Election 1944: Address by Dewey in Charleston, WV (10-7-44)

The Pittsburgh Press (October 7, 1944)

americavotes1944

Dewey will reply to Roosevelt

Nation to hear him tonight at 9:45

Charleston, West Virginia (UP) –
Governor Thomas E. Dewey, determined to carry his political fight for the White House directly to President Roosevelt, is prepared to unleash a vigorous attack on the “whole course” of the Democratic national administration and the “means” by which his opponent seeks reelection.

Swinging into West Virginia on a bid for the border state’s eight electoral votes, Mr. Dewey will resume his attack on Mr. Roosevelt’s policies in a nationwide campaign speech tonight from Charleston.

WJAS will broadcast Mr. Dewey’s speech at 9:45 p.m. ET.

“Mr. Roosevelt asked the American people not to look now because somebody is following him,” Mr. Dewey said at a press conference, apparently referring to the President’s disavowal of Communist support.

Since he would like softly to deny the means by which he seeks election to 16 straight years in the White House, I shall be compelled to discuss it quite openly at Charleston on the radio.

The Governor’s speech, which associates predicted would be even stronger than the attack he made on Mr. Roosevelt at Oklahoma City, will also deal with “the whole course of the administration and its competence to convert to peacetime jobs.” His aides said he will “pull no punches.”

Mr. Dewey’s criticism of the Roosevelt policies has been one of the major issues of his campaign. He charged that post-war planning will require “competence never yet shown by the present administration.”

In discussing the President’s declaration that he did not want the support of Communists, Mr. Dewey is expected to concentrate his attack on the activities of Earl Browder.

Recently, Mr. Dewey said Browder, a Communist leader, had been pardoned so that he could participate in Mr. Roosevelt’s fourth-term campaign.

Prior to delivering his ninth major political address at a party rally in municipal auditorium, the New York Governor will confer with state leaders of labor, miners, Negro, agriculture, business and veterans’ groups.

To obtain their views

He will obtain their views of current issues facing the country and attempt to organize them behind his campaign.

The labor groups will include representatives of the West Virginia State Federation of Labor and the Railroad Brotherhood. There was no mention of the CIO, whose Political Action Committee under Sidney Hillman is supporting the Democratic national ticket.

Following his campaign speech, the Governor will board his train for the return trip to New York City. He plans to arrive in New York about 1:00 p.m. tomorrow so that he can review the Pulaski Day parade and deliver a “non-political” radio address over a local station.

Warns of regimentation

Speaking from the rear platform of his train to a crowd at Hinton, West Virginia, Mr. Dewey said the main issue of the campaign is “whether we want to continue slipping down the New Deal road to regimentation or whether there is a much better way to run our government.”

He said:

For 12 long years, it has been the objective of the New Deal to gain greater and greater control of our daily lives.

If they continue, they will be in a position to tell us what to eat for breakfast and what kind of pajamas we shall wear at night.

americavotes1944

Address by New York Governor Thomas E. Dewey
October 7, 1944, 9:45 p.m. EWT

Broadcast from Charleston, West Virginia

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Even as this terrible war moves toward our inevitable victory, we are preparing to decide the whole future of our country at the polls. If every American who believes in freedom for his country will register and vote, free America will win an overwhelming victory here at home in November.

That victory at the polls will mean an end to a very, very tired administration in Washington. It will mean the beginning of a new, a competent and an honest government in Washington.

This victory at the polls will also serve to speed the defeat of Germany and Japan because it will bring an end to bungling, fumbling and incompetence in Washington.

I have already made it clear that a change of administration will mean no change in the military leadership of the war. It should be equally clear that with a change in administration the work of international organization for peace will proceed with only increased competence and zeal.

I have taken unprecedented steps to put that work upon a nonpartisan basis. I intend to see that it remains a nonpartisan effort with the help of the ablest Americans of both parties in command.

Beyond victory, what kind of a country will our American men and women come home to? This election will decide that question.

We have a fateful decision to make, but that decision must be made not on vague and irresponsible political discussion that has to be retracted the day after it’s made on the radio. It ought to be made on the facts. On Thursday night of this week my opponent repeated his charge that “there are politicians and others who quite openly worked to restrict the use of the ballot in this election.”

Now I do not know whom Mr. Roosevelt means, because he seems to lack the courage to name names and say what he means. So, let’s look at the facts.

He sadly complained that not enough people vote. But he pointed with pride to the fact that in 1940 62½ percent of the eligible voters of this nation went to the polls.

Well, in the State of New York not 62½ percent but 77 percent of the eligible soldiers and sailors of our state have had ballots mailed to them already.

Despite my opponent’s attempt to play politics with the soldier vote every evidence indicates that as a nation we will have an even larger percentage of soldier votes than we will of civilians.

Let’s have no more of this political pretense on a matter of importance to us all. Now we know where the truth is.

And let me point out, my opponent is relying for his main support upon a solid block of votes in states where millions of American citizens are deprived of their right to vote by the poll tax and by intimidation. Not once in twelve years has my opponent lifted a finger to correct this and his platform is cynically silent on the subject.

In his speech of Thursday night my opponent softly denies that he welcomes “the support of any person or group committed to Communism or Fascism.”

Now, that is news! But doesn’t this soft disclaimer come a trifle late? Only last week in Madison Square Garden, Earl Browder, the head of the Communist Party in America, proclaimed to 15,000 cheering adherents that the election of my opponent was essential to his aims.

This is the same Earl Browder, now such a patriot, who was convicted as a draft dodger in the last war, convicted again as a perjurer and pardoned by Franklin Roosevelt in time to organize the campaign for his fourth term. The soft disclaimer does come a little late.

Now, why is my opponent’s election so essential to the aims of the Communists? The answer is right in the record of this administration. The aims of the New Dealers were stated on May 23, 1939, by Adolf Berle in a carefully-written memorandum submitted to the Temporary National Economic Committee, an official agency set up to decide upon our future for us.

There he said, and I quote his words:

Over a period of years, the government will gradually come to own most of the productive plants in the United States.

Now, who is this Adolf Berle? He is one of the original brain-trusters and today he holds the office of Assistant Secretary of State.

What does he mean by the government owning “most of the productive plants in the United States”? That means, of course, a system where government would tell each of us where we could work, at what, and for how much.

Now, I do not know whether my opponent calls that system Communism or National Socialism, or Fascism. He can take it any way he likes it. It’s his program, not mine. But I do know it is not an American system and it’s not a free system.

Let’s just see how far we have traveled down that New Deal road. A report just released by a Congressional committee headed by a Democratic United States Senator shows there are fifty-five government corporations and credit agencies with net assets of $27 billion. That is 27 thousand millions of dollars. The federal government now owns or operates one-fifth of the manufacturing plants in the country.

Little by little, the New Deal is developing its own form of corporate state. It becomes clear why the twice-convicted Comrade Browder and his friends are so eager for the reelection of my opponent.

There is another reason. They love to fish in troubled waters. Their aims can best be served by unemployment and discontent. They remember that the New Deal in all its seven peacetime years never cured unemployment. They remember that in the spring of 1940 we still had 10 million unemployed. They remember that under the New Deal we had to have a war to get jobs.

That’s why they want a fourth term and sixteen years of the New Deal. That is one of the very good reasons why it’s time for a change.

Now, just for a minute, let’s look at the way this tired administration bungled its way into conversion for war production. Then we will know how well they can convert for peace and for jobs after the war. In August 1939, more than six years after Hitler came to power, Mr. Roosevelt finally created a War Resources Board under Edward R. Stettinius. It worked for three months and brought in a report, but the report was buried and the board quietly died.

The report is still a secret after five years. Like so many other things, we will never know about it until a new administration opens up the record of these past twelve years.

With heroic Poland conquered, Hitler took Norway and invaded the Lowlands. At last, in response to public pressure on May 25, 1940, Mr. Roosevelt acted. He created the Office for Emergency Management under Executive Order No. 8248.

But just four days later he piled on top of this one a seven-man advisory commission. In doing this he was repeating with exact fidelity the most notorious blunder of the First World War. So of course, it failed.

So next we are handed the prize monstrosity of all, the Office of Production Management under two different heads, William Knudsen and Sidney Hillman.

It was Sidney Hillman’s performance in this job that led the chairman of a Senate investigating committee to say, and I’m quoting the Senate record:

If Mr. Hillman cannot or will not protect the interests of the United States, I am in favor of replacing him with someone who can and will.

The Senator who said that is now my opponent’s handpicked running mate, Harry Truman. In spite of his unkind remarks the Democratic National Convention was allowed to nominate Mr. Truman because he was “cleared with Sidney.”

Of course, that agency also was a failure. So, Mr. Roosevelt piled on still another one, the Supply Priorities and Allocations Board. That was on August 28, 1941, and of course, that failed too. It was not until five weeks after Pearl Harbor that Mr. Roosevelt did what should have been done at the beginning.

At last, we got a War Production Board with a single responsible administrator at the head of it.

But that was not the end. By way of coordinating all this confusion, and, as he said, “to resolve and determine controversies,” my opponent created a sixth agency, the Office of War Mobilization. That was on May 27, 1943, eighteen months after Pearl Harbor.

Still conflicting orders, overlapping responsibilities, backbiting and character assassination handicapped the war effort.

So, the inevitable happened again. A little over a month ago, the War Production Board itself fell apart. One official after another resigned in a torrent of recrimination and the head of the board was given a ticket to China.

Now, during all these months that the war effort was being hampered by open warfare in Washington, the responsible head of our government was doing nothing about it. For weeks our daily papers carried stories of internal dissensions within the board. After it finally blew up, Mr. Roosevelt’s only comment was that he had, of course, been aware of dissension but he had “hoped it would disappear.”

Judging by the words of my opponent it has become dreadfully clear that his administration is too tired even to do the job at hand. It is obviously too tired for the job ahead of this country.

We need a house cleaning in Washington. We need clear lines of authority with competent men to carry out their jobs. We need team work in our government. That’s why it’s time for a change.

The American people have succeeded in the face of every difficulty in sending overwhelming supplies to our Armed Forces. Within a new administration we can speed victory and also be ready for reconversion to peacetime jobs.

Is there any chance the New Deal can ever do this job ahead? Its own best friends disagree. Even Henry Wallace last year described the whole picture as “bureaucracy at its worst!” and he added, “it is utterly inexcusable in a nation at war.”

Now listen to Richard T. Frankensteen, vice president of the CIO Auto Workers Union and delegate to the national convention in which the great Democratic Party was taken over by Earl Browder and Sidney Hillman. Here’s what he said:

The trouble is that no adequate overall planning is being done to ensure orderly reconversion which will lead into a post-war period of full employment.

How in the name of the future of our country can such an administration be trusted with the vital task of creating peacetime jobs?

How can we move ahead to peacetime jobs and opportunity under an administration that has no cure for dissension within its own ranks except for the feeble hope that “it would disappear”?

How can we trust our future to an administration which talks out of one side of its mouth about government ownership of all factories, while out of the other side of its mouth it softly disavows its Communist supporters?

On January 20 of next year, we shall restore honesty to our government so that its spoken word can be trusted. We shall proceed to put into effect a program to recover those things we have lost and to make them secure. This program I have already outlined in part.

To labor we are pledged to restore the Department of Labor with an able and experienced man from the ranks of labor at its head. We are pledged to abolish or transfer to the Department of Labor the almost countless bureaus with which the working men and women of our country now have to struggle.

We are pledged to full support of the guarantees of free, collective bargaining through the National Labor Relations Act and to restore to American labor freedom from government dictation.

We are pledged to work with all our hearts and souls to bring about a lasting peace through international organization with adequate force to back it up. And I may add, I have stated such a program at Louisville in detail, something my opponent has never yet done, unless somewhere in secret.

We are pledged to an expanding Social Security for the people of this country. Twenty million Americans have been forgotten by this administration in the nine long years the old-age pension laws have been on the books. We propose to bring security to 20 million Americans as well as to make our Social Security system sound and supportable by an expanding economy. For there can be no security without a strong, free society to support it.

We are pledged that our government shall not again use its power to set race against race, creed against creed, or class against class. We are pledged to a government which has equal respect for the rights of agriculture, labor and business, and for every race, creed and color.

We are pledged to a future of freedom and abundance for agriculture with assurance by government that the farmer will never again suffer ruinous prices. We are pledged to a scientific and expanding soil conservation program so that the soil of our country may be preserved and built up.

We are pledged to a specific program of tax relief, which will permit our job-making machinery to go to work. We are pledged to bring an end to the tired defeatism of this administration, which talks glibly of opportunity and did nothing about it for seven peacetime years.

And what has been the answer of the New Deal to the specific proposals of our platform and the detailed statements of policy I have made on the radio in these recent weeks?

We have heard nothing but glittering generalities, ghosts of the dead past and wisecracks.

We have heard no answer because my opponent has no answer.

We have had no answer because, in truth, as the New Deal itself has said, it wants a government-owned America. It has no other solution.

I say there is a better way. I have outlined much of that way in detail. Ten million returning heroes will demand that better way under the freedom they have fought to win. It is our solemn duty to provide it for them, to build for them. Under Divine guidance they will have here a land of security with freedom and opportunity for all.

The Pittsburgh Press (October 8, 1944)

americavotes1944

Dewey lashes Red support of Roosevelt

‘Ism’ label attached to President’s program

Charleston, West Virginia (UP) – (Oct. 7)
Governor Thomas E. Dewey charged tonight that President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s reelection “is essential to the aims of Communists” and that the present Democratic national administration plans a “government-owned America.”

Speaking to an overflow crowd at Municipal Auditorium, Mr. Dewey said the Roosevelt administration is “developing its own corporate state” which is “not an American system and it’s not a free system.” The crowd was estimated by police at 6,000, with more than 1,000 standing in a park adjacent the auditorium.

Frequently Mr. Dewey was interrupted by shouts of “Attaboy, Tom,” “Give him more, Tom,” and “Pour it on.” It was one of the most enthusiastic crowds of his campaign.

‘Not my program’

The GOP nominee quoted Assistant Secretary of State Adolf Berle as saying that “over a period of years, the government will gradually come to own most of the productive plants in the United States.”

He asked:

What does he mean by the government owning most of the productive plants of the United States? That means, of course a system where government would tell each of us where we would work, at what job and for how much.

Now, I do not know whether my opponent calls that system Communism or National Socialism or Fascism. He can take it any way he likes it. It’s his program, not mine. But I do know it is not an American system and it’s not a free system.

Concentrates on Browder

The Governor was given a prolonged ovation when he and Mrs. Dewey appeared on the huge auditorium stage, which seats about 1,500 people. It was unusually warm, and most of the crowd were trying to keep cool with makeshift fans.

Mr. Dewey concentrated much of his attack on Earl Browder, Communist leader, whom he charged “had been pardoned” to participate in Mr. Roosevelt’s fourth-term campaign.

Mr. Dewey asked:

Now, why is my opponent’s election so essential to the aims of the Communists? The answer is right in the record of this administration.

Little by little, the New Deal is developing its own form of corporate state. It becomes clear why the twice-convicted Comrade Browder and his friends are so eager for the reelection of my opponent. There is another reason. They love to fish in troubled waters. Their aims can best be served by unemployment and discontent.

Points to ownership

Mr. Dewey charged that at present there are 55 government corporations and credit agencies with net assets of $27 billion. The federal government, he added, owns or operates one-fifth of the manufacturing plants in the country.

The Governor not only accused Mr. Roosevelt of disavowing “too late” the support of various groups but also of seeking the backing of “a solid block of votes in states where millions of American citizens are deprived of their right to vote by the poll tax and by intimidation.”

Prior to Mr. Dewey’s talk, U.S. Senator Chapman Revercomb (R-WV) assailed the activities of Mr. Browder and Sidney Hillman, head of the CIO Political Action Committee.

Mr. Revercomb said:

Mr. Roosevelt may deny connection with these groups again, and again, but who earnestly in his heart does not believe that he works hand in hand with them. A man must be judged by the company he keeps.

Mr. Revercomb said that the “war is going to be won by the military and the boys over there and not by any political leader in America.” He then pointed to Mr. Dewey’s pledge to maintain the military leadership in event of a Republican victory.

Assails Roosevelt

Determined to carry his fight for the White House to Mr. Roosevelt, Mr. Dewey wasted no time in attacking the President’s political campaign. He charged that Mr. Roosevelt was attempting to “play politics with the soldier vote,” but he said he was certain that the percentage of the soldier voters would be greater than the percentage of the civilian ballot markers.

Mr. Dewey said the President attempted to “softly deny” he wanted the support of the Communists but charged the “soft disclaimer” came “a trifle late.”

Mr. Dewey added:

Only last week in Madison Square Garden, Earl Browder, the head of the Communist Party in America, proclaimed to 15,000 cheering adherents that the election of my opponent was essential to his aims.

This is the same Earl Browder, now a patriot, who was convicted as a draft dodger in the last war, convicted again as a perjurer and pardoned by Franklin Roosevelt in time to organize the campaign for his fourth term. The soft disclaimer does come a little late.

‘Cynically silent’

Mr. Dewey also charged that the Democrats were replying on a “solid block of votes in states where millions of American citizens are deprived of their right to vote by the poll tax and by intimidation.”

He added:

Not once in 12 years has my opponent lifted a finger to correct this and his platform is cynically silent on the subject.

He also accused Mr. Roosevelt of attempting to “play politics with the soldier vote” and predicted that the average vote from servicemen would be even larger than the civilian vote.

The GOP standard-bearer reiterated that a Republican victory would mean no change in the country’s military leadership and added the promise that forming the peace would continue on a nonpartisan basis. He said he planned to retain the help of the ablest Americans of both parties.

Bungling charged

Mr. Dewey said the national administration had “bungled its way into conversion for production” and that the war effort had been “hampered by open warfare” among the various governmental agencies.

Mr. Dewey said that thus far in the presidential campaign he had laid down a definite program while his Democratic opponent had resorted to “glittering generalities, ghosts of the dead past and wisecracks” and continued:

We have had no answer because, in truth, as the New Deal itself has said, it wants a government-owned America. It has no solution.

Program outlined

The Governor recalled that he had promised to:

  • Restore the Department of Labor with “an able and experienced man from the ranks of labor at its head,” and guaranteed the continuation of free collective bargaining.

  • Work for a lasting peace through an international organization with adequate force to back it up.

  • Expand social security to all the people.

  • Conduct a government which has equal respect for the rights of agriculture, labor, business, and for every race, creed and color.

  • Bring about greater expansion of the nation’s agricultural resources.

  • Lower personal income taxes and levies on incorporated business along with elimination of most nuisance taxes.