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OCR Page 1 of 3News
REPUBLICAN NATIONAL
release
L. Richard Guylay, Public Relations Director
NAtional
1625 Eye Street, Northwest
Washington 6,
the
10
FOR RELEASE
TUESDAY, AUGUST 9
AND THEREAFTER
A progress report to the people hailing the achievements of the Eisen-
hower Republican Administration in the field of civil rights was rele ased to-
day by Val Jo Washington, Director of Minorities for the Republican National
Committee.
In the report, Mr. Washington said that President Eisenhower's approach
on civil rights had been one of action instead of words.
"The Republican Party has fulfilled each of its specific promises on
civil rights made during the 1952 campaign, said Mr. Washington. "These
were published in a pamphlet entitled 'The Republican Party and the Negro'
and with the appointment of E. Frederic Morrow to the White House staff, the
program of campaign promises to minorities has been fulfilled.
President Eisenhower acknowledged receipt of the report in a letter to
Mr. Washington in which he said that "the Republican Party has been firm in
its insistence that there can be only one class of citizenship and has been
effective in its practice of this conviction; thereby it has proved itself,
in our day, a vigorous and productive champion of the ideals and purposes of
Lincoln."
The report stressed the ending of segregation in the Nation's capital, the
elimination of bias and jim crow in Federal departments and bureaus, the
appointment of Negroes to important Federal positions, the strengthening of
the Civil Rights Section of the Justice Department which prosecutes violations
of civil rights laws, and the enforcement of the non-discriminatory clauses
of the Taft-Hartley law.
A copy of the report is attached and the text of the President's letter
of acknowledgment follows:
11 The White House, Washington
August 1, 1955
"Dear Val:
"Naturally, every report on the fulfillment in this Administration of
Republican pledges made in the campaign of 1952 gives me a great
deal of satisfaction. In a special sense, however, your letter on
the complete realization of fourteen points presented to the Negro
voters of the Nation during that campaign is particularly heartening
and gratifying. You relate an achievement which emphatically proves
that the unity of the American people is neither a mere political plat-
itude nor a purely philosophical concept.
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