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OCR Page 1 of 3THE WHITE HOUSE
Fle
WASHINGTON
June 10, 1946
Dear Mrs. Roosevelt:
I hope you will pardon my delay in answering your
letter of May wenty-seventh, but as you can well
imagine I have been quite busy.
It is very heartening to get your kind expressions
with reference to some of the recent events in
Washington. I have tried to carry out what I think
is the best interests of the nation as a whole.
I
am sure that I have succeeded in wiping from my own
mind any thought of the political considerations in-
volved.
The dangers to our whole economic system stemming from
the stagnation of the railroads were so great that there
was no room for any politics. I am afraid, however,
that in some quarters the old criterion of politics was
still quite important.
As you know, the Senate has removed from the bill the
provision for drafting strikers against the Government.
I assure you that it was not easy for me to recommend
such legislation. I tried to hedge it around with as
many safeguards as possible. Among these safeguards
was a limitation of its provisions to a handful of
national industries in which a stoppage of work would
affect our entire economy. There was also the limita-
tion that its provisions could be made applicable only
to those industries which already had been taken over
by the Government.
I am afraid that the Senate has taken all of the teeth
out of the proposed emergency legislation.
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