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- November 12, 1956The People's Choice
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- At 11:15 a.m. on a clear, blue Pennsylvania Election Day,
- the new couple from the farm over on Route 10 stepped into the
- one-room, white clapboard Cumberland Township election house
- outside Gettysburg. They identified themselves to an election
- official, and workers at the roughhewn wooden table checked their
- names in the record books. "Housewife," said the listing of the
- woman's occupation. After her husband's name, the record read:
- "President of the United States."
-
- Under the light of four naked electric light bulbs, by the
- heat of a small oil stove, the President of the U.S. marked his
- ballot in the election of 1956. It took him just 45 seconds. For
- Mamie Eisenhower, the process was somewhat longer. She popped out
- of the booth to ask if one X would take care of the whole ticket.
- Assured that it would, she marked her ballot, and said: "Fine,
- that takes care of everything." Then she and her husband dropped
- their ballots in the battered, wooden ballot box that showed the
- wear and tear of many elections, and headed back to the farm.
-
- "That's Swell!" Within minutes President Eisenhower was
- flying back to the White House (Mamie returned by car later in
- the day). There, as he had during most of the closing week of the
- campaign, he turned his attention away from politics and toward
- the tense international scene. He talked on the telephone with
- British Prime Minister Anthony Eden, sent off messages on the
- cease-fire to France's Premier Guy Mollet and to India's Prime
- Minister Nehru; he met with his defense and diplomatic advisers
- to discuss the whole pattern of developments in Europe.
-
- But by 7:30 p.m. the President was engaged in the pursuit
- that occupied most citizens of the land. Dressed in sports coat
- and slacks, he sat down to dinner in the living room on the
- second floor of the White House with Mamie, his son, Major John
- Eisenhower, and John's wife, Barbara. Their table was placed
- before the television set so they could watch the early returns.
- When Presidential News Secretary James Hagerty brought in press
- reports that the President had swept Connecticut and the
- Republican U.S. Senator Prescott Bush was re-elected, Ike's
- reaction was a broad smile and an exultant "That's swell."
-
- "Principles & Ideals." Through the evening, as the size of
- the victory rolled into a landslide and then into an avalanche,
- President Eisenhower kept no chart as Franklin Roosevelt had done
- on election nights. He depended entirely on the television set
- and press reports brought in by Secretary Hagerty and son John.
- At 10 o'clock, as previously planned, he dressed and rode off to
- the Sheraton-Park Hotel, where the Republican National Committee
- had set up its victory headquarters. There, surrounded by members
- of his Cabinet and other close associates, preparing to make his
- victory appearance before 2,300 cheering Republicans in the
- hotel's ballroom (and on the nation's television screens), he
- refused to watch Adlai Stevenson's television concession of
- defeat. He had not looked at Stevenson during the campaign, he
- said, and he did not intend to start at that late hour.
-
- "We Want Ike!" chanted the 2,000 in the ballroom as the
- President and Mrs. Eisenhower, the Vice President and Mrs. Nixon
- made their entrance. Before the cheering, celebrating throng the
- President was solemn. Said he: "It is a very heart-warming
- experience to know that your labors, your efforts of four years
- have achieved that level where they are approved by the United
- States of America in a vote. Such a vote as that cannot be merely
- for an individual. It is for principles and ideals for which that
- individual and his associates have stood and have tried to
- exemplify."
-
- A Deeper Base. From the start of the campaign, there had
- never been any real doubt that the people of the U.S., by their
- vote, would approve the principles and ideals of the Eisenhower
- Administration. But it was not a victory without obstacles.
- Candidate Eisenhower had to come back from a heart attack and
- prove to himself and the people that he was again well enough to
- assume the full burdens of the presidency. Then he had to
- confront another opponent in the form of an ailment that few
- Americans could identify or spell - ileitis. But he defeated
- both, and his health was never an important issue in the
- campaign. One big reason: everywhere he went, the people saw a
- picture of good, vigorous, glowing health.
-
- Politically, his opponent was not so much Adlai Stevenson as
- it was the Democratic party. But from the time the President
- first took to the campaign trail, there was every indication that
- he would also defeat that foe. Everywhere he went -- from Peoria
- to Portland, Ore. to Miami to Philadelphia -- cheering,
- applauding crowds poured out to greet him. Democratic campaigners
- sought to establish that their candidate was the "man of the
- people" in this election, but the President's welcome all across
- the U.S. and his votes on Election Day showed that the people
- knew their man.
-
- What had Dwight Eisenhower and his Administration given the
- people of the U.S. that brought their overwhelming approval? The
- Republican campaign slogan summed it up well: peace, progress and
- prosperity. The Eisenhower Administration had ended one hopeless
- war and had kept the sparks of new wars from landing on the U.S.
- Under new economic policies, the U.S. had reached new heights of
- prosperity for both labor and capital. The Administration had
- balanced the federal budget, and cut taxes, and had shown proper
- concern for the welfare of its citizens, e.g., in the broadening
- of social security, in programs for better schools.
-
- But there was a deeper base for the people's approval. In
- their campaign slogan, the Republicans left out another "P" that
- was the most important of all: principle. The people sensed that
- Dwight Eisenhower held to basic and important American principles
- that worked, as the President put it, for "every American man,
- woman and child, whatever his station, his calling, his religion
- or his race."
-
- "The Individual is Supreme." When Dwight Eisenhower spoke in
- what his bitterest critics called platitudes, the people
- understood what his opponents did not: he was indeed the voice of
- America, speaking the language that America understands and
- believes. "The individual is of supreme importance," he said.
- "Government's function is to provide the climate in which those
- people can work in confidence and security . . . The spirit of
- our people is the strength of our nation. Strength is not just in
- arms and guns and planes; it's not just in factories and in
- fertile farms. It's in the heart, the heart that venerates the
- heritage we have from our fathers, the heritage of freedom, of
- self-government. That is the basic strength of America."
-
- Because they believed Dwight Eisenhower when he said that he
- was working for "what is good for all of us," U.S. farmers voted
- for him, although they were not specifically satisfied with his
- Administration's farm program, and labor union members voted for
- him, although their leaders urged them not to. Because they could
- clearly see what the Eisenhower Administration had done, the
- people rejected the charge that it had been working for the
- special interests of "big business." The major polls verified
- that the avalanche of votes that swept Dwight Eisenhower into a
- second term began piling up many months ago when the people saw
- how his Administration was performing in Washington. It was more
- than a personal victory; it was a victory for everything that
- Dwight Eisenhower and his Administration have stood for.
-
- Knowledge & Confidence. President Eisenhower said that he
- sought re-election in order "to finish what I've started. There
- is so much to do," he said. "There are so many things yet
- unfinished." He mentioned specifically the need for better
- schools, for aid to economically depressed areas, for help to
- small business, for better roads, new air safety measures, more
- security for the aged, and liberalization of the immigration
- laws. He knows that there is more to do, also, for the
- consolidation of gains already made -- for the restoration of
- government that is closer to the people, for sound fiscal
- policies, for the reconstruction of the Republican Party, and --
- above all -- for world peace.
-
- In his hour of victory, President Eisenhower pledged himself
- to continue working for the principles that he and his
- Administration have stood for since January 1953. "With whatever
- talents the good God has given me," he said,"with whatever
- strength there is within me, I will continue, and so will my
- associates, to do just one thing: to work for 168 million
- Americans here at home and for peace in the world." With the
- knowledge and with the confidence that he would do just that, the
- American people have given him one of the clearest mandates in
- the history of free elections.
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