The Taft-Hartley Act simply would not have prevented a shutdown of essential steel production in this case.
Executive Order No. 8389 of April 10, 1940, as amended, and Executive Order No. 9989 of August 20, 1948, and all delegat...
By virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and laws of the United States, including the Trading with th...
We must stop these rampaging floods and this terrible damage to farms and farm buildings, to homes and business district...
There is no economy in spending less than we can afford on our efforts to stop these disastrous floods.
After extensive hearings and careful study of the subject of annual leave, the Congress enacted a new leave program expe...
I firmly believe that to cut below the Budget estimates would lose us far more than would be 'saved.'
It strikes me as particularly unfair to Federal employees and to those who were heard in Congress on their behalf, to re...
I am convinced that a careful study of the long-range effect of this provision would indicate that it would increase cos...
The Congress itself has a real responsibility here.
Instead the Congress provided only $75 million.
I am transmitting herewith for the attention of the Congress the first Annual Report of the Federal Civil Defense Admini...
It did not hurt the Republic. In fact, it made the Republic better.
We simply cannot afford a penny-wise-pound-foolish attitude about the cost of adequate civil defense.
But it is not nearly enough.
I was answering to the point of the welfare of the country, and that's what's at stake.
I say there was a certain day in which to get out.
The thought of seizing press and radio has never occurred to me.