When
she left the White House on April 19, 1945, several political
leaders, administration officials, and labor leaders urged
her either to run for office or manage political organizations.
Speaker of the House Sam Rayburn and New Jersey congresswoman
Mary Norton
urged ER to join the American delegation to the conference
charged with planning the United
Nations. Secretary of the Interior Harold
Ickes pleaded with her to run for the United States
Senate while New York Democratic Party leader Ed
Flynn argued that she should be the Empire State's
next governor. Others proposed that she be the new
secretary
of labor. CIO leader Sidney
Hillman lobbied her to direct the CIO's political
action committee. Even the syndicated columnists Joseph
and Stewart Alsop belatedly joined the conjecture,
satirically suggesting that their cousin become Truman's
new political
"medium."
Close friends and the media reinforced this expectation
of a political career. As they rode the train from Hyde
Park back to Washington, Henry
Morgenthau, Jr., recommended that FDR's estate be
settled as soon as possible so "she could speak out to
the world as Eleanor Roosevelt." "It [is] most important
that [your] voice be heard," the secretary asserted.
After encouraging her friend to "take a few days off
this Spring and Summer to rest," Lorena
Hickok reminded her that "you are going to be more
your own agent, freer than you've ever been before." ER
must be prepared, Hickok concluded, for the "very active
and important place" awaiting her. The Associated Press
anticipated ER's reentry and summarized ER's options
with this front
page headline: "Mrs. Roosevelt Will Continue Column; Seeks
No Office Now."
ER had her own expectations about the future, but she was
undecided about what actions she should take to achieve
them. Fearing that her public life had died along with FDR,
ER struggled to set her own course. In On My Own,
she wrote she was sure of only three things when she returned
to Hyde Park: she wanted to continue her columns, simplify
her lifestyle, and "not feel old . . . [or] useless." She
knew her keen interest in the world around her, her eagerness
to confront "every challenge and opportunity to learn more,"
and her "great energy and self-discipline" were tremendous
assets.
"Of one thing I am sure," she wrote in early May, "in order to be useful we must stand for the
things we feel are right, and we must work for those things wherever we find ourselves. It does
very little good to believe something unless you tell your friends and associates of your beliefs."
Vowing that she would not become "a workless worker in a world of work," she decided that she
would focus on her column and the organizations she supported.
By 1946, the public expectation was so strong that she
wrote an article for Look ("Why
I Do Not Choose To Run") denying rumors of her
candidacy. "The simple truth is that I have had my fill
of public life of the more or less stereotyped kind." While
she believed "that every citizen, as long as he is alive
and able to work, has an obligation to work on public questions
and . . . should choose the kind of work he is best fitted
to do," she felt she would be happier outside the elected
office.(1)
Notes:
- Allida Black, Casting Her Own Shadow: Eleanor Roosevelt and the Shaping of Postwar
Liberalism (New York: Columbia University Press, 1996), 52-53.