| Long title | An Act to require the registration of certain organizations carrying on activities within the United States, and for other purposes. |
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| Acronyms(colloquial) | VAPA |
| Nicknames | Voorhis Anti-Propaganda Act |
| Enacted by | the76th United States Congress |
| Effective | January 14, 1941 |
| Citations | |
| Public law | Pub. L. 76–870 |
| Statutes at Large | 54 Stat. 1201, Chap. 897 |
| Codification | |
| Titles amended | 18: Crimes and Criminal Procedure |
| U.S.C. sections created | 18 U.S.C. ch. 115 § 2386 |
| Legislative history | |
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Anti-Propaganda Act of 1940 orVoorhis Anti-Propaganda Act is a United States statute requiring the registration oforganizationssubject to foreign control while accomplishing activities in the United States. Thepublic law was penned amidst theeconomic contraction of1930s reasonably considering the developments ofAmerican imperialism,American Organized Labor,Nazism in the Americas, andpropaganda in the United States. TheAct of Congress was declared during the mid-twentieth centuryclandestinepolitical movements in the United States often known as thePopular Front of 1930s.[1][2]
During the1930s, thepublic policy of the United States attested to the ascent ofmodern liberalism whileconservatism in the United States wasmarginalized with thepropagation of Franklin Roosevelt'sNew Deal persuasively bolstered by theNew Deal coalition.[3][4]
The U.S. Housebill 10094 was sponsored by California congressman Jerry Voorhis who introduced the legislation to theUnited States House of Representatives on July 1, 1940.[5] The United States federal law was passed by the76th United States Congress and enacted into law by the32nd President of the United States Franklin Roosevelt on October 17, 1940.[6]
The Chapter 897 article found in volume fifty-four of theStatutes at Large was unanimously adopted to oppose thepopulism andpropaganda of thefifth columnauspiciously accomplishing a departure from thepropaganda of the deed.
TheAmerican patriotismslip law was preceded by theMcCormack Act of 1938 and theHatch Act of 1939 while consecutively substantiated with theSmith 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 ofsubject to foreign controls as determined as aforeign relations of the United States.
Publications related to propaganda during the mid-20th century |
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Federal Bureau of Investigation's classifications of the National Archives |
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20th-century political and social ideology |
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