National Committee to Defeat the Mundt Bill | |
Founder: | Jerry J. O'Connell |
Vat Id: | (for European organizations) --> |
Purpose: | oppose Mundt-Nixon Bill |
Leader Title: | national chairman |
Leader Name: | Jerry J. O'Connell |
Leader Title2: | treasurer |
Leader Name2: | Bruce Waybur |
Leader Title3: | executive treasurer |
Leader Name3: | Edith Pratt |
Leader Title4: | registered lobbyists |
Leader Name4: | Jerry J. O'Connell, John B. Stone |
Subsidiaries: | sub-committees in Chicago, Miami, New York, San Francisco, Santa Cruz, Delaware, Philadelphia, Trenton, Denver |
Affiliations: | National Lawyers Guild, Communist Party USA |
The National Committee to Defeat the Mundt Bill AKA "NCDMB" (1948-1950) was an American organization that sought to oppose passage of the Mundt-Nixon Bill and subject of a 15-page report of the House Un-American Activities Committee, two of whose members were US Representatives Karl E. Mundt and Richard M. Nixon.[1] [2] [3]
In early 1948, US Representatives Mundt and Nixon began formulating an anti-communist bill, formally House Resolution 5852, Subversive Activities Control Act of 1948, which passed the House in May 1948.[4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10]
On June 1, 1948, Henry A. Wallace supporters visibly "took command" of a march on Washington to stop the Mundt-Nixon Bill from passing the Senate. Former congressional representative Jerry J. O'Connell became chairman of a "Committee to Defeat the Mundt Bill." The committee claimed that more than 5,000 would march on Washington on June 2.[11] In early June 1948, the bill died in the US Senate as the 1948 United States presidential election season commenced with conventions. (See Mundt-Nixon Bill.)
The group continued existence long enough to face the next iteration of the Mundt-Nixon Bill, namely the Mundt–Ferguson Communist Registration Bill AKA the "Mundt-Ferguson Bill."[12]
It is unclear when exactly the group dissolved. During hearings in 1955, O'Connell indicated that NCDMB ended when Congress overruled President Truman's veto of the Subversive Activities Control Act of 1950, more commonly known as the McCarran Internal Security Act, i.e., September 22, 1950.[13] HUAC's annual report for 1950 cited an unspecified date in September 1950.[14]
On December 7, 1950, HUAC issued a 15-page Report on National Committee to Defeat the Mundt Bill: A Communist Lobby. At that time, HUAC's senior investigator was Louis J. Russell and director of research Benjamin Mandel. HUAC had successfully subpoenaed months of Western Union telegrams and telephone records between the committee and the National Lawyers Guild and tied both organizations to the Communist Party USA (CPUSA) and numerous Communist front organizations. HUAC also cited testimony from FBI undercover agent Matthew Cvetic.[1]
The report concluded:
The Committee on Un-American Activities is unanimous in its belief that the National Committee to Defeat the Mundt Bill was organized not as a legitimate lobbying enterprise, but rather as a propaganda adjunct of the Communist Party. The work of this organization, in many instances, was performed by the Communist Party, and it was at all times wholly supported by the Communist Party.[1](Note: The report states its "belief.")
A number of NCDMB supporters also supported US Vice President Henry A. Wallace and his Progressive Party including Leo Isaacson, Arthur Miller, Louis Untermeyer, and Mark Van Doren (listed under "sponsors" below).
The NCDMB has the following sub-organizations:
Major financial contributors to NCDMB included:
NCDMB Officers included:
NCDMB sponsors included:
A House document states that US Senator James E. Murray of Montana had close Communist front ties with the Daily Worker newspaper, Soviet Russia Today magazine, the National Lawyers Guild, and the International Workers Order as well as known affiliation with Jerry J. O'Connell of NCMDB.[17]