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OCR Page 1 of 2FILED BY
MR. HOPKINS
JUL 9 1952
Congress of Industrial Organizations
CIO
x170
718 Jackson Place, N. W.
Washington 6, D. C.
Office of
LEGISLATIVE
EXECUTIVE 5581
REPRESENTATIVE
133
June 13, 1952
HR5678
5678
Con
The President
C
The White House
Washington, D.C.
ARCHIVES NATIONAL TRUMAN AND
RECORDS
SERVICE
Dear Mr. President:
During recent weeks we have been gratified to note that
the American public is gradually becoming aware of the meaning and
content of the McCarran Immigration bill and is registering its
opposition to it. We are also happy to note that a substantial
number of Senators are now on record as opposing the bill. Unfor-
tunately their number was not large enough to prevent its final
passage.
We are opposed to the McCarran bill not only because of
the many injustices of the present law which it perpetuates, but
even more because of the many new injustices which it adds. In the
latter category are many loosely drawn and unnecessarily harsh
provisions for exclusion, deportation and denaturalization. We find
it significant that the McCarran bill is chiefly supported by those
who generally attack most vociferously the concentration of authority
in the executive branch of the Government. Here they suddenly change
their position and are willing to grant to minor officials in the
Immigration Service and the Consular Service vast new unreviewable
powers over the lives of millions of human beings.
We are particularly concerned with the possible impact of
these new unlimited powers on the labor union movement. An Adminis-
tration hostile to labor could easily use these vastly expanded
powers to punish or intimidate labor union members or labor union
leaders of foreign birth even though they are naturalized citizens.
It is a fact that much more limited powers under the present law have
been used for that purpose by anti-labor Administrations in the past.
The power to denaturalize for new, technical grounds and to deport
for reasons which need only exist in the mind of an Attorney General,
or one of his many assistants, could, in the wrong hands also be
used as a club against sponsors of progressive legislation.
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