The Eisenhower Years

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The Eisenhower Years Section 16.3 Smiling Ike

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The Eisenhower Years. Section 16.3. Smiling Ike. Why was Eisenhower an unusual presidential candidate?. Ike, ecstatic, in victory parade. Why was Eisenhower an unusual presidential candidate?. Supreme Allied Commander in Europe Led D-Day invasion Had never seen combat Never voted - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of The Eisenhower Years

Page 1: The Eisenhower Years

The Eisenhower Years

Section 16.3

Smiling Ike

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Why was Eisenhower an unusual presidential candidate?

Ike, ecstatic, in victory parade

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Why was Eisenhower an unusual presidential candidate?

• Supreme Allied Commander in Europe– Led D-Day invasion– Had never seen combat

• Never voted• Only began to study US

history/economics after the war

• Handpicked by Republicans because he was popular

Above: Ike exhorts the troops; below: Ike the candidate emerges from the campaign plane

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Who was Ike’s Opponent in the 1952 presidential election?

• Adlai E. Stevenson of Illinois– A liberal intellectual– Eloquent speaker but

seemed out of touch with common people

– Called “egghead” by Republicans

– Tainted with Truman’s unpopularity

Above: Adlai Stevenson; below: Stevenson accepts his party’s nomination

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Who was Ike’s Running mate and what was the “Checkers” speech?

• Richard M. Nixon• Experienced politician and

reputation of communist fighter – Pumpkin Papers

• Accused of accepting illegal campaign contributions which paid for a luxurious lifestyle

• Nix went on TV and denied accusation

• Admitted to accepting one gift – A dog named Checkers

• Convinced Americans that he would be an honest vice president

Above: Nixon giving Checkers speech; below: Nixon with Checkers

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CheckersNixon giving Checkers speech

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Describe Ike’s Campaign.• Organized and efficient• Speeches full of

platitudes– We’re going to “clean

up the mess in Washington”

• Promised to end Korean War

• “We Like Ike”• Won a landslide victory

Above and below: Ike campaign posters

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Eisenhower Wins!

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Describe Eisenhower’s style of management.• Consensus decision making

– Based on group (cabinet) decisions, not just his own

• Delegated – Ike only focused on big picture issues– Left the details and execution to others

• Admired Business Principles– Corporate execs appointed to key posts– Somewhat laissez-faire

• Privatization– Tried to turn government control of TVA

to private business– Atomic Energy Act of 1954

• Allowed private companies to operate nuclear power plants

Above: Cabinet meeting in Eisenhower administration; below: nuclear power plants

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Ike as President

Capture: Huge crowd for Ike

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Describe Ike’s Second Term.• Democrats regained control of

Congress (’56)• Launched Explorer I (1/31/58)

– 4 months after Sputnik• Created National Aeronautics and

Space Administration (NASA)• National Highway Act (’56)

– Costs $80 billion • Extended Social Security and

Unemployment insurance• Increased minimum wage (.75 to

$1)

Above: U.S. rocket; below: incredibly aged and sad Eisenhower

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Ike’s Second Term

Ike waves and smiles over economic policy

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Ike’s Farewell Address• Farwell address warned

against the influence of the military industrial complex

• 2007 $626.1 billion– Includes military budget of

Department of Defense– War in Iraq– Nuclear weapons research– Infrastructure of military

bases• 47% of the World’s Total

military spendingGraph shows growth of government

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Who were the candidates in the 1960 election?

• Richard M. Nixon– Republican– Protestant– Came from

Common background

– anticommunist politician

– War hero– Experienced

politician

• John F. Kennedy – Democrat– Catholic– Came from wealth

and privilege– anticommunist– War hero– Seemed much

younger

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Why were the Nixon-Kennedy Debates important in the 1960 election?

• 1st presidential debate ever• Kennedy looked better on TV

– Wore make-up– Looked polished

• Nixon– Sweating problem, leg injury

• Radio listeners thought Nix won

• Closest election in history– Kennedy won by about 100

thousand votes (69 million casts)

Above: Nixon shakes JFK’s hand before debate; below: during one of the debates

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The Election of 1960

JFK campaigns