Press Release, Speech of President Harry S. Truman, Sacramento, California
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OCR Page 1 of 3IMMEDIATE RELEASE
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
REAR PLATFORM REMARKS OF THE PRESIDENT AT
SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA, SEPTEMBER. 22,
TRUMAN
1948 at :17 p. m. C. d. S. t.
"NATIONAL
ARCHIVES AND
RECORDS
Thank you very much.
Mr. Chairman, I am astonished. This crowd's bigger than
the crowd was when I was here on my non-political trip. You're
very C ordial and I appreciate immer sely the hospitality which has
been shown to me. in California today, and this, this makes me feel
-- well, It's right here. I can't express it to you as it. should be
done.
I'm happy to be here because there are a few things I
would like to tell you. You remember I talked here in June and I
didn't want to talk politics at that time because I was out to let
you know something about your Government and how it ran, and let
you see the President and what he looked like. I'm making a poli-
tical trip now.
I'm going to talk to you about some practical politics,
Practical politics is Government. Government starts from the grass
roots. Government starts when you vote, and whenever a men is a
politician and he honestly carries that designation, it means the t
he is interested in Government. Usually, after he dies, they call
him a statesman.
As I travelled across the country I have become more and
more convinced that it is the simple democratic principles of our
forefathers which constitute the secret of growth and prosperity
in this great country. But it's a strange thing that some of these
simple, old principles which are the secret of our growth and pros-
perity are under attack today.
Let me explain what I mean by discussing issues which are
of vital importance to you people here in the Central Valley of
California.
Take the basic principle of small business and the public
distribution of publicly produced power. These principles are
being attacked by monopolies, monopolistic public utilities, and by
special interests, just as they always have been the special in-
terests.
You know, there are a class of people who believe that
there ought to be a strata of people at the top who milk all the
cream, and whatever drops through to the bottom of the separater
ought to go the little man.
The Democratic Party doesn't believe that. The Democratic
Party believes that there ought to be a fair distribution of all
the wealth so that the farmer, the laboring man end the small busi-
ness man e-so that the every-day citizen such as you and me can have
a fair share in the proper way. That's what I'm fighting for right
now.
I'm calling this trip 8 crusade. It's a grusade of the
people against the special interests, and if you back me up we're
going to win that crusade.
Sacramento was the scene of one of the greatest struggles
by the people against monopoly which the country has ever seen.
It was the struggle of the people of California to remove the
strangle-hold grasp of a railroad monopoly. That was the fight
which Frank Norris dramatized in his famous book, "The Octopus".
You all remember that. I suppose there are a lot. of citizens here
who indulged in that fight, and it was a good one.
We are in the same kind of a fight today. The effort of
your Federal Government to keep the resources and the development of
America free from the grasp of monopoly are being attacked now as
radical and un-American. It is the same false charge which was
leveled against your fathers when they fought the railroad mooveroly.
OVER
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