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Clinton Anderson
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===Truman administration=== {{stack| [[File:Photograph of Secretary of Agriculture Clinton P. Anderson, evidently arriving at the White House for a Cabinet meeting. - NARA - 199137.jpg|thumb|250px|Secretary of Agriculture Clinton P. Anderson arriving at the White House for a Cabinet meeting (August 1945).]] [[File:President Truman and his cabinet in the Cabinet Room of the White House. Clockwise at table, Secretary of the... - NARA - 199648.jpg|thumb|250px|Anderson (center) in the Truman Cabinet (January 1948).]] [[File:Christmas Tree Lighting Ceremony on the south lawn of the White House.jpg|thumb|Clinton P. Anderson and wife Henrietta McCartney at the Christmas Tree Lighting Ceremony on the South Lawn of the White House (December 24, 1947).]] }} Shortly after Harry S. Truman became president in 1945, he selected Anderson to serve as his Secretary of Agriculture. His most immediate concern was the reorganization of the domestic agricultural economy, which for the previous four years, had been focused on supporting the American war effort in the [[World War II|Second World War]]. Anderson addressed issues such as price controls, shortages, and subsidies, and he played an important role in developing postwar agricultural policies. The domestic situation was only one of Anderson's concerns as Secretary of Agriculture. The looming worldwide food crisis, which was becoming more evident by 1946, led President Truman to establish the Famine Emergency Committee. Anderson made two controversial moves to change the drastic problems. Firstly, he used his organizational skills to incorporate all existing food and agricultural activities under his office. Secondly, he advised Truman to enlist former President [[Herbert Hoover]] to serve as chairman of the Famine Emergency Committee. During the crisis, Anderson, Truman, and Hoover worked together very closely. Many of Hoover's proposals on alleviating the international food shortage were adopted by the Truman administration, and it became Anderson's responsibility to implement the proposals. The three men can be credited with preventing an even larger international disaster. U.S. food production and worldwide distribution was stabilized by 1948, and Anderson decided to retire from the Cabinet. As with every project he had undertaken, Anderson left after he had resolved the problems faced.
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