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ADLAI STEVENSON (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   157214


Political perils of cold war foreign relations: Adlai stevenson’s democrats and foreign policy in the 1956 presidential election / Sewell, Bevan   Journal Article
Sewell, Bevan Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This analysis uses the case of the 1956 American presidential election between Adlai Stevenson and Dwight Eisenhower to highlight the ways that an obsession with foreign relations could prove problematic to a campaign. Focusing primarily on Stevenson’s advisors, long-standing problems in the Democrats’ strategy on foreign relations, coupled with the emotional attachments that several key advisors had to the issue, combined to ensure that the Democrats failed to develop an effective foreign policy platform—particularly when running against a president believed to be so successful in that arena. Ultimately, it argues that the Stevenson campaign’s failure to forge an effective position highlights the problematic relationship between domestic policies and foreign relations.
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2
ID:   108810


Test Ban and the 1956 election / Steiner, Barry H   Journal Article
Steiner, Barry H Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract Adlai Stevenson, the Democratic presidential candidate in 1952 and 1956, has been called "the first national political leader to take a clear-cut position for the limitation of [nuclear weapons] testing."[1] In his 1956 campaign against President Dwight Eisenhower, the former Illinois governor capitalized on widespread fear of radiation from nuclear weapons tests to propose a testing moratorium, but he had not intended to make the tests a major campaign issue at first.
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