The Third Term


On the evening of July 16, 1940, Thomas D. (for Democrat) Garry sat sweating in front of a microphone in the basement of Chicago Stadium. Garry, Chicago's Superintendent of Sewers, had orders from his boss, Mayor Edward Kelly, to use his leather lungs to shout out, on cue, three words over and over. Above Garry's head, Kentucky Senator Alben Barkley was finishing the keynote address to the delegates at the 1940 Democratic National Convention. The signal for Garry to shout his three words would come after Barkley finished reading a statement from the President of the United States.

In 1796, at the end of his second term, President George Washington announced that he would not seek a third term. For the new republic, Washington's decision set a precedent -- an unwritten law for future chief executives to quit after two terms. Washington's successor John Adams served only one term, so it fell to Thomas Jefferson to carry on the tradition at the end of his second term, which he did. Presidents James Madison, James Monroe, Andrew Jackson, Ulysses S. Grant, and Grover Cleveland all served two full terms and upheld the tradition of declining a third term. In 1908 Theodore Roosevelt followed in their footsteps, but four years later he ran for a third term on a third party ticket. TR lost and in the process split the Republican vote, electing Democrat Woodrow Wilson who would himself become a two-term president and a respecter of the two-term tradition. Then came 1940 and FDR.

Early in the year, the war in Europe lingered in the "sitzkreig" stage. The Untied States officially took a neutral position, and President Roosevelt remained publicly noncommittal about a third term. One cartoonist drew FDR as a an Egyptian Sphinx, 1940 model -- smiling but saying nothing. Roosevelt told his good friend, Secretary of the Treasury Henry Morganthau, that he had no intentions of running unless "things get very, very much worse in Europe." In April things got very much worse. The German spring offensive that swept through Denmark, Holland, Belgium, and culminated with the fall of France, pushed many of Roosevelt's supporters to work behind the scenes for a third term; Roosevelt did nothing to stop them. With the world going to hell, the president's supporters believed the nation needed a seasoned leader in the White House.

Many other democrats, however, firmly believed in the two-term-only tradition, no matter how dire the world situation. Three members of Roosevelt's cabinet viewed FDR's continued silence right up to the convention as encouragement to run for the nomination themselves -- Vice- President John Nance Garner, Secretary of State Cordell Hull, and Postmaster General Jim Farley.

The copyright of the article The Third Term in U.S. History 1929-1945 is owned by Earl Rickard. Permission to republish The Third Term in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.

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