JOINT STATEMENT
THE STATEMENT
Vice President Nixon - a member of the
Eisenhower administration team for the past 7 1/2 years - in the short
span of 48 hours since his nomination has repudiated two key parts of that
administration's program. This is just the first evidence of his lack of
basic conviction on the issues to which Governor Rockefeller alluded so
eloquently before the midnight confrontation in New York.
This lack of basic conviction has already
manifested itself in the Vice President's agreement with Rockefeller that
further defense funds are required - an agreement he entered into just
before the President told the Republican Convention and Nation that all
was well in the field of defense.
Those in the Farm Belt are acutely aware of
the failures of the Republican policy on agriculture, a policy to which
Vice President Nixon has wholeheartedly subscribed until yesterday. In
April of 1954, speaking in Des Moines, the Vice President said:
"I predict that the verdict of history will be that Secretary of Agriculture Benson has been one of the best Secretaries of Agriculture in our history and that he was a friend of the farmer."
In September of 1956, in Rapid City, S. Dak., Nixon said:
"I am confident that our program is right and if the people stick with us the farmer will share in unparalleled prosperity."
Secretary Benson said in 1957 that he had "every
evidence of the support of the Vice President" and in January of this year
said he would expect Nixon to carry on present Benson policies because
the Vice President "had participated in the development of the program."
Vice President Nixon said Benson was good enough
for us but now he has said he is not good enough for him.
This steadfastness of support for the Republican farm program came
despite the fact that-
More than 3 million persons have been driven
from the farm since 1952.
Total net farm income in 1959 was 35 percent
less than in 1952.
Total cost of the farm program increased from
$1.5 billion in 1952 to $5.7 billion in fiscal year 1961.
Stored surpluses increased 636 percent from
1952 to 1959.
The American people will have grave doubts
about a candidate who can change his beliefs with such mobility. They will
be surprised that the Vice President can, with such facility, repudiate
the policies of his fellow member of the administration team, President
Eisenhower. The record of the past speaks far more eloquently than any
new positions taken for the purpose of a political campaign. This is the
most flagrant example in recent years of a political captain leaving the
sinking ship.
KENNEDY STATEMENT
The Democratic leaders in the Midwest have
accurately pinpointed Mr. Nixon's lack of basic beliefs indicated by his
betrayal of the Benson farm program which he helped to write.
The Vice President cannot at one time say
that in his role in the present administration he has not had a chance
to express his own views until now and, on the other hand, portray himself
as the most powerful Vice President in history. These roles are incongruous,
and the fact of the matter is that the Vice President was an architect
of the current disastrous farm policy, and now in the face of that policy's
failure attempts to dissociate himself from it.
In February of this year, Vice President Nixon
hailed Secretary of Agriculture Benson as the greatest Secretary of Agriculture
in our country's history.
The President of the United States has repeatedly
fought those who sought to oust Secretary Benson.
Election day conversions are not an indication
of conviction and election day promises backed by a record of contradictions
are worth absolutely nothing. The past is prolog.
His consistent support of this program for
8 years, his consistent adherence to the beliefs of Mr. Benson cast a shadow
over this decision to drop his agricultural pilot quietly overboard. His
present effort to dissociate himself from a disastrous farm program, which
he himself helped formulate, is another evidence of Mr. Nixon's lack of
basic beliefs.