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COMMUNISM IN MOTION PICTURE INDUSTRY 285
Actors as their business agent and in turn he put in another man by the name of Maurice Howard, the present business agent. And they are all tied up with the same outfit.
Mr. Smith. What is your opinion of Mr. Pomerance and Mr. Howard as to whether or not they are or are not Communists ?
Mr. Disney. In my opinion they are Communists. No one has any way of proving those things.**^
Mr. Smith. Were you able to produce during the strike?
Mr. Disney. Yes, I did, because there was a very few, very small majority that was on the outside, and all the other unions ignored all the lines because of the set-up of the thing.
Mr. Smith. What is your personal opinion of the Communist Party, Mr. Disney, as to whether or not it is a political party?
Mr. Disney. Well, I don't believe it is a political party. I believe it is an un-American thing. The thing that I resent the most is that they are able to get into these unions, take them over, and represent to the world that a group of people that are in my plant, that I know are good, 100-percent Americans, are trapped by this group, and they are represented to the world as supporting all of those ideologies, and it is not so, and I feel that they really ought to be smoked out and shown up for what they are, so that all of the good, free causes in this country, all the liberalisms that really are American, can go out without the taint of communism. That is my sincere feeling on it.
Mr. Smith. Do you feel that there is a threat of communism in the motion -picture industry I
Mr. Disney. Yes, there is, and there are many reasons why they would like to take it over or get in and control it, or disrupt it, but I don't think they have gotten very far, and I think the industry is made up of good Americans, just like in my plant, good, solid Americans.
My boys have been fighting it longer than I have. They are trying to get out from under it and they will in time if we can just show them up.
Mr. Smith. There are presently pending before this committee two bills relative to outlawing the Communist Party. What thoughts have you as to whether or not those bills should be passed?
Mr. Disney. Well, I don't know as I qualify to speak on that. I feel if the thing can be proven un-American that it ought to be outlawed. I think in some way it should be done without interfering with the rights of the people. I think that will be done. I have that faith. Without interfering, I mean, with the good, American rights that we all have now, and we want to preserve.
Mr. Smith. Have you any suggestions to offer as to how the industry can be helped in fighting this menace?
Mr. Disney. Well, I think there is a good start toward it. I know that I have been handicapped out there in fighting it, because they have been hiding behind this labor set-up, they get themselves closely tied up in the labor thing, so that if you try to get rid of them they make a labor case out of it. We must keep the American labor unions clean. We have got to fight for them.
■•« See appendix, p. 538, for exhibit 59, being letter from Walter E. Disney to the Committee on Un-American Activities, dated November 3, 1947.
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