RightDataUSA


Thomas Werdel

[Congressional biography]

Born: September 13, 1905 in Emery, SD
Died: September 30, 1966 in Bakersfield, CA

Education:

  • University of California, 1930, Law School, 1936

Career:

  • Lawyer

Elected Office:

  • CA Assembly, 1943-1946
  • Candidate for U.S. Vice-President (States Rights party), 1956



Election Results for Thomas Werdel


Click on the Year to see the results of that election.

YearAgeStatePartyOfficeDistrictStagePosVotes%
1948 42 CA R U.S. House District 10 Primary 1 10,737 44.7%
1948 42 CA D U.S. House District 10 Primary 1 8,640 22.4%
1948 42 CA R,D U.S. House District 10 General 1 67,448 71.3%
1950 44 CA R U.S. House District 10 Primary 1 24,937 79.3%
1950 44 CA D U.S. House District 10 Primary 2 26,920 49.1%
1950 44 CA R U.S. House District 10 General 1 59,313 53.6%
1952 46 CA R U.S. House District 14 Primary 1 21,379 54.8%
1952 46 CA D U.S. House District 14 Primary 2 19,937 33.9%
1952 46 CA R U.S. House District 14 General 2 68,011 49.0%


Age: Age as of July 1 of the year pertaining to this election.




Ideology Data for Thomas Werdel


Click on the number in the 'Conserv.' column to see all of the key votes for that year.

YearAgeBodyConservative
Coalition
Party UnityPresidential
Support
Vote %LiberalConserv.
P
1949 43 House 92 5 D 94 0
1950 44 House 58 12 D 55 0
1951 45 House 84 6 D 65 0
1952 46 House 82 7 D 69 0


Age: Age as of July 1 of the year pertaining to this row.



Conservative Coalition: According to the publication "Congressional Quarterly" (CQ), this is an alliance of Republicans and Southern Democrats (from back when Southern Democrats tended to be conservative or at least moderate) against Northern Democrats in Congress.

This concept had significant meaning perhaps through the 1980's. These statistics stopped being computed after 2000 because conservative Democrats no longer existed except in very rare cases. The number under the green check is the percentage of time this Representative or Senator voted with the coalition; the number under the red X is the percentage of the time he opposed the coalition. The numbers often do not add to 100% because of instances where no vote was cast.



Party Unity: According to CQ, a Party Unity vote in Congress is one in which the parties were split, with a majority of Democrats opposing a majority of Republicans.

The number under the green check is the percentage of time this Representative or Senator voted with his party; the number under the red X is the percentage of the time he opposed the party. The numbers often do not add to 100% because of instances where no vote was cast.



Presidential Support: These are votes for which the President has stated his position, either in via a message to Congress, by press conference remarks or other public statements and documents.

The number under the green check is the percentage of time this Representative or Senator voted with the President; the number under the red X is the percentage of the time he opposed the President. The numbers often do not add to 100% because of instances where no vote was cast. The "P" column indicates the party of the President in each year.



Vote %: The percentage of roll-call votes in which this Representaive or Senator participated by voting "Yes" or "No" (as opposed to "Present" or not voting at all.)



Liberal Rating: These ratings are based on key votes as identifed by the ultra-liberal advocacy organization called "Americans for Democratic Action" (ADA). They have been rating members of Congress since 1947. The number shown is the percentage of the time this Representative or Senator took the liberal position on a key issue. The methodology behind the calculation can be found here. Ratings followed by an asterisk were calculated the "ADA way" due to missing data regarding key votes in the ADA source material.



Conservative Rating: These ratings are based on key votes as identifed by the conservative advocacy organization called the "American Conservative Union" (ACU). They have been rating members of Congress since 1971. The number shown is the percentage of the time this Representative or Senator took the conservative position on a key issue.

The liberal and conservative ratings are not expected to add to 100% because the two groups use different sets of key votes to determine their ratings. Conservative ratings from 1961 through 1970 (and for 2024) were calculated based on key votes as selected by the creators of this website.