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Henry Wallace (1888-1965) Wallace distinguished himself as a loyal, hard-working wartime vice-president over the next four years, but still failed to recapture the nomination in 1944 when he was dumped by an increasingly conservative Democratic party. His 1943 speech in which he repudiated Henry Luce's vision of an "American Century" in favor of a "Century of the Common Man" had endeared him to left-liberals, but alienated him from rank-and-file Democrats at the convention. FDR wanted him to remain in the cabinet, however, and Wallace accepted FDR's appointment as secretary of commerce in 1945. He remained at the Commerce Department until September 1946 when he was forced to resign for having publicly criticized President Truman's foreign policy in a speech at Madison Square Garden. The left-leaning secretary had been troubled by Truman's rightward drift in foreign affairs throughout much of that year, regarding the president's militarism as a precursor to another world war. After leaving the Commerce Department, Wallace returned to editing, but this time at the New Republic, a liberal publication that he used as a platform for the Democratic party's left wing. At the end of 1946, Wallace went even further in his pursuit to advance progressive politics when he helped found the Progressive Citizens of America. Wallace's outspoken support of progressive causes
made him perhaps the victim of more redbaiting than
any other 1940s politician. Maligned as a communist
sympathizer at a time when the American public was
intolerant to socialism, Wallace's criticisms of
administration foreign policy were increasingly
out of step with
mainstream public opinion. Recognizing that his chances
at capturing the Democratic presidential nomination
in 1948 were marginal at best, Wallace instead ran
as the candidate of the Progressive party against
President Truman, Thomas
Dewey, and Strom Thurmond, but failed to capture
any electoral votes. Wallace's break from the party
also signaled the final break with Eleanor Roosevelt,
his old political champion, who had originally
wanted
him to succeed FDR but increasingly felt uncomfortable
with his "political naivete" and his desire to
deepen relations with the Soviet Union. Wallace
would ultimately
reach a rapprochement with the Truman administration's
foreign policy when he endorsed its firm stance
in
Korea, but shortly thereafter Wallace retired from
political life and the Progressive party when
it rebuked
him for having voiced assent to the war. Wallace
would continue to write about politics and agriculture
throughout
his retirement and until his death in 1965. Sources:Beasley, Maurine H., Holly C. Shulman, and Henry R. Beasley, eds. The Eleanor Roosevelt Encyclopedia. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 2001, 553-554. Black, Allida. Casting Her Own Shadow: Eleanor Roosevelt and the Shaping of Postwar Liberalism. New York: Columbia University Press, 1996, 44-45, 79, 132. Buhle, Mari Jo, Paul Buhle, and Dan Georgakas, eds. Encyclopedia of the American Left. New York: Garland Publishing, Inc., 1997, 596-599. Kirkendall, Richard S., ed. The Harry S. Truman
Encyclopedia. Boston: G.K. Hall & Co., 1989,
383-385. For more information on Henry Wallace, visit the following web site: |