Word: democratized
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Nixon over John Kennedy-much to the surprise of Kennedy's expert pollsters. And even in the shambles of Barry Goldwater's 1964 defeat, Bliss's Republicans kept control of both houses of the legislature and came out with a 14-to-10 edge over the Democrats in the Ohio congressional delegation. Bob Taft Jr. lost to Incumbent Democrat Stephen Young for the Senate, but by only 13,000, while Johnson ran more than 1,000,000 ahead of Goldwater...
...Jersey Democrat Richard J. Hughes, planning to seek a second term next fall and facing a hostile, Republican-dominated legislature, tossed off a 31,700-word message in the Great Society vein, designed to make sure "that New Jersey does not become a grim preview of a polluted, congested world of the future." His new programs would add $153 million to the $634 million state budget. Hughes wants a state sales or income tax, which the legislature-under federal court order to reapportion itself and stand for re-election next November-is not about to give...
...Iowa Democrat Harold Hughes's problem is too many Democrats. He won his second term by the biggest margin (430,479 votes) of any candidate in state history, bringing with him nearly 100 new Democrats, most without previous legislative experience or special loyalties to the Governor. He hoped they would stay in line. "In this hour of unlimited promise," he said, "no lowan can afford to be antibusiness, antilabor, anti-farmer, anti-government or anti-progress." He also meant anti-Hughes...
...Indiana Democrat Roger D. Branigin stepped into his first term as Governor, whipped through a seven-minute inaugural address, followed next day with a legislative message that lasted all of 14 minutes. Apparently as tight fiscally as he is verbally, Branigin moved against the trend, urged the Democratic legislature to repeal some $40 million in state and local taxes over the next two years...
...Arkansas Democrat Orval E. Faubus began his record sixth term by asking the legislature to 1) pass a constitutional amendment calling for reapportionment on a basis other than population, and 2) send it to "this misguided group of people who are supposed to be judges on the Supreme Court." Then Faubus got busy trying to make good on two campaign promises: a multimillion-dollar road-building program and a $1,000 raise for each of Arkansas' 16,756 public-school teachers...