
That's what President Roosevelt was fighting for while he was here.
On the public record
Every politician on the site, every statement on file. Search, filter, and read the public record.
791,600+·quotes on file

That's what President Roosevelt was fighting for while he was here.

I am extremely interested in this organization.

I do hereby proclaim October 11, 1946, the one hundred and sixty-seventh anniversary of the death of that gallant warrior, as General Pulaski's Memorial Day

There are two things in the world I want above everything else--peace in the world and unity at home.

That's what I have been fighting for since I have been here.

It is absolutely essential, in order that the program of the Democratic Party as outlined in the platform adopted in 1944 which I helped to write--and I was a member of that original committee--may be carried out, that we have a Congress…

That's the program of the Democratic party--peace in the world, and a production program that will help rehabilitate that world.

I AM of course interested in the political welfare of every one of you.

I hereby revoke the said Executive Order No. 7744 of November 19, 1937.

Our foreign policy as established by the Congress, the President, and the Secretary of State, remains in full force and effect without change.

No change in our foreign policy is contemplated.

The foreign policy of this country is the most important question confronting us today.

Mr. Byrnes consults with me often, and the policies which guide him and his delegation have my full endorsement.

I have today asked Mr. Wallace to resign from the Cabinet.

As I have frequently said, I have complete confidence in Mr. Byrnes and his delegation now representing this country at the Paris Peace Conference.

Our responsibility for obtaining a just and lasting peace extends not only to the people of this country but to the nations of the world.

The people of the United States may disagree freely and publicly on any question, including that of foreign policy, but the Government of the United States must stand as a unit in its relations with the rest of the world.