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<text id=93HT0967>
<title>
40 Election: Power of Silence
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1940 Election
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
July 22, 1940
THE PRESIDENCY
Power of Silence
</hdr>
<body>
<p> Down the gravel-covered driveway and though the East Gate of
the White House grounds swung the long, black, open automobile
that is known around the Executive offices as "the Queen Mary."
In the back seat sat the President, wearing a seersucker suit,
doffing his battered Panama hat when the crowds in the street
recognized him. A crowd of government workers gathered around the
gate of the Washington Naval Yard, where the U.S.S. Potomac,
White House yacht, was tied up to the dock awaiting President and
party; the crowd gave a stifled cheer; the President's big right
hand went up in the air and the big smile flashed in recognition.
There was the usual 21-gun salute barked from the shore batteries
as the President crossed the dock-level gangplank; there was the
usual trilling of the bos'n's whistle piping the President over
the side as eight boys stood at attention; the four-starred flag
of the Commander in Chief of the Army & Navy was broken out at
the mainmast; a bugle sounded, bluejackets scurried about the
decks, the big gasoline motors began to roar, and the Potomac
moved down the historic river toward the sea.
</p>
<p> In any week but last week the cruise of the Potomac would
have seemed a normal weekend rest. On board was Judge Samuel
Irving Rosenman, old friend and political counselor who was with
the President when he was nominated in 1932, traveled with him
during the 1936 campaign, and was a White House guest for the week
of the Democratic Convention in 1940. There were also the
President's secretary Marguerite Le Hand and two friends. The
President toyed with his stamp collection, as usual; talked long
with Judge Rosenman, as usual; fished a little, as usual. As on
other cruises, a Navy plane dropped from the skies, came
alongside the Potomac, left the official mail and the Sunday
papers. There were eels for dinner, eels that the President had
caught and which make good eating when prepared by the Potomac's
Filipino cook.
</p>
<p> But no rigorous devotion to business as usual or relaxation
as usual, no careful determination to act as if the Democratic
convention did not exist, could make last week usual. In Chicago
the Convention was existing. To many an appalled observer it
seemed to be doing little more than that. In his last pre-
Convention press conference the President had put off question
after question hurled at him by reporters attempting to draw him
out about the Third Term. He was, he said, President of the
United States, sticking close to the affairs of the nation, as
his position dictated; he would not go to the Convention. But the
uncertainty over what he intended to do, how he would react when
he received the nomination that all observers agreed he would
get, was a more powerful political force than any political
action he could have taken, any political statement he could have
made. And when Chicago observers looked over the scene--the
other candidates stymied, the delegates supporting Roosevelt
because they believed that only with him could they win in
November, the uneasiness over the Third Term--they were prepared
to give President Roosevelt a unique place in U.S. political
history. Through all the wordy 37 Presidential campaigns in the
U.S., his were the most powerful words that were never spoken.
</p>
<p> The Potomac returned to the Navy Yard dock; the President
returned to the White House. Washington headquarters of the
Democratic National Committee shifted to the White House
switchboard its private line to Chicago. The President called Jim
Farley, extended his good wishes for the convention. "How are
things going?" he asked. "Okay," said Jim Farley. Secretary of
State Cordell Hull, preparing to leave for Havana, stopped to
lunch with the President. Said White House Spokesman Steve Early:
"Probably nobody will believe it, but they're going to talk about
the Havana Conference."
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>