Eighth Army drives across the Rubicon
British gain along coast of Italy
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President indispensable to bosses, he says
Aboard Dewey campaign train (UP) –
Governor Thomas E. Dewey called upon the American people today to elect him president in November to “restore integrity to the White House.”
The Republican presidential nominee wound up a seven-speech coast-to-coast campaign tour in Oklahoma City last night with a charge that integrity had been lacking in the 12 years of President Roosevelt’s administration and in his opening bid for an unprecedented fourth term.
Fightingest speech yet
It was Governor Dewey’s fightingest speech to date and his audience, estimated at 15,000, was the most boisterously responsive.
Governor Dewey appeared confident that his plea would be answered, he predicted that the American people will “restore integrity to the White House so that its spoken word can be trusted again.”
He said the President’s speech Saturday night completely ignored his pledge on acceptance of the 1944 nomination that he would not campaign in the usual sense and was one of “mudslinging, ridicule and wisecracks.”
Demagogy charged
He charged:
It plumbed the depths of demagogy by dragging into this campaign the names of Hitler and Goebbels; it descended to quoting from Mein Kampf and to reckless charges of “fraud” and “falsehood.”
Governor Dewey promised that he personally would not resort to such tactics.
He said:
The winning of this war and the achievement of a people’s peace are too sacred to be cast off with frivolous language.
Then, with an explanation that his opponent has “made the charges, asked for it, and here it is,” Governor Dewey took up, point by point, the subjects of President Roosevelt’s opening campaign speech.
‘Countless lives lost’
Governor Dewey accused Mr. Roosevelt of failure to prepare for war and said it had “cost countless American lives; it has caused untold misery.”
He recalled that in 1937, Mr. Roosevelt remarked:
How happy we are that the circumstances of the moment permit us to put our money into bridges and boulevards… rather than into huge standing armies and vast implements of war.
Governor Dewey continued:
But the war came just two years later. It was in January of 1940 that I publicly called for a two-ocean navy for the defense of America. It was that statement of mine which Mr. Roosevelt called, and I quote his words, “Just plain dumb.”
‘Indispensable man’
Then, Governor Dewey took up the issue of the “indispensable man.” He pointed out that neither Senator Harry S. Truman nor Mayor Edward J. Kelly of Chicago has been repudiated for his statement that Mr. Roosevelt’s reelection is vital to future peace and prosperity and salvation of the nation.
Governor Dewey conceded:
The man who wants to be President for 16 years is indeed indispensable. He is indispensable to Harry Hopkins, to Madam Perkins, Harold Ickes, to a host of other political jobholders. He is indispensable to Sidney Hillman and the Political Action Committee. to Earl Browder, the ex-convict and pardoned Communist leader.
Sapulpa, Oklahoma (UP) –
Governor Thomas E. Dewey carried his campaign into his wife’s childhood hometown today. asking Republicans and “good Democrats” to join him in a complete housecleaning of the federal government.
After a short talk at Bristow, Oklahoma, in his first stop before reaching Sapulpa, Mr. Dewey turned the spotlight on his wife, the former Francis Eileen Hutt.
A huge reception was held at the local high school, from which Mrs. Dewey was graduated as class valedictorian 20 years ago.
A crowd estimated at 25,000 persons – twice the town’s normal population – greeted the Deweys.
“You are here to do honor to the lady who is my wife,” Governor Dewey said. He thanked citizens of Sapulpa for the friendliness, the education and the love shown to his wife but said the best thing they did was “let her go to New York where I found her and have kept her ever since.”
New York (UP) –
Thirty-five Negro leaders announced today the formation of the “National Nonpartisan Committee for the Reelection of Roosevelt.” It is headed by Mrs. Mary McLeod Bethune.
The committee’s statement said:
We will work and vote for those men and those measures which, irrespective of party labels, will best advance the welfare of our people.
Officers of the committee include Doxey A. Wilkerson (New York vice chairman), Ross Gragg (Detroit secretary) and William P. Harrison (Chicago treasurer). Regional vice chairmen included Arthur Huff Fauset of Pennsylvania and Bishop R. R. Wright Jr. of Ohio.
Tie-up of CIO group with ‘city bosses’ put it in wrong boat, he asserts
By Fred Woltman, Scripps-Howard staff writer
New York –
In an open letter to Sidney Hillman, chairman of the CIO Political Action Committee, Norman Thomas, Socialist candidate for President, today charged that PAC “is, in effect, a company union in politics,” and that the tactics “have delayed rather than advanced intelligent labor action in the political field.”
Mr. Thomas called many of the charges against the PAC “unfair and frivolous,” but, he declared:
The net result of PAC activity has been to make you one of the motley crew of bosses who control that extraordinary conglomeration of Northern city political machines and Southern bourbons, known as the Democratic Party.
Truman assailed
You, Hague, Kelly, Hannegan and the Southern bosses managed to blackmail your pet hates until by elimination you got as a possible future President of the United States that mediocrity, convict-boss Pendergast’s protégé, Harry Truman.
You got personal power, but not power enough to renominate Henry Wallace, whom Mr. Roosevelt dismissed with a character reference, and not power enough to write planks in behalf of the rights of Negroes or of labor itself, as good as even the Republicans produced.
The Socialist candidate wrote:
I emphatically oppose attacks on PAC on the irrelevant issue of the land of your birth. I applaud the idea of workers’ participation in politics.
I think it unfortunate that your present playmates, the Communists, are so influential in your organization because they have no principles except a desire for power.
‘Company union’
His main objection, however, said Mr. Thomas, “is your company unionism politics.”
You had a rare opportunity to start effective organization of the workers on behalf of some new political realignment based on principle. Instead, you chose to play along with the bosses…
In one respect, the PAC is less advanced than the American Federation of Labor. You have been very hesitant about endorsing any candidates, however well qualified, except Democrats, because, as some of your subordinates have explained, “the workers are too dumb to split their ticket.” The AFL is far less hesitant in crossing party lines in “rewarding its friends and punishing its enemies.”
What of coercion?
Mr. Thomas criticized PAC as “undemocratic in that its meetings or conventions have never been allowed to share policy but only to execute your policy.”
He went on:
You have challenged anyone to prove coercion of CIO members to support the PAC. I am not a detective and I shall not press individual cases, but I can testify that in state after state which I have visited there is among CIO workers a definite feeling that it would be very unhealthy not to support the PAC, especially if they happen to be on the CIO payroll.
Your cynicism infects your subordinates so that they can print a picture of the Chicago massacre of 1937 where workers were victims of Mayor Kelly’s police, as if it had happened under a Republican administration. That’s company unionism with a vengeance!
Future wars?
On none of “the great issues of future peace or war, of abundance or depression,” he told Mr. Hillman, “did you get any worthwhile declaration from the Democratic Party. The President, with your approval, is preparing the way for future war by underwriting with American blood the indefinite ‘Balkanization of Europe’ and by supporting the French, Dutch and British empires in the Far East.”
Pointing out that he “was not indicting PAC” for its failure to support the Socialist ticket, Mr. Thomas concluded:
…My indictment of your manipulation of the potentially useful PAC goes far deeper. It is that you have delayed the awakening of American workers by your application of the principles of company unionism to support the party of Kelly, Hague, Crump and Bilbo.
Democracy’s, union’s death knell feared
Chicago, Illinois (UP) –
William M. Jeffers, president of the Union Pacific Railroad, today denounced the CIO Political Action Committee and declared that if the PAC succeeds in its aims “the disintegration of American labor unions starts and democracy begins to crumble.”
Mr. Jeffers, former controller of the rubber industry, told the 70th annual convention of the American Bankers Association that he was speaking as a man “who has carried a union card all his working life – and still does.”
Longtime union man
He said:
I was a union man before the un-American element now dominating segments of American labor was born. The railroad brotherhoods know how and where I stand. But I say that no Political Action Committee or any group or individual is going to tell me or any upheaded American how he is going to vote or what he is going to think.
Mr. Jeffers declared that when the victorious U.S. Army comes home, the fighting men are going to insist upon coming back to a better America than when they left.
He said:
It may go hard with any individual or group who attempts to herd them in a civil non-thinking regiment or attempt to stamp them in a common mold.
Post-war business
Mr. Jeffers urged the convention to liberalize banking practices to aid little businessmen in the post-war period. It is there, he said, that the Walter Chryslers and the Henry Fords of the future will be found. He said that many post-war planners have dreams of enticing large established business institutions to new locations.
“But the mirage of big business on the dreamy horizon,” he said, “must not blind these communities to the successful little businesses now within their grasp.”
Mr. Jeffers also denounced the government’s antitrust suit against the railroads and declared that Attorney General Biddle and his assistant, Wendell Berge, “hate secured the bulk of their railroad knowledge from riding in Pullman drawing rooms paid for by taxpayers.”
Washington (UP) –
Playwright Robert E. Sherwood was free to begin active work on behalf of President Roosevelt’s fourth-term campaign today following his “regretfully tendered” resignation as director of the Overseas Branch of the Office of War Information.
He will be succeeded in the OWI post by Edward W. Barrett, who has served at executive director of the Overseas Branch since January.
Mr. Sherwood said his sole reason for resigning was the conviction that Mr. Roosevelt’s reelection was of “supreme importance in this hour of history.” In order not to compromise OWI’s “rigidly nonpartisan” political position by work on behalf of the Roosevelt campaign, Mr. Sherwood said, he decided to make a “clean, complete break.”
By Robert Richards, United Press staff writer
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…
Well, now we are getting into the sort of political campaign to which we have been accustomed every four years.
For a time, it was almost too polite to be true. The terrible reality of war had laid restraint over the quadrennial electioneering. Mr. Roosevelt said he would “not, campaign in the usual sense” – he did “not consider it fitting.” And Mr. Dewey was sedately stumping the country, tolling off the issues in a dignified tone and manner.
Then came Saturday night. “The Champ” stepped into the arena, before a banquet of the teamsters’ union. A born crowd-pleaser, he couldn’t resist the temptation to use the kind of language he did. “Fraud,” “falsehood,” “isolationists,” “labor baiters,” “monopolists,” with liberal reference to Mein Kampf and Goebbels. Brickbats such as “the Champ” had not felt compelled to use in polishing off Messrs. Hoover, Landon and Willkie. It was a gay and hilarious evening of name-calling and wisecracking.
So last night, in Oklahoma City, Mr. Dewey picked up the brickbats and hurled them back.
He read the record to sustain charges which the President had said were “false,” “fantastic” and “fraudulent.”
The man who had suggested that after the war we could “keep people in the Army about as cheaply as we could create an agency” for jobless men when they are out, Mr. Dewey recalled, was “the national director of Selective Service, appointed by Mr. Roosevelt and still in office.”
The men who had said we were unprepared when war came were generals, and such administration Senators as Messrs. Barkley and Truman.
Where had Mr. Dewey picked up that strange idea that Mr. Roosevelt had prolonged the depression? From the record which showed after seven years of Roosevelt rule 10 million still unemployed – figures supplied by the American Federation of Labor.
And the suggestion that Mr. Roosevelt considered himself “indispensable” – where did that “malicious falsehood” come from? And again Mr. Dewey quoted, from Senator Truman and Boss Kelly – men certainly not repudiated by the President.
“The man who wants to be President for 16 years,” said Mr. Dewey, “is indeed indispensable, He is indispensable to Harry Hopkins, to Madam Perkins, to Harold Ickes, to a host of other political jobholders. He is indispensable to America’s leading enemy of civil liberties – the Mayor of Jersey City. He is indispensable to those infamous machines, in Chicago – in the Bronx – and all the others. He is indispensable to Sidney Hillman and the Political Action Committee, to Earl Browder, the ex-convict and pardoned Communist leader. Shall we, the American people, perpetuate one man in office 16 years to accommodate this motley crew?”
Mr. Dewey, the prosecuting attorney, speaking.
The case is now getting ready for the jury.
Orson Welles, actor, playwright, producer, magician, child prodigy, etc., etc., etc., now bows himself in as a pro-Roosevelt political orator with this brilliant effort:
Tom Dewey is a persuasive conman. He leads a slicker’s gang of conmen, of expert wreckers. The American people are as wise as they are good, and it’s true that they can’t be fooled for long; but they can be fooled a little and enough.
We don’t wonder that Orson considers himself a great authority on fooling – and scaring – the American people. But we think he was more effective when he was using those Men from Mars.