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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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Part:         Session:         Page of 912

Perkins:

Yes, I'm sure he could have.

Interviewer:

This is the kind of a thing that can unhorse a man.

Perkins:

Well, it didn't unhorse him. He got caught up on this thing by the utter irrelevance of the suggestion and the fact that the Democratic Party didn't receive it, you see. I don't think it ever occurred to them. I doubt if anybody put his name in nomination, even mentioned his name to the Nominating Committee--you know, the committee that was coping with this, I've forgotten who they were now. I don't think his name was ever mentioned. I don't think he ever made the suggestion to anybody but the President, and let me and Dan Tobin know about it. Certainly Dan Tobin and I didn't put his name in, or suggest it to anybody. I think it was wholly his own idea. I don't think that it ever had any spread at all, and I think that he just felt it was one of those things that could be done.

I don't think he was under a conviction that he was going to be nominated, but I think he was under an illusion that he might be.

Interviewer:

Do you think this was the reason why he came out for Willkie?

Perkins:

Oh, certainly it was. There was no other reason under heaven. Was any other ever alleged? No. This wasn't





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