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Concerns Over the Mundt-Ferguson Bill: A Statement by Helen Gahagan Douglas, 1950-03-31

 Item — Box: 172, Folder: 9
Identifier: CAC_CC_014_5_172_9_0019
Helen Gahagan Douglas criticizes the Mundt-Ferguson Bill as being worse than the previous Mundt-Nixon Bill, which was rejected by Thomas E. Dewey. She believes that passing this bill would lead to a police state in America and argues that there are already laws in place to deal with treasonous activities. She opposes totalitarian methods in both Communist countries and the United States.

Dates

  • 1950-03-31

Language of Materials

English

Extent

1 Pages

Overview

81st (1949-1951)

Preservica Internal URL

Preservica Public URL Preservica Access

Creator

  • TypeCollection

Repository Details

Part of the Carl Albert Center Congressional and Political Collections Repository

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