the power that they can generate. Likewise, such a partnership can 
be effective in the expansion throughout the Nation of upstream storage; 
the sound use of public lands; the wise conservation of minerals; and
the sustained yield of our forests. 
There has been much criticism, some of it apparently justified, of the 
confusion resulting from overlapping Federal activities in the entire 
field of resource-conservation. This matter is being exhaustively 
studied and appropriate reorganization plans will be developed. 
Most of these particular resource problems pertain to the Department of 
the Interior. Another of its major concerns is our country's island 
possessions. Here, one matter deserves attention. The platforms of both 
political parties promised immediate statehood to Hawaii. The people 
of that Territory have earned that status. Statehood should be granted 
promptly with the first election scheduled for 1954. VIII. 
One of the difficult problems which face the new administration is that 
of the slow, irregular decline of farm prices. This decline, which has 
been going on for almost 2 years, has occurred at a time when most 
nonfarm prices and farm costs of production are extraordinarily high. 
Present agricultural legislation provides for the mandatory support of 
the prices of basic farm commodities at 90 percent of parity. The 
Secretary of Agriculture and his associates will, of course, execute the 
present act faithfully and thereby seek to mitigate the consequences of 
the downturn in farm income. 
This price-support legislation will expire at the end of 1954. 
So we should begin now to consider what farm legislation we should 
develop for 1955 and beyond. Our aim should be economic stability 
and full parity of income for American farmers. But we must seek this 
goal in ways that minimize governmental interference in the farmers' 
affairs, that permit desirable shifts in production, and that encourage 
farmers themselves to use initiative in meeting changing economic 
conditions. 
A continuing study reveals nothing more emphatically than the 
complicated nature of this subject. Among other things, it shows that 
the prosperity of our agriculture depends directly upon the prosperity of 
the whole country--upon the purchasing power of American consumers. 
It depends also upon the opportunity to ship abroad large surpluses of 
particular commodities, and therefore upon sound economic 
relationships between the United States and many foreign countries. It 
involves research and scientific investigation, conducted on an 
extensive scale. It involves special credit mechanisms and marketing,
rural electrification, soil conservation, and other programs. 
The whole complex of agricultural programs and policies will be 
studied by a Special Agricultural Advisory Commission, as I know it 
will by appropriate committees of the Congress. A nonpartisan group 
of respected authorities in the field of agriculture has already been 
appointed as an interim advisory group. 
The immediate changes needed in agricultural programs are largely 
budgetary and administrative in nature. New policies and new 
programs must await the completion of the far-reaching studies which 
have already been launched. IX. 
The determination of labor policy must be governed not by the vagaries 
of political expediency but by the firmest principles and convictions. 
Slanted partisan appeals to American workers, spoken as if they were a 
group apart, necessitating a special language and treatment, are an 
affront to the fullness of their dignity as American citizens. 
The truth in matters of labor policy has become obscured in 
controversy. The very meaning of economic freedom as it affects labor 
has become confused. This misunderstanding has provided a climate of 
opinion favoring the growth of governmental paternalism in labor 
relations. This tendency, if left uncorrected, could end only by 
producing a bureaucratic despotism. Economic freedom is, in fact, the 
requisite of greater prosperity for every American who earns his own 
living. 
In the field of labor legislation, only a law that merits the respect and 
support of both labor and management can help reduce the loss of 
wages and of production through strikes and stoppages, and thus add to 
the total economic strength of our Nation. 
We have now had 5 years' experience with the Labor Management Act 
of 1947, commonly known as the Taft-Hartley Act. That experience 
has shown the need for some corrective action, and we should promptly 
proceed to amend that act. 
I know that the Congress is already proceeding with renewed studies of 
this subject. Meanwhile, the Department of Labor is at once beginning 
work to devise further specific recommendations for your 
consideration. 
In the careful working out of legislation, I know you will give 
thoughtful consideration--as will we in the executive branch--to the
views of labor, and of management, and of the general public. In this 
process, it is only human that each of us should bring forward the 
arguments of self-interest. But if all conduct their arguments in the 
overpowering light of national interest--which is enlightened 
self-interest--we shall get the right answers. I profoundly hope that 
every    
    
		
	
	
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