Walter DeVries


Walter de Vries was a political consultant, author, and founder of the North Carolina Institute of Political Leadership.
James M. Perry, the chief political correspondent for the Wall Street Journal, said this about his book The Ticket-Splitter : "DeVries and Tarrance, scholars who have worked in the political hedge-rows, have brilliantly destroyed generations of conventional wisdom about how America votes and why they vote as they do. The Ticket-Splitter has opened new vistas in political research techniques and election strategies."
Writing in 1972, Andrew M. Greeley remarked that "Walter DeVries and Lance Tarrance, Jr. have apparently pinpointed a change which exists in the real world apart from the 'Op-Ed' page of the New York Times. If party identification has not changed much, 'ticket-splitting' has. In 1944 there were 41 Congressional districts that voted for one party for the Presidency and another for the House of Representatives. In 1956 there were 130 such districts; in 1964, 145... From 1914 to 1962 there was only one year when there were more than six states which elected a Senator from one party and a Governor from another... Since 1962 the average number of 'incongruences' has been eleven per year..."
Significantly, "DeVries and Tarrance... point out that the 'ticket-splitter' is not the 'independent' described by Angus Campbell and his colleagues from the Survey Research Center -— a voter without conviction or commitment. Rather, the 'ticket-splitter' is both more concerned and better informed than the straight-party voter. He is more likely to be young, professional, college-educated, and to have an income of over $10,000. He is part of America’s post-World War II, college-educated, professional class."

Biography

Walt de Vries was born in Holland, Michigan, in 1929. He was the oldest of seven sons of Dutch immigrants. He enlisted in the 2nd Armored Division of the U.S. Army and was recalled to active duty as an Intelligence NCO with the Army Security Agency in Korea.
He later received a B.A. from Hope College in 1954. He then went on to earn an M.A. and Ph.D. in political science and social psychology from Michigan State University in 1955 and in 1960, respectively.
De Vries became director of research & strategy in George Romney's three successful campaigns for governor and in his presidential campaign during 1967, but he resigned that position in November 1967. He also served as Romney's executive assistant in the administration of the Michigan state government from 1962 to 1967.
From 1969 to 1972 professor of political science at the University of Michigan.
From 1973 to 1979 he was an associate professor in the Institute of Policy Sciences and Public Affairs at Duke University.
In 1981 he was appointed an adjunct professor at the University of North Carolina Wilmington.
From 1969 through 1987 de Vries was the president of de Vries & Associates, Inc., a public relations, polling, media production, and campaign consulting firm. His company conducted more than 350,000 in-the-home and telephone surveys with registered voters for political, commercial, governmental and media clients. He has served as a campaign consultant to presidential, U.S. Senate, gubernatorial, congressional, state legislative and referendum campaigns in 35 states and several countries. He served on the Wrightsville Beach Planning Board from 2011 to 2013.
De Vries wrote and produced for television from 1960 until his death. His business, de Vries and Associates, Inc., has written and produced full-length documentaries, mini-documentaries, special telecasts, PSA's and commercials for public television, commercial television, cable networks, and satellite systems.

Personal life

Walter de Vries met Lois Cook while still in high school. They were married in September 1950, when de Vries was subsequently recalled for military duty in Korea. They have four sons: Michael Dale, Robert Cook, Steven Richard, and Walter Dann.
De Vries, an avid sailor and also longing to be near the ocean, moved the family from Michigan to Marblehead, Massachusetts, and then ultimately south to the coastal town of Wrightsville Beach, North Carolina, in 1972.

Works