Mr. STEIGERWALT. As student body president
of the Associated Students of Southern California, and representing students
of Southern California, and representing not only my fellow students but
the first Voters of this area, at this time we would like to pose several
questions to you regarding the 1960 presidential campaign.
Our first question is: Exactly what are today's
practical differences between the Republican and Democratic Parties as
you see them.
Senator KENNEDY. Well, I think that there
are several significant differences. The first is the difference which
is suggested by their record of the past. The fact of the matter is that
the Republican Party has opposed every single piece of new, progressive
legislation of benefit to the people in the last 25 years, social security
[applause] social security, housing, minimum wage [response from the audience]
civil rights. In 1953 and 1954 the Republicans controlled the administration,
the House and the Senate. Not one single civil rights bill saw the light
of day in either the House or the Senate.
Second, I think what is past is prologue.
I think the general direction of the Republican Party and Mr. Nixon himself,
as he has said on many occasions, is to be conservative, and a conservative
defends the status quo. And I don't believe in 1960 or in the 1960's that
there is going to be a status quo. I believe we either drop back or we
move ahead. We do not sit on dead center. Secondly, the differences were
suggested earlier in my speech. Mr. Nixon and I hold a wholly different
view of our position in the world, of our prestige. Prestige is not
popularity. Prestige involves the willingness of other countries to follow
the leadership of another country, and the polls taken by the USIA this
summer which have not been released, but which several
papers have printed, show, for example, that only 7 percent of the
people of England and France now believe that we are ahead of the Soviet
Union in science. A majority of people in the 10 countries pooled believe
that the Soviet Union will be ahead of us militarily and scientifically
and in economic growth by 1970. How many of those people will follow our
lead, if they believe that the way to the future is our adversary and not
ourselves?
So first in our party differences, in our
willingness to move forward, in our willingness to provide programs which
will serve our people; second, in our view of the world, our prestige in
the world, the judgment that we make of our prestige; third, I believe
that we, the Democratic Party, are far more concerned historically and
at present about the problems of the underdeveloped world which hold the
key to our future, Africa, Latin America, India versus China. I do not
believe that the Republican Party has shared this concern. We are, for
example, the 14th country in the world today in radio broadcasts to Africa.
We gave the Congo last June - we offered them more scholarships, 300, than
we had offered all of Africa the year before. Do you know how many Congolese
students are studying as a result of that in the United States? Six.
Guinea asked us for 500 teachers last year.
Do you know how many we sent them? One. We gave Africa less than 5 percent
of all our funds for technical assistance. I don't believe that this administration,
either in nuclear testing or in the case of Africa, in the two revolutions
of the fifties, has demonstrated its willingness to break new ground. In
those three areas, our parties and the candidates differ. [Applause.]
Mr. STEIGERWALT. Our second question: What
three issues upon which you and Mr. Nixon greatly differ do you feel will
be the most decisive in bringing voters into your respective camps, and
in each case, why do you feel that your particular stand is better?
Senator KENNEDY. One is the issue we have
discussed already, about our position in the world. The second is the question
of economic growth which goes to the question of jobs, full employment,
and our ability to meet the national budget, our defense, and all the rest.
The United States over the last 8 years has had an economic growth of about
2.5 percent a year. In the last 9 months, our economic growth has dropped
back, 0.3 percent. Western Germany had twice the economic growth that we
did in the last 8 years. Italy had a greater economic growth and so did
France. The Soviet Union was, according to Mr. Allen Dulles, nearly 2½
times as much. We are going to have to find 25,000 new jobs a week every
week for the next 10 years, in order to maintain full employment.
I believe that that can be done only by an
administration which is committed to progress, which in the management
of the monetary and fiscal organs of government demonstrates an awareness
of change, which supports programs which emphasize education, full employment,
housing and all the rest. This year, for example, we are going to build
30 percent less homes than we did a year ago. This year, by the middle
of November, we will have nearly a million unsold cars, the largest by
500,000, nearly, than we have ever had in mid-November in the history of
the United States. Anyone who is a student, who looks at the facts, believes
that we have in Mr. Nixon's words, unexampled prosperity, maybe should
stay in school one more year. [Applause.]
The third point on which we differ is in the
record of our party, and the promise that that record gives to the future.
Ninety percent of the Republicans voted against a 25-cent minimum wage
in 1935, and 90 percent of them voted against the $1.25 an hour in 1960,
which Mr. Nixon considers extreme. Ninety percent of the Republicans voted
against the social security in the midthirties and 95 percent in 1960 voted
against the medical care for the aged tied to social security. The fact
of the matter is that on these issues, medical care, social security, this
administration vetoed two bills on housing, and one of them, the reason
it was vetoed, was because it provided loans to colleges for dormitories.
We are going to have to build more college
dormitories and classrooms in the next 10 years than we have built
in the last 200 years, to provide space for all the people who want to
go to college by 1970.
Now, if you believe that a party which has
opposed all of these pieces of progressive legislation in the past, legislation
which we now take for granted, is equipped to lead a changing country in
a changing world in 1960, then Mr. Nixon is your man. But I don't agree.
[Applause.] [Response from the audience.] That was my brother. [Applause
and laughter.]
Mr. STEIGERWALT. Mr. Kennedy, at this time
we are running out of time, and at this time may I thank you on behalf
of all students, the first-time voters for this area. It has been a great
pleasure having you with us. Thank you very much.