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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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quite a tangle of candidates for the Vice Presidency, and that, I suppose, is going to be a very interesting part of the contest.”

He'd told me that he was going out to the Convention to appear before the Platform Committee. They never admit to the Platform Committee being split up into labor, agriculture, or any group having any special function. I said, “Well, of course, the real problem is going to be, I suppose, the Vice Presidency, and there'll be great confusion and many candidates and a great deal of feeling about it, and hard feelings, I suspect, being brewed.”

He smiled, and I continued to talk about the confusions of the Vice Presidency. He smiled, and he said, “Madame Secretary, I don't think we need to worry about that. I have made a suggestion to the President which will solve all those problems.”

“Oh,” I said, “what is it, Mr. Lewis?”--knowing what he meant.

He said, “I do not feel quite free to tell you myself, but it involves a well known labor leader.”

I said, “Oh--I see!”

That was the most I ever got from him, and I didn't press him.

Interviewer:

Did Dan Tobin add anything to this?





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