Anti-Propaganda Act of 1940
Great Seal of the United States
Long titleAn Act to require the registration of certain organizations carrying on activities within the United States, and for other purposes.
Acronyms (colloquial)VAPA
NicknamesVoorhis Anti-Propaganda Act
Enacted bythe 76th United States Congress
EffectiveJanuary 14, 1941
Citations
Public lawPub. L.Tooltip Public Law (United States) 76–870
Statutes at Large54 Stat. 1201, Chap. 897
Codification
Titles amended18: Crimes and Criminal Procedure
U.S.C. sections created18 U.S.C. ch. 115 § 2386
Legislative history

Anti-Propaganda Act of 1940 or Voorhis Anti-Propaganda Act is a United States statute requiring the registration of organizations subject to foreign control while accomplishing activities in the United States. The public law was penned amidst the economic contraction of 1930s reasonably considering the developments of American imperialism, American Organized Labor, Nazism in the Americas, and propaganda in the United States. The Act of Congress was declared during the mid-twentieth century clandestine political movements in the United States often known as the Popular Front of 1930s.[1][2]

During the 1930s, the public policy of the United States attested to the ascent of modern liberalism while conservatism in the United States was marginalized with the propagation of Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal persuasively bolstered by the New Deal coalition.[3][4]

The U.S. House bill 10094 was sponsored by California congressman Jerry Voorhis who introduced the legislation to the United States House of Representatives on July 1, 1940.[5] The United States federal law was passed by the 76th United States Congress and enacted into law by the 32nd President of the United States Franklin Roosevelt on October 17, 1940.[6]

Declarations of Congressional Act

The Chapter 897 article found in volume fifty-four of the Statutes at Large was unanimously adopted to oppose the populism and propaganda of the fifth column auspiciously accomplishing a departure from the propaganda of the deed.

The American patriotism slip law was preceded by the McCormack Act of 1938 and the Hatch Act of 1939 while consecutively substantiated with the Smith Act of 1940.

The Voorhis Act of 1940 was authored as six sections authorizing the judicial observations of organizations pursuing activities in the United States susceptible of subject to foreign controls as determined as a foreign relations of the United States.

Registration of Certain Organizations - 54 Stat. 1201 § I
◇ Definitions ~
Attorney General ~ United States Attorney General
Organization ~ Any group, club, league, society, committee, association, political party, or combination of individuals
Political Activity ~ Any activity given the purpose or aim of which is the control by force or overthrow the Government - Coup d'état - of the United States or a political subdivision or any State or political subdivision
Civilian Military Activity ~
(1) it gives instruction to, or prescribes instruction for, its members in the use of firearms or other weapons or any substitute therefor, or military or naval science
(2) it receives from any other organization or from any individual instruction in military or naval science
(3) it engages in any military or naval maneuvers or activities
(4) it engages, either with or without arms, in drills or parades of a military or naval character
(5) it engages in any other form of organized activity which in the opinion of the Attorney General constitutes preparation for military action
Subject to Foreign Control ~
An organization shall be deemed subject to foreign control
(1) It solicits or accepts financial contributions, loans, or support of any kind, directly or indirectly, from, or is affiliated directly or indirectly with, a foreign government or a political subdivision thereof, or an agent, agency, or instrumentality of a foreign government or political subdivision thereof, or a political party in a foreign country, or an international political organization
(2) Its policies, or any of them, are determined by or at the suggestion of, or in collaboration with, a foreign government or political subdivision thereof, or an agent, agency, or instrumentality of a foreign government or a political subdivision thereof, or a political party in a foreign country, or an international political organization
Organizations Required to Register - 54 Stat. 1202-1203 § II
◇ Organizations shall be required to register with the Attorney General ~
(1) Every organization subject to foreign control which engages in political activity
(2) Every organization which engages both in civilian military activity and political activity
(3) Every organization subject to foreign control which engages in civilian military activity
(4) Every organization, the purpose or aim of which, or one of the purposes or aims of which, is the establishment control, conduct seizure, or overthrow of a government or subdivision by the use of force, violence, military measures, or threats of any one or more of the foregoing
◇ Manner of Registration ~
Every such organization shall register by filing with the Attorney General, on such forms and in such detail as the rules and regulations prescribe, a registration statement containing the information and documents prescribed and shall within thirty days after the expiration of each period of six months succeeding the filing of such registration statement
◇ Filing of Supplemental Statements ~
Attorney General may by rules and regulations prescribe, a supplemental statement containing such information and documents as may be necessary to make the information and documents previously filed accurate and current with respect to such preceding six months' period. Every statement required to be filed shall be subscribed, under oath, by all of the officers of the organization
◇ Exemptions ~
Nothing shall be deemed to require registration or the filing of any statement with the Attorney General
(1) The armed forces of the United States
(2) The organized militia or National Guard of any States, Territory, District, or possession of the United States
(3) Any law-enforcement agency of the United States or of any Territory, District, or possession thereof, or of any State or political subdivision of a State, or of any agency or instrumentality of one or more States
(4) Any duly established diplomatic mission or consular office of a foreign government which is so recognized by the Department of State
(5) Any nationally recognized organization of persons who are veterans of the armed forces of the United States, or affiliates of such organizations
◇ Registration Statement Contents ~
Every registration statement required to be filed by any organization shall contain the following information and documents
(1) The name and post-office address of the organization in the United States, and the names and addresses of all branches, chapters, and affiliates of such organization
(2) The name, address, and nationality of each officer, and of each person who performs the functions of an officer, of the organization, and of each branch, chapter, and affiliate of the organization
(3) The qualifications for membership in the organization
(4) The existing and proposed aims and purposes of the organization, and all the means by which these aims or purposes are being attained or are to be attained
(5) The address or addresses of meeting places of the organization, and of each branch, chapter, or affiliate of the organization, and the times of meetings
(6) The name and address of each person who has contributed any money, dues, property, or other thing of value to the organization or to any branch, chapter, or affiliate of the organization
(7) A detailed statement of the assets of the organization, and of each branch, chapter, and affiliate of the organization, the manner in which such assets were acquired, and a detailed statement of the liabilities and income of the organization and of each branch, chapter, and affiliate of the organization
(8) A detailed description of the activities of the organization, and of each chapter, branch, and affiliate of the organization
(9) A description of the uniforms, badges, insignia, or other means of identification prescribed by the organization, and worn or carried by its officers or members, or any of such officers or members
(10) A copy of each book, pamphlet, leaflet, or other publication or item of written, printed, or graphic matter issued or distributed directly or indirectly by the organization, or by any chapter, branch, or affiliate of the organization, or by any of the members of the organization under its authority or within its knowledge, together with the name of its author or authors and the name and address of the publisher
(11) A description of all firearms or other weapons owned by the organization, or by any chapter, branch, or affiliate of the organization, identified by the manufacturer's number thereon
(12) In case the organization is subject to foreign control, the manner in which it is so subject
(13) A copy of the charter, articles of association, constitution, bylaws, rules, regulations, agreements, resolutions, and all other instruments relating to the organization, powers, and purposes of the organization and to the powers of the officers of the organization and of each chapter, branch, and affiliate of the organization
(14) Such other information and documents pertinent to the purposes of this Act as the Attorney General may from time to time require
◇ Statements Filed to be Public Records ~
All statements filed shall be public records and open to public examination and inspection at all reasonable hours under such rules and regulations as the Attorney General may prescribe
Rules and Regulations - 54 Stat. 1203-1204 § III
The Attorney General is authorized at any time to make, amend, and rescind such rules and regulations as may be necessary to carry out the provisions of this Act, including rules and regulations governing the statements required to be filed by this Act
Penalty Provisions - 54 Stat. 1204 § IV
Any violation of any of the provisions of this Act shall be punishable by a fine of not more than $10,000 or by imprisonment for not more than five years, or both. Whoever in a statement filed willfully makes any false statement or willfully omits to state any fact which is required to be stated, or which is necessary to make the statements made not misleading, shall, upon conviction, be subject to a fine of not more than $2,000 or to imprisonment for not more than five years, or both
Saving Clause - 54 Stat. 1204 § V
If any provision of this Act, or the application thereof to any person or circumstances, is held invalid, the remainder of the Act, and the application of such provisions to other persons or circumstances, shall not be affected thereby
Effective Date - 54 Stat. 1204 § VI
This Act shall take effect on the ninetieth day after the date of its enactment, except that prior to such ninetieth day the Attorney General may make, amend, or rescind such rules and regulations as may be necessary to carry out the provisions of this Act

See also

Bourgeois nationalismInstitute for Propaganda Analysis
Committee on Public InformationMcCarthyism
CounterattackPoint Four Program
Democratic centralismPolitical opportunity
DeviationismRed Channels
Foreign Broadcast Information ServiceSmith Act trials of Communist Party leaders
House Un-American Activities CommitteeSocial movement theory
Industrial Workers of the WorldUnited States Office of War Information

Anti-Propaganda and United States Associated Legislation

Communist Control Act of 1954McCarran Internal Security Act of 1950
Countering Foreign Propaganda and Disinformation ActSmith–Mundt Act of 1948

Facets of Domestic and International Propaganda and Social Doctrine

Communist propagandaPropaganda in Fascist Italy
German Agrarian LeaguePropaganda in Imperial Japan
Historical CoffeehousesReich Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda
John Reed ClubsSecret society
Marxists Internet ArchiveUnemployed Councils
Pan-German LeagueYoung Communist League USA

References

  1. Nelson, Bruce (1986). "Unions and the Popular Front: The West Coast Waterfront in the 1930s". International Labor and Working-Class History. Cambridge University Press. 30 (30): 59–78. doi:10.1017/S0147547900016847. JSTOR 27671649. S2CID 144896000.
  2. Sylvers, Malcolm (1989). "American Communists in the Popular Front Period: Reorganization or Disorganization?". Journal of American Studies. Cambridge University Press. 23 (3): 375–393. doi:10.1017/S0021875800004035. JSTOR 27555210. S2CID 145701095.
  3. Jeffries, John W. (1990). "The "New" New Deal: FDR and American Liberalism, 1937-1945". Political Science Quarterly. The Academy of Political Science. 105 (3): 397–418. doi:10.2307/2150824. JSTOR 2150824.
  4. Bellush, Bernard; Bellush, Jewel (1980). "A Radical Response to the Roosevelt Presidency: The Communist Party (1933—1945)". Presidential Studies Quarterly. Wiley. 10 (4): 645–661. JSTOR 27547633.
  5. "Voorhis, Horace Jeremiah (Jerry)". U.S. House Clerk & Historian ~ History, Art & Archives. U.S. House of Representatives.
  6. "Registration of Certain Organizations" [House Congressional Record ~ July 1, 1940 Vol. 86, Part 8 - 76th Congress - 3rd Session]. Congress.gov. pp. 1921–1922.

Bibliography

Periodical Resources

Publications Related to Propaganda During the Mid-20th Century
"FIGHTS ALIEN-LINK BILL; Lawyers Guild Asks Veto of Voorhis' Registration Plan". The New York Times. October 14, 1940.
"NEW LAW IN EFFECT ON ALIEN SOCIETIES; Any Organization Controlled Abroad Must Register Now Under the Voorhis Act 30 DAYS TO BE ALLOWED Political Aims, Firearms and Where They Are Kept, Uniforms, Etc., Part of Data". The New York Times. January 15, 1941.
Smith, Bruce Lannes (1942), "Democratic Control of Propaganda Through Registration and Disclosure I", Public Opinion Quarterly, Oxford University Press, 6 (1): 27–40, doi:10.1086/265531, JSTOR 2745035
Kane, R. Keith (1942), "The O. F. F.", Public Opinion Quarterly, 6 (2): 204–220, doi:10.1086/265545, JSTOR 2745020
Childs, Harwood L. (1943), "V. Public Information and Opinion", American Political Science Review, American Political Science Association, 37 (1): 56–68, doi:10.2307/1948994, JSTOR 1948994, S2CID 144744191
Crowther, Bosley (June 27, 1949). "'The Red Menace,' Dealing With Communist Party in U.S., Shown at the Mayfair". The New York Times.
Cremins, James S. (1965), "The Present Legal Status of the Communist Party, U.S.A.", American Bar Association Journal, American Bar Association, 51 (5): 469–472, JSTOR 25723219
Bullock, Paul (1973), ""Rabbits and Radicals" Richard Nixon's 1946 Campaign Against Jerry Voorhis" [1946 California's 12th congressional district election], Southern California Quarterly, University of California Press, 55 (3): 319–359, doi:10.2307/41170489, JSTOR 41170489
Valocchi, Steve (1993). "External Resources and the Unemployed Councils of the 1930s: Evaluating Six Propositions from Social Movement Theory". Sociological Forum. Springer. 8 (3): 451–470. doi:10.1007/BF01115054. JSTOR 684570. S2CID 143811514.
Callaghan, John T. (2014). "Anti-Communism in the USA and American Foreign Policy in the Late 1940s". Twentieth Century Communism. Lawrence & Wishart. 2014 (6): 149–170. ISSN 1758-6437.
Hunt, Jonathan (2015). "Communists and the Classroom: Radicals in U.S. Education, 1930-1960". Composition Studies. Parlor Press. 43 (2): 22–42. JSTOR 45157098.

Safeguard of America's Democracy

FBI Records Classifications in National Archives
"Classification 3: Overthrow or Destruction of the Government". Federal Bureau of Investigation Records ~ FBI Records Classifications. U.S. National Archives and Records Administration. 1941.
"Classification 97: Foreign Agents Registration Act". Federal Bureau of Investigation Records ~ FBI Records Classifications. U.S. National Archives and Records Administration. 1939.
"Classification 100: Domestic Security". Federal Bureau of Investigation Records ~ FBI Records Classifications. U.S. National Archives and Records Administration. 1939.
"Classification 101: Hatch Act". Federal Bureau of Investigation Records ~ FBI Records Classifications. U.S. National Archives and Records Administration. 1939.
"Classification 102: Voorhis Act". Federal Bureau of Investigation Records ~ FBI Records Classifications. U.S. National Archives and Records Administration. June 21, 1942.

Historical Video Archive

20th Century Political and Social Ideology
"Democracy In Education". Internet Archive. Ford Motor Company. 1922.
"Democracy". Internet Archive. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films. 1945.
"Despotism". Internet Archive. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films. 1946.
"Don't Be a Sucker". Internet Archive. United States War Department. 1947.
"Communism". Internet Archive. Armed Forces Information Film. 1950.
"In Our Hands, Part 1: How We Got What We Have". Internet Archive. Wilding Picture Productions, Inc. 1950.
"In Our Hands, Part 2: What We Have". Internet Archive. Wilding Picture Productions, Inc. 1950.
"In Our Hands, Part 3: How To Lose What We Have". Internet Archive. Wilding Picture Productions, Inc. 1950.
"In Our Hands, Part 4: How to Keep What We Have". Internet Archive. Wilding Picture Productions, Inc. 1950.
"Face to Face with Communism". Internet Archive. Armed Forces Information Film. 1951.
"Communism". Internet Archive. Coronet Instructional Films. 1952.
"Longines Chronoscope with Senator Joseph R. McCarthy" [Reel America Longines Chronoscope with Senator Joseph McCarthy R-Wisconsin]. Internet Archive. National Archives and Records Administration. 1952.
"Communist Propaganda". Internet Archive. Armed Forces Information Film. 1953.
"Crisis for Americans: Communist Accent on Youth". Internet Archive. Pepperdine College. 1961.
"The Challenge of Ideas". Internet Archive. U.S. Army Pictorial Center. 1961.
"The Challenge of Ideas ~ Part I". Internet Archive. U.S. Army Pictorial Center. 1961.
"The Challenge of Ideas ~ Part II". Internet Archive. U.S. Army Pictorial Center. 1961.
  • "Jerry Voorhis". Office of Art & Archives ~ Office of the House Clerk. U.S. House of Representatives.
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