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(the excerpt is italicized
below)
Municipal Auditorium, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
I AM SORRY that the microphones
are in the way, but I must leave them the way
they are because I have got to be able to see
what I am doing--as I am always able to see what
I am doing.
I can't tell you how very
much I appreciate the honor which you have just
conferred upon me. I shall continue to try to
deserve it.
I accept the nomination.
And I want to thank this
convention for its unanimous nomination of my
good friend and colleague, Senator Barkley of
Kentucky. He is a great man, and a great public
servant. Senator Barkley and I will win this election
and make these Republicans like it--don't you
forget that!
We will do that because
they are wrong and we are right, and I will prove
it to you in just a few minutes.
This convention met to
express the will and reaffirm the beliefs of the
Democratic Party. There have been differences
of opinion, and that is the democratic way. Those
differences have been settled by a majority vote,
as they should be.
Now it is time for us to get together and beat
the common enemy. And that is up to you.
We have been working together
for victory in a great cause. Victory has become
a habit of our party. It has been elected four
times in succession, and I am convinced it will
be elected a fifth time next November.
The reason is that the
people know that the Democratic Party is the people's
party, and the Republican Party is the party of
special interest, and it always has been and always
will be.
The record of the Democratic
Party is written in the accomplishments of the
last 16 years. I don't need to repeat them. They
have been very ably placed before this convention
by the keynote speaker, the candidate for Vice
President, and by the permanent chairman.
Confidence and security
have been brought to the people by the Democratic
Party. Farm income has increased from less than
$2 ¼ billion in 1932 to more than $18 billion
in 1947. Never in the world were the farmers of
any republic or any kingdom or any other country
as prosperous as the farmers of the United States;
and if they don't do their duty by the Democratic
Party, they are the most ungrateful people in
the world!
Wages and salaries in this
country have increased from 29 billion in 1933
to more than $128 billion in 1947. That's labor,
and labor never had but one friend in politics,
and that is the Democratic Party and Franklin
D. Roosevelt.
And I say to labor what
I have said to the farmers: they are the most
ungrateful people in the world if they pass the
Democratic Party by this year.
The total national income
has increased from less than $40 billion in 1933
to $203 billion in 1947, the greatest in all the
history of the world. These benefits have been
spread to all the people, because it is the business
of the Democratic Party to see that the people
get a fair share of these things.
This last, worst 80th Congress
proved just the opposite for the Republicans.
The record on foreign policy
of the Democratic Party is that the United States
has been turned away permanently from isolationism,
and we have converted the greatest and best of
the Republicans to our viewpoint on that subject.
The United States has to
accept its full responsibility for leadership
in international affairs. We have been the backers
and the people who organized and started the United
Nations, first started under that great Democratic
President, Woodrow Wilson, as the League of Nations.
The League was sabotaged by the Republicans in
1920. And we must see that the United Nations
continues a strong and growing body, so we can
have everlasting peace in the world.
We removed trade barriers
in the world, which is the best asset we can have
for peace. Those trade barriers must not be put
back into operation again.
We have started the foreign
aid program, which means the recovery of Europe
and China, and the Far East. We instituted the
program for Greece and Turkey, and I will say
to you that all these things were done in a cooperative
and bipartisan manner. The Foreign Relations Committees
of the Senate and House were taken into the full
confidence of the President in every one of these
moves, and don't let anybody tell you anything
else.
As I have said time and
time again, foreign policy should be the policy
of the whole Nation and not the policy of one
party or the other. Partisanship should stop at
the water's edge; and I shall continue to preach
that through this whole campaign.
I would like to say
a word or two now on what I think the Republican
philosophy is; and I will speak from actions and
from history and from experience.
The situation in 1932
was due to the policies of the Republican Party
control of the Government of the United States.
The Republican Party, as I said a while ago, favors
the privileged few and not the common everyday
man. Ever since its inception, that party has
been under the control of special privilege; and
they have completely proved it in the 80th Congress.
They proved it by the things they did to the people,
and not for them. They proved it by the things
they failed to do.
Now, let's look at some
of them--just a few.
Time and time again
I recommended extension of price control before
it expired June 30, 1946. I asked for that extension
in September 1945, in November 1945, in a Message
on the State of the Union in 1946; and that price
control legislation did not come to my desk until
June 30, 1946, on the day on which it was supposed
to expire. And it was such a rotten bill that
I couldn't sign it. And 30 days after that, they
sent me one just as bad. I had to sign it, because
they quit and went home.
They said, when OPA
died, that prices would adjust themselves for
the benefit of the country. They have been adjusting
themselves all right! They have gone all the way
off the chart in adjusting themselves, at the
expense of the consumer and for the benefit of
the people that hold the goods.
I called a special session
of the Congress in November 1947--November 17,
1947--and I set out a 10-point program for the
welfare and benefit of this country, among other
things standby controls. I got nothing. Congress
has still done nothing.
Way back 4 1/2 years ago,
while I was in the Senate, we passed a housing
bill in the Senate known as the
Wagner-Ellender-Taft bill. It was a bill to clear
the slums in the big cities and to help to erect
low-rent housing. That bill, as I said, passed
the Senate 4 years ago. It died in the House.
That bill was reintroduced in the 80th Congress
as the Taft-Ellender-Wagner bill. The name was
slightly changed, but it is practically the same
bill. And it passed the Senate, but it was allowed
to die in the House of Representatives; and they
sat on that bill, and finally forced it out of
the Banking and Currency Committee, and the Rules
Committee took charge, and it still is in the
Rules Committee.
But desperate pleas from
Philadelphia in that convention that met here
3 weeks ago couldn't get that housing bill passed.
They passed a bill they called a housing bill,
which isn't worth the paper it's written on.
In the field of labor we
needed moderate legislation to promote labor-management
harmony, but Congress passed instead that so-called
Taft-Hartley Act, which has disrupted labor-management
relations and will cause strife and bitterness
for years to come if it is not repealed, as the
Democratic platform says it ought to be repealed.
On the Labor Department,
the Republican platform of 1944 said, if they
were in power, that they would build up a strong
Labor Department. They have simply torn it up.
Only one bureau is left that is functioning, and
they cut the appropriation of that so it can hardly
function.
I recommended an increase
in the minimum wage. What did I get? Nothing.
Absolutely nothing.
I suggested that the schools
in this country are crowded, teachers underpaid,
and that there is a shortage of teachers. One
of our greatest national needs is more and better
schools. I urged the Congress to provide $300
million to aid the States in the present educational
crisis. Congress did nothing about it. Time and
again I have recommended improvements in the social
security law, including extending protection to
those not now covered, and increasing the amount
of benefits, to reduce the eligibility age of
women from 65 to 60 years. Congress studied the
matter for 2 years, but couldn't find the time
to extend or increase the benefits. But they did
find time to take social security benefits away
from 750,000 people, and they passed that
over my veto.
I have repeatedly asked
the Congress to pass a health program. The Nation
suffers from lack of medical care. That situation
can be remedied any time the Congress wants to
act upon it.
Everybody knows that I
recommended to the Congress the civil rights program.
I did that because I believed it to be my duty
under the Constitution. Some of the members of
my own party disagree with me violently on this
matter. But they stand up and do it openly! People
can tell where they stand. But the Republicans
all professed to be for these measures. But Congress
failed to act. They had enough men to do it, they
could have had cloture, they didn't have to have
a filibuster. They had enough people in that Congress
that would vote for cloture.
Now everybody likes to
have low taxes, but we must reduce the national
debt in times of prosperity. And when tax relief
can be given, it ought to go to those who need
it most, and not those who need it least, as this
Republican rich man's tax bill did when they passed
it over my veto on the third try.
The first one of these
was so rotten that they couldn't even stomach
it themselves. They finally did send one that
was somewhat improved, but it still helps the
rich and sticks a knife into the back of the poor.
Now the Republicans came
here a few weeks ago, and they wrote a platform.
I hope you have all read that platform. They adopted
the platform, and that platform had a lot of promises
and statements of what the Republican Party is
for, and what they would do if they were in power.
They promised to do in that platform a lot of
things I have been asking them to do that they
have refused to do when they had the power.
The Republican platform
cries about cruelly high prices. I have been trying
to get them to do something about high prices
ever since they met the first time.
Now listen! This is equally
as bad, and as cynical. The Republican platform
comes out for slum clearance and low-rental housing.
I have been trying to get them to pass that housing
bill ever since they met the first time, and it
is still resting in the Rules Committee, that
bill.
The Republican platform
favors educational opportunity and promotion of
education. I have been trying to get Congress
to do something about that ever since they came
there, and that bill is at rest in the House of
Representatives.
The Republican platform
is for extending and increasing social security
benefits. Think of that! Increasing social security
benefits! Yet when they had the opportunity, they
took 750,000 off the social security rolls !
I wonder if they think
they can fool the people of the United States
with such poppycock as that!
There is a long list of
these promises in that Republican platform. If
it weren't so late, I would tell you all about
them. I have discussed a number of these failures
of the Republican 80th Congress. Every one of
them is important. Two of them are of major concern
to nearly every American family. They failed to
do anything about high prices, they failed to
do anything about housing.
My duty as President requires
that I use every means within my power to get
the laws the people need on matters of such importance
and urgency.
I am therefore calling
this Congress back into session July 26th.
On the 26th day of July,
which out in Missouri we call "Turnip Day,"
I am going to call Congress back and ask them
to pass laws to halt rising prices, to meet the
housing crisis--which they are saying they are
for in their platform.
At the same time I shall
ask them to act upon other vitally needed measures
such as aid to education, which they say they
are for; a national health program; civil rights
legislation, which they say they are for; an increase
in the minimum wage, which I doubt very much they
are for; extension of the social security coverage
and increased benefits, which they say they are
for; funds for projects needed in our program
to provide public power and cheap electricity.
By indirection, this 80th Congress has tried to
sabotage the power policies the United States
has pursued for 14 years. That power lobby is
as bad as the real estate
lobby, which is sitting on the housing bill.
I shall ask for adequate
and decent laws for displaced persons in place
of this anti-Semitic, anti-Catholic law which
this 80th Congress passed.
Now, my friends, if there
is any reality behind that Republican platform,
we ought to get some action from a short session
of the 80th Congress. They can do this job in
15 days, if they want to do it. They will still
have time to go out and run for office.
They are going to try to
dodge their responsibility. They are going to
drag all the red herrings they can across this
campaign, but I am here to say that Senator Barkley
and I are not going to let them get away with
it.
Now, what that worst 80th
Congress does in this special session will be
the test. The American people will not decide
by listening to mere words, or by reading a mere
platform. They will decide on the record, the
record as it has been written. And in the record
is the stark truth, that the battle lines of 1948
are the same as they were in 1932, when the Nation
lay prostrate and helpless as a result of Republican
misrule and inaction.
In 1932 we were attacking
the citadel of special privilege and greed. We
were fighting to drive the money changers from
the temple. Today, in 1948, we are now the defenders
of the stronghold of democracy and of equal opportunity,
the haven of the ordinary people of this land
and not of the favored classes or the powerful
few. The battle cry is just the same now as it
was in 1932, and I paraphrase the words of Franklin
D. Roosevelt as he issued the challenge, in accepting
nomination in Chicago: "This is more than
a political call to arms. Give me your help, not
to win votes alone, but to win in this new crusade
to keep America secure and safe for its own people."
Now my friends, with the
help of God and the wholehearted push which you
can put behind this campaign, we can save this
country from a continuation of the 80th Congress,
and from misrule from now on.
I must have your help.
You must get in and push, and win this election.
The country can't afford another Republican Congress.
NOTE: The President spoke
at 2 a.m. in Convention Hall in Philadelphia.
The address was carried on a nationwide radio
broadcast.
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