Story

“I Hardly Know Truman”

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Authors: David McCullough

Historic Era: Era 8: The Great Depression and World War II (1929-1945)

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July/August 1992 | Volume 43, Issue 4

It was in the early summer of 1943, one year in advance of the Democratic National Convention, that Senator Harry S. Truman recorded on paper for the first time that in some circles he was being talked of as a candidate for vice president, assuming the president was to run for a fourth term. He had been invited to Sunday lunch at the Washington home of Senator Joe Guffey, a staunch New Dealer who took him out into the garden to ask “very confidentially” what he thought of Vice President Henry Wallace. Truman had smiled and said Wallace was the best Secretary of Agriculture the country ever had. Guffey, laughing, said that was what he though, too. “Then, he wanted to know if I would help out the ticket if it became necessary by accepting the nomination for vice president,” Truman recorded. “I told him in words of one syllable that I would not…”

And, though the idea was talked about with increasing frequency, Truman, when asked his opinion, always gave the same answer. He wanted to stay in the Senate.

 
Truman: “The vice president simply presides over the Senate and sits around hoping for a funeral.”

Moreover, Franklin Roosevelt had shown no sign of dissatisfaction with the vice president or any inclination to abandon him. And even if Roosevelt was to change his mind, there were a number of others who were better known and more experienced and who would leap at the opportunity—Jimmy Byrnes, for instance. A small, tidy, vivid man whom Truman greatly admired, Byrnes was a Southerner, a lapsed Catholic, and 66 years old, all of which could count against him. But he had done virtually everything there was to do in government, his experience ranging across all three branches, beginning with seven terms in the House before going to the Senate. Named to the Supreme Court in 1941, Byrnes had resigned after only a term to become Roosevelt’s War Mobilization Director. Popularly referred to as “Assistant President,” he was the consummate insider. Roosevelt relied heavily on him and liked him. By contrast with such a man, Truman was small potatoes, as he well knew, and no closer to Roosevelt now than he had ever been.

Still, the vice-presidential speculation continued, and with Truman’s name spoken often, for the reason that certain influential figures in the Democratic party had joined in a pact to keep Henry Wallace off the ticket.

They were only a handful, only a half-dozen men or so to begin with, but they were among the most powerful men in the party. They included the chairman of the Democratic National Committee, Frank Walker, who had replaced Jim Parley as postmaster general; Ed Pauley, a wealthy California oil man who was treasurer of the National Committee; George E. Allen, a jovial man-about-Washington, a lobbyist, and the secretary of the National Committee; and Robert E. Hannegan, commissioner of internal revenue and not only a great favorite of the president’s