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Special Message to the Congress on the Succession to the Presidency

June 19, 1945

To the Congress of the United States:

I think that this is an appropriate time for the Congress to reexamine the question of the
Presidential succession.

The question is of great importance now because there will be no elected Vice President for
almost four years.

The existing statute governing the succession to the office of President was enacted in 1886.
Under it, in the event of the death of the elected President and Vice President, members of the
Cabinet successively fill the office.

Each of these Cabinet members is appointed by the President with the advice and consent of the
Senate. In effect, therefore, by reason of the tragic death of the late President, it now lies within
my power to nominate the person who would be my immediate successor in the event of my own
death or inability to act.

I do not believe that in a democracy this power should rest with the Chief Executive.

In so far as possible, the office of the President should be filled by an elective officer. There is no
officer in our system of government, besides the President and Vice President, who has been
elected by all the voters of the country.

The Speaker of the House of Representatives, who is elected in his own district, is also elected to
be the presiding officer of the House by a vote of all the Representatives of all the people of the
country. As a result, I believe that the Speaker is the official in the Federal Government, whose
selection next to that of the President and Vice President, can be most accurately said to stem
from the people themselves.

Under the law of 1792, the President Pro Tempore of the Senate followed the Vice President in
the order of succession.

The President Pro Tempore is elected as a Senator by his State and then as presiding officer by
the Senate. But the members of the Senate are not as closely tied in by the elective process to the
people as are the members of the House of Representatives. A completely new House is elected
every two years, and always at the same time as the President and Vice President. Usually it is in
agreement politically with the Chief Executive. Only one third of the Senate, however, is elected
with the President and Vice President. The Senate might, therefore, have a majority hostile to the
policies of the President, and might conceivably fill the Presidential office with one not in sympathy
with the will of the majority of the people.

Some of the events in the impeachment proceedings of President Johnson suggested the possibility
of a hostile Congress in the future seeking to oust a Vice President who had become President, in
order to have the President Pro Tempore of the Senate become the President. This was one of the
considerations, among several others, which led to the change in 1886.

No matter who succeeds to the Presidency after the death of the elected President and Vice
President, it is my opinion he should not serve any longer than until the next Congressional election
or until a special election called for the purpose of electing a new President and Vice President.
This period the Congress should fix. The individuals elected at such general or special election
should then serve only to fill the unexpired term of the deceased President and Vice President. In
this way there would be no interference with the normal four-year interval of general national
elections.

I recommend, therefore, that the Congress enact legislation placing the Speaker of the House of
Representatives first in order of succession in case of the removal, death, resignation or inability to
act of the President and Vice President. Of course, the Speaker should resign as a Representative
in the Congress as well as Speaker of the House before he assumes the office of President.

If there is no qualified Speaker, or if the Speaker fails to qualify, then I recommend that the
succession pass to the President Pro Tempore of the Senate, who should hold office until a duly
qualified Speaker is elected.

If there be neither Speaker nor President Pro Tempore qualified to succeed on the creation of the
vacancy, then the succession might pass to the members of the Cabinet as now provided, until a
duly qualified Speaker is elected.

If the Congress decides that a special election should be held, then I recommend that it provide for
such election to be held as soon after the death or disqualification of the President and Vice
President as practicable. The method and procedure for holding such special election should be
provided now by law, so that the election can be held as expeditiously as possible should the
contingency arise.

In the interest of orderly, democratic government, I urge the Congress to give its early
consideration to this most important subject.
HARRY S. TRUMAN

NOTE: On July 18, 1947, the President approved Public Law 199, 80th Congress (61 Stat. 380),
providing for the performance of the duties of the office of the President in case of the removal,
resignation, death, or inability both of the President and the Vice President.