Everything about 1944 Democratic National Convention totally explained
The
1944 Democratic National Convention was held at the
Chicago Stadium in
Chicago, Illinois from
July 19 -
July 21,
1944. The convention resulted in the re-nomination of U.S. President
Franklin D. Roosevelt for an unprecedented fourth term.
Senator Harry S. Truman of
Missouri was nominated for the Vice-Presidency.
Roosevelt's fourth nomination was largely unchallenged. The contention lay in the vice-presidential nomination. Although the party's conservatives couldn't stop FDR from winning the nomination, the obvious physical decline in the President's appearance, as well as rumors of secret health problems - led many delegates and party leaders to strongly oppose
Henry Wallace. Wallace, who was FDR's second
Vice-President, was regarded by most conservatives as being too
left-wing and personally eccentric to be next in line for the Presidency. Numerous party leaders privately told Roosevelt that they'd fight Wallace's renomination, and they proposed
Missouri Senator
Harry Truman, a moderate who had become well-known as the chairman of a Senate wartime investigating committee, as FDR's new running mate. Roosevelt, who personally liked Wallace and knew little about Truman, reluctantly agreed to accept Truman as his new running mate to preserve party unity. Even so, many liberal delegates refused to abandon Wallace, and they cast their votes for him on the first ballot. However, enough large Northern, Midwestern, and Southern states supported Truman to give him the victory on the second ballot. The fight over the vice-presidential nomination proved to be historic, as FDR's declining health led to his death in April 1945, and Truman thus became the nation's 33rd President.
The keynote address was given by
Governor Robert S. Kerr of
Oklahoma, in which he "gave tribute to Roosevelt's war leadership and
new deal policies."
President Roosevelt was making a trip to the South Pacific in order to discuss military strategy with General
Douglas MacArthur, and thus didn't attend the convention. This was the last time that a presidential nominee failed to attend a national convention during the 20th century.
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