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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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impression of having a sense of relief that the NRA perhaps could be washed up and we could perhaps return to normal ways. I think the President had a sense that the NRA was getting so big, so sprawling, so involved that nobody could ever manage it - Richberg, or anybody else. It was leading us to situations which perhaps couldn't be handled by our ordinary ways. Up to this time there had been a minimum of complaint about the NRA, but it was beginning to come in. There were beginning to be great complaints about the NRA. There were beginning to be statements of opposition by the time of this decision.

The great complaint was that there was no compliance. Everybody was chiseling. Then, of course, there had begun to be that second thought when things were so bad, business was better. Everybody began to be resentful of having all these regulations and restrictions. Even the news-papers which had already written favorably about the NRA began to say, “Well, this is very complicated. This is not in the American tradition. Nothing like this was ever done before. This is too big. This is too complicated. You can't have one set of rules for everybody.”

That kind of talk had begun and I think the President had heard a great deal of it. A good deal of it was vituperative. However, I think there was a





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