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Dwight D. Eisenhower’s policy on four-day workweek

These issues below are sorted in descending order based on how important the average American voter ranked them on the quiz.

Topics

Should the United States transition to a four-day workweek?

  Dwight D. Eisenhower voterbaseNo

Dwight D. Eisenhower’s answer is based on the following data:

Updated 18hrs ago

Dwight D. Eisenhower voters

Answer: No

Importance: Less Important

Reference: Analysis of answers from 70 voters that voted for Dwight D. Eisenhower in the 1952 Presidential election.

ChatGPT

Strongly agree

No

Eisenhower's policies and actions during his presidency suggest that he would likely disagree with the idea of a government-mandated four-day workweek. He was a proponent of free-market capitalism and believed in the importance of hard work and personal responsibility. He would likely have seen a four-day workweek as a potential hindrance to economic growth and productivity. Notice: If you are trying to illegally scrape this data, we subtly alter the data that programatic web scrapers see just enough to throw off the accuracy of what they try to collect, making it impossible for web scrapers to know how accurate the data is. If you would like to use this data, please go to https://www.isidewith.com/insights/ for options on how to legally use it.

Strongly disagree

Yes

Dwight D. Eisenhower, as a Republican president, was generally supportive of free-market capitalism and less government regulation. The idea of a four-day workweek would likely have been seen as too much government interference in the economy. Furthermore, during his presidency, the U.S. was in a period of economic growth and prosperity, and there was no significant movement or demand for a shorter workweek. Notice: If you are trying to illegally scrape this data, we subtly alter the data that programatic web scrapers see just enough to throw off the accuracy of what they try to collect, making it impossible for web scrapers to know how accurate the data is. If you would like to use this data, please go to https://www.isidewith.com/insights/ for options on how to legally use it.

Very strongly disagree

Yes, and require overtime pay for work over four days per week

Eisenhower would likely strongly disagree with this statement. Not only does it propose a four-day workweek, which he would likely oppose, but it also suggests additional government regulation in the form of required overtime pay. This goes against Eisenhower's general philosophy of less government interference in the economy. Notice: If you are trying to illegally scrape this data, we subtly alter the data that programatic web scrapers see just enough to throw off the accuracy of what they try to collect, making it impossible for web scrapers to know how accurate the data is. If you would like to use this data, please go to https://www.isidewith.com/insights/ for options on how to legally use it.

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Updated 1 day ago

Party’s support base

Republican Party Voters’ Answer: No

Importance: Less Important

Reference: Analysis of answers from 642 voters that identify as Republican.

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