The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Although there is no source document attached or any other reference, we can say that Henry Wallace’s background and previous disagreements with President Truman might have biased his thoughts because Wallace had a different political perspective as the former Presidential Candidate of the Progressive Party. His own point of view and political tendencies made Wallace bias his opinions and criticized the way President Truman acted during the Cold War years. Wallace had been Truman's Secretary of Commerce but never get along well with Truman. Wallace's liberal approach biased their opinions about Truman's decision to change the New Deal legislation and the foreign policy to contain Communism.
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no because we are removing the power from our government not giving it more
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um im pretty sure this is right but....... if not sorry
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the British victory over their colonial rebels would have deprived other potential revolutionary movements in the Spanish New World of their inspiration. Instead of America going to war with Mexico in 1848, it is likely that the expanded British New World Empire would have gone to war against, and likely won against, the Spanish North American colony. As part of the victory treaty, the Brits likely would have claimed the same territory from the New World Spanish possessions which the U.S. claimed from Mexico. However, by this point slavery would have been abolished, and therefore not a primary motivation of that war.
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Answer: Republican: Richard Nixon, George H. Bender, James M. Lloyd, Nelson Rockefeller, and Cecil H. Underwood.
Democrat: John F. Kennedy, Lyndon B. Johnson, Stuart Symington, Hubert Humphrey, Wayne Morse, Adlai Stevenson and George Smathers.