply raw resources through their possessions in what is now China. Without that direct access to Oil, Rubber, and other essential war material, their fate was sealed. They greatly preferred to surrender to Americans (as did the Germans), so the narrative was put forward as described in the video.
@burningphoenix6679
@burningphoenix6679 3 жыл бұрын
This is factually wrong.
@stateofzach
@stateofzach 5 жыл бұрын
You actually had me so confused when you said Dewey won...
@TheEverythingSpiral
@TheEverythingSpiral 4 ай бұрын
Why did I misread this at first as The Presidential *Erection* of 1948? What kind of stuff is Harry Truman looking up on the computer?
@NikoBellic04
@NikoBellic04 3 жыл бұрын
Lesson: Never declare victory in advance. Cuz then you will jinx it and loose!
@chillplayer1234
@chillplayer1234 3 жыл бұрын
See Newsmax’s Hillary magazine in November 2016 and also Hillary herself when she was a nominee.
@coasterhockygamingboy9549
@coasterhockygamingboy9549 3 жыл бұрын
Yeah people don’t understand just how bad Japan was in WW2. It was basically Germany of the Pacific. If Truman dropped the bomb on Germany, no one would’ve been mad honestly but Germany was already defeated by the time the bomb dropped
@youwayo
@youwayo 2 жыл бұрын
There are always at least two sides to the story :P
@tannerwilson4843
@tannerwilson4843 5 жыл бұрын
I know this channel isn’t about alt. History. Be interesting to see how the later stages of WWII would have gone say Thomas Dewey won in 1944.
@asherhayes2429
@asherhayes2429 3 жыл бұрын
Not well
@bonghunezhou5051
@bonghunezhou5051 3 жыл бұрын
On the national/macro level, 1948 win by Truman was the bigger upset than the 2016 win by Drumpf. On the state level (namely Great Lakes region) they seem to be about the same.
@AFT_05G
@AFT_05G 2 ай бұрын
Cope
@MM22966
@MM22966 27 күн бұрын
Not gonna lie; I'd be tempted to vote for a politician called "The Singing Cowboy" who rode a horse to work.
@TheAndrewSchneider
@TheAndrewSchneider 3 жыл бұрын
Just read this chapter in the McCullough book!
@MoonlightXYZ
@MoonlightXYZ 5 жыл бұрын
39 electoral votes but only of 2.4% popular vote, yesh.
@morgankingsley4992
@morgankingsley4992 4 жыл бұрын
It was due to him crow laws preventing all voters but rich white land owners in the south, who went heavily Democratic. The South represented 24 percent if the population in 1948 (which can be figured out when you learn that the south would have contained 165 of 682 electoral votes in 1948 if the apportionment act of 29 was never made) but the laws made the south only get 10.5 percent of the popular vote, only about 40 percent of the real population
@haroldlawson8771
@haroldlawson8771 4 жыл бұрын
Morgan Kingsley Wrong it was because he was on the ballot and Truman wasn’t in every state he won as he official democrat
@morgankingsley8711
@morgankingsley8711 2 жыл бұрын
I was explaining the 2.4 percent, as that is not actually vindictive of the south population percent. I know he used democratic machinery to win the states he did.
@mdavis7298
@mdavis7298 2 жыл бұрын
Both the democrats AND republicans wanted Dwight Eisenhower? That's crazy!!!
@drawn2myattention641
@drawn2myattention641 4 жыл бұрын
Strom Thurmond: I never understood a word he said. He spoke a kind of Appalachian english that had long since gone extinct.
@Billy-xn9ez
@Billy-xn9ez 4 жыл бұрын
In 1948, I would have been fine with Truman, Wallace, or Dewey In 2016, I like none of the candidates.
@nethercreature1624
@nethercreature1624 8 ай бұрын
6:22 did not age well 💀
@MM22966
@MM22966 27 күн бұрын
Truman never graduated college. He was a bookkeeper and hat-maker before he entered politics. He served in combat as a National Guard artillery officer in WW1. He kept a plaque on his desk in the Oval Office that said "The Buck Stops Here". If modern Democrats were more like Harry, I'd vote for them.
@gregoryhunter7413
@gregoryhunter7413 3 жыл бұрын
Mr. Beat- Truman dropped two atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The Sax player in the background- "Check out these sick riffs"
@morgankingsley8711
@morgankingsley8711 3 жыл бұрын
I would recommend adding Wallace back in. Yes, he won no states, but he got the same votes as Thurmond, and was percieved as a equal threat to Thurmond in throwing the election to the house. He certainly threw New York to Dewey, and nearly did the same for California and Ohio. If he had gotten about 2.6 or 2.7 percent of the vote, so about an extra 150K votes, which isn't that unfeasible, then he would have denied Truman a majority. However, with Thurmond, unless if he took the mantle of the democrat in even MORE states (which would have only realistically possibly happened in Georgia and Arkansas) and won them, he was not going to be having a much bigger impact on the race, though to be fair I think Thurmond would have won South Carolina, Alabama and Mississippi even as a third party and the democratic nomination only TRULY tipped Louisiana. So yeah, I would argue that despite winning no states, Wallace had a relatively equal impact to Thurmond.
@skoots6303
@skoots6303 4 жыл бұрын
This is why we should put aside any polling until the Election Day.
@nelsonmlazo4449
@nelsonmlazo4449 3 жыл бұрын
Dewey lost because he thought the polls are on his side and did not bother campaigning in Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Wisconsin, Minnesota, and Iowa he would had 288 Electoral Votes, Truman 204 Electoral Votes, and Thurmond still at 39 Electoral Votes.
@captainwilliam3920
@captainwilliam3920 3 жыл бұрын
Thomas Dewey was the most British American presidential candidate of the 20th century
@k.w.powell6393
@k.w.powell6393 4 жыл бұрын
The progressive media and historians so loved this victory, but are not so eager to really explain how Truman pulled off the upset. In the final weeks of the campaign, the Dems went into rural areas and scared all the farm voters that the Republicans would take away their farm subsidies and pointed to the fact that Dewey was a "city slicker" from New York. The big switch of the farm votes (that normally vote Republican) in Ohio, Iowa, Illinois and California decided the election. Of course there was no reason to continue the farm subsidies (which paid farmers not to plant in order to support farm prices) after WW2, as most of Europe and Asia was starving, and Americans were and are the most efficient farm producers in the world.
@wizardstumpt4467
@wizardstumpt4467 4 жыл бұрын
So your telling me that literally every election the farmers got scared in to voting democrat which was every election the Democratic Party was in to 1956 probely. But I do think you are right about calling them calling him a city slicker.
@k.w.powell6393
@k.w.powell6393 4 жыл бұрын
@@wizardstumpt4467 I am not saying all farmers or even most farmers, just enough were worried to tip the scale. Dewey still got a majority of the northern farm vote, but not by the expected majority to win those states. In America, farmers big or small are basically independent businessmen (and women), and the GOP is their natural home, just look up the voting history of all the "farm states" of Kansas, Nebraska, the Dakotas ... During the depression, farmers got used to getting government checks for doing nothing, in 1948 many were still hooked on the welfare (as too many poor folks are today). Once farmers realized the return of world market demand for food after WW2, they returned home and never looked back.
@wizardstumpt4467
@wizardstumpt4467 4 жыл бұрын
K.W. Powell that’s fair
@FloridaMan4205
@FloridaMan4205 4 жыл бұрын
You know, call me crazy, but I don't think this is the greatest upset election in American history anymore.
@MeesterTweester
@MeesterTweester 3 жыл бұрын
Trump in 2016 had a better chances than Truman was predicted
@user-nt4wc8os8o
@user-nt4wc8os8o 7 ай бұрын
2:53 Truman was nominated 3:21 Strom Thurmond was nominated 4:41 Wallace was nominated 5:42 Dewey was nominated 6:18 results 6:28 Truman won
@rainer_uncrowned
@rainer_uncrowned Жыл бұрын
The “Singing Cowboy” is such a cool nickname! Wallace was the man!
@TonysMusic1974
@TonysMusic1974 4 жыл бұрын
The music you have in the background sounds more 1920 than 1948
@dukeofcurls3183
@dukeofcurls3183 3 жыл бұрын
yes, because this version of Twelfth Street Rag, despite being from 1948, was a cover of a nearly 40 year old ragtime piece and was intentionally done in a Dixieland throwback style
@georgew.bush4372
@georgew.bush4372 3 жыл бұрын
First election I was alive in!
@georgew.bush4372
@georgew.bush4372 3 жыл бұрын
@@ThatOneGuy7999 also the first election where Trump and Clinton were alive in
@meechisminners
@meechisminners Жыл бұрын
The only thing i learned from this video is that Henry Wallace shouldve been President
@AFT_05G
@AFT_05G 2 ай бұрын
☠️
@knockshinnoch1950
@knockshinnoch1950 4 жыл бұрын
Great series of videos
@gibby9298
@gibby9298 3 жыл бұрын
This will be very similar to what happened to Trump.
@obamabinladen4109
@obamabinladen4109 3 жыл бұрын
7:19 Why are the colours inverted?
@MeesterTweester
@MeesterTweester 3 жыл бұрын
Republican = red and Democrat = blue wasn't actually standardized until 2000. In other countries red is the liberal color and blue is the conservative color, too.
@obamabinladen4109
@obamabinladen4109 3 жыл бұрын
@@MeesterTweester but most republicans are liberals too
@cielito4575
@cielito4575 Жыл бұрын
watching this back now "the greatest election upset in American history" feels a little outdated..
@jonathantrauner3742
@jonathantrauner3742 8 ай бұрын
The greatest series ever. I got my BA degree in history in May 2016 in Baltimore Maryland at Goucher College
@80sman986
@80sman986 2 жыл бұрын
Storm Thurmond was also a WW2 vet, later a SC senator who won as a write in, he’s now the third longest running senator from Robert Byrd, living to be 100
The American Presidential Election of 1952
5:13
Mr. Beat
Рет қаралды 324 М.
The American Presidential Election of 1912
7:59
Mr. Beat
Рет қаралды 506 М.
Can This Bubble Save My Life? 😱
00:55
Topper Guild
Рет қаралды 37 МЛН
Kids' Guide to Fire Safety: Essential Lessons #shorts
00:34
Fabiosa Animated
Рет қаралды 12 МЛН
The American Presidential Election of 1968
6:52
Mr. Beat
Рет қаралды 476 М.
The American Presidential Election of 2016
11:34
Mr. Beat
Рет қаралды 1,4 МЛН
The American Presidential Election of 1960
6:11
Mr. Beat
Рет қаралды 637 М.
A look back at memorable moments of past debates
14:51
CBS News
Рет қаралды 3,2 МЛН
The American Presidential Election of 2008
6:59
Mr. Beat
Рет қаралды 1,1 МЛН
The First Kennedy-Nixon Debate of 1960
58:15
Richard Nixon Foundation
Рет қаралды 217 М.
The American Presidential Election of 1976
6:08
Mr. Beat
Рет қаралды 663 М.
The American Presidential Election of 1980
6:30
Mr. Beat
Рет қаралды 632 М.