Herbert
Hoover Inaugural Address.
March 4, 1929
[Delivered in person at
the Capitol]
My countrymen:
This occasion is not alone
the administration of the most sacred oath which can be assumed
by an American citizen. It is a dedication and consecration
under God to the highest office in service of our people. I
assume this trust in the humility of knowledge that only through
the guidance of Almighty Providence can I hope to discharge
its ever-increasing burdens.
It is in keeping with tradition
throughout our history that I should express simply and directly
the opinions which I hold concerning some of the matters of
present importance.
OUR PROGRESS
If we survey the situation
of our Nation both at home and abroad, we find many satisfactions;
we find some causes for concern. We have emerged from the losses
of the Great War and the reconstruction following it with increased
virility and strength. From this strength we have contributed
to the recovery and progress of the world. What America has
done has given renewed hope and courage to all who have faith
in government by the people. In the large view, we have reached
a higher degree of comfort and security than ever existed before
in the history of the world. Through liberation from widespread
poverty we have reached a higher degree of individual freedom
than ever before. The devotion to and concern for our institutions
are deep and sincere. We are steadily building a new race--a
new civilization great in its own attainments. The influence
and high purposes of our Nation are respected among the peoples
of the world. We aspire to distinction in the world, but to
a distinction based upon confidence in our sense of justice
as well as our accomplishments within our own borders and in
our own lives. For wise guidance in this great period of recovery
the Nation is deeply indebted to Calvin Coolidge.
But all this majestic advance
should not obscure the constant dangers from which self-government
must be safeguarded. The strong man must at all times be alert
to the attack of insidious disease.
THE FAILURE OF OUR SYSTEM
OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE
The most malign of all these
dangers today is disregard and disobedience of law. Crime is
increasing. Confidence in rigid and speedy justice is decreasing.
I am not prepared to believe that this indicates any decay in
the moral fibre of the American people. I am not prepared to
believe that it indicates an impotence of the Federal Government
to enforce its laws.
It is only in part due to
the additional burdens imposed upon our judicial system by the
18th amendment. 1 The problem is much wider than that. Many
influences had increasingly complicated and weakened our law
enforcement organization long before the adoption of the 18th
amendment.
1 The 18th amendment to
the Constitution, ratified January 16, 1919, prohibited "the
manufacture, sale, or transportation of intoxicating liquors
within, the transportation thereof into, or the exportation
thereof from the United States and all territory subject to
the jurisdiction thereof for beverage purposes."
To reestablish the vigor
and effectiveness of law enforcement we must critically consider
the entire Federal machinery of justice, the redistribution
of its functions, the simplification of its procedure, the provision
of additional special tribunals, the better selection of juries,
and the more effective organization of our agencies of investigation
and prosecution that justice may be sure and that it may be
swift. While the authority of the Federal Government extends
to but part of our vast system of national, State, and local
justice, yet the standards which the Federal Government establishes
have the most profound influence upon the whole structure.
We are fortunate in the
ability and integrity of our Federal judges and attorneys. But
the system which these officers are called upon to administer
is in many respects ill adapted to present-day conditions. Its
intricate and involved rules of procedure have become the refuge
of both big and little criminals. There is a belief abroad that
by invoking technicalities, subterfuge, and delay, the ends
of justice may be thwarted by those who can pay the cost.
Reform, reorganization,
and strengthening of our whole judicial and enforcement system,
both in civil and criminal sides, have been advocated for years
by statesmen, judges, and bar associations. First steps toward
that end should not longer be delayed. Rigid and expeditious
justice is the first safeguard of freedom, the basis of all
ordered liberty, the vital force of progress. It must not come
to be in our Republic that it can be defeated by the indifference
of the citizens, by exploitation of the delays and entanglements
of the law, or by combinations of criminals. Justice must not
fail because the agencies of enforcement are either delinquent
or inefficiently organized. To consider these evils, to find
their remedy, is the most sore necessity of our times.
ENFORCEMENT OF THE 18th
AMENDMENT
Of the undoubted abuses
which have grown up under the 18th amendment, part are due to
the causes I have just mentioned; but part are due to the failure
of some States to accept their share of responsibility for concurrent
enforcement and to the failure of many State and local officials
to accept the obligation under their oath of office zealously
to enforce the laws. With the failures from these many causes
has come a dangerous expansion in the criminal elements who
have found enlarged opportunities in dealing in illegal liquor.
But a large responsibility
rests directly upon our citizens. There would be little traffic
in illegal liquor if only criminals patronized it. We must awake
to the fact that this patronage from large numbers of law-abiding
citizens is supplying the rewards and stimulating crime.
I have been selected by
you to execute and enforce the laws of the country. I propose
to do so to the extent of my own abilities, but the measure
of success that the Government shall attain will depend upon
the moral support which you, as citizens, extend. The duty of
citizens to support the laws of the land is coequal with the
duty of their Government to enforce the laws which exist. No
greater national service can be given by men and women of good
will--who, I know, are not unmindful of the responsibilities
of citizenship--than that they should, by their example, assist
in stamping out crime and outlawry by refusing participation
in and condemning all transactions with illegal liquor. Our
whole system of self-government will crumble either if officials
elect what laws they will enforce or citizens elect what laws
they will support. The worst evil of disregard for some law
is that it destroys respect for all law. For our citizens to
patronize the violation of a particular law on the ground that
they are opposed to it is destructive of the very basis of all
that protection of life, of homes and property which they rightly
claim under other laws. If citizens do not like a law, their
duty as honest men and women is to discourage its violation;
their right is openly to work for its repeal.
To those of criminal mind
there can be no appeal but vigorous enforcement of the law.
Fortunately they are but a small percentage of our people. Their
activities must be stopped.
A NATIONAL INVESTIGATION
I propose to appoint a national
commission for a searching investigation of the whole structure
of our Federal system of jurisprudence, to include the method
of enforcement of the 18th amendment and the causes of abuse
under it. Its purpose will be to make such recommendations for
reorganization of the administration of Federal laws and court
procedure as may be found desirable. In the meantime it is essential
that a large part of the enforcement activities be transferred
from the Treasury Department to the Department of Justice as
a beginning of more effective organization. 2
2 Although the final sentence
of this paragraph was included in the official text printed
as Senate Document 1 (71st Cong., special sess.), it was reported
in the press that the President omitted the sentence in his
delivery of the address.
THE RELATION OF GOVERNMENT
TO BUSINESS
The election has again confirmed
the determination of the American people that regulation of
private enterprise and not Government ownership or operation
is the course rightly to be pursued in our relation to business.
In recent years we have established a differentiation in the
whole method of business regulation between the industries which
produce and distribute commodities on the one hand and public
utilities on the other. In the former, our laws insist upon
effective competition; in the latter, because we substantially
confer a monopoly by limiting competition, we must regulate
their services and rates. The rigid enforcement of the laws
applicable to both groups is the very base of equal opportunity
and freedom from domination for all our people, and it is just
as essential for the stability and prosperity of business itself
as for the protection of the public at large. Such regulation
should be extended by the Federal Government within the limitations
of the Constitution and only when the individual States are
without power to protect their citizens through their own authority.
On the other hand, we should be fearless when the authority
rests only in the Federal Government.
COOPERATION BY THE GOVERNMENT
The larger purpose of our
economic thought should be to establish more firmly stability
and security of business and employment and thereby remove poverty
still further from our borders. Our people have in recent years
developed a new-found capacity for cooperation among themselves
to effect high purposes in public welfare. It is an advance
toward the highest conception of self-government. Self-government
does not and should not imply the use of political agencies
alone. Progress is born of cooperation in the community--not
from governmental restraints. The Government should assist and
encourage these movements of collective self-help by itself
cooperating with them. Business has by cooperation made great
progress in the advancement of service, in stability, in regularity
of employment, and in the correction of its own abuses. Such
progress, however, can continue only so long as business manifests
its respect for law.
There is an equally important
field of cooperation by the Federal Government with the multitude
of agencies, State, municipal, and private, in the systematic
development of those processes which directly affect public
health, recreation, education, and the home. We have need further
to perfect the means by which Government can be adapted to human
service.
EDUCATION
Although education is primarily
a responsibility of the States and local communities, and rightly
so, yet the Nation as a whole is vitally concerned in its development
everywhere to the highest standards and to complete universality.
Self-government can succeed only through an instructed electorate.
Our objective is not simply to overcome illiteracy. The Nation
has marched far beyond that. The more complex the problems of
the Nation become, the greater is the need for more and more
advanced instruction. Moreover, as our numbers increase and
as our life expands with science and invention, we must discover
more and more leaders for every walk of life. We cannot hope
to succeed in directing this increasingly complex civilization
unless we can draw all the talent of leadership from the whole
people. One civilization after another has been wrecked upon
the attempt to secure sufficient leadership from a single group
or class. If we would prevent the growth of class distinctions
and would constantly refresh our leadership with the ideals
of our people, we must draw constantly from the general mass.
The full opportunity for every boy and girl to rise through
the selective processes of education can alone secure to us
this leadership.
PUBLIC HEALTH
In public health the discoveries
of science have opened a new era. Many sections of our country
and many groups of our citizens suffer from diseases the eradication
of which are mere matters of administration and moderate expenditure.
Public health service should be as fully organized and as universally
incorporated into our governmental system as is public education.
The returns are a thousandfold in economic benefits, and infinitely
more in reduction of suffering and promotion of human happiness.
WORLD PEACE
The United States fully
accepts the profound truth that our own progress, prosperity,
and peace are interlocked with the progress, prosperity, and
peace of all humanity. The whole world is at peace. The dangers
to a continuation of this peace today are largely the fear and
suspicion which still haunt the world. No suspicion or fear
can be rightly directed toward our country.
Those who have a true understanding
of America know that we have no desire for territorial expansion,
for economic or other domination of other peoples. Such purposes
are repugnant to our ideals of human freedom. Our form of government
is ill adapted to the responsibilities which inevitably follow
permanent limitation of the independence of other peoples. Superficial
observers seem to find no destiny for our abounding increase
in population, in wealth and power except that of imperialism.
They fail to see that the American people are engrossed in the
building for themselves of a new economic system, a new social
system, a new political system--all of which are characterized
by aspirations of freedom of opportunity and thereby are the
negation of imperialism. They fail to realize that because of
our abounding prosperity our youth are pressing more and more
into our institutions of learning; that our people are seeking
a larger vision through art, literature, science, and travel;
that they are moving toward stronger moral and spiritual life--that
from these things our sympathies are broadening beyond the bounds
of our Nation and race toward their true expression in a real
brotherhood of man. They fail to see that the idealism of America
will lead it to no narrow or selfish channel, but inspire it
to do its full share as a Nation toward the advancement of civilization.
It will do that not by mere declaration but by taking a practical
part in supporting all useful international undertakings. We
not only desire peace with the world, but to see peace maintained
throughout the world. We wish to advance the reign of justice
and reason toward the extinction of force.
The recent treaty for the
renunciation of war as an instrument of national policy sets
an advanced standard in our conception of the relations of nations.
Its acceptance should pave the way to greater limitation of
armament, the offer of which we sincerely extend to the world.
But its full realization also implies a greater and greater
perfection in the instrumentalities for pacific settlement of
controversies between nations. In the creation and use of these
instrumentalities we should support every sound method of conciliation,
arbitration, and judicial settlement. American statesmen were
among the first to propose, and they have constantly urged upon
the world, the establishment of a tribunal for the settlement
of controversies of a justiciable character. The Permanent Court
of International Justice in its major purpose is thus peculiarly
identified with American ideals and with American statesmanship.
No more potent instrumentality for this purpose has ever been
conceived and no other is practicable of establishment. The
reservations placed upon our adherence should not be misinterpreted.
The United States seeks by these reservations no special privilege
or advantage but only to clarify our relation to advisory opinions
and other matters which are subsidiary to the major purpose
of the Court. The way should, and I believe will, be found by
which we may take our proper place in a movement so fundamental
to the progress of peace.
Our people have determined
that we should make no political engagements such as membership
in the League of Nations, which may commit us in advance as
a nation to become involved in the settlements of controversies
between other countries. They adhere to the belief that the
independence of America from such obligations increases its
ability and availability for service in all fields of human
progress.
I have lately returned from
a journey among our sister Republics of the Western Hemisphere.
3 I have received unbounded hospitality and courtesy as their
expression of friendliness to our country. We are held by particular
bonds of sympathy and common interest with them. They are each
of them building a racial character and a culture which is an
impressive contribution to human progress. We wish only for
the maintenance of their independence, the growth of their stability
and their prosperity. While we have had wars in the Western
Hemisphere, yet on the whole the record is in encouraging contrast
with that of other parts of the world. Fortunately the New World
is largely free from the inheritances of fear and distrust which
have so troubled the Old World. We should keep it so.
3 See Supplement IV of this
volume.
It is impossible, my countrymen,
to speak of peace without profound emotion. In thousands of
homes in America, in millions of homes around the world, there
are vacant chairs. It would be a shameful confession of our
unworthiness if it should develop that we have abandoned the
hope for which all these men died. Surely civilization is old
enough, surely mankind is mature enough so that we ought in
our own lifetime to find a way to permanent peace. Abroad, to
west and east, are nations whose sons mingled their blood with
the blood of our sons on the battlefields. Most of these nations
have contributed to our race, to our culture, our knowledge,
and our progress. From one of them we derive our very language
and from many of them much of the genius of our institutions.
Their desire for peace is as deep and sincere as our own.
Peace can be contributed
to by respect for our ability in defense. Peace can be promoted
by the limitation of arms and by the creation of the instrumentalities
for peaceful settlement of controversies. But it will become
a reality only through self-restraint and active effort in friendliness
and helpfulness. I covet for this administration a record of
having further contributed to advance the cause of peace.
PARTY RESPONSIBILITIES
In our form of democracy
the expression of the popular will can be effected only through
the instrumentality of political parties. We maintain party
government not to promote intolerant partisanship but because
opportunity must be given for expression of the popular will,
and organization provided for the execution of its mandates
and for accountability of government to the people. It follows
that the government both in the executive and the legislative
branches must carry out in good faith the platforms upon which
the party was entrusted with power. But the government is that
of the whole people; the party is the instrument through which
policies are determined and men chosen to bring them into being.
The animosities of elections should have no place in our Government
for government must concern itself alone with the common weal.
SPECIAL SESSION OF THE CONGRESS
Action upon some of the
proposals upon which the Republican Party was returned to power,
particularly further agricultural relief and limited changes
in the tariff, cannot in justice to our farmers, our labor,
and our manufacturers be postponed. I shall therefore request
a special session of Congress for the consideration of these
two questions. I shall deal with each of them upon the assembly
of the Congress.
OTHER MANDATES FROM THE
ELECTION
It appears to me that the
more important further mandates from the recent election were
the maintenance of the integrity of the Constitution; the vigorous
enforcement of the laws; the continuance of economy in public
expenditure; the continued regulation of business to prevent
domination in the community; the denial of ownership or operation
of business by the Government in competition with its citizens;
the avoidance of policies which would involve us in the controversies
of foreign nations; the more effective reorganization of the
departments of the Federal Government; the expansion of public
works; and the promotion of welfare activities affecting education
and the home.
These were the more tangible
determinations of the election, but beyond them was the confidence
and belief of the people that we would not neglect the support
of the embedded ideals and aspirations of America. These ideals
and aspirations are the touchstones upon which the day-today
administration and legislative acts of government must be tested.
More than this, the Government must, so far as lies within its
proper powers, give leadership to the realization of these ideals
and to the fruition of these aspirations. No one can adequately
reduce these things of the spirit to phrases or to a catalogue
of definitions. We do know what the attainments of these ideals
should be: the preservation of self-government and its full
foundations in local government; the perfection of justice whether
in economic or in social fields; the maintenance of ordered
liberty; the denial of domination by any group or class; the
building up and preservation of equality of opportunity; the
stimulation of initiative and individuality; absolute integrity
in public affairs; the choice of officials for fitness to office;
the direction of economic progress toward prosperity and the
further lessening of poverty; the freedom of public opinion;
the sustaining of education and of the advancement of knowledge;
the growth of religious spirit and the tolerance of all faiths;
the strengthening of the home; the advancement of peace.
There is no short road to
the realization of these aspirations. Ours is a progressive
people, but with a determination that progress must be based
upon the foundation of experience. Ill-considered remedies for
our faults bring only penalties after them. But if we hold the
faith of the men in our mighty past who created these ideals,
we shall leave them heightened and strengthened for our children.
CONCLUSION
This is not the time and
place for extended discussion. The questions before our country
are problems of progress to higher standards; they are not the
problems of degeneration. They demand thought and they serve
to quicken the conscience and enlist our sense of responsibility
for their settlement. And that responsibility rests upon you,
my countrymen, as much as upon those of us who have been selected
for office.
Ours is a land rich in resources,
stimulating in its glorious beauty, filled with millions of
happy homes, blessed with comfort and opportunity. In no nation
are the institutions of progress more advanced. In no nation
are the fruits of accomplishment more secure. In no nation is
the government more worthy of respect. No country is more loved
by its people. I have an abiding faith in their capacity, integrity,
and high purpose. I have no fears for the future of our country.
It is bright with hope.
In the presence of my countrymen,
mindful of the solemnity of this occasion, knowing what the
task means and the responsibility which it involves, I beg your
tolerance, your aid, and your cooperation. I ask the help of
Almighty God in this service to my country to which you have
called me.
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