1960 election and precidency basics Flashcards
1
Q
What were Kennedy’s advantages against Nixon?
A
- Young, taller, better-looking, more charismatic, better suited to TV debates
- Had a more impressive war record saving crewmates compared to Nixon’s desk job
2
Q
Why was Nixon a good candidate, and why did he fail?
A
- More experienced and a crafty politician, but didn’t fully take advantage of Kennedy’s catholicism
- Bad TV debate- was ill, rundown from campaigning and had bad makeup
3
Q
What were the results of the 1960 election?
A
Kennedy won the popular vote and the electoral college, but Nixon won more states:
- Kennedy: 49.72% of votes, 303 EC, 22 states
- Nixon: 49.55% of votes, 219 EC, 26 states
4
Q
Why did Kennedy win?
A
- Had looks charisma and money from his father
- Played on his heroism during the war and attacked Republicans record on defence, pushing the idea of the ‘Missile Gap’
- Ike didn’t counter the claim
5
Q
How did Nixon counter his inexperience?
A
Having LBJ on his ticket- a highly experienced Senator
6
Q
How did Kennedy win the black vote?
A
- Won it 70/30
- Partly due to his phone call the MLK’s wife when King had been arrested during the Atlanta sit-in and helped secure his release
- Nixon hoped to win over Southern whites by his running mate, Henry Cabot Lodge, promised black cabinet members
7
Q
Who won the debate?
A
Radio listeners favoured Nixon, whilst the 74 million TV viewers overwhelmingly favoured JFK
8
Q
Who did Kennedy appoint to his administration?
A
- A new generation of like-minded people from academia and other areas to bring a fresh approach
- Controversial = Bobby Kennedy, JFK’s youngest brother, as Attorney General
- Robert McNamara: President of Ford, taught accountancy at Harvard
- Sargent Shriver: key member of Kennedy’s inner circle (brother-in-law). Key figure in the creation of the Peace Corps
- McGregor Bundy: National Security Advisor- former Harvard dean
- Dean Rusk: Sec of State, often clashed with Kennedy
- Douglas Dillon: Republican Treasury Secretary
9
Q
What were the ideas behind the ‘New Frontier’?
A
- Equivalent to the New Deal
- Plant to tackle ‘unsolved problems’: ignorance and prejudice; peace and war
- Kennedy aimed to tackle poverty
- Wanted to tackle uncharted areas such as space and science
- Was it all for sound-bites and good intentions or a sound basis of a legislative programme