Press Release, Speech of President Harry S. Truman, Irvington, Kentucky
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OCR Page 1 of 2TRUMIT
NATIONAL
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
ARCHIVES AND
RECORDS
SERVICE"
REAR PLATFORM REMARKS OF THE PRESIDENT
AT IRVINGTON, KENTUCKY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1948,
6:40 P. M., c.s.t.
Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman. I especially like that
second remark you made.
I was talking to the Governor of Kentucky a while ago, and
he looked out the window and he said, "A lot of people must have
postponed their milking tonight. I'm glad you did because I
wanted to see you, despite helfact that the train was late.
That wasn't my fault. I got delayed in the great State of Illinois
They sidetracked me and drove me all over Southern Illinois and
I was due two hours before while we were doing it, but it was a
pleasant trip; and in every town we saw almost as many people as
we have here. At every stop there's always a prophesy that there
won't be anybody there, and when we get there it looks as if
everybody in the county got there.
I stopped here in Henderson when we came across the river
from Evansville, and I asked the newspaper man there how many
people were there. "oh," he said, "fifty thousand." I said,
how did he know it. He said, well, there were fifty thousand
people in that county and they were all there.
I wish'I could spend enough time with you to discuss the
issues that are before the country at this time because you are
all VAtelly interested in them. But I can't do it because the
train is late and I have got a special meeting at Louisville
tonight that is over a national radio hook-up -- and you know,
people have to be prompt with the radio or they will charge you
for the time and you won't get the use of it, and I know you
won't have me do that, would you?
But there are certain fundamentals that I can mention
incidentally --the attitude of the Re ublicans toward the farm
program, which was inaugurated by the Democrats in 1933. If you
remember, the farmer was about as low as he could possibly get,
financially, in 1932. He was being foreclosed. He could get
nothing for his produce. If I remember correctly, corn was
as low as 15c a bushel, and wheat went to a quarter. Hogs were
selling for $3 a hundred, and you couldn't sell a fat steer at
all, unless you brought in the skin, and you had to almost give
him away.
This situation has been almost reversed since 1933. The
farmers have been more prosperous than ever before in the history
of the country. The National income has been fairly distributed
between the farmers, laborers and white collar workers, and that
is what the Government is for -- to see that everybody gets a
fair deal in the country. That's what we started to give the
country, and that's what we did give the country over the last
sixteen years.
Then along comes the terrible 80th Congress, and they're
trying to undo it. They did their level best to undo those things.
They cut the ground from under the farmer and the price support
program. They tried their best to abolish labor's Bill of Rights
by passing that Taft-Hartley Act, and they're working on reclamation
and irrigation projects and public power. They would like to
abolish TVA. They've cut out the power transmission lines from
these great dams which the Government has built and which belong to
the public and which are intended to furnish cheap power to the
public. They are a special interest Congress, and they are
representative of the Renublican Party.
Now, I want you to keep that situation in mind, and Iwant
you to be sure and send a Democrat, Senator Virgil Chapman, to the
Senate this fall, and I want you to send Frank Chelf back to the
House -- and then we'll have a start on a Congress that will be in
the interest of the people -- and goodness knows we don't want
another duplicate of the 80th Congress. And if the Republicans
get control that's/exactly what we'll have because the leadership
just
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