U.S. Senate election, 1938 - Factbites
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Topic: U.S. Senate election, 1938


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 Irish Free State
With no British restrictions on his policies, he abolished the Oath of Allegiance, (which Cosgrave intended to do had he won the 1932 general election) the Senate, university representation in the Dáil, appeals to the Privy Council.
The Irish Free State (Irish language:, Saorstát Éireann) was (1922-1937) the name of the state comprising the 26 of Ireland's 32 counties which were separated from the United Kingdom under the Irish Free State Agreement (or Anglo-Irish Treaty) signed by British and Irish Republic representatives in London on December 6, 1921.
In 1918 the majority of Irish seats in the Westminster parliament of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland were won (mainly without contests) by Sinn Féin, a previously monarchist party that under Eamon de Valera's leadership from 1917 had campaigned for an Irish republic.
www.1-free-software.com /en/wikipedia/i/ir/irish_free_state.html   (2113 words)

  
 Dail Elections since 1918
The result was that future Senate elections in the Irish Free State were restricted to TDs and Senators, and the rate of replacement was stepped up to twenty members plus vacancies rather than fifteen at each triennial election.
Afer this sequence of elections, there was general relief among the political classes when Hillery announced that he would seek a second term as President, and he was re-elected unopposed.
I do not intend to go much further into politics in what is now the Irish Republic here, since many other sites do that in much more detail, and this web-site is generally devoted to Northern Irish elections.
www.ark.ac.uk /elections/gdala.htm   (3582 words)

  
 The Political Graveyard: Scotch-Irish ancestry Politicians
Michigan state senate, 1919-32, 1935-36, 1943-44, 1947-48 (3rd District 1919-26, 4th District 1927-32, 1935-36, 1943-44, 1947-48); elected unopposed 1930; defeated, 1932, 1936, 1938, 1944, 1948, 1950, 1952; delegate to Republican National Convention from Michigan,
The coverage of the site includes certain federal officials, state officeholders and candidates in all 50 states, state and national political party officials, federal and state judges, and mayors (including candidates at election for mayor) of qualifying cities.
Lieutenant Governor of Michigan, 1940; candidate for Presidential Elector for Michigan,
politicalgraveyard.com /group/scotch-irish.html   (1512 words)

  
 otd.98.10.14.html
Ottawa Ontario - William Lyon Mackenzie King 1874-1950 defeats R. Bennett in the 18th federal general election; wins 171 of the 245 Commons seats, to 40 Conservatives, 17 Social Credit; 7 CCF, 1 Independent; takes 44.8% of the popular vote for the largest majority since Confederation.
Quebec - Quebec provincial vote sees the election of 31 Liberals, 27 Conservatives and 6 Nationalists.
Arthur Meighen 1874-1960 becomes Senate Opposition leader on King's victory; only person to lead government and opposition in both houses.
www1.sympatico.ca /news/otd/otd.98.10.14.html   (1512 words)

  
 Richard B. Russell Foundation Oral History Project
Topics: Depression, 1929; Walter F. George; Georgia gubernatorial election (1930); Political patronage; Presidential election (1952); Franklin D. Roosevelt; U.S. Senate elections (1932, 1936, 1938); William J. Harris.
Topics: Democratic National Conventions (1948, 1956); Walter F. George; Georgia gubernatorial elections (1930, 1970); Presidential elections (1952); Roads; Franklin D. Roosevelt; U.S. Senate elections (1936, 1966); World War, 1939-1945.
Topics: Dwight D. Eisenhower; John F. Kennedy; Lyndon B. Johnson; Richard M. Nixon; Parliamentary practices; Presidential elections (1948, 1952); Franklin D. Roosevelt; Harry S. Truman; U.S. Senate election (1966); Warren Commission.
www.libs.uga.edu /russell/collections/russelloralhis.html   (1512 words)

  
 BPL - Special Collections Descriptions
She had also been a member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives from 1938 until her election to the Senate.
Innes served as assistant corporation counsel for the City of Boston, a member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives, 1933-1941, a member of the Massachusetts Senate, 1942-1956, and from 1956 as legal counsel to the Massachusetts Senate.
Dana was General Manager of the Boston Elevated Railway Company (1919-1937) and later the Metropolitan Transit Authority (1947-1959).
www.bpl.org /research/special/collections.htm   (1512 words)

  
 Encyclopedia: Brian Lenihan
Of the nine presidential elections held before 1990 (1938, 1945, 1952, 1959, 1966, 1973, 1974, 1976, 1983) one candidate had been elected unopposed one five occasions (1938, 1952, 1974, 1976, 1983).
He contested the immediately following Senate election and was elected, becoming his party's leader in the upper house.
In September 1990 The Irish Times carried a series of articles on the presidency, one of whom mentioned in passing the role of Lenihan, Sylvester Barrett and Charles Haughey in making the controversial phonecalls to ras an Uachtar in, the Irish presidential residence, to pressurise the President.
www.nationmaster.com /encyclopedia/Brian-Lenihan   (1512 words)

  
 Northern Ireland Parliamentary Elections Results: Biographies
Sat for Belfast, Dock from the general election of 1933 until the general election of 1938, when he was defeated, and for Belfast, Willowfield from the byelection of 3rd December 1941 until his death in April 1957.
Sat for Mid Londonderry from the general election of 1945 until the general election of 1953, and for the Foyle Division of Londonderry from the general election of 1953 until the general election of 1969 when he was defeated.
Sat for Belfast, Oldpark from the general election of 1949 until the general election of 1958 when he was defeated, and for Belfast, Clifton from the byelection of 28th May 1959 until the general election of 1969 when he was defeated.
www.election.demon.co.uk /stormont/biographies.html   (1512 words)

  
 The Political Graveyard: Scotch-Irish ancestry Politicians
Michigan state senate, 1919-32, 1935-36, 1943-44, 1947-48 (3rd District 1919-26, 4th District 1927-32, 1935-36, 1943-44, 1947-48); elected unopposed 1930; defeated, 1932, 1936, 1938, 1944, 1948, 1950, 1952; delegate to Republican National Convention from Michigan,
The coverage of the site includes certain federal officials, state officeholders and candidates in all 50 states, state and national political party officials, federal and state judges, and mayors (including candidates at election for mayor) of qualifying cities.
Lieutenant Governor of Michigan, 1940; candidate for Presidential Elector for Michigan,
politicalgraveyard.com /group/scotch-irish.html   (1512 words)

  
 Index Da
In 1986 he defeated the incumbent to win election to the Senate, and he was reelected overwhelmingly in 1992 and 1998.
His election was voided by Premier Ioannis Metaxas because of his opposition to Metaxas' regime, and Bishop Chrysanthos of Trebizond was appointed instead.
He served as a state representative (1936-38) and senator (1938-46), state director of revenue (1948-50), and clerk of Cook County (1950-55) before being elected mayor, which at that time was only a confirmation of his status as the city's leading Democrat (in 1953 he had become chairman of the Cook County Democratic Party).
www.rulers.org /indexd1.html   (1512 words)

  
 ADMIRALTY JURISDICTION
General George Washington had learned of the uprising only on the same date at his headquarters at Newburgh, and reacting promptly, he dispatched a large contingent of his whole force to suppress this "infamous and outrageous Mutiny"; see 27 WRITINGS OF WASHINGTON, at page 32 [George Washington Bicentennial Commission, GPO (1938)].
ATTORNEY GENERAL DESIGNATE in "Hearings Before the Committee on the Judiciary of the United States Senate," 83rd Congress, First Session (GPO 1953)].
General St. Clair, then in Philadelphia, was sent for, and desired to use his interposition, in order to prevail on the troops to return to the barracks.
www.wealth4freedom.com /mercier/006.htm   (1512 words)

  
 Richard B. Russell Foundation Oral History Project
Topics: Anecdotes of Senator Russell; Burke and Bullock Counties, 1930s; County unit system; Georgia gubernatorial election (1930); Georgia politics and government; Douglas MacArthur; New Deal, 1933-1939; Russell's character; U. Senate elections (1932, 1936, 1938); Office of War Information in Southeast.
Topics: Anecdotes of Senator Russell; Jere Cooper; Hubert Humphrey; Lyndon B. Johnson; Presidential election (1952); Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Topics: Anecdotes of Senator Russell; Harrold Carswell; Civil rights; Georgia House of Representatives; Georgia gubernatorial election (1930); Alexander A. Lawrence; U.S. Senate elections (1932, 1936).
www.libs.uga.edu /russell/collections/russelloralhis.html   (3492 words)

  
 Richard B. Russell Foundation Oral History Project
Topics: Anecdotes of Senator Russell; Burke and Bullock Counties, 1930s; County unit system; Georgia gubernatorial election (1930); Georgia politics and government; Douglas MacArthur; New Deal, 1933-1939; Russell's character; U. Senate elections (1932, 1936, 1938); Office of War Information in Southeast.
Topics: Dwight D. Eisenhower; John F. Kennedy; Lyndon B. Johnson; Richard M. Nixon; Parliamentary practices; Presidential elections (1948, 1952); Franklin D. Roosevelt; Harry S. Truman; U.S. Senate election (1966); Warren Commission.
Topics: Anecdotes of Senator Russell; James F. Byrnes; Walter F. George; Georgia gubernatorial election (1930); Georgia politics and government; Douglas MacArthur; National school lunch program; Franklin D. Roosevelt; Chief Justice Russell; Ina Dillard Russell; Russell's relationship with U. residents; Eugene Talmadge; Herman E. Talmadge; U. Senate election (1936).
www.libs.uga.edu /russell/collections/russelloralhis.html   (3492 words)

  
 Richard B. Russell Foundation Oral History Project
Topics: Depression, 1929; Walter F. George; Georgia gubernatorial election (1930); Political patronage; Presidential election (1952); Franklin D. Roosevelt; U.S. Senate elections (1932, 1936, 1938); William J. Harris.
Topics: Dwight D. Eisenhower; John F. Kennedy; Lyndon B. Johnson; Richard M. Nixon; Parliamentary practices; Presidential elections (1948, 1952); Franklin D. Roosevelt; Harry S. Truman; U.S. Senate election (1966); Warren Commission.
Topics: Democratic National Conventions (1948, 1956); Walter F. George; Georgia gubernatorial elections (1930, 1970); Presidential elections (1952); Roads; Franklin D. Roosevelt; U.S. Senate elections (1936, 1966); World War, 1939-1945.
www.libs.uga.edu /russell/collections/russelloralhis.html   (3492 words)

  
 Encyclopedia: Politics of Chile
Politics of Chile Political parties in Chile Elections in Chile: President: 1925 - 1927 - 1931 - 1932 - 1938 - 1941 - 1946 - 1952 - 1958 - 1964 - 1970 - 1989 - 1993 - 1999 - 2005 A presidential election was held in Chile on September 4, 1964.
Politics of Chile Political parties in Chile Elections in Chile: President: 1925 - 1927 - 1931 - 1932 - 1938 - 1941 - 1946 - 1952 - 1958 - 1964 - 1970 - 1989 - 1993 - 1999 - 2005 A presidential election was held in Chile on September 4, 1952.
Politics of Chile Political parties in Chile Elections in Chile: President: 1925 - 1927 - 1931 - 1932 - 1938 - 1941 - 1946 - 1952 - 1958 - 1964 - 1970 - 1989 - 1993 - 1999 - 2005 A presidential election was held in Chile on October 4, 1931.
www.nationmaster.com /encyclopedia/Politics-of-Chile   (3917 words)

  
 Richard B. Russell Foundation Oral History Project
Topics: Depression, 1929; Walter F. George; Georgia gubernatorial election (1930); Political patronage; Presidential election (1952); Franklin D. Roosevelt; U.S. Senate elections (1932, 1936, 1938); William J. Harris.
Topics: Armed forces (U.S.); William T. Bennett; James Francis Byrnes; Berlin Crisis; Cuban Missile Crisis, Oct. 1962; Douglas MacArthur; George C. Marshall; Nuclear Test Ban Treaty (1963); Senate Committee on Appropriations; Senate Committee on Armed Services.
Interviews provide insight into Senator Russell's political career as State Representative, Governor, and U.S. Senator, his views on various topics such as civil rights and Vietnam, and his personality and family life.
www.libs.uga.edu /russell/collections/russelloralhis.html   (3917 words)

  
 Richard B. Russell Foundation Oral History Project
Topics: Depression, 1929; Walter F. George; Georgia gubernatorial election (1930); Political patronage; Presidential election (1952); Franklin D. Roosevelt; U.S. Senate elections (1932, 1936, 1938); William J. Harris.
Topics: Dwight D. Eisenhower; John F. Kennedy; Lyndon B. Johnson; Richard M. Nixon; Parliamentary practices; Presidential elections (1948, 1952); Franklin D. Roosevelt; Harry S. Truman; U.S. Senate election (1966); Warren Commission.
HARRIS, WILLIAM C. Savannah (Georgia) newsman and politician.
www.libs.uga.edu /russell/collections/russelloralhis.html   (3917 words)

  
 Senator H. John Heinz III Archives: Carnegie Mellon Libraries
The Senator H. John Heinz III Archives at the Carnegie Mellon University Libraries contain the congressional papers of the late Pennsylvanian John Heinz (1938-1991), a Republican member of the U.S. House of Representatives (1971-1976) and the U.S. Senate (1977-1991).
John Heinz entered the arena of national politics in 1971 when he won a special election to fill the unexpired term of U.S. Representative Robert Corbett of Pennsylvania's 18th District.
Upon the retirement of Hugh Scott from the U.S. Senate in 1976, John Heinz successfully won the vacated U.S. Senate seat.
www.library.cmu.edu /Research/Archives/Heinz   (3917 words)

  
 Hattie Wyatt Caraway Biography / Biography of Hattie Wyatt Caraway Biography Biography
Elected to the U.S. Senate in early 1931 to complete her late husband's term, Hattie Wyatt Caraway (1878-1950) won election to a full six-year term in 1932 (and again in 1938) to become the first woman elected to the U.S. Senate in her own right.
family · washington · congress · senate · tennessee · senators · arkansas · won election · women legislators · dickson · kidney stones · jonesboro arkansas · thaddeus · bright girl · hattie caraway · interim governor
Hattie Wyatt Caraway was born on February 1, 1878, near Bakersville, Tennessee.
www.bookrags.com /biography/hattie-wyatt-caraway   (242 words)

  
 H. John Heinz III - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Henry John Heinz III (October 23, 1938 – April 4, 1991) was an American politician from Pennsylvania, a Republican member of the United States House of Representatives (1971–1977) and the United States Senate (1977–1991).
Heinz's initial election to the Senate was aided by the U.S. Supreme Court's decision, Buckley v.
He was chairman of the National Republican Senatorial Committee (Ninety-sixth and Ninety-ninth Congresses) and a member of the Senate Special Committee on Aging (Ninety-seventh through Ninety-ninth Congresses).
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/H._John_Heinz_III   (729 words)

  
 Porter J. Goss - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Goss was born in 1938 in Waterbury, Connecticut.
Goss said he has no evidence that the controversy is more than a product of "wild and unsubstantiated allegations, which are being obviously piled on by partisan politics during an election year." Valerie Plame Wilson was reported by the press to be resigning or taking early retirement from the CIA on December 9, 2005.
Porter Johnston Goss (born November 26, 1938) is an American politician and the current Director of the Central Intelligence Agency.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Porter_Goss   (1988 words)

  
 Helen Caldicott - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
However, party rules dictated that the appointment go to the highest unelected person on their New South Wales Senate ticket from the previous election, which saw Karin Sowada take the position automatically instead of Caldicott.
In 1990 Caldicott decided to contest the seat of Division of Richmond (a traditional National Party of Australia seat in northern New South Wales) in the federal election the time that Charles Blunt was the leader of the conservative National Party of Australia, and represented the division.
Helen Caldicott (born 1938) is an Australian physician and anti-nuclear advocate who has founded several associations dedicated to fighting nuclear weapons and nuclear power.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Helen_Caldicott   (930 words)

  
 Mundt Inventory - Political
In the 1960 election for U.S. Senator, Karl Mundt defeated George McGovern in Mundt's closest of four Senate races.
Mundt lost the 1936 election to Congressman Fred Hildebrandt when, for the first time in South Dakota history, a Democrat presidential candidate carried the state.
McGovern went on to the U.S. Senate in 1962 from South Dakota and became the Democrat candidate for President of the United States in 1972 running against Richard Nixon.
www.departments.dsu.edu /library/archive/old_site/politcal.html   (930 words)

  
 Encyclopedia: National Renewal (Chile)
Politics of Chile President of Chile Political parties in Chile Elections in Chile: Presidential: 1925 - 1927 - 1931 - 1932 - 1938 - 1941 - 1946 - 1952 - 1958 - 1964 - 1970 - 1989 - 1993 - 1999 - 2005 A presidential election was held in Chile on 4 September 1970.
Chile Congress building The Senate of the Republic of Chile is the upper house of Chiles bicameral Congress, as established in the current constitution.
Politics of Chile Political parties in Chile Elections in Chile: President: 1925 - 1927 - 1931 - 1932 - 1938 - 1941 - 1946 - 1952 - 1958 - 1964 - 1970 - 1989 - 1993 - 1999 - 2005 A presidential election was held in Chile on 1932.
www.nationmaster.com /encyclopedia/National-Renewal-%28Chile%29   (1462 words)

  
 Hispanic Americans in Congress -- Montoya
Montoya won the 1964 Senate election to complete the term of Dennis Chávez, who died in office, despite the fact the Governor of New Mexico, Edwin L. Mechem, had resigned the governorship in order fill the seat temporarily.
In 1957 Montoya was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in a special election after the sudden death of the recently reelected New Mexican Congressman Antonio Manuel Fernández.
Montoya's most important accomplishment was his work on the Senate Agriculture Committee, where he gained expertise concerning the inspection and regulation of the meat packing industry.
www.loc.gov /rr/hispanic/congress/montoyaj.html   (1462 words)

  
 CLIPS::New Deal law and politics...
Ackerman views the 1938 midterm election as a consolidating election where the Court was concerned, even as he acknowledges that "Republicans in the Senate failed to make the President's transformative strategy a campaign issue in 1938."
Ackerman maintains that he converges with the internalists in saying the "paradigm shift" was not apparent until the early 1940s.
Ackerman thus legitimates the Court's role in a representative democracy and safely distances law from politics.
www-personal.umich.edu /~ampage/AMPMLS/2-6/CLIPS/CONLAW--new_deal.html   (1462 words)

  
 Hal Draper: Friends of the War Referendum (1939)
Ludlow himself, running for re-election in November 1938, staked his entire campaign upon it, and won handily.
In 1938 the arena shifted to the Senate where – again under the stimulus of a war scare, this time Hitler’s grab of Czechoslovakia – a group of Senators headed by LaFollette and Nye introduced a new draft of the war referendum.
In order to get the full import of these qualifying exceptions, and in order to see how the transitions were made, we must now turn to the testimony given at the Senate subcommittee hearings.
www.marxists.org /archive/draper/1939/10/referendum.htm   (1462 words)

  
 O HI' O Defined - Ohio Politicians 2
Following Eisenhower’s election, however, Taft became Senate majority leader and, until his death, was an influential advisor to the president.
He served from 1921-1926 and 1931-1932 in the Ohio Legislature and was elected to the U.S. Senate in 1938.
As a Republican leader in the Senate, Taft was known as a conservative and an isolationist.
www.oplin.lib.oh.us /ohiodefined/politicians-2.htm   (409 words)

  
 Senator H. John Heinz III Archives: Carnegie Mellon Libraries
The Senator H. John Heinz III Archives at the Carnegie Mellon University Libraries contain the congressional papers of the late Pennsylvanian John Heinz (1938-1991), a Republican member of the U.S. House of Representatives (1971-1976) and the U.S. Senate (1977-1991).
John Heinz entered the arena of national politics in 1971 when he won a special election to fill the unexpired term of U.S. Representative Robert Corbett of Pennsylvania's 18th District.
Upon the retirement of Hugh Scott from the U.S. Senate in 1976, John Heinz successfully won the vacated U.S. Senate seat.
www.library.cmu.edu /Research/Archives/Heinz   (409 words)

  
 H. John Heinz III - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Henry John Heinz III (October 23, 1938 – April 4, 1991), an American politician from Pennsylvania, was a Republican member of the United States House of Representatives (1971–1977) and the United States Senate (1977–1991).
Heinz's initial election to the Senate was aided by the U.S. Supreme Court's decision, Buckley v.
He was chairman of the National Republican Senatorial Committee (Ninety-sixth and Ninety-ninth Congresses) and a member of the Senate Special Committee on Aging (Ninety-seventh through Ninety-ninth Congresses).
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/John_Heinz   (409 words)

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