I am announcing today my candidacy for the
Presidency of the United States.
The Presidency is the most powerful office
in the Free World. Through its leadership can come a more vital life for
our people. In it are centered the hopes of the globe around us for freedom
and a more secure life. For it is in the Executive Branch that the most
crucial decisions of this century must be made in the next four years--how
to end or alter the burdensome arms race, where Soviet gains already threaten
our very existence--how to maintain freedom and order in the newly emerging
nations--how to rebuild the stature of American science and education--how
to prevent the collapse of our farm economy and the decay of our cities--how
to achieve, without further inflation or unemployment, expanded economic
growth benefiting all Americans--and how to give direction to our traditional
moral purpose, awakening every American to the dangers and opportunities
that confront us.
These are among the real issues of 1960. And
it is on the basis of these issues that the American people must make their
fateful choice for their future.
In the past 40 months, I have toured every
state in the Union and I have talked to Democrats in all walks of life.
My candidacy is therefore based on the conviction that I can win both the
nomination and the election.
I believe that any Democratic aspirant to
this important nomination should be willing to submit to the voters his
views, record and competence in a series of primary contests. I am therefore
now announcing my intention of filing in the New Hampshire primary and
I shall announce my plans with respect to the other primaries as their
filing dates approach.
I believe that the Democratic Party has a
historic function to perform in the winning of the 1960 election, comparable
to its role in 1932. I intend to do my utmost to see that that victory
is won.
For 18 years, I have been in the service of
the United States, first as a naval officer in the Pacific during World
War II and for the past 14 years as a member of the Congress. In the last
20 years, I have traveled in nearly every continent and country--from Leningrad
to Saigon, from Bucharest to Lima. From all of this, I have developed an
image of America as fulfilling a noble and historic role as the defender
of freedom in a time of maximum peril--and of the American people as confident,
courageous and persevering.
It is with this image that I begin this campaign.