Speech on the Minority Report at the Democratic National Convention

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http://www2.mnhs.org/library/findaids/00442/pdfa/00442-00187.pdf


Mr. Chairman, fellow Democrats, fellow Americans: 

I realize that in speaking in behalf of the minority report on civil rights as presented by Congressman Biemiller of Wisconsin, that I am dealing with a charged issue, with an issue which has been confused by emotionalism on all sides of the fence.

 I realize that there are here today friends and colleagues of mine, many of them who feel just as deeply and keenly as I do about this issue, and who are yet in complete disagreement with me.

 My respect and admiration for these men and their views was great when I came to this Convention. It is now far greater because of the sincerity, the courtesy and the forthrightness with which many of them have argued in our prolonged discussions in the Platform Committee. 

Because of this very great respect, and because of my profound belief that we have a challenging task to do here, because good conscience, decent morality demands it, I feel I must rise at this time to support a report, the minority report, a report that spells out our democracy.

 A report that the people of this country can and will understand and a report that they will enthusiastically acclaim on the greatest issue of civil rights. (Applause.)

 Now let me say this at the outset: That this proposal is made for no single region. Our proposal is made for no single class, for no single racial or religious group in mind. All of the regions of this country, all of the states, have shared in our precious heritage of American freedom. All of the states, and all of the regions have seen at least some of the infringements of that freedom. 

All people, get this; all people, white and black, all groups, all racial groups, have been the victims at time in this nation, let me say, of vicious discrimination. The masterly statement of our keynote speaker, the distinguished United States Senator from Kentucky, Alben Barkley, made that plank with great force. 

Speaking of the founder of our Party, Thomas Jefferson, he said this, and I quote from Alben Barkley:

"He did not proclaim that all of the white or the black or the red or the yellow men are equal, that all Christian or Jewish men are equal, that all Protestant and Catholic men are equal, that all rich and poor men are equal, that all good and bad men are equal, but what he declared was that all men are equal, and the equality which he proclaimed was the equality in the right to enjoy the blessings of free government in which they may participate, and to which they have given their support." (Applause.) 

Now these words of Senator Barkley’s are appropriate to this convention, appropriate to this convention of the oldest,  the most truly progressive political party in America. From the time of Thomas Jefferson, the time when that immortal American doctrine of individual rights, under just and fairly administered laws, the Democratic Party has tried hard to secure expanding freedoms for all citizens. 

Oh, yes, I know, other political parties may have talked more about civil rights, but the Democratic Party has surely done more about civil rights. (Applause.) We have made progress, we’ve made great progress in every part  of this country. We have made great progress in the South, we have made it in the West and in the North and in the East, but we must now focus the direction of that progress towards the realization of a full program of civil rights t o all. 

This convention must set out more specifically the directions in which our Party efforts are to go. We can be proud that we can be guided by the courageous trail-blazing of two great Democratic Presidents, and we can be proud of the fact that our great and beloved immortal leader, Franklin Roosevelt, gave us guidance, and we can be proud of the fact, we can be proud of the fact that Harry Truman has had the courage to give to the people of America the new emancipation proclamation. (Applause.)

 It seems to me, it seems to me that the Democratic Party needs to make definite pledges of the kind suggested in the minority report, to maintain the trust and confidence placed in it by the people of all races and all sections of this country. Sure, we are here as Democrats, but, my good friends, we are here as Americans; we are here as the believers in the principle and the ideology of democracy, and I firmly believe that as men concerned with our country's future, we must specify in our platform the guarantees which we have mentioned in the minority report. 

Yes, this is far more than a party matter. Every citizen in this country has a stake in the emergence of the United States as a leader in a free world. That world is being challenged by the world of slavery. For us to play our part effectively, we must be in a morally sound position.

We can’t use a double standard. There is no room for double standards in American Politics. For measuring our own and other people’s policies, our demands for democratic practices in other lands will be no more effective than the guarantee of those practices in our own country. (Applause.)

Friends, Delegates, I do not believe that there can be any compromise on the guarantees of the civil rights which we have mentioned in the minority report. In spite of my desire for unanimous agreement in the entire platform, in spite of my desire to see everybody here in honest and unanimous agreement, there are some matters which I think must be stated clearly and without qualification. There can be no hedging. The newspaper headlines are wrong.

There will be no hedging, and there will be no watering down, if you please, of the instruments and the principles of the civil rights program. (Applause.)

To those who say , my friends, to those who say that we are rushing this issue of civil rights, I say to them, we are 172 years late. (Applause.) 

To those who say that this civil rights program is an infringement on States' Rights, I say this, that the time has arrived in America for the Democratic Party to get out of the shadows of States' Rights and to walk forthrightly into the bright sunshine of human rights. (Applause.)

 People. People. Human beings, this is the issue of the 20th century, people of all kinds, all sorts of people, and these people are looking to America for leadership and they are looking to America for precepts and example.

 My good friends and my fellow Democrats, I ask you for a calm consideration of our historic opportunity. Let us not forget the evil pa-, Let us do forget the evil passions and the blindness of the past. In these times of world economic, political and spiritual, above all spiritual crisis, we cannot, and we must not, turn from the paths so plainly before us. 

That path has already led us through many valleys of the shadow of death, and now is the time to recall those who were left on that path of American freedom. To all of us here, for the millions who have sent us, for the whole two billion members of the human family, our land is now more than ever before the last, best hope on earth. I know that we can, and I know that we shall, begin here the fuller and richer realization of that hope, that promise of a land for all men truly free and equal, and each man uses his freedom and equality wisely well. 

My good friends, I ask my Party, I ask the Democrat to march down the high-road of progressive democracy. I ask this convention, I ask this convention to say in unmistakable terms that we proudly hail and we courageously support our President and leader, Harry Truman, in his great fight for civil rights in America. (Applause.) 

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