‘Black Sheep’ fliers avenge ‘Pappy’s’ death
By William Forrester
…
Bill, pigeonholed last fall after passing Senate, makes surprise appearance; bloc plans vigorous fight
…
Washington (UP) – (Feb. 5)
Senate showdown on the bitterly-contested soldier vote issue was postponed today until next week when an epidemic of “hooky” playing forced adjournment of a special Saturday session shortly after it opened.
The chamber met today on motion of Democratic Leader Alben W. Barkley (D-KY), who hoped for passage of administration-supported legislation to provide federal ballots for voting by service personnel this November.
But Mr. Barkley’s hope was in vain. When the gavel fell at 11:00 a.m. ET, seven Senators were present. Twenty minutes and two roll calls later when only 44 members – four less than a quorum – had answered present, Mr. Barkley gave up and moved an adjournment until Monday.
Foes cheered
Spokesmen for the anti-administration coalition of Republicans and Southern Democrats who are opposing provision of federal ballots hailed today’s fiasco as a victory. They contended that if a vote had been possible, they would have had a 24–20 victory.
They based that claim on the fact that, of 44 Senators present, 24 voted against the administration in a test yesterday on an amendment which would have sharply restricted use of federal ballots. The amendment, opposed by the administration, lost by a 46–42 tally.
James O. Eastland (D-MS), a leader of the Republican-Southern Democrat coalition, viewed the adjournment as a good omen for the “states’ rights” legislation favored by his group, which would simply call on states to provide adequate absentee balloting procedure.
Another effort planned
Meanwhile, there was some talk that the anti-administration bloc might make another attempt Monday to settle the entire issue by a parliamentary maneuver which they tried but failed to bring off on Friday.
The maneuver involved a motion to lay aside the pending Lucas-Green federal ballot bill and take up the so-called “states’ rights” measure passed by the Senate last December and by the House Thursday night.
If those two steps were successful, the bloc would then move to accept the minor revisions made by the House and, if that motion carried, the bill would then be on the way to the White House – without any provision for federal ballots.
But they must qualify under state law and have opportunity to get ballots
Washington (UP) – (Feb. 5)
The War Department has informed soldiers from Pennsylvania, Illinois, Nebraska and Louisiana that they have some voting to do this April – if they’re qualified under state laws and if they have the time, patience and opportunity to do what it takes to get and cast ballots.
In a preview of what will happen on a tremendously larger scale in advance of the November presidential election if no new soldier vote legislation is enacted, the department set in motion machinery to “facilitate” voting in Illinois, Nebraska and Pennsylvania primaries and in Louisiana’s general election.
Inform serviceman
Commanding officers at all military installations have been instructed to call the elections to the attention of men from the four states and to provide those who wish to vote with postage-free postcard applications for ballots. With the postcards go special instructions for each state.
Under Public Law 712 enacted in 1942, the armed services must do what they can to help service personnel obtain absentee ballots. Voting qualifications and the validity of ballots are determined by the states.
The War Department reminded prospective voters of “certain important factors,” including:
A soldier must be at least 21 to vote.
In certain states just filing application for an absentee ballot is not enough; there are other steps.
If a soldier doesn’t know whether he is qualified to vote, “he should immediately inquire by letter to the Secretary of State of the state of his voting residence as to whether it is necessary to register, pay taxes or meet other requirements.”
Upon receiving his absentee ballot, the soldier should execute it and return it immediately.
Instructions given
The War Department issued the following special information:
Pennsylvania primary, April 25: Soldiers may apply for “official war ballots” covering only federal offices, or for state absentee ballots covering all offices. The former may be obtained from the Secretary of State, Harrisburg, by use of Army postcard forms.
Full prosperity and employment will follow war ‘if we use men wisely’ and teach children properly, he asserts
By Anthony G. de Lorenzo
…
Milwaukee, Wisconsin (UP) – (Feb. 5)
Wendell L. Willkie announced today that he will spend two weeks in March campaigning for the election of delegates in Wisconsin pledged to support him for the Republican presidential nomination.
He said:
I look upon the Wisconsin primary as one of the most important tests in the whole pre-nomination struggle.
The primary will be held April 4 and is the first in which leading candidates for the GOP nomination will be directly opposed. Delegate slates so far are entered for Mr. Willkie, New York Governor Thomas E. Dewey and Gen. Douglas MacArthur, commander of Allied forces in the Southwest Pacific.
Mr. Willkie made his announcement to newspapermen after conferring with 22 of the 24 delegates entered in the primary as pledged to him.
The Wisconsin primary is particularly important, he said, because of leadership in the state of the Progressive Party and of widespread circulation of The Chicago Tribune.
He also welcomed the entrance of the name of Col. Robert McCormick, publisher of the Tribune, in the Illinois primaries. This, he said, would bring the real issues of the campaign before the public.
Negotiations continued over demands of custodians
…
Los Angeles, California (UP) – (Feb. 5)
Organized labor must raise its voice in post-warn planning to equal that of industry, Vice President Henry A. Wallace today urged a meeting of American Federation of Labor members.
Mr. Wallace said:
It is so easy in government to put the dollar and the plant before the man.
This is a fascistic idea. Yet unless labor makes itself heard among Congressional and government committees which will have so much to do with problems of reconversion of industry and post-war activity, we shall see a tendency for property rights to be placed ahead of human rights.
Earlier, during a short speech to some 3,500 assembled workers at the Wilmington yard of California Shipbuilding Corporation, Mr. Wallace emphasized that government would have to take an active part in reconversion of war industries back to peacetime production.
Washington (UP) – (Feb. 5)
Rep. Jessie Sumner (R-IL), who announced during the Christmas holidays that she would not seek reelection, said tonight that she has changed her mind, because messages from friends “made me feel like a rat leaving the sinking ship of state.”
Her intention to retire had “discouraged a substantial number of Americans whose patriotic efforts I should do what I can to encourage,” Miss Sumner said in a statement.
An outspoken opponent of U.S. participation in the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration, Miss Sumner said she was afraid:
…to leave now when steps are being taken that will surely cause another war in Europe and lock our country into a world union from which we cannot secede without causing a world civil war.
System charged with causing economic turmoil behind Allied lines
By Blair Bolles, North American Newspaper Alliance
…
Oklahoma business, social and aviation leaders struck down
…
…
Davis and Sherwood due to continue sessions over weekend
…
…
Soldier on furlough can show his wife around town with baby safe and in expert hands
By Ruth Millett
…
Unions overwhelming favor Roosevelt, give Dewey and MacArthur GOP, lead over Willkie
By George Gallup, Director, American Institute of Public Opinion
The popularity of the Democratic Party among the rank and file of organized labor has shown a slight decline since mid-December – a decline which coincides with increasing criticism of President Roosevelt by union leaders.
However, in spite of the downward trend, the rank and file of organized labor is still nearly two to one Democratic. What effect the anti-administration views of some of the labor leaders will have on the political thinking of the membership in the next few months remains to be seen. For the present, there can be no question that the trend of labor union sentiment has been steadily away from the Roosevelt administration, especially during the past eight months.
So far as presidential candidates are concerned, those union members who favor a Republican for President pick Governor Thomas E. Dewey as their top choice today. Gen. MacArthur ranks next, and Wendell L. Willkie third.
Union members who favor a Democrat give an overwhelming vote to President Roosevelt as their choice for Democratic nominee. Henry A. Wallace ranks second.
All organized labor
Each union member interviewed was asked, first, what party he would prefer to see win the presidential election this November. The results are given below, together with the trend as revealed in previous surveys. The figures apply to all organized labor as a whole, not to union members in any one union or in any particular section of the country, such as Kentucky, where the Democratic vote in the coalmining areas fell off sharply in the election last November.
1936 | 1940 | June 1943 | December 1943 | Today | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | 80% | 72% | 69% | 66% | 64% |
Republican | 20% | 28% | 31% | 34% | 36% |
The trend by CIO and AFL membership is given below:
CIO MEMBERS
1936 | 1940 | December 1943 | Today | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | 85% | 79% | 68% | 66% |
Republican | 15% | 21% | 32% | 34% |
AFL MEMBERS
1936 | 1940 | December 1943 | Today | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | 80% | 71% | 65% | 64% |
Republican | 20% | 29% | 35% | 36% |
Each union member interviewed was shown a list of presidential candidates most often talked about for 1944, and asked to indicate his present choice for nomination. The results are given below.
One of the surprises is the comparatively high vote for Gen. MacArthur.
Roosevelt-Willkie
In the following table, the labor union vote applies only to union members who choose a Republican for President. Were Roosevelt not a possible candidate, Willkie’s strength with laboring groups would be substantially higher, previous surveys have indicated.
In addition to the labor union vote, the results for the whole nation based on those who named a Republican are given for comparison.
Labor union members | All U.S. | |
---|---|---|
Dewey | 41% | 42% |
MacArthur | 29% | 18% |
Willkie | 20% | 23% |
Bricker | 5% | 8% |
Stassen | 3% | 6% |
Warren | 1% | 3% |
Johnston | 1% | 3% |
The choice of labor union members who named a Democratic candidate for President show a one-sided picture in favor of Roosevelt as follows:
Labor union members | |
---|---|
Roosevelt | 88% |
Wallace | 6% |
Farley | 3% |
Byrnes | 1% |
McNutt | 1% |
Marshall | 1% |
Credit given Nazis caused trouble for Franco; terms outlined; agreement with U.S. may come this week
…