Eisenhower Dwight D. Eisenhower was the commander of the
Allied Expeditionary Force in Europe during
World War II, and directed the 1944
Normandy invasion. After the war, he served as the
Chief of Staff of the Army from 1945 to 1948. He was an extremely popular figure in the late 1940s, and he frequently topped the "
most admired man" poll conducted by
Gallup. In the
1948 presidential election, despite numerous entreaties from organizations and prominent politicians, Eisenhower refused to enter the race, asserting that running for office was not appropriate for a military general. After the election, Eisenhower began to associate more closely with
Republican politics, and in the lead-up to the
1952 election he faced renewed pressure to declare his candidacy as a Republican, though he remained reluctant.
Irving Berlin included a song titled "They Like Ike" in the Broadway musical
Call Me Madam, and a rally at
Madison Square Garden featured thousands of Eisenhower supporters chanting "I like Ike". Various newspaper editors endorsed Eisenhower's presidential candidacy, and politicians from both the
Democratic and Republican parties supported him. In January 1952,
Massachusetts senator
Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. entered Eisenhower's name in the
presidential primary in
New Hampshire, angering Eisenhower; he won anyway. After his victory in New Hampshire and a narrow loss in
Minnesota, he decided to join the presidential race. In July, the
Republican National Convention nominated him for president, with Senator
Richard Nixon as his running mate. They faced the Democratic presidential
ticket of
Adlai Stevenson II and
John Sparkman.
Television advertising By 1952, approximately 40 percent of Americans had a television, and the
1952 election was the first presidential election in which television played an important role. The Eisenhower campaign launched a series of television commercials titled "Eisenhower Answers America", the first spot ad campaign by an American presidential candidate.
BBDO was responsible for handling the radio and television programming for Eisenhower's campaign. Total media expenditure for the election is estimated to range from $2 million (equivalent to $ million in ) to over $6 million (equivalent to $ million in ). == Creation ==