Press Release, Speech of President Harry S. Truman, Superior, Wisconsin
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OCR Page 1 of 2IMMEDIATE RELEASE
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
REAR PLATFORM REMARKS OF THE PRESIDENT
TRUMAN
"NATIONAL
AT SuperIOR, WISCONSIN
ARCHIVES AND
RECORDS
OCTOBER 13, 1948, 2.40 PV CST
SERVICE
GOVERNMENT
Thank you -- thank you very much. I appreciate very
much that introduction of Dan Holmes, and I think he is a good
prophet -- I am pretty sure he is a good prophet.
You know, I am more than happy to cone to Superior today.
One of my greatest friends was born and reised here in
Superior. He has now passed on, but he was a great public
servant, and that was DEW Schwellenbach. he was Secretary of
Labor, and he made a great Secretary of Labor. I think of him
every time I think of Superior.
This is my first opportunity to congretulate you people
personally on the great job you dil during the war. The
trenendous amount of shipping that you handled here at Superior
was one of the big reasons why we won World War Two. The
unbroken production record in the mines, on the forms, and in
the forests gave us the material we needed to win that great
war.
Now you are doine an equally good job in producing for
peace. The fine record of cooperation of labor and management
here is a record you can all be proud of . Your cooperatives
here have brought benefits to the whole area, and this part of
the United States is now enjoying greater pescetime prosperity
than ever before in its history.
As a matter of fact, after 16 years of Democratic adminis-
trations, the whole Nation is prosperous. I want to see the
United States stay prosperous. The Democratic Party is fighting
to keep it prosperous.
But the leaders of the Renublican Party, who are terribly
anxious to get their hands on the Government this election,
haven't yet learned one basic lesson. That lesson is simply
this:
We can stay prosperous only when all groups of our people
-- labor, the farmer, the small business man, the white collar
worker -- when oll of them get their fair share of the national
income.
The Republicans don't see it that way. Their record proves
it.
In November 1946, two-thirls of the people stayed at home
and didn't vote for the candidates for Congress in that election.
We got the Republican controlled do-nothing 80th Congress as a
result.
That Congress passed a rich man's tax bill, so the rich
could get relief from taxes, at the expense of the working man.
That Republican Congress passed the Taft-Hortley Act, to weaken
organized labor, so that labor would no longer be in such a good
position to bargain for better wages and working conditions.
Now I vetced that bill, which I cught to have, and I told
you exactly what that bill would do to labor, but the Congress
passed it over my veto by more then a two-thirds majority; and I
have to enforce the laws. So long as they are laws and I em
President, I enforce the laws, for I am sworn to do that, and I
have to do just that as long as I am the President.
But I want you to do something about this terrible law.
I want you to send a Domocratic Congress to Washington and repeal
it. That is the best thing you can do.
That Congress knocked the props out from under permanent
fare prosperity. They tried their best to strangle coopera-
tives.
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