Las Vegas Review-Journal

James Risen and Tom Risen

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OWheeling, W.VA. n Feb. 9, 1950, Sen. Joseph Mccarthy disembarke­d from his Capital Airlines plane at Stifel Field here, where he planned to speak at a Lincoln Day event hosted by the Ohio County Women’s Republican Club.

At the Mclure Hotel downtown that night, Joe Mccarthy, a 41-year-old junior Republican senator from Wisconsin, gave one of the most infamous speeches in U.S. history, mixing right-wing demagoguer­y and outright lies as he claimed there were hundreds of Communists burrowed deep in the State Department and accused President Harry Truman’s Democratic administra­tion of refusing to weed them out.

His speech electrifie­d a crowd of 275 in the Mclure’s Colonnade ballroom and transforme­d him into a frightenin­g national force. Mccarthy blamed “elite” Democrats in the Truman administra­tion, particular­ly Secretary of State Dean Acheson, who he said had failed to purge “the enemy within” that threatened America’s security and way of life: “While I cannot take the time to name all of the men in the State Department who have been named as members of the Communist Party and members of a spy ring, I have here in my hand a list of 205 that were known to the secretary of state as being members of the Communist Party and who, neverthele­ss, are still working and shaping the policy in the State Department.”

By today’s standards, the news of Mccarthy’s speech spread across the nation at a glacial pace. Only the local newspaper and radio station covered it (the radio station later mistakenly erased the only tape recording of the speech). It gained national notice because of a 110-word Associated Press story picked up by about two dozen newspapers around the country.

But within days, Mccarthy’s accusation that there was a hidden Communist cabal at the heart of the U.S. government blew up into a bitter national controvers­y. And before long, Mccarthy’s Wheeling

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