White House Press Release, Message from President Harry S. Truman to the United States Congress
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HOLD FOR RELEASE
HOLD FOR RELEASE
HOLD FOR RELEASE
May 25, 1946
CAUTION: The following Message to be delivered by the President
before a Joint Session of the Congress, MUST BE HELD IN STRICT
CONFIDENCE and no portion, synopsis or intimation is to be given
out or published until delivery has begun.
The same release also applies to radio broadcasters and
news commentators.
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Please guard against premature publication.
CHARLES G. ROSS
Secretary to the President
MR. PRESIDENT, MR. SPEAKER, MEMBERS OF THE CONGRESS OF THE UNITED
STATES:
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I desire to thank you for this privilege of appearing
before you in order to urge legislation which I deem essential to
the welfare of our country. For the past two days the nation has
been in the grip of a railroad strike which threatens to paralyze
all our industrial, agricultural, commercial, and social life.
Last night I tried to point out to the American people
the bleak picture which we face at home and abroad if the strike
is permitted to continue.
The disaster will spare one. It will bear equally
upon business men, workers, farmers, and upon every citizen of
the United States. Food, raw materials, fuel, shipping, housing,
the public health, the public safety -- all will be dangerously
affected. Hundreds of thousands of liberated people of Europe and
Asia will die who could be saved if the railroads were not now
tied up.
As I stated last night, unless the railroads are manned
by returning strikers, I shall immediately undertake to run them
by the Army of the United States.
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I assure you that I do not take this action lightly. But
there is no alternative. This is no longer a dispute between labor
and management. It has now become a strike against the government
itself. That kind of strike can never be tolerated. If allowed to.
continue, government will break down. Strikes against the government
must stop. I appear before you to request immediate legislation
designed to help stop them.
I am sure that some of you may think that I should have
taken this action earlier, and that I should have made this appearance
here before today. The reason that I did not do so, was that I was
determined to make every possible human effort to avoid this strike
against the government and to make unnecessary the kind of legisla-
tion which I am about to request.
For months, publicly and privately, I have been supervising
and directing negotiations between the railroad operators and the
twenty different railroad unions. I have been doing the same with
respect to the pending labor dispute in the coal mines. Time and
again I have seen the leaders of the unions and the representatives
of the operators. Many hours have been spent by me personally and
many days have been spent by my representatives in attempting to
negotiate settlements of these disputes.
(OVER)
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