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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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off into nowhere in particular, thinking of nothing, but with a small smile of complete satisfaction on his face, under all kinds of circumstances. He never said anything to me about an ambition to be President, but one realized that he was ready to accept any call that the people should put upon him. That curious smug, and emptily vain, smile on his face used to bother me, as one realized that he just felt that great things would happen to him. I couldn't believe that he thought he would be President, because it seemed so out of character with his abilities. He might have felt that, but I wasn't talking with him intimately.

He was then head of the Social Security Agency and he paid no attention to it whatever. He was barnstorming around the country, which I now think probably had Presidential ambitions as its basis, although his speaking was largely on subjects that had to do with Social Security. I was very much surprised that he wanted that post. He was inappropriate for it, but the President explained to me that he wanted it very badly, and he, the President, had to give him something. The President said, “If I don't give him something, he'll be sore and he'll be against us. I would rather have him in my corner than not.” I was very disturbed about it, because





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