G. O. P. PAPER WARNS HOOVER

G. O. P. PAPER WARNS HOOVER From CLEVELAND PLAIN DEALER It is an obvious and significant fact that in Republican circles friendly toward Herhert Hoover the advisability of his renomlnatlon in 1932...

...So far the opposition to Mr...
...Dwight W. Morrow's cleanup In the Jersey primary gives hope to some The silent man among the Northampton beeches i* not to be Ignored...
...Through long months of tariff debate In congress he gave, his friends no hint as to the kind of, rate structure he believed desirable...
...Hoover docs not crystallize behind any other candidacy...
...Only the jokrsters now mention Mr...
...That Mr...
...That In lfi months as president he has failed in show those qualities of leadership which party and country expect ol the chief executive...
...Hoover and prosperity in the same breath...
...And what do these disappointed Republican ex-Hnoverltes say ol the economist In the White House...
...Only in relation to the flexible provision and Ihe debenture plan did he make his position clear...
...G. O. P. PAPER WARNS HOOVER From CLEVELAND PLAIN DEALER It is an obvious and significant fact that in Republican circles friendly toward Herhert Hoover the advisability of his renomlnatlon in 1932 Is given serious consideration...
...That the president has the distressing habit of accepting bad advice...
...Hoover's position- on prohibition is wavering and uncon- ' vincing...
...He fell for the suggestion that...
...Only by compromise is he able to keep the lower house in line on the World war measure...
...on Its fee' Pro-perHv «¦>' l'i U' r.Uitl'anlC'-i Af!(-l MVri!] month...
...One would seek far for a parallel...
...Parker's nomination would be a "major political stroke...
...Hoover announced his hearty support of him...
...That Mr...
...The senate's round robin on the London treaty Is more of the same...
...Drys supported htm against Smith, and the president, has been considered friendly toward his "noble experiment...
...That the supposed masterful courage of the man in the White House has been too seldom in evidence...
...They form the background of a. party picture as congress adjourns and th« midterm national campaign oper...
...The senate rejected his nomination of Parker...
...and two sessions of congress and an expenditure of millions for agriculture the industry fails to respond...
...That prophecies based on hi,', election have almost without exception gone awry Agriculture was to be put...
...He signed an outrageous tariff bill, excusing its injustices by declaring that through the flexible provision he might overrule congress and in effect veto its worst feature* He refu.-es to endorse the w.igiiej unemployment bills which embody the very' principles which he urged as secretary of commerce...
...Hoover has failed signally in relation to the prime duty of working with Congresr...
...He listened to Borah and called the special session...
...He bows to the supposed partisan necessity of retaining Huston at the head of the national committee...
...Hoover would mean the breaking up of the solid Democratic south is shown now to be groundless...
...To challenge a president's right to a second nomination before he has served the second year of his first term in something new in Republican politics...
...These are not Democratic, but Republican, counts in a most astonishing indictment of a Republican president elected less than twenty months ago by an unprecedented popular majority...
...Between the dry leadership In the old Confederacy and the wet leadership of the industrial east there is no sympathy or prospect of co-operation...
...Both houses pass- the Spanish War bill over hip veto...
...That the hopes of Republicans thBt the advent of Mr...
...Were the discussion to become widespread if would either force the president to fight for a nomination ordinarily conceded in such cases or make him a one-icrm-er...
...Yet as) soon as Morrow was nominated on a dripping wet platform Mr...

Vol. 1 • July 1930 • No. 32


 
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