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The Catholic Church, the Congress of Industrial Organizations, and Labor in the United States, 1930-1950

Philip Murray, 'Rights and Duties,' and the CIO

Title: Philip Murray, president of the CIO

Source: American Catholic History Research Center, USCCB-SAD Collection, Box 72 Folder 16

Date: n.d.

Philip Murray (1886-1952) reluctantly accepted the presidency of the CIO in 1940 because of his sense of obligation and recognition that he alone, among the possible candidates, could keep it together. Inheriting an organization that was considerably weaker than it appeared and divided between the left and labor liberals, he oversaw its institutionalization and balanced the factions through the war years and beyond. Although firmly anti-communist, he chose to keep Lee Pressman as the CIO's general counsel despite his left-wing political agenda. Offsetting Pressman, although considerably less competent, was the anti-communist James Carey, secretary-treasurer. Murray secretly provided help to anti-communists in the CIO, but never crossed the line into open warfare. Clerics of his Roman Catholic Church had been long pressuring him, publicly and privately, to do that very thing, but it was only within the context of the Cold War that Murray chose to give the communists "cease and desist" orders. No matter how reasonable some of their critique of U.S. Cold War policy, the CIO communists marginalized themselves beyond repair when they supported a third-party at the orders of Communist Party leaders who, in turn, were acting within the purview of the Soviet Union's foreign policy. For Murray, this was not only tantamount to trying to elect the Republican candidate in 1948, but also an act of treason. At the CIO convention the same year, the battle against the communists and their allies became official, and during the 1949 convention, the largest and most important communist-led union, the United Electrical and Machine Workers of America (UE), seceded before it was expelled. In 1950, ten more communist-led unions were ousted.

 

Question

As you read these documents, reflect on the following questions:

1. What reasons did Murray give for calling World War II "labor's war"?

2. What were some of the points made in the CIO-PAC resolution?

3. What reasons were given for the attempted expulsion of the UE (United Electrical and Machine Workers of America)? What was proposed instead for the membership of the UE?

Title: Rights and Duties

Source: Assumption University Archives, Windsor, ON, Canada

Date: 1943
Title: Proceedings of the Tenth Constitutional Convention of the Congress of Industrial Organizations (Nov. 22-26, 1948)

Source: Proceedings of the Tenth Constitutional Convention of the Congress of Industrial Organizations

Date: Nov. 22-26, 1948
Title: Proceedings of the Eleventh Constitutional Convention of the Congress of Industrial Organizations (Oct. 31-Nov. 4, 1949)

Source: Proceedings of the Eleventh Constitutional Convention of the Congress of Industrial Organizations

Date: Oct. 31-Nov. 4, 1949