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Massachusetts Congressman Jim McGovern addressed the House floor on February 10, 2025. A key ally in the effort to clear Ethel Rosenberg's good name, the Representative issued an apology to Ethel's family after President Biden failed to do so before leaving office in January. Below is a transcript of the speech, and a video recording can be found here.
"Mr. Speaker, I rise today to bring attention to the case of Ethel Rosenberg, who along with her husband, Julius, was convicted of conspiracy to commit espionage and executed in 1953.
For decades, evidence has cast serious doubt on the charges against Ethel Rosenberg. She had no KGB codename, and in 2001 her brother even admitted to falsely testifying against her. Last year with the help of my colleague, Intelligence Committee ranking member Jim Himes of Connecticut, I urged the National Archives and Records Administration to release information that we believed would exonerate Ethel. Working with Robert and Michael Meeropol, Ethel's sons, we helped shake loose a Freedom of Information Act Request for a crucial document written by a senior U.S. Army code-breaker and analyst, Meredith Knox Gardner, in 1950.
In August, 2024, we finally secured the release of this document, and it confirmed what we had suspected and what the Meeropol brothers have always known: Ethel Rosenberg was not a spy. And not only that, the government knew that she was not a spy and executed her anyway.
Let me repeat that: this government, the United States Government, knew way back then that she was innocent and executed her anyway. In fact, Gardner explicitly wrote in his classified memo that Ethel, "did not engage in the work (meaning espionage on behalf of the Soviet Union) herself." And despite this concrete evidence, the government has never righted this wrong. And I for one think it is unconscionable.
The truth is clear. Ethel Rosenberg's execution was motivated by fear and politics and it was not based on the facts. And so I urged former President Biden to exonerate her. The proof is right there in the documents and we handed over everything. Yet unfortunately President Biden did not act.
Ethel Rosenberg's execution was a miscarriage of justice. I think a disgraceful stain on our history. It was also a tragedy that left two young boys orphans. Her sons, Robert and Michael Meeropol, have spent their lives seeking justice for their mother, turning their pain into advocacy. Their work continues through a fund supporting children whose parents have been incarcerated or executed for political reasons. Their own children and family are even involved in this advocacy, and I greatly admire the way they have taken such a terrible tragedy of their lives and used it to put good back into the world. I deeply admire them, but no family should have to fight this long for the truth. It's my hope that one day a presidential administration will acknowledge the wrongfulness of her death and fully exonerate Ethel Rosenberg so her name may be cleared once and for all.
Until then, let the congressional record show, and every person in this building know, the U.S. government knew that Ethel Rosenberg was innocent. We knew that she was not a spy, and we executed her anyway. And I find that to be a disgrace, and I want to apologize for the pain and grief her family suffered because of what happened. Ethel was put to death during the height of McCarthyism, a time of hysteria when due process was cast aside. She was put to death at a time when due process was not guaranteed and our democratic values were not always upheld. We let fear and anger and hate get the best of us.
We are currently living through an equally troubling time in our country. People are being targeted and attacked for the way they think, what they say, and who they are. Facts must still matter, Mr. Speaker. Let's learn from our unperfect history. Nothing will bring Ethel Rosenberg back or erase the pain and challenges her sons have had to face in her absence. But as we continue to work to exonerate her, my hope is by telling her story we can prevent this dark chapter in history from repeating itself.
Ethel's story must not be forgotten, and she must be exonerated."
Comments
Apology to Ethel Rosenberg
My gratitude to Congressman Jim. As a child I remember to this day the day of the execution. I group among a group of families who were persecuted for their political views and solidarity actions, needing my own. I can remember being on a dusty summer road and stopping with the other children to hear a bell, tolling for their death.
Thank you, Jim
Ethel Rosenberg
Thank you, Congressman McGovern, for speaking out on the issue of an official U.S. Government apology on the House floor for Ethel Rosenberg. As a child the execution of
the Rosenbergs after just getting our family's first TV, caught my attention although not my understanding. Since adulthood I have sought out answers to many questions and supported the Rosenberg Fund for Children as something I could do. Thank you for using your important position as a politician and as a citizen to advocate with the family and with so many of us.
Hampton Bays, NY 11946
Jim McGovern
We need more people with the courage of Jim McGovern to get us through these difficult times. Thank you.
Thanks to Jim McGovern
Thanks so much Representative McGovern for standing up for the family of the Rosenbergs after so many years.
ETHEL Rosenberg injustice, the crime against humanity.
As a child myself, I saw Ethel and Julius on tv. They looked like deer caught in a headlight, frozen and waiting for execution. I couldn't understand it then. Now, I have a greater understanding as I see people blindly raging, following misdirection, misinformation...and that we must make this injustice known AND exonerate Ethel Rosenberg. Thank YOU Sen. McGovern
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