Election 1944: Roosevelt campaigns in New York (10-21-44)

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Remarks by President Roosevelt at a Businessmen’s Rally for Senator Wagner
October 21, 1944, 11:00 a.m. EWT

Delivered at Ebbets Field, Brooklyn, New York

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I wanted to come here for two reasons. You know I come from the State of New York, and I have made a series of inspection tours here. I come from the State of New York and I practiced law in New York City, but I have never been to Ebbets Field before. I have rooted for the Dodgers. And I hope to come back here some day and see them play.

But the chief reason I came here today is to pay a little tribute to my old friend Bob Wagner. We were together in the legislature – I would hate to say how long ago – thirty-some years ago, in the Senate of the State of New York, and we have been close friends ever since, I think largely because we had the same ideals of being of service to our fellow men.

If anybody knew and could visualize all the way through the help that Bob Wagner has been to mankind, there wouldn’t be any question about asking him to go back to the Senate for six years more, to carry on the splendid service that he has rendered.

And so, I just came here to say that word in his behalf. He deserves well of mankind.

Thanks ever so much.

The Pittsburgh Press (October 21, 1944)

americavotes1944

Foreign policy speech tonight –
Roosevelt takes campaign to sidewalks of New York

Two million expected to see President as he braves drizzle in open car

New York (UP) –
President Roosevelt took his fourth-term reelection campaign to this vast damp city today in an open car, 50-mile motor tour despite wet weather and gray skies.

Bare-headed and without the cape which had sheltered him earlier, the President made the first major station of his citywide swing at Ebbets Field, the Brooklyn Dodgers’ ballpark, where he called upon an estimated 16,000 persons to return Senator Robert F. Wagner (D-NY) to the U.S. Senate.

He speaks tonight before the Foreign Policy Association.

KDKA and KQV will broadcast the speech at 9:30 p.m. EWT.

Bad weather, brushed over the metropolitan area by the diminishing force of a hurricane-at-sea, cut crowds and took some of the sparkle from the occasion. But the President made good on the promise that he would parade “rain or shine.” He did so at the head of a motorcade of about 50 cars which was destined to be on the streets for four hours or more. Near noon the schedule was lagging by half an hour.

Will tour five boroughs

From the Brooklyn depot, where he arrived just before 8:30 a.m., Mr. Roosevelt will move for four hours or more through all but one of the city’s five boroughs. He will see and be seen by more persons, than could be mustered in many a prairie state in a matter of days.

Military courtesies were not wholly observed at the beginning of the city-swing. There was no 21-gun salute at the Army depot and it was as Candidate Franklin D. Roosevelt and not as the Commander-in-Chief that the President came to town. The party left the Brooklyn depot at 10:02 a.m. for the first leg of the journey to the Brooklyn Navy Yard.

The next was Ebbets Field, home grounds of the Brooklyn Dodgers, where the rally for Senator Wagner attracted additional thousands because the President appeared.

Route well-guarded

Ten thousand policemen – vacations and other leave canceled in this wartime political emergency – were guarding the route. Rooftops were ordered cleared and the Secret Service, and probably the FBI, were on unostentatious duty. This is Mr. Roosevelt’s first wholly public appearance since Pearl Harbor.

He has travelled far and often since then but his plans have been unannounced and his route as much of a military secret as a war plan. This avowedly political public appearance was undertaken under pressure of the President’s campaign advisers who believe there are thousands of yotes to be gained by presenting the President in person to the curbside crowds.

Crowds gather early

And if his health is an issue in this campaign, it doubtless will be remarked by the electorate that the President was not fearful of spending hours in an open car on a day which promised at any moment to send even the ducks indoors.

Hatless at the start of his tour, the President arrived at the Navy Yard at 10:18 a.m. Mrs. Roosevelt awaited him there. Mayor Fiorello H. La Guardia and other municipal and party leaders were in the parade. Mr. La Guardia in the presidential car for the first leg of the ride.

Child greets Roosevelt

Four-year-old Carol Levine, a Brooklyn beauty, came up with the first placard of the thousands which are expected to greet the President today. It was homemade, mailed to a suck and read: “Long Live Roosevelt.”

The first Roosevelt speech of the day was at Ebbets Field where some 7,500 persons had gathered well in advance of the President’s arrival as Senator Wagner began his preliminary remarks. The President will speak later today at Hunter College, a WAVE installation, in the Bronx.

Tonight, he will make the third of his formal and avowed nationwide political broadcasts before a Waldorf-Astoria Hotel dinner of the Foreign Policy Association.

Police seem apprehensive

A raw drizzle in the Ebbets Field section of Brooklyn dampened the occasion and the stands blossomed umbrellas by the hundreds. The area of the Navy Yard was cleared of all spectators before the President’s appearance. Police and others responsible seemed apprehensive.

The President’s battered old campaign fedora, a veteran of 1932, came into view early as the procession got underway.

Municipal politicos alternated in the open car with Mr. Roosevelt. But he had one constant companion – Fala, the White House dog. There were two secret service men on each side of the car, assigned to the running boards for an anxious four-hour tour of duty. Military bands – one of them powered by WACs – sent the party away from the Army depot with a blare of sound.

Bad weather cuts crowds

Mr. Roosevelt was 23 minutes behind schedule when he reached Ebbets Field at 10:58 a.m. Bad weather had cut the crowds on the early laps. But there were cheers, banners and shouts from windows and from the curbs. The sidewalk crowds were in knots of 500 here and 1,000 there, concentrated largely where the President was expected to make brief stops.

It was a colorful procession. City and national flags and the President’s own standard flew from the handlebars of the 50-motorcycle escort. Each time the motorcade slowed a dozen Secret Service men loped up alongside the presidential car to screen its flanks.

Rain fell steadily as the procession rolled at 30 miles an hour into the downtown section of Brooklyn.

The President and his wife smiled and nodded to the crowds, Mr. Roosevelt giving from time to time with a two-hand, overhead gesture or with a wave of the old hat acknowledgement. Women observed that Mrs. Roosevelt wore a dark red, fur-collared coat and a felt hat. Crowds stood three-deep along downtown Brooklyn curbs.

There was a buzz of curbside comment as the President passed by. “He looks swell” was a frequent judgement, and there was comment that in the long procession of cars only one top was down – the President’s.

americavotes1944

Address by President Roosevelt Before the Foreign Policy Association
October 21, 1944, 9:30 p.m. EWT

Broadcast from the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, New York City

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Broadcast audio:

Gen. McCoy, my old friends, ladies and gentlemen.

Tonight, I am speaking as a guest of the Foreign Policy Association, a nationwide organization – a distinguished organization composed of Americans of every shade of political opinion. I am going to talk about American foreign policy. I am going to talk without rancor, without snap judgment. And I am going to talk without losing my head or losing my temper.

When the First World War was ended – it seems like a long time ago – I believed – I believe now – that enduring peace in the world has not a chance unless this nation, our America, is willing to cooperate in winning it and maintaining it. I thought back in those days of 1918 and 1919, and I know now, that we have to back our American words with American deeds.

A quarter of a century ago, we helped to save our freedom, but we failed to organize the kind of world in which future generations could live – with freedom. Opportunity knocks again. There is no guarantee that opportunity will knock a third time.

Today, Hitler and the Nazis continue the fight – desperately, inch by inch, and may continue to do so all the way to Berlin.

And, by the way, we have another important engagement in Tokyo. No matter how hard, how long the road we must travel, our forces will fight their way there under the leadership of MacArthur and Nimitz.

All of our thinking about foreign policy in this war must be conditioned by the fact that millions of our American boys are today fighting, many thousands of miles from home, for the first objective: defense of our country; and the second objective, the perpetuation of our American ideals. And there are still many hard and bitter battles to be fought.

The leaders of this nation have always held time out of mind that concern for our national security does not end at our borders. President Monroe and every American President following him were prepared to use force, if necessary, to assure the independence of other American nations threatened by aggressors from across the seas.

That principle, we have learned from childhood has not changed, though the world has. Wars are no longer fought from horseback, or from the decks of sailing ships.

It was with recognition of that fact that way back in 1933 that we took, as the basis of our foreign relations, the Good Neighbor Policy – the policy– the principle of the neighbor who, resolutely respecting himself, equally respects the rights of others.

We and the other American Republics have made the Good Neighbor Policy real, real in this hemisphere. And I want to say tonight that it is my conviction that this policy can be, and should be, made universal throughout the world.

At inter-American conferences, beginning at Montevideo in 1933, and continuing down to date, we have made it clear to this hemisphere at least, and I think to most of the world, that the United States of America practices what it preaches.

Our action in 1934, for example, with respect to Philippine independence was another step in making good the same philosophy that animated the Good Neighbor Policy of the year before.

And, as I said two years ago:

I like to think that the history of the Philippine Islands in the last 44 years provides in a very real sense a pattern for the future of other small nations, other small peoples of the world. It is a pattern of what men of good will look forward to in the future to come.

And I cite as an illustration in the field of foreign policy something that I am proud of. That was the recognition in 1933 of Soviet Russia.

And may I add a personal word. In 1933, a certain lady – who sits at this table in front of me – came back from a trip on which she had attended the opening of a schoolhouse. And she had gone to the history and geography class with children eight, nine or ten, and she told me that she had seen there a map of the world with a great big white space upon it – no name – no information. And the teacher told her that it was blank, with no name, because the school board wouldn’t let her say anything about that big blank space. Oh, there were only a hundred and eighty to 200 million people in that space which was called Soviet Russia. And there were a lot of children, and they were told that the teacher was forbidden by the school board even to put the name of that blank space on the map.

For sixteen years before then, the American people and the Russian people had no practical means of communicating with each other. We reestablished those means. And today we are fighting with the Russians against common foes – and we know that the Russian contribution to victory has been, and will continue to be, gigantic.

However – and we have to take a lot of things – certain politicians, now very prominent in the Republican Party, have condemned our recognition.

I am impelled to wonder how Russia would have survived, survived against the German attack, if these same people had had their way.

After the last war – in the political campaign of 1920 – the isolationist Old Guard professed to be enthusiastic about international cooperation. And I remember very well, because I was running on the issue at that time.

While campaigning for votes in that year of 1920, Senator Harding said that he favored with all his heart an Association of Nations “so organized and so participated in” – I am quoting the language – “as to make the actual attainment of peace a reasonable possibility.”

However – and this is history, too – after President Harding’s election, the Association of Nations was never heard of again.

However, we have got to look at people – this is a human world of ours. One of the leading isolationists who killed international cooperation in 1920 was an old friend of mine, and I think he supported me two or three times – Senator Hiram Johnson. Now, in the event of Republican victory in the Senate this year – 1944 – that same Senator Johnson, who is still a friend of mine, would be Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. And I hope that the American voters will bear that in mind.

And it’s a fact – a plain fact, all you have to do is to go back through the files of the newspapers – during the years that followed 1920, the foreign policy of the Republican administrations was dominated by the heavy hand of isolationism.

Much of the strength of our Navy – and I ought to know it – was scuttled; and some of the Navy’s resources were handed over to friends in private industry, as in the unforgettable case of Teapot Dome.

Tariff walls went higher and higher, blocking international trade.

There was snarling at our former allies, and at the same time encouragement was given to American finance to invest two and one-half billion dollars in Germany, our former enemy.

All petitions that this nation join the World Court were rejected or ignored.

We know that after this administration took office, Secretary Hull and I replaced high tariffs with a series of reciprocal trade agreements under a statute of the Congress. The Republicans in the Congress opposed those agreements – and tried to stop the extension of the law every three years. I am just talking about their votes.

In 1935, I asked the Congress to join the World Court. So happens, and I put it that way, he Democrats in the Senate at that time voted for it, for joining, 43–20 – two-thirds. The Republicans voted against it 14–9. And the result was that we were prevented from obtaining the necessary two-thirds majority. I did my best.

In 1937, I asked that aggressor nations be quarantined. For this I was branded by isolationists in and out of public office as an “alarmist” and a “warmonger.”

From that time on, as you well know, I made clear by repeated messages to the Congress of the United States, by repeated statements to the American people, the danger threatening from abroad – and the need of rearming to meet it.

For example, in July ‘39, I tried to obtain a repeal of the arms embargo provisions in the Neutrality Law that tied our hands – tied us against selling arms to the European democracies in defense against Hitler and Mussolini.

Now I remember very well, I have got my notes on it somewhere in my memoirs, the late Senator Borah told a group, which I called – of all parties – which I called together in the White House, that his own private information from abroad was better than that of the State Department of the United States, and that there would be no war in Europe.

And it was made plain to Mr. Hull and me – and it was made plain to us at that time – that because of the isolationist vote in the Congress of the United States, we could not possibly hope to obtain the desired revision of the Neutrality Law.

Now, this fact was also made plain to Adolf Hitler. A few weeks later, after Borah said that to me, he brutally attacked Poland – and the Second World War began.

Let’s get on. In 1941, this administration proposed and the Congress passed, in spite of isolationist opposition, a thing called the Lend-Lease Law – the practical and dramatic notice to the world that we intended to help those nations resisting aggression.

Bringing down to date, in these days – and now I am speaking of October 1944 – I hear voices in the air attacking me for my “failure” to prepare this nation for this war, to warn the American people of the approaching tragedy.

It’s rather interesting as a side thought that these same voices were not so very audible five years ago – or even four years ago – giving warning of the grave peril which we then faced.

There have been, and there still are, in the Republican Party, distinguished men and women of vision and courage, both in and out of public office, men and women who have vigorously supported our aid to our allies and all the measures that we took to build up our national defense. And many of these Republicans have rendered magnificent service to our country in this war as members of my administration. I am happy that one of these distinguished Americans is sitting here at this table tonight – our great Secretary of War, Henry Stimson.

And let us always remember that this very war might have been averted if Henry Stimson’s views had prevailed when, in 1931, the Japanese ruthlessly attacked and raped Manchuria.

Let’s analyze it a little more. The majority of the Republican members of the Congress voted – I’m just giving you a few figures, not many – voted against the Selective Service Law in 1940; they voted against repeal of the arms embargo in 1939; they voted against the Lend-Lease Law in ‘41; and they voted in August 1941 against extension of the Selective Service, which meant voting against keeping our Army together, as was going on then – four months before Pearl Harbor.

You see, I am quoting history to you. I am going by the record. And I am giving you the whole story and not a phrase here and half a phrase there. In my reading copy, there’s another half sentence. You’ve got the point and I’m not going to use it.

You know, I happen to believe – I’m sort of old-fashioned, I guess I’m old – that, even in a political campaign, we ought to obey that ancient injunction: Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbor.

Now, the question of the men who will formulate and carry out the foreign policy of this country is in issue in this country – very much in issue. It is in issue not in terms of partisan application, but in terms of sober, solemn facts – the facts that are on the record.

If the Republicans were to win control of the Congress in this election – and it’s only two weeks from next Tuesday – and I occupy the curious position of being President of the United States, and at the same time a candidate for the Presidency – if the Republicans were to win control of the Congress, inveterate isolationists would occupy positions of commanding influence and power. That record too.

I have already spoken of the ranking Republican member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Senator Hiram Johnson.

One of the most influential members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee – a man who would also be the chairman of the powerful Senate Committee on Appropriations – is Senator Gerald P. Nye.

Well, I am not going back to the old story of the last presidential campaign: Ah, Martin and Barton and Fish – one of them has gone! But, in the House of Representatives, the man who is the present leader of the Republicans there, another friend of mine, and who undoubtedly would be Speaker, is Joseph W. Martin. He voted – I am just giving you examples – he voted against the repeal of the arms embargo, he voted against the Lend-Lease Bill, against the extension of the Selective Service Law, against the arming of merchant ships, and against the Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act, and their extensions.

The chairman of the powerful Committee on Rules – the other one – would be none other than Hamilton Fish.

These are like a lot of others in the Congress of the United States – every one of them is now actively campaigning for the national Republican ticket this year.

Can anyone really suppose that these isolationists have changed their minds about world affairs? That’s a real question. Politicians who embraced the policy of isolationism, and who never raised their voices against it in our days of peril – I don’t think they are reliable custodians of the future of America.

Let’s be fair. There have been Democrats in the isolationist camp, but they have been relatively few and far between, and so far, they have not attained great positions of leadership.

And I am proud of the fact that this administration does not have the support of the isolationist press. You know, for about a half-century I have been accustomed to naming names. I mean specifically, to take the glaring examples, the McCormick-Patterson-Gannett-and-Hearst press.

You know, the American people have gone through great national debates in the recent critical years. They were soul-searching debates. They reached from every city to every village and to every home.

We have debated our principles, our determination to aid those fighting for freedom.

Obviously, we could have come to terms with Hitler, we could have accepted a minor role in his totalitarian world. We rejected that!

We could have compromised with Japan, and bargained for a place in the Japanese-dominated Asia, the Japanese-dominated Pacific, by selling out the heart’s blood of the Chinese people. And we rejected that!

As I look back, I am more and more certain that the decision not to bargain with the tyrants rose from the hearts and souls and sinews of the American people. They faced reality; they appraised reality; they knew what freedom meant.

The power which this nation has attained – the political, the economic, the military, and above all the moral power – has brought to us the responsibility, and with it the opportunity, for leadership in the community of nations. It is our own best interest, and in the name of peace and humanity, this nation cannot, must not, and will not shirk that responsibility.

Now, there are some who hope to see a structure of peace completely set up immediately, with all the apartments assigned to everybody’s satisfaction, with the telephones in, and the plumbing complete, the heating system, and the electric ice boxes all functioning perfectly, all furnished with linen and silver, and with the rent prepaid.

The United Nations have not yet produced such a comfortable dwelling place. But we have achieved a very practical expression of a common purpose on the part of four great nations, who are now united to wage this war, that they will embark together after the war on a greater and more difficult enterprise, an enterprise of waging peace. We will embark on it with all the peace-loving nations of the world – large and small.

And our objective, as I stated ten days ago, is to complete the organization of the United Nations without delay, before hostilities actually cease.

You know, peace, like war, can succeed only where there is a will to enforce it, and where there is available power to enforce it. The Council of the League of Nations– the United Nations must have the power to act quickly and decisively to keep the peace by force, if necessary.

I live in a small town, and I always think in small-town terms, but this goes for small towns as well as big towns. A policeman would not be a very effective policeman if, when he saw a felon break into a house, he had to go to the Town Hall and call a town meeting to issue a warrant before the felon could be arrested.

So, to my simple mind it is clear that, if the world organization is to have any reality at all, our American representative must be endowed in advance by the people themselves, by constitutional means through their representatives in the Congress, with authority to act.

If we do not catch the international felon when we have our hands on him, if we let him get away with his loot because the Town Council has not passed an ordinance authorizing his arrest, then we are not doing our share to prevent another world war. I think – and I have had some experience – that the people of this nation want their government to work, they want their government to act, and not merely to talk, whenever and wherever there is a threat to world peace.

Now, it’s obvious that we cannot attain our great objectives by ourselves. Never again, after cooperating with other nations in a world war to save our way of life, can we wash our hands of maintaining the peace for which we fought.

The Dumbarton Oaks Conference didn’t spring up overnight. It was called by Secretary Hull and me after years of thought, discussion, preparation, and consultation with our allies. Our State Department did a grand job in preparing for the conference and leading it to a successful termination. It was just another chapter in the long process of cooperation with other peace-loving nations, beginning with the Atlantic Charter Conference – that’s a long time ago – and continuing through Conferences at Casablanca, Moscow, Cairo, Tehran and Québec and Washington.

It is my profound conviction that the American people as a whole have a very real understanding of these things. The American people know that Cordell Hull and I are thoroughly conversant with the Constitution of the United States, and know that we cannot commit this nation to any secret treaties or any secret guarantees that are in violation of that Constitution.

After my return from Tehran, I stated officially that no secret commitments had been made. The issue then is between my veracity and the continuing assertions of those who have no responsibility in the foreign field – or, perhaps I should say, a field foreign to them.

No President of the United States – been quite a lot of them – can or could have made the American contribution to preserve the peace without the constant, alert and conscious collaboration of the American people.

Only the determination of the people to use the machinery gives worth to the machinery. Remember that.

We believe that the American people already made up their minds on this great issue; and this administration has been able to press forward confidently with its plans. We are seeking to avert and avoid war.

The very fact that we are now at work on the organization of the peace proves that the great nations are committed to trust in each other. Put this proposition any way you want, it is bound to come out the same way; we either work with the other great’ nations, or we might someday have to fight them. And I am against that.

The kind of world order which we the peace-loving nations must achieve, must depend essentially on friendly human relations, on acquaintance, on tolerance, on unassailable sincerity and good will and good faith. We have achieved that relationship to a very remarkable degree in our dealings with our allies in this war – as I think the events of the war have proved.

It is a new thing in human history for allies to work together, as we have done – so closely, so harmoniously, so effectively in the fighting of a war, and at the same time in the building of a peace.

If we fail to maintain that relationship in the peace – if we fail to expand it and strengthen it – then there will be no lasting peace.

I digress for a moment. As for Germany, that tragic nation which has sown the wind and is now reaping the whirlwind, we and our allies are entirely agreed that we shall not bargain with the Nazi conspirators, or leave them a shred of control – open or secret – of the instruments of government.

We shall not leave them a single element of military power – or of potential military power.

But and I should be false to the very foundations of my religious and political convictions, if I should ever relinquish the hope, or even the faith, that in all peoples, without exception, there live some instinct for truth, some attraction toward justice, some passion for peace – buried as they may be in the German case under a brutal regime.

We bring no charge against the German race, as such, for we cannot believe that God has eternally condemned any race of humanity. We know in our own land, in these United States of America, how many good men and women of German ancestry have proved loyal, freedom-loving, and peace-loving citizens.

But there is going to be a stern punishment for all those in Germany directly responsible for this agony of mankind.

The German people are not going to be enslaved, why? Because the United Nations do not traffic in human slavery. But it will be necessary for them to earn their way back into the fellowship of peace-loving and law-abiding nations. And, in their climb up that steep road, we shall certainly see to it that they are not encumbered by having to carry guns. We hope they will be relieved of that burden forever.

No, the task ahead of us will not be easy. Indeed, it will be as difficult and complex as any task that has ever faced any American administration.

I will not say to you now, or ever, that we of the Democratic Party know all the answers. I am certain, for myself, that I do not know how all the unforeseeable difficulties can be met. What I can say to you is this – that I have unlimited faith that the task can be done. And that faith is based on knowledge – knowledge gained in the arduous, practical, and continuing experience of these past eventful years.

And so, I speak to the present generation of Americans with a reverent participation in its sorrows and in its hopes. No generation has undergone a greater test, or has met that test with greater heroism and I think greater wisdom, and no generation has had a more exalted mission.

For this generation must act not only for itself, but as a trustee for all those who fell in the last war – a part of their mission unfulfilled. It must act also for all those who have paid the supreme price in this war – lest their mission, too, be betrayed. And finally, it must act for the generations to come – that must be granted a heritage of peace.

I do not exaggerate that mission. We are not fighting for, and we shall not attain a utopia. Indeed, in our own land, the work to be done is never finished. We have yet to realize the full and equal enjoyment of our freedom. So, in embarking on the building of a world fellowship, we have set ourselves a long and arduous task, a task which will challenge our patience, our intelligence, our imagination, as well as our faith.

That task, my friends, calls for the judgment of a seasoned and a mature people. This, I think, the American people have become. We shall not again be thwarted in our will to live as a mature nation, confronting limitless horizons. We shall bear our full responsibility, exercise our full influence, and bring our full help and encouragement to all who aspire to peace and freedom.

We now are, and we shall continue to be, strong brothers in the family of mankind – the family of the children of God.

The Pittsburgh Press (October 22, 1944)

americavotes1944

Roosevelt asks free hand for U.S. delegate to League

Isolationists singled out as main targets of bitter criticism
By Merriman Smith, United Press staff writer

New York – (Oct. 21)
President Roosevelt, climaxing a rain-drenched campaign tour of New York’s major boroughs, tonight demanded in a speech before the Foreign Policy Association that the American delegate to the United Nations Council be given in “advance” power to act with other nations in enforcing peace even by force, if necessary.

The President said such authority must be granted if the post-war “world organization is to have any reality at all.”

And at the same time, he denied that any “secret treaties or any secret guarantees” had been developed by Secretary of State Cordell Hull or him. He added a promise that none would be developed.

In a lengthy analysis of this country’s international position as he sees it and particularly referring to keeping the peace after the present conflict ends, Mr. Roosevelt said:

It is clear that, if the world organization is to have any reality at all, our representative must be endowed in advance by the people themselves, by constitutional means through their representatives in Congress, with authority to act.

At the same time, the President restated the principle of unconditional surrender, saying that once Germany is defeated “we shall not leave them a single element of military power – or of potential military power.”

He said:

**As for Germany, that tragic nation which has sown the wind and is now reaping the whirlwind, we and our Allies are entirely agreed that we shall not bargain with the Nazi conspirators, or leave them a shred of control – open or secret – of the instruments of government.

Mr. Roosevelt said that the Allies had “rejected” the possibility of coming “to terms” with Germany and Japan because “the decision not to bargain with the tyrants rose from the hearts and souls and sinews of the American people. They faced reality; they appraised reality; and they knew what freedom meant.”

Isolationists assailed

Mr. Roosevelt was bitterly critical of the “isolationist” attitude of Republicans in Congress, saying:

If the Republicans were to win control of the Congress in this election, inveterate isolationists would occupy positions of commanding influence and power.

He singled out in this category Senator Hiram Johnson (R-CA) and Senator Gerald P. Nye (R-ND) and he went on to call the roll of ranking Republicans on the House side, asking his audience:

Can anyone really suppose that these isolationists have changed their minds about world affairs? Politicians who embrace the policy of isolationism – or who never raised their voices against it in our days of peril – are not reliable custodians of the future of America.

The President admitted there had been Democrats in the same isolationist camp, “but they have been few and far between, and they have not attained positions of leadership.”

There were several boos during the President’s speech, especially when he expressed thanks that his administration did not have the support of the “isolationist… McCormick- Patterson-Hearst-Gannett press,” and when he mentioned Rep. Hamilton Fish (R-NY).

Another vociferous boo came when Mr. Roosevelt mentioned Senator Nye.

Tours city in rain

Mr. Roosevelt spoke in the main ballroom of the Waldorf-Astoria after touring Brooklyn, Queens, the Bronx and Manhattan in an open car for more than four hours during the morning and getting himself thoroughly soaked in a driving rain that followed him throughout the day.

The President opened his address by citing the Republican record on international affairs.

He said:

The majority of the Republican members of the Congress voted against the Selective Service Law in 1940; they voted against repeal of the arms embargo in 1939; they voted against Lend-Lease in 1941 and they voted in August 1941 against extension of Selective Service, which meant voting against keeping our Army together – four months before Pearl Harbor.

Council for peace described

In discussing the pattern of the United Nations Council to keep the peace, the President said “peace, like war, can succeed only where here is a will to enforce it, and where there is available power to enforce it.”

He added:

The Council must have the power to act quickly and decisively to keep the peace by force, if necessary.

The President assured the American people that he and Secretary of State Hull were “thoroughly conversant with the Constitution” and knew they could not “commit the nation to any secret treaties or any secret guarantees in violation of that Constitution.”

‘No secret agreements’

He asserted that “no secret agreements” had been made and that the issue involving agreements of this sort – as put forth by Governor Dewey – was “between my veracity and the continuing assertions of those who have no responsibility im the foreign field – or, perhaps I should say, a field foreign to them.”

Mr. Roosevelt, discussing the fate of a completely defeated Germany, said “we bring no charge against the German race, as such,” but “there is going to be stern punishment for all those in Germany directly responsible for this agony of mankind.”

He said flatly “the German people are not going to be enslaved, because the United Nations do not traffic in human slavery.” But he said, “It will be necessary for them to earn their way back into the fellowship of peace-loving and law-abiding nations.”

Mr. Roosevelt charged that in the years following 1920, Republican foreign policy was “dominated by the heavy hand of isolationism;” and that “much of the strength of our Navy was scuttled – and some of the Navy’s resources were handed over to friends in private industry – as in the unforgettable case of Teapot Dome.”

The President went on to recall his record and the record of Secretary Hull, “against Republican opposition,” to prepare the country for an international emergency and improve its foreign relations.

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New Yorkers line streets in rain to cheer Roosevelt

An estimated three million see President as he makes 50-mile tour of city

New York (UP) – (Oct. 21)
President Roosevelt toured the rain-soaked streets of New York amid a wet but enthusiastic crowd today in an open bid for the state’s 47 electoral votes for his fourth-term campaign.

Mayor F. H. LaGuardia said that Deputy Police Inspector John J. O’Connor estimated that about three million persons had seen the President during his tour.

In his first stop on the four-borough swing, the President stood bareheaded under dripping skies in Ebbets Field, the Brooklyn Dodgers’ ballpark, where he urged an estimated 16,000 persons to return Senator Robert F. Wagner (D-NY), to the U.S. Senate.

Crowds six-jeep

Bad weather, sent inland by a sea-riding hurricane, failed to take the edge off the occasion, as the 50-car flag-draped procession wound through New York’s streets in a four-hour procession.

As the parade wheeled from 110th Street into Upper Broadway on the last lap of the tour the crowds were six-deep along both sides of the city’s more famous streets.

The President’s ride down Broadway, particularly m the theater district and on down Fifth Avenue, was made under a floating canopy of ticker tape, torn-up paper, serpentine and confetti.

His hand was in the air all the time waving to the crowd that was heavy from the Bronx down to Washington Square.

A real Dodger ovation

The Ebbets Field crowd gave the President a regular Dodger ovation as he stood by his open car – bareheaded and without his customary cane – “to pay a little tribute to my old friend, Bob Wagner.”

He said:

We were together in the Legislature some thirty-odd years ago. We’ve been close friends ever since, largely because we have the same ideals of being of service to our fellow men.

Mayor La Guardia accompanied the President on the first leg of his trip. Other municipal and party officials were in the parade, and various municipal politicos alternated in the presidential car, flanked by alert Secret Service men. The President had one constant companion, Fala, his dog, who took a somewhat aloof interest in the crowd.

Navy Yard workers enthusiastic

Arriving at the Navy Yard, the President was greeted by a noisy, unabashed crowd that yelled: “Hi, yah, Frankie. Give ‘em hell.”

Ten thousand policemen – vacations and leaves had been canceled – were stationed along the motorcade’s route. Rooftops were ordered cleared of spectators, and the Secret Service and probably the FBI were on the job.

The old Roosevelt smile was very much in evidence, and he acknowledged bursts of applause with a wave of his hat or by clasping his hands over his head. Mrs. Roosevelt, wearing a dark red fur-collared coat and a felt hat, smiled and nodded to crowds standing three-deep along the curb.

americavotes1944

Cheers for Roosevelt cost woman her teeth

New York (UP) – (Oct. 21)
A woman Democrat in Queens leaned out of her fourth-floor apartment window today to cheer lustily when President Roosevelt’s motorcade passed by.

At the peak of her efforts, her false teeth – uppers and lowers – popped out and fell on the heads of spectators on the sidewalk.

The Pittsburgh Press (October 23, 1944)

americavotes1944

Roosevelt studied four-point program to enforce peace

Legislation to carry out administration plans faces almost certain fight in Congress

Washington (UP) –
The administration is studying a four-step program to carry out the ideas on a world peace organization outlined by President Roosevelt in his foreign policy address Saturday night.

Speaking before the Foreign Policy Association in New York, Mr. Roosevelt declared that the peace organization must be set up before hostilities cease and said the U.S. delegate must receive Congressional authority “in advance” to commit U.S. forces to check aggression.

Steps outlined

Administration officials were understood to be contemplating this four-point program:

  • Submission to the Senate of a treaty to make the United States a member of the new organization. This would require a two-thirds vote for ratification.

  • A separate agreement on the types and amounts of military forces to be held ready for use by the Security Council. This may be either in treaty form or as a resolution requiring simple majorities in both houses.

  • Legislation to set up the office of the American delegate and to outline his duties and authorities. To prevent this from being stymied by the two-thirds Senate rule, the measure probably will be in form of domestic legislation requiring simple majorities.

  • Various appropriation bills providing funds for the office of the delegate and for the American quota forces.

Fight almost certain

Despite the almost certain prospect of opposition from many Congressmen, Mr. Roosevelt said it was imperative that the Council of the organization projected at Dumbarton Oaks have power to act quickly to keep the peace.

He said:

I was clear that if the world organization is to have any reality at all, our representatives must be endowed in advance by the people themselves, by constitutional means through their representatives in the Congress with authority to act.

The Pittsburgh Press (October 24, 1944)

americavotes1944

Fala patriotic

Washington –
President Roosevelt’s “greatest joy” during his tour of New York Saturday came when Fala, his Scottie dog, put his paws on the seat in front of him and stood at attention while bands played “The Star-Spangled Banner,” Mrs. Roosevelt said today. She said she guessed it was “accidental,” that Fala saw everybody else standing at attention.