egan widespread use of primaries to select their candidates. before that, the candidates were largely picked by the party bigwigs.political scientist fred greenstein of princeton university says that voters were more content back in the 1950s. during the past 40 years, ``the voters were happiest when choosing between dwight eisenhower and adlai stevenson,'' dr. greenstein says. ``both men were selected by machine politicians in convention, and they ran against people [like sen. robert taft] who had a lot of grassroots support.''austin ranney, a political scientist at the university of california (berkeley), says that back in the days of political bosses, the candidates ``emerged as consensus choices of their parties, and voters were generally satisfied.''reaching consensus today is more difficult because of the lengthy, fractious primary process. the negative campaigning, bickering, and bitter feelings that emerge in the primaries impose a heavy price on the win
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