Fellow Americans, fellow Democrats:
I accept your nomination.
I accept also - with full
confidence in the outcome and with high enthusiasm for a labor I love -
the happy privilege of campaigning on your platform for the victory that
will be won in November by a united Democratic party.
To each of you at this convention,
I express again my gratitude - for the great honor you have done
me and for the greater honor you have done yourselves by your conduct here.
You brought to this convention
strong and honorable convictions.
Out of those convictions, ably
advocated and responsibly resolved, you have forged new strength for the
Democratic party and for the Nation.
At the threshold of a new era,
this convention has closed the door on the things which have divided Americans
in the past. We have stepped across boldly, into what I believe will be
a new day of hope and harmony for all Americans - regardless of religion,
race, or region.
I am proud to be a member
of such a party.
What man could - what
sort of man would - say "no" to any call to serve such a party and through
that party render a service to his country in these times of peril?
Certainly, to such a call,
I could not say, "no".
For eight years - at the
call of my fellow Democrats in the Senate of the United States - I have
served in a position of leadership, responsible for the success of my party
in that chamber, - but responsible in a far larger sense for mustering
for my country all the strength that could be drawn from our system of
government.
These years have been
years of divided government.
By great effort, by great
patience, by a sense of overriding responsibility to the Nation on all
things, Democrats have made divided government work.
But today, as our Nation
moves into the times we see ahead, you know, I know, all Americans know
that divided government must end, and It will end in January.
The front line of divided government
has been on the Senate floor. The front line of unified government is on
up ahead. In the choice between the uniform to wear or the duty to perform,
there is no choice - no responsible choice - but duty. I will serve where
my party asks me to serve and where my countrymen want me to serve, and
that is why I gave the answer I did yesterday...
As the distracting divisions
between Executive and Legislative must be ended, so must we end the divisions
between our regions - the suspicions between our religions - the fears
between our races - the strifes of class - the pressures and tensions of
competitive groups and conflicting interests...
We must live - we must
work - as responsible men.
With gentle hands we must
minister to the needs of the meek among us - the young, the aged, the sick,
the men and women and children of all walks, all stations of life.
At the same time, we shield
the prize of freedom. We must keep the muscle in the arm of America, and
with steady hands and resolute hearts hold back the aggressive forces of
evil which challenge us today.
America must - to those
who threaten the peace and freedom of mankind - speak with a decisive voice,
speak with one voice, speak again with the voice of a government undivided,
or a Nation fully united.
Small powers and great
powers alike will challenge our hesitation - move against our uncertainty
- attack our disunity. But no power on earth will prevail against a decisive
America, confident of its strength, sure of its soul, one in its voice
of determination.
This is the America we
must have - and shall have.
This is the American leadership
the Democratic party will provide...
I am quite certain that
within the last 48 hours the plans - and hopes - of the Republican party
have been undergoing one of their agonizing reappraisals.
And I will tell you why:
First, the Republicans
know they are up against a winning party, a party united, a party without
North or South, East or West, a party where the nominee is not afraid to
fight for victory - and, I might add, not afraid to debate the issues.
But secondly, let me say,
since we are meeting where we are, the Republicans know as I know and as
you know that a new star has been born in the leadership skies of the Nation
here at Los Angeles.
In admiration, and in
envy, I want to say to you quite frankly - and I think I have the experience
and maturity in this field to say it - I know when I see political genius
and I have seen it in my friend John Kennedy. The Democratic party is going
all the way with J.F.K. and L.B.J., and I am proud to be on the bandwagon.
But there is more - much
more. My tasks in the Senate are the tasks of leadership, of knowing men,
of seeing into them, knowing what they are made of. Long ago - when both
of us were in the House together - I saw inside this man the steel of strength
that is all too rare and I have watched with unabashed pride, as he knows,
as these qualities have come forth in the Senate...
There is character here,
quality here, greatness here. And if, as he said the other day, he has
learned from me, I am sure that I have a very great deal to learn from
him.
To him, I want to express
my gratitude for his confidence in me and my humility at the compliment
which is mine, to share this moment of opportunity with him. For
that I am grateful. More especially, in a more personal way, I am grateful
and I am proud that the bond of friendship which formed long ago was still
holding fast, as I knew it would be, when we had finished our lawsuit and
the jury came in. It is this quality of our American life and system I
which, more than most any other, reaffirms my faith not only in the greatness
of the system but in the greatness of the human race.
Wherever he wants me to
go, I will go, for the party, for the Nation. I will go because I know
we both want America to go up the same road toward greatness...
Wednesday night - I was
confidently waiting for the second and third ballot - I learned that Mr.
Kennedy took to heart my admonitions that the next President of the United
States would have no second chances. As a result, I did not get out of
the hotel before the convention had concluded - and did not have the opportunity
to make the motion that the nomination be unanimous.
I am sure you don't mind voting
one more time.
So I move that we now, by voice
vote, make it unanimous for the next President of the United States, John
Fitzgerald Kennedy.