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OCR Page 1 of 2PSF : James H. Rowe, Jr.
1938 - June 1941
PSF: Rowe
Subject
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
fill
November 4, 1938
Memorandum For The President.
I telephoned Ed Flynn your
decision on the H.O.L.C. matter.
He said it would not solve the
difficulty, that the only solution was to
fire Hunt, the Regional Manager and Nelson,
the State Manager. I asked him at least
to try the other method and he was first
inclined to do so, but finally said he
would not.
Mr. Fahey will send Hunt to see
Flynn anyway.
Flynn said he has been very ill
and is going away right after election for
six months and could not really devote any
time to the matter for that reason.
JHR James Rowe, Jr.
PSF: Rowe
Subject
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
December 19, 1938
Memorandum For The President.
Clinton Hester, Administrator
of the Civil Aeronautics Authority, told me
that a few days ago Clarence Lea, Chairman
of the House Interstate Commerce Committee
approached him ostensibly about something
else and in the course of the conversation
asked if Hester, since he was on such good
terms with James Roosevelt, could get word
to you that he was interested in the judgeship
in the Northern District of California which
is now vacant.
Lea told him he did not want to
come down to see you about it. Hester pointed
out he had no choice but to listen.
Hester pointed out to me that
the next ranking member of that committee is
Crosser of Ohio who has not been too friendly
to the Administration.
James Rowe, Jr.
PSF
Rowe
adm.assts adm. assts
N.Y. Herald-Tribune, April 12, 1939
Speech by Wendell Willkie
Occasion: Ohio Society of New York, Hotel Pennsylvania
Guest of Honor: Tom Girdler
Note: Willkie did not introduce Girdler - merely praised him
thus:
"These politicians didn't build America, and they won't
rebuild it." He added that "the great industrialists of America,
the Girdlers, the Irwins made the country" and that people thru-
out the country with "returning sanity" were coming to realize
it. "If we are patient we will see the time when men like Girdler
are recognized as the true heroes of America."
Memorandum For The President.
Perhaps these two quotations will
amuse you. They have been sent to
interested persons.
file
J. H. R.
Bruce Barton - Article in American Magazine, June 1930
"How can we develop the love of country, the respect
for courts and the law, the sense of national obligation,
that Mussolini has recreated in the soul of Italy? Must
we abolish the Senate and have a dictator to do it? I some-
times think it would be almost worth the cost."
Barton is running for the Senate in New York State against
Senator James Mead.
PSF: Rowe
THE WHITE HOUSE
Subject
WASHINGTON
May 8, 1939.
MEMORANDUM FOR
JIM ROWE
Will you talk with Wallace
about this and try to get him
busy on it and also talk with
the R. F. C. people?
F. D. R.
5/8 - I talled to Secretary Walloce
and to cliff Drov, director of Complety
Crist Corporation.
I notified J Gillin the
me were eventing on it.
JHR.
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
May 6 1939.
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT:
The attached memorandum from James
Rowe has to do with the repeated repre-
sentations of Gillis, from Georgia, re-
garding the Georgia Commodity Credit
Corporation situation. Gillis seemed
to think that it is very urgent, as
the Commission meets Monday.
Emml-
E.M.W.
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
May 6, 1939
Memorandum For The President.
Re: Georgia Turpentine Loan
Jim Gillis of Georgia has been calling me about
loans to be made by the Commodity Credit Corporation
to turpentine producers in Georgia. Gillis is trying
to remove a 22% "selling charge" which the factors,
who distribute the loan, deduct from the money the
Commodity Credit Corporation gives them.
The attached is an explanatory memorandum which
Gillis' lawyer gave me on the subject.
I am told that Gillis discussed this turpentine
loan with you in detail during your last trip to Georgia,
and that you promised to get the commission deducted
when the matter was brought to your attention.
The Commodity Credit Corporation is holding a
meeting Monday to decide. The factors' lobby which works
through the Congressional delegation has been trying to
persuade the members of the Board to retain the commission.
Clifford Durr, Assistant General Counsel of R. F. C.,
tells me the problem is exceedingly complicated. The
factors claim if the 22% commission 1s removed, they will
refuse the loan. If they are not bluffing, this will ruin
the producers whom Gillis represents. A majority of the
producers support the factors "on the record". Gillis
claims they are forced to because they owe the factors
so much money. Durr says that might very well be so, but
it would take the C. C. C. months of investigation to find
out. Durr believes nothing can be done this year except
to retain the commission but thinks they ought to start
working to revise it next year.
Gillis has been told by the producers that if he can
do nothing for them, they will change their allegiance to
the other faction in Georgia. He says it will cost him
50 counties and may lose him the delegation.
IHR.
James Rowe, Jr.
The charge of 2-1/2 percent by the factors is unreasonable and
unjust even when the producer is making a profit but the assessment of
such a charge at a time when the Government is in effect purchasing the
entire production is unthinkable. These commodity loans are made at or
below the cost of production for the purpose of preventing the disruption
of production and the destruction of the producer and no possible excuse
exists for permitting the factors to receive such an undue profit as
the 2-1/2 percent commission plus other charges would result in.
Factors are money lenders and nothing more or less. All of the charges
they assess are simply increased interest charges be they called by what-
ever name. Normally they collect inspection fees, insurance fees, storage
and interest. The service they render is solely the advance of money for
production purposes. Production credit associations make a profit at 5
percent per annum, factors charge 6 and 8, the majority of producers are
charged 8 percent.
If the 2-1/2 percent is waived the factors will receive the entire
amount of the loan out will credit the producer's account with $1.00 per
unit more than they would otherwise do. The producer would owe the factor
$1.00 less for every unit he produced. The factor would also make a profit
from storage, insurance, inspection and interest charges and the sale of
supplies. The producer would certainly no more than break even as a
profit cannot be made at $40.00 per unit.
Surely the factors should be willing to forego this small part of
their profit, not for the purpose of increasing the profit of the producer,
but to make his loss less. The producer can obtain no relief except by
action of C. C. C. Storage rates were reduced 50 percent last year -
they are still ample. The charge of 1/2 percent insurance is absurd but
2-1/2 percent for selling is ridiculous as no sale is made nor have the
factors ever sold, they have simply financed production, charged high
interest rates and assessed such other charges as the producer would
or could bear. They received his product and transferred it to some
dealer who actually made the sale and made an additional charge.
PSF: Rowe
THE WHITE HOUSE
subject
WASHINGTON
I
June 20, 1939
MEMORANDUM FOR:
The President.
Department of Justice (Judge Townsend) tells
me that a man may be nominated and confirmed as
administrator of one of the three new agencies and
can, on July first, take the oath of office wherever
he happens to be. The commission can be signed by
you in Washington. The administrator can then
immediately appoint an assistant administrator,
without Senate confirmation, who could act as
acting administrator until the arrival of the
administrator. (Sections 201-(c), 301-(c) and
402-(b) -- creating the new agencies-read in part:
"The assistant administrator shall act as administrator
during the ".) absence or disability of the administrator
IHR
James Rowe, Jr.
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
June 20, 1939.
MEMORANDUM FOR
JIM ROWE
Will you give me the answer
to the following question:
If one of these men is
nominated who cannot take over the
duties on the first of July, can he
appoint immediately an Assistant,
without Senate confirmation, who
could be sworn in and act as Acting
Administrator until the Administrator
gets here?
F. D. R.
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
June 19, 1939
MEMORANDUM FOR:
General Watson.
The President may be interested in the following which
Harold Smith, Director of the Budget, asked be brought to his
attention:
The positions of the administrators of the three new
agencies created by Reorganization Plan #1 do not exist until
July first. Smith was of the opinion that the President could
not nominate these men until July first but I have checked this
question with Department of Justice and Treasury lawyers. It
is their informal opinion the President may send down the names
at any time and that the Senate may confirm. The commissions,
however, should properly not be issued until July first. Rudolph
Forster is having them prepared to read "I nominate
to be
, effective July 1, 1939." I might emphasize
that this is only an informal expression of opinion by the
Department of Justice.
In any event, the important thing from the Bureau of
the Budget's point of view is that these nominations should
be sent down as soon as possible so that on July first there
will be administrators who can take over immediately. Other-
wise, there will be a gap of several days before confirmation
in which these agencies, composed of presently existing agencies,
would have no one who could legally sign necessary papers and,
therefore, a large segment of the Government would cease to
function temporarily. Smith regards this problem as so serious
from a managerial point of view that lie hopes the President
can send down the names soon.
JHR H. R.
PSF
Rowe
June 22, 1939
Memos from Jim Rowe to Gen Watson
subject
in re-appt. for Congressmen Healey
and Celler-
Subject--The Hatch Bill--letter from
Carl A. Hatch to Watson attached,
also copy of Chas. Michelson's
letter to Bankhead and and Rayburn
in ref to Hatch Bill.
See: Watson folder-Drawer 2-1939
Rome N.
July 18, 1939
subject File
Memo to Watson
From James H. Rowe
In re-Congr. Sabath and Tom O'Malley
See Watson folder-Drawer 2-1939
fillsmal
PSF Rome
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
subject
September 13, 1939
Memorandum For The President.
Jerome Frank telephoned, saying
there were Wall Street rumors that Paul
Shields 18 to be put on the War Resources
Board. He wanted to remind you that
Shields has turned out to be one of the
SEC's worst enemies, injuring it with his
sub rosa activities whenever he can. As
between Jim Forestal of Dillon, Reed and
Shields, Forestal is far and away the
better choice.
IHR
James Rowe, Jr.
fite
PSF
THE white HOUSE
WASHINGTON
Rowe Subject
September 25, 1939
Memorandum For The President.
Check on Transatlantic Messages
Larry Fly, Chairman of the Federal Communications
Commission, asked that I give you the following report,
since he does not wish to bother you personally at
this time. This concerns the check on transatlantic
messages which you discussed with him last week:
His key staff men are devising a practical plan
of operation for handling the problem. He has conferred
with the Attorney General and a member of the FBI, who
will cooperate. He has conferred with Vincent Astor,
who has been extremely cooperative and has arranged a
meeting with White, head of Western Union, in New York
this Thursday. Astor indicates White will be cooperative.
Fly raised two problems for your consideration:
(1) He feels it would be extremely unwise to take
an FBI man with him to the New York conference, since
he is trying to avoid, above all, "scaring these men".
This is Astor's advice also. If agreeable to you, he
will go alone. The FBI will, of course, be kept informed.
(2) He learned in confidence that the Communica-
tions Division of the State Department is planning to
call to Washington the same industrial leaders in the
Communications field with whom you told him to confer
in New York. This is a specific instance of a recent
tendency for other government departments to cut across
the Commission's field. He says he mentioned this
general tendency to you at your conference.
To avoid violating the confidence, but also to pre-
vent action by the State Department, he suggests that if
you tell the Secretary of State that you have directed
Fly to take charge of this problem, that procedure will
provide the solution.
JHR
James Rowe, Jr.
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
October 4, 1939
Memorandum For The President.
Larry Fly, who has gone up to
New York on the matter on which he has
been reporting to you, telephoned that
he hopes that when you see Vincent Astor
over the week-end, you can find time to
get Astor's point of view on the subject.
Fly says Astor has been invaluable to him
and has thought the problem through better
than anyone else.
JKR
James Rowe, Jr.
PSF
Rowe,
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
November 21, 1939.
memorandum FOR JIM ROWE:
Will you ask Stewart McDonald
to put James Townsend of Poughkeepsie, N.Y.
back as field Executive Secretary of Federal
Housing Administration for Hudson River Valley.
He resigned a few months ago
under the Hatch Act as he is Democratic County
Chairman in Dutchess County. The campaign 1s
over and he is voluntarily retiring from the
chairmanship and asks to be put back on F.H.A.
F.D.R.
PSF
THE
WHITE
HOUSE Subject OK. yes.
Jun Rone
WASHINGTON
December 9, 1939
FDR
Memorandum For The President.
Congressman Sirovich
(1) District Attorney Cahill says he will
do his duty and give Sirovich an appointment
from his district. He hopes that if Sirovich's
candidate is obviously incompetent, you will
allow Cahill to ask that Sirovich submit the
name of a more competent man.
(2) Sirovich also told me that he mentioned
the name of Isadore Apfel to you and that you
were annoyed because Justice had not put him on
before. You had once told me that you wanted
this done if he were any good. I have arranged
that Justice will put him on Monday morning.
lie has a good record. Governor Lehman plans to
put him on the New York Supreme Court after this
job.
Do you want Sirovich to get both jobs?
JHD
James Rowe, Jr.
12/11- 2 tabl the to Littell
PSF
Pome
Subject
Memorandum for Jim Rowe from the President december 9, 1939,
Re-Dave Sholtz
Asks J. R. to talk with Senator Pepper about job which
Dave Sholtz wants as Ambassador to Cuba. Attached is memo
of Dec 13th from Rowe outlining Pepper's reply; also letters of
Dec 7th and 13th from Sholtz to the President and one to Mr.
McIntyre of Dec 14th. Attached also is Watson's reply to Sholtz
of Dec 15, 1939. For memo from Towe to President-Feb 6, 1940-Re-conversation
with Sholtz who says he can beat Andrews for the Senate if the Pres keeps WPA
out of politics etc.
See:Sholtz-Gen Corres-Drawer 2-1940
PSF
Rowe
THE WHITE HOUSE
Subject
WASHINGTON
Confidential
January 11, 1940
Memorandum For Mr. Forster.
Labor Board
Although I do not expect the question
to arise, if the name of Professor McCoy of
the University of Alabama appears as an
appointment to the Labor Board, Senutor
Lister Hill telephoned his opposition and
asked that it be held up until he can talk
to the President. I understand that the
Secretary of Labor feels the same way, so
this is merely an added precaution.
JHR
James Rowe, Jr.
\
PSF Prive
F - confidential (have.
Subject
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
January 13, 1940.
JIM ROWE:
To speak to me about.
F.D.R.
1/22 - Talle to Lany Fly who will toy.
JHR
one
Int Thail Bruwn out -
keet Willis Bullinger
In a Reduct
Bill Dary eago Janush
1440
THE WHITE HOUSE
PSF
WASHINGTON
Subject
January 30, 1940
Memorandum For Paula Larrabee:
I think this should be in the
President's confidential files, don't you?
James 2 Rowe, Romae Jr.
Memorandum from the President to Jim Rowe--Dec 9, 1939.
Re-Dave Sholtz
Asks J..R. to talk with Senator Pepper about job which
Dave Sholtz wants as Ambassador to Cuba. Attached is
memo of Dec 13th from Rowe outlining Pepper's reply; also
letters of Dec 7th and 13th from Sholtz to the President
and one 60 Mr. McIntyre of Dec 14th. and Watson's reply
to Shottz of Dec 15, 1939. For Memo from Rowe to President-Feb 6,1940
RE-conversation with Sholtz who says he can beat Andrews for the
Senate if the Pres keeps WPA out of politics etc.
See:Sholtz-Gen corres-Drawer 2-1940
PSF
Review
subject
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
February 6, 1940
Memorandum For The President:
Oregon
Dick Neuberger, Portland newspaperman, who had
an appointment with you last week but came down with the
grippe, asked that you be given the following message:
1. He was sent as an emissary from the group in
Oregon who have circulated petitions to put your name in
the Primary. He wanted to know whether you wished to have
your name withdrawn. Under the Oregon law, the petitions
can be filed even against the consent of the person and
once filed cannot be withdrawn. (In 1916 Hughes tried un-
successfully by a mandamus suit to withdraw his name).
I told Neuberger it was impossible for me or anyone
else to get an answer on that question. Neuberger said
Lowell Mellett had strongly hinted the petitions should not
be filed. If so, the group will file the name of Wheeler to
beat Garner. The delegates must vote for the candidate se-
lected until released by him.
Incidentally the Oregon Commonwealth Federation,
which is the group circulating the petitions, is closely
affiliated with the Labors Non-Partisan League of John
Lewis; in fact they share the same office and have several
of the same officers.
2. Neuberger also wanted to warn you against the
"Western Liberal Conference". He says that Costigan, the
prime mover, is still following the so-called "Communist
Party line" even after the Russian attack on Finland, and
that the West Coast communists were active. He believes
there is absolutely nothing to be gained by such a Con-
ference and that if held the "left wing crowd" would seek
to embarrass the Administration.
I do not know how reliable this information $s.
I do know that Neuberger on one side and Boettiger and
Littell on the other dislike each other heartily.
,INR
James Rowe, Jr.
Grace:
The President may wish to look at
this tonight, or to take it on the trip and
think about it. On the other hand, it could
wait until his return. I promised Dr.
Leiserson left. I would get it to him before he
friend J.m.
J.H.R.
PSF
Subject
THE WHITE HOUSE
February 13, 1940
WASHINGTON
Memorandum For The President.
National Labor Relations Board
Rowe
Dr. Leiserson asked me to give you this message before you left and wants to
discuss it with you on your return.
When you appointed him to the Labor Board he told you he did not believe he
could successfully clean up the internal situation there unless he had a majority
of the Board. He now says his judgment was correct. He can do no more alone.
The Wagner Act itself is all right; it should not be amended. The Smith Com-
mittee's forthcoming proposals will make matters worse, as will those of the National
Association of Manufacturers, the A. F. of L. and the C. I. 0. He believes there
must be an entirely new Board, and thinks the Administration should sponsor an amend-
ment to the Act to provide for such a Board. I suggested it might be impossible to
get able men to accept appointment at this stage. He admitted this is Secretary
Perkins' point of view, but disagrees with her.
New members can change the staff and then the administrative procedure which
Leiserson indicates is the basic trouble. For example, four of the best regional
directors proposed such changes, but Madden and Smith refused to put them into effect.
Leiserson told me you have been quietly trying to get Edwin Smith to resign.
The statute requires the President to show neglect of duty or malfeasance at a hearing
before he can remove a member. This would be difficult if not impossible. Secretary
Perkins thinks she can get him to resign. Leiserson disagrees. ,Inknow Smith fairly
well and think Leiserson is correct. Smith has "all the makings of a martyr". But
there is one chance. If you send word to Ed Smith that if he will not resign, you
will sponsor an amendment to create a new five-man (or three-man) Board, thus throw-
ing open the Act to damaging amendments, he might yield. Nothing would be lost by
trying it.
Leiserson, as you may know, has been severely criticized by friends of the Act
for the way in which he has tried to reorganize the Board. General opinion is that
he blundered badly in his attempt to remove Nat Witt, Secretary of the Board (I
understand this was at your order). Madden in testimony before the Smith Committee
showed that Leiserson accused Witt of certain things which were handled in other
divisions and which were handled quite adequately. Leiserson told me he refused to
tell the Committee the truth about Witt's actions only because he wanted to protect
the Act.
It is only fair to say that Madden has for years been the "tower of strength"
of the Labor Board. He has been forced to handle the labor split and the enmity of
industry without any help from his fellow Board members, who were at least incompetent
and at most indiscreet. Friends of the Administration insist that Leiserson has
peculiarities of temperament, approaching arrogance, which alienated Madden. For
example, Madden was angered because Leiserson told too many people that the President
had sent him into the Labor Board to clean it up and he would do it despite Madden.
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
-2-
Former employees of Leiserson who applauded his appointment to the Labor Board as
the solution have been chagrinned at his tactics. He has, of course, been faced
with an almost impossible problem, but some of the blame is his.
I think Miss Perkins would agree with this analysis, although I am not sure.
I know John Carmody, who was once a member of the Board, does agree, especially
about the temperament of Leiserson.
If Smith would resign and someone like Millis of the old Labor Board were
appointed, I think Madden and Leiserson would work "in harness". The Smith Committee
has done enough damage to make it a campaign issue. Because of the approaching
campaign, if any change is to be made it should probably be soon, 80 the Board can
get its house in order.
JHR
James Rowe, Jr.
PSF
gim Rome
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
Subject
March 11, 1940.
MEMORANDUM FOR
THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
Will you speak to me
about this at lunch today?
F. D. R.
Memorandum from Jim Rowe
to the President in re Congressman Thomas
D'Alesendro and his desire for
certain jobs in the District
Attorney's Office and the Marshal's
office in Maryland.
March 18, 1940.
MEMORANDUM FOR MRS. BONSTEEL:
Did the memo from Jim Rowe get to your
files? If so, this memo belongs with it.
no it did not PTL (Parrabee) Savey.
S.B.
Shin Larraber -
Wish l could pull
this out of the hat for
you, but The bay
looked it up this
a m & report "no".IB
March 28, 1940.
Mrs. Bonsteel:
Will you please check again to see if
you have the memo before I file this. Thank you.
PTL
PSF
Rome
subject
Re:Memo from Jim Rowe of March 13, 1940
about Senator Murray having to support Senator
Wheeler etc.
See: Senate folder-Drawer 2-1940
PSF Rowe
Subject
April 11, 1940
Memo to General Watson from the President:
Re: appt to see Joe Guffey about sending Woodward's
name up for appt to Maritime Commission and to tell
Guffey that poor Woodward is being sued for his back
salary etc.
Attached to the above memo are the following memos re
Woodward:
Memo of April 9-1940 to the President from
Steve Early re conversation he had with Mr.
Frederic Delano etc.
Memo to Steve Early from Jim Rowe-April 9, 1940
re Jerry Land and his talk with the President
about Woodward and Guffey etc.
Memo to the President from Jim Rowe--April 8, 1940
re inquiry of Admiral Land's who is interested
to know whether President has seen Guffey.
For the above memos
See:Maritime Commission folder-Drawer 2-1940(4pril 11, 1940)
Grace:
file
Will you show this to the
President?
J. h. R.
PSF
THE WHITE HOUSE
Subject
WASHINGTON April 23, 1940
Dear Grace:
Jim Gillis telephoned to say he is calling the State
Committee together this week to select a delegation which
will be for the President -- and will insist the President
must be drafted. He feels strongly that no one in Warm
Springs should have communication with the Georgia leaders
before this is done (probably Thursday).
He asked if this would be agreeable to the President;
I said I had no idea and could not get an answer. He asked
if I could give him a "green light"; I said I could not.
He will, therefore, go ahead on his own.
Gillis and Governor Rivers are not getting along. Gillis
says he must go along with Rivers ( which means he must
support Rivers for reelection as National Committeeman) so
he can get the delegation without a fuss. The President's
popularity in Georgia is about 20 to 1; Rivers' popularity
is 1 to 20. Gillis expects a scandal very soon which will
be as bad as the recent Louisiana scandal. He did not indi-
cate whether it was corruption in the road program or the
S. E. C. utility investigation, but it is probably the
former because that is Gillis' background. Rivers is deeply
involved. There is talk that the President will stop the
Federal investigations now going on and Gillis suspects
Rivers is circulating it.
Gillis hopes the President will have no conversations
with Rivers and, what is more important, will not give
Rivers an opportunity to appear with him in public, since
Rivers' only chance is to hide behind the President.
You will note that Gillis is much more outspoken against
the Governor than ever before.
James J Rowe, Jr.
PSF gim Rowe
subject
/
Memo to FDR from Jim Rowe dated June 4, 1940
with attached memo from Harold Smith of same date
re recommendations for Comptroller Generalship.
Rowe also suggests that the President replace
Stanley with Brown or give Brown position which
R. Walton Moore has, also memo to J.Rowe from FDR for him to note
enclosed memo of June 21st from Stevens opposing suggested
appointment of J.L. Sullivan as Comptroller General.
See:Fred Brown-Gen corres-Drawer 2-1940
PSF Rowe
subject
Memo for Grace G. Tully--June 12, 1940
From Jim Rowe
Re:Ray Stevens calling Mrs. Fred Brown about the
Comptroller Generalship.
See:Fred Brown-Gen corres-Drawer 2-1940
file
PSF Rowe Subject
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
August 22, 1940
Memorandum For The President.
Chairman Madden
Warren Madden, Chairman of the Labor Board, asked that I transmit this
four-page letter (with appendix) to you, with the distinct understanding
he is not pressing his candidacy for reappointment through this document.
It is Madden's accounting to you of the past five years' operation of the
Labor Relations Act.
Although I recognize it is not my function to make recommendations, I
have been disturbed by the fact that those men who should recommend the re-
appointment of Madden have not done SO. So far as I can discover, every
person informed about the Labor Board believes that Madden has contributed
the best single outstanding performance in this Administration. That includes
Francis Biddle and Lloyd Garrison, former Chairmen, Senator Thomas, Senator
Wagner and with one or two exceptions the entire staff of the Board. Every
New Deal lawyer without exception is an admirer of Madden. I believe the
Secretary of Labor thinks he should be reappointed. Yet none of them seem
to be willing to speak for Madden.
There are, of course, difficulties in the way of his reappointment:
(1) A. F. of L. It is difficult to follow Mr. Green's shifting point
of view toward the Board and the Act. As you know, he changes frequently.
I believe that today Green is against Madden. Strangely enough, on a statis-
tical basis only, Madden personally has been more favorable toward the A. F.
of L. than the C. I. O. Green's real enmity is against Ed Smith who is
always C. I. 0. Some months ago I suggested to you that Smith be asked to
resign, but I understand Murdock and Healey (who are in favor of Madden's
reappointment) vetoed that idea. If Smith would resign, Green might go
along with Madden.
(2) Political. Undoubtedly the Republicans would make Madden's con-
firmation a campaign issue. But to replace Madden at this time is to admit
something has been wrong with the Labor Board and the Republicans would make
that too a political issue. I think the appointment of Madden to the Court
of Claims vacancy would also be regarded as an admission something is wrong
with the Board.
(3) Leiserson. In a purely personal conversation months ago I urged
Miss Perkins to ask you to appoint Leiserson to the Board as the only possible
solution. At that time I was an ardent admirer of Leiserson, but his behavior
during the past year has been inexcusable. He played hand in glove with
the Smith Committee in its attempt to discredit not only the Board but the
Administration. He has not been able to put through what he regarded as
necessary reforms only because he deliberately antagonized his natural ally
Madden and made charges against members of the staff which were easily proven
incorrect, instead of making obvious charges in forcing out the personnel
- 2 -
which has caused most of the trouble in the Board. Leiserson has also
preached a gospel that Madden, Charles Fahy and the rest of the lawyers are
"doctrinaire". The easy answer is that the Labor Relations problem was in
the first few years a Supreme Court problem.
(4) Nat Witt. I understand Witt will resign if Madden is reappointed
(it should not take long to clean out his cohorts). Madden can be justly
criticized for being stiff-necked about this problem; but it can be justly
explained by Madden's feeling the last few years that his back has been
against the wall, that no one, including the unions, was helping him except
his staff, and that, therefore it was up to him to protect them.
If Madden is not reappointed, the Board will become fair prey for
pressure groups; the fight over the appointment of the new man will accentuate
the labor split. Under the terms of the statute Madden cannot hold over
after next Monday. That will leave Smith and Leiserson directly opposed to
each other and will mean public turmoil, since neither of them have a sense
of restraint.
A sound solution would be to reappoint Madden, Ed Smith to resign and
make an appointment satisfactory to Leiserson, thus satisfying all sides.
IHIP
James Rowe, Jr.
STARD NATIONAL LARDY STATE
SEAL
NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD
WASHINGTON, D. c.
J. WARREN MADDEN
August 21, 1940
Chairman
EDWIN S. SMITH
WILLIAM M. LEISERSON
Honorable Franklin D. Roosevelt
The White House
Washington, D. C.
My dear Mr. President:
The conclusion of five fiscal years' of operation of the National
Labor Relations Act suggests an accounting to you of the present status
of the objectives of that legislation.
Present Status of Collective Bargaining
Nine million American employees today have chosen trade union
representatives to negotiate working agreements with their employees.
This is three times the number of employees who in 1933 enjoyed trade
union recognition and the consequent opportunity to submit their in-
terests to the conference table instead of resorting to strikes.
Increased trade union' membership is directly reflected in an
increase in written working agreements, annually renewed, under which
wage-earners and those who hire know exactly where they stand for
definite periods ahead.
Indicative of the new relationship are these contracts in fields
where five years ago few if any existed:
Iron and steel,
550,000 workers,
654 agreements
Automobiles,
400,000 workers,
600 agreements
Rubber,
45,000 workers,
70 agreements
Electrical
Manufacturing,
150,000 workers,
630 agreements
Aluminum,
25,000 workers,
(not available)
Marine transport*
150 agreements
Petroleum,
75,000 workers,
(not available)
*More than 60 percent of all employees in salt water merchant marine
vessels of 1,000 tons or more.
- 2 -
It so happens that this new growth trade unionism has taken place
in industries basic to national defense.
The practice of living under stable, renewable contracts has been
extended almost as spectacularly in older trade union fields such as the
clothing, coal mining, machinery and rail and truck transportation.
Relation to Defense Preparations
The written contract is in itself evidence that most of the causes
which mar the industrial relationship have been removed. Where these
contracts exist, fights for union recognition have ended. The bargaining
units are set. Negotiations have advanced from hostility to the plane of
solving mutual problems.
This is demonstrable by strike data before and after 1937, the
bench-mark year in which the National Labor Relations Act was held valid
and its protection of the rights to organize and bargain became effective.
In 1937 a five-year rising trend of strike activity reached a peak,
halted and began to decline, falling off 42 percent in 1938, the first
full year of the Act's operation, and continued to decline in 1939.
Preliminary data for the first six months of 1940 show that time lost
through strikes was lower than any comparable period since 1930. Further,
during the past fiscal year there was 66 percent less time lost through
strikes than in the fiscal year 1936-37, although the level of industrial
activity was equally high and strikes traditionally increase during
rising production.
Since 1937, then, increased union membership has gone hand in hand
with more numerous working agreements and decreased industrial strife.
These related phenomena give reason to expect that responsible representa-
tives of labor and industry will turn naturally to collective bargaining
for the peaceful adjustment of disputes which may arise in defense
industries.
This expectation is buttressed by experience early in the first
World War when workers were not schooled in collective bargaining
procedures and went on strike as the only method of protest open to them.
To meet this crisis, government in 1917 had to proclaim collective
bargaining as national policy. Today collective bargaining has struck
deep roots in industrial practice.
- 3 -
Operation of NLRB
Since 1935 the Act has been invoked in 19,124 cases of alleged
unfair labor practice. 6,850 of these charges lacked merit and were
dismissed or withdrawn. .1,714 were set for hearing, and during the five
years 804 employers have been ordered to cease and desist from practices
destructive of labor rights. This is one employer out of every 23
against whom charges were filed. On the estimate that 320,000 employers
are subject to the Act, one twentieth of one percent of them have
annually been held in violation of it.
The Supreme Court and the Circuit Courts of Appeals have upheld
Board cease and desist rulings in 120 cases, and 342 consent decrees have
been entered in Circuit Courts of Appeals. In 25 cases Board orders were
set aside.
The five years have served to define the principal areas of
jurisdiction of the Act and to establish precedents by which employers may
guide their labor relationships. It has been judicially determined that
the procedure of the Act does not deny due process of law; that reinstate-
ment with back pay during unfair discharge periods is properly remedial;
that strikers retain the status of employees when unfair labor practice
caused the strike; that strikers who sit-down or commit serious violence
lose their rights under the Act.
These cases formally adjudicated by the Board and the Courts
represent a small fraction of all Board cases. The great bulk of compliance
occurs in the informal stage where employer, employee and Board representa-
tives agree upon settlements. 8,200 such settlements have been concluded
in unfair labor practice cases in five years.
Board intervention in strikes only happens when unfair labor
practice charges have been filed. 2,100 such strikes have been settled,
849 averted, and 275,510 workers reinstated after strikes and lock-outs.
The election machinery of the Act has been used to a degree
calling for deep satisfaction with the practical application of industrial
democracy. During the last fiscal year 91 percent of eligible voters
cast valid ballots in Board elections to determine bargaining representa-
tives. In all 1,194,781 valid votes have been cast in 3,257 elections,
with no serious challenges from any parties and without loss of production
on balloting days.
During the past fiscal year 69.3 percent of the 526,208 valid votes
were cast for affiliated trade unions, 12.5 percent for unaffiliated trade
unions, 9.8 percent against unions and 8.5 percent for neither of two
competing unions.
- 4 -
Present Problems
The A F of L-CIO split continues to add heavily to the burdens
of the Board.
Public acceptance of the Act is much better underneath than on
the surface. Present general support of the principles of collective
bargaining represents a reversal of opinion by very many who fought
it even in theory five years ago. The true test of public acceptance
lies in the increase in practical written working agreements between
employers and trade unions. This has come about despite waves of
attack on the Act and the Board, each one of which has encouraged
intransigeant employers to refuse compliance.
Present problems are no different than those already faced.
During the past three years more progress toward acceptance of the
Act has been made than was ever to my knowledge made within a similar
period with any importent piece of controversial legislation.
The underlying requirement is that the Act continue to have
diligent and technically competent enforcement in order that indus-
trial relations shall not drop back into the chaos of uncertainty and
strife existing before the Act became effective.
Civil Liberties
Civil liberties are freely enjoyed today in many industrial
communities where four years 820 they were denied. Most denials of
freedom of speech, assembly, and publication related to attempts to
organize labor unions. Since that right has been legally declared,
and the law enforced, the economic motive for the denial of civil
liberties has largely disappeared. I consider this result, though
it is in a sense a by-product rather than the main purpose of the
Act, as of importance comparable to the industrial peace and sta-
bility which the Act has brought.
Sincerely yours,
J Warren Madden
JUNE 30, 1940.
RECORD OF NLRB FOR FIVE FISCAL YEARS TO
I
CHART G.
TREND IN UNION MEMBERSHIP
1912-1938
MILLIONS OF MEMBERS
MILLIONS OF MEMBERS
10
10
1939 estimate
8
8
6
6
4
4
2
2
0
1912
1915
1920
0
1925
1930
1935
1938
NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD, DIVISION OF ECONOMIC RESEARCH
APRIL 18, 1939
SOURCES - LEO WOLMAN, EBB AND FLOW OF TRADE UNIONISM
S.L.
CARROLL DAUGHERTY, LABOR PROBLEMS IN AMERICAN INDUSTRY*
REPORTS OF A.F. OF L. AND C.I.O.
NATIONAL BUREAU OF ECONOMIC RESEARCH
SEE TABLE XXIII
CHART E
TREND OF MAN-DAYS OF IDLENESS DUE TO STRIKES
COMPARED WITH TREND OF BUSINESS ACTIVITY
1940
JANUARY 1935 - JUNE 1959
MILLIONS OF
MAN-DAYS OF IDLENESS
INDEX OF
INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION
6
130
5
NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD DIVISION OF ECONOMIC RESEARCH
WASHINGTON D.C.
120
SR
INTUMINOUS COAL
STOPPADE
4
110
INDUSTRIAL
PRODUCTION
3
100
2
90
I
80
MAN-DAYS
OF IDLENESS
0
70
1935
1936
1937
1938
1939
1940
102197-40 (Face p. 197)
ANALYSIS OF CHART
The sharp increase in strike activity between 1932 and
1937 is attributable to two main factors, the increasing volume
of employment which increased the bargaining power of labor from
the levels reached in the Great Depression and the refusal of
employers to bargain collectively in violation of statutory
requirements embodied in the NIRA and later the Wagner Act.
Since 1937, the increasing willingness of employers to
bargain collectively has been manifested in a sharp decline in
industrial strife. It is significant too that the maintenance
of wage rates and a stable cost of living rendered unnecessary
strikes to regain recession wage cuts, such as took place in the
early '20's.
Preliminary data for the first six months of 1940
indicate that man-days of idleness due to strikes were lower than
for any comparable period since 1927 except for one year, 1930.
National Labor Relations Board
Technical Service Division
Washington, D. C.
August 12, 1940
sl
STRIKE STATISTICS
AND INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION DATA
BY FISCAL YEARS
NUMBER OF
INDEX OF
WORKERS
MAN-DAYS
INDUSTRIAL
FISCAL YEARS
STRIKES
INVOLVED
IDLE
PRODUCTION
1935 - 36
2,084
1,071,712
14,507,000
96
1936 - 37
3,840
1,743,192
26,998,000
114
1937 - 38
3,435
893,551
14,204,000
90
1938 - 39
2,733*
1,045,304*
15,602,000*
95
1939 - 40
2,147
641,933
9,077,000
111
*These figures include the bituminous coal stoppage of 1939.
To exclude this stoppage the figures should be reduced by one
strike, 343,500 workers and 6,920,000 man-days of idleness.
Source: U. S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
Board of Governors - Federal Reserve
DECISIONS OF THE SUPREME COURT
1. Decisions granting enforcement of Board orders. . 18
(a) Orders enforced without modification. . 14
(b) Orders enforced with modification.
: .
4
2. Decisions denying enforcement of Board orders : .
2
3. Decisions favorable to the Board relating to
other questions
6
DECISIONS OF CIRCUIT COURTS OF APPEALS
l. Decisions granting enforcement of Board orders. . 98
(a) Orders enforced without modification. 59
(b) Orders enforced with modification
...
39
2. Decisions denying enforcement of Board orders # 23
3. Consent decrees entered enforcing Board orders. 342
(As of August 20, 1940)
RECORD OF NLRB FOR FIVE FISCAL YEARS TO JUNE 30, 1940
A total of 28,661 cases has been handled by the Board in the
five fiscal years to June 30, 1940. 19,148 cases involved charges of
unfair labor practice. 9,513 petitions were filed requesting determination
of representation. The total cases involved 6,233,319 workers.
Of the 25,608 cases handled, or about 89 per cent, have been
closed, leaving 3,053 cases pending on July 1.
Of these 25,608 cases, 12,309, or 48 per cent,
were closed by agreement of both parties,
48 percent
involving 2,006,495 workers.
settled
4,331, or 17 per cent, involving 1,145,159
17 percent
workers, were dismissed by the Board and
dismissed
regional directors.
6,970 cases, or 27 per cent, involving
27 percent
1,301,268 workers, were withdrawn.
withdrawn
1,998 cases, or 8 per cent, involving 684,966
8 percent
workers, were closed in some other way,
by formal
including compliance with the Board's decisions
procedure
and Trial Examiners' Intermediate Reports,
certification after elections, refusal by
Board to certify, Intermediate Report finding
no violations, transfer to other agencies,
such as the Conciliation Service of the
Department of Labor and State Labor Relations
Boards, and by the issuance of cease and desist
orders.
Of a total of 2,806 strike cases handled, involving 445, 518 workers,
2,100, or 75 per cent, were settled and 275,510 workers were reinstated
after strikes and lock-outs.
An additional 20,556 workers were reinstated after discriminatory
discharges.
849 threatened strikes, involving 195,565 workers, were averted
through the Board's action.
There were 3,257 elections held in which 1,194,781 valid votes were
cast.
VOTES CAST IN ELECTIONS CONDUCTED BY THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS
BOARD, FISCAL YEARS ENDING JUNE 30, 1938-1940
Elections
Eligible
Votes
Valid
Votes Cast
Votes Cast
Votes
Votes Cast
Conducted
Voters
Cast
Votes
for Affil.
for Unaff.
Cast
"for
Cast
Trade Unions
Trade Unions
Against
Neither"
Unions
1938
1,152
394,558
350,960
343,587
232,989
49,481
55,758
5,359
1939
746
207,597
181,090
177,215
121,643
16,389
34,085
5,098
1940
1,189
585,068
534,470
526,208
364,595
65,689
51,363
44,561
PER CENT OF VOTES CAST FOR MAJOR CLASSES OF PARTICIPANTS
Per Cent of Valid
Per Cent of Valid
Per Cent of Valid
Per Cent of Valid
Votes Cast for
Votes Cast for
Votes Cast Against
Votes Cast "for
Affiliated Trade
Unaffiliated Trade Unions
Neither"
Unions
Unions
1938
67.8
14.4
16.2
1.6
1939
68.6
9.3
19.2
2.9
1940
69.3
12.5
9.8
8.5
ANALYSIS
The Board conducted a greater number of elections during the
fiscal year 1939-1940, with more workers participating, than in any preceding
year.
Eligible voters who cast ballots increased from 88 per cent in
1939 to 91 per cent in 1940.
Unions affiliated with AFL and CIO received a higher percentage
of valid votes, 69.3 per cent, than in any preceding year.
Unaffiliated unions (which in 1940 included National Organi-
zations such as the International Ladies Garment Workers Union, the standard
Railroad Brotherhoods, the Mechanics Educational Society of America, the
independent shoe and textile unions of New England and unions restricted to
one plant or all the plants of one employer) cast 12.5 per cent of valid
votes, a higher percentage than 1939 but lower than 1938.
The percentage of votes cast against unions declined sharply
from 19.2 per cent in 1939 to 9.8 per cent in 1940.
Votes cast "for neither" occur in elections in which more than
one union appeared on the ballot. Such votes increased from 2.9 per cent in
1939 to 8.5 per cent in 1940.
Relations
belongs_to