Press Release, Speech of President Harry S. Truman, Amsterdam, New York
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OCR Page 1 of 2IMMEDIATE RELEASE
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
REAR PIATFORM REMARKS OF THE PRESIDENT
AT AMSTERDAM, NEW YORK - OCTOBER 8, 1948
NATIONAL
10:30 A.M., E.S.T.
ARCHIVES AND
RECORDS
SERVICE"
Ladies and Gentlemen: You know, I certainly do highly appreciate
this turn-out. I thank Mayor Carter most sincerely for that fine
introduction, and I hope he is a good prophet, that I will be the
next President of the United States 1 and I think he is right.
This is a very ha ppy day for me to be in your city of
Amsterdam. During the war, it was my business as Chairman of the
special Senate Committee investigating the defense program to become
somewhat familiar with your factories here in this city. You made
a great contribution to the war effort. You turned your factories
over from war work to peace work and you did it expeditiously. I
want to express my appreciation as President of the United States
for the contribution that you made.
Now, this campaign that I am making up and down the country
is a campaign in the interests of the people. This is a campaign
in which I am trying to explain to you that it is your own
interest that you vote for on November 2nd. It is not necessarily
me you are electing President, you are voting for your own interests
for this
campaign is a campaign of the people against the special
interests. The Republican Congress conclusively proved that, as soon
as they got control.
What was the first thing they did when they got control of
the Congress of the United States? They immediately began to tear up
labor's bill of rights. The first thing they did was to try and
amend the Wagner Labor Act so it would no longer work in the interests
of labor, but would work in the interests of special privilege.
I vetoed that, and I hope everyone of you will read that
veto message, because it strikes at the fundamental foundation of the
Democratic plan to make the government for all the people.
The next thing they did was to try to tear up the farm
program. They tried to leave the farmer out on a limb so he could no
longer have a floor under bis prices, and they are trying to tell
the people that that floor under prices to the farmers is causing
the high cost of living. That is not true. You cannot tell how much
the price sup. ort program has been worth to this great co untry of
ours, because the farmer was willing to go out and raise tremendous
cfops that have been necessary to feed the world and to keep enough
in this country so that prices would not go sky high.
If these people had been willing to give me the necessary
controls for allocation of these things, everybody would have had his
fair share, and prices would not have been out of sight.
I want you to weigh these things. I want you to consider
very carefully the record of the Congressman in this district,
then I think you will want to vote for Professor Murphy for Congressman
from this district, who knows what these issues are and has been trying
to tell you what they are.
The best interests are the people's interests - in voting
for a Government that is of the people and for the people.
Now, you are the Government. You are yourselves the
Government, when you exercise your rights to vote. When you do not
exercise that right to vote, you are shirking your duty.
In 1946, two-thirds of the people of the United States who
were entitled to vote stayed away from the polls - and look what they
received as a result of that! They got a Congress that immediately
began working for special privilege. There were more lobbyists and
more higher paid lobbyists around this 80th Congress than ever before
in the history of the Country. And rhose lobbyists got just what they
wanted. The real-estate lobby kept the housing bill Brom going through.
The big corporation lobbyists got the Taft-Hartley Bill through.
Mr. Taft said that he wrote that bill for the benefit of employers.
I don't think that is anything to brag about.
(OVER)
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