New Deal coalition (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "New Deal coalition" in English language version.

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amazon.com

  • Farley broke with FDR in 1940. Daniel Mark Scroop, Mr. Democrat: Jim Farley, the New Deal and the Making of Modern American Politics (University of Michigan Press, 2009) excerpt.
  • Richard Moss, Creating the New Right Ethnic in 1970s America: The Intersection of Anger and Nostalgia (Rowman & Littlefield, 2017) excerpt.

books.google.com

  • Sebastian Berg, ed. (2017). Intellectual Radicalism after 1989: Crisis and Re-orientation in the British and the American Left. Transcript Verlag. p. 35. ISBN 9783839434185. Hence the center-left of U.S. politics, symbolized by the New Deal Coalition which had given the Democrats comfortable majorities in Washington for a long time, disintegrated from the mid-1960s onwards.

colorado.edu

autocww.colorado.edu

history.com

jstor.org

  • Thomas Kessner, "Fiorello H. LaGuardia" History Teacher 26#2 (1993), pp. 151–159 online.
  • Hugh T. Lovin, "The Fall of Farmer-Labor Parties, 1936–1938." Pacific Northwest Quarterly (1971): 16–26. in JSTOR .
  • Donald L. Singer, "Upton Sinclair and the California Gubernatorial Campaign of 1934." Southern California Quarterly 56.4 (1974): 375–406. https://www.jstor.org/stable/41171421.

linnbenton.edu

cf.linnbenton.edu

  • Gregory Albo, "Neoliberalism from Reagan to Clinton." Monthly Review 52.11 (2001): 81–89 online.

nytimes.com

  • Nate Cohn, "How Educational Differences Are Widening America’s Political Rift: College graduates are now a firmly Democratic bloc, and they are shaping the party’s future. Those without degrees, by contrast, have flocked to Republicans." New York Times Oct. 8, 2021

openlibrary.org

  • Lubell, Samuel (1956). The Future of American Politics (2nd ed.). Anchor Press. pp. 62–63. OL 6193934M.

web.archive.org