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Democratic Party (United States) presidential primaries, 1924 : ウィキペディア英語版 | Democratic Party (United States) presidential primaries, 1924
The Democratic Party held primary elections prior to the 1924 presidential elections in order to select their candidate. The result was a victory for no one and the most calamitous convention in the history of the party., After ''a hundred and three ballots'', the winner went on to lose the election to Republican candidate Calvin Coolidge. ==Background== Sizable Democratic gains during the 1922 Midterm elections suggested to many Democrats that the nadir they experienced immediately following the 1920 elections was ending, and that a popular candidate like William Gibbs McAdoo of California, who could draw the popular support of labor and Wilsonians, would stand an excellent chance of winning the coming presidential election. The Teapot Dome scandal added yet even more enthusiasm for party initially, though further disclosures revealed that the corrupt interests had been bipartisan; Edward Doheny for example, whose name had become synonymous with that of the Teapot Dome scandal, ranked highly in the Democratic party of California, contributing highly to party campaigns, served as chairman of the state party, and was even at one point advanced as a possibly candidate for Vice-President in 1920. The death of Warren Harding in the August of 1923 and the succession of Coolidge blunted the effects of the scandals upon the Republican party, including that of Teapot Dome, but up until and into the convention many Democrats believed that the Republicans would be turned out of the White House.〔History of American Presidential Elections 1789-1968; Arthur M. Schlesinger, jr.; Pgs 2460-2461〕
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