The 'Internal Security Act' (also known as the 'Subversive Activities Control Act', 'McCarran Act' or 'ISA') of
1950 is a
United States federal law that required the
registration of Communist organizations with the
Attorney General in the
United States and established the
Subversive Activities Control Board to investigate persons thought to be engaged in "un-American" activities. Members of these groups could not become citizens. Citizen-members could be denaturalized in five years.
It was a key institution in the era of the
Cold War, tightening alien exclusion and deportation laws and allowing for the detention of dangerous, disloyal, or
subversive persons in times of war or "internal security emergency". The
Democratic Congress overrode President
Harry S. Truman's veto to pass this bill. Truman called the bill "the greatest danger to freedom of speech, press, and assembly since the
Alien and Sedition Laws of 1798."
Sections of the ISA were gradually ruled
unconstitutional by the
Supreme Court.
Much of the Act has been repealed, but some portions remain intact. Violation of Section 797 of Title 50,
United States Code (Section 21 of "the Internal Security Act of 1950"), for example, may be punishable by a prison term of up to one year.
[1]
References
1. United States Department of Defense DoD Directive 5200.8, "Security of DoD Installations and Resources", 04/25/1991, retrieved August 26, 2005.
See also
★
Communist Registration Act
★
Hatch Act of 1939
★
McCarran-Walter Act
★
Alien Registration Act
★
House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC)
★
Second Red Scare
★
McCarthyism
★
Internal Security Act