Senator KENNEDY. Governor Battle, Governor
Almond, Congressman Jennings, Congressman Downing, Congressman Gary, your
distinguished national committeeman, Congressman Hardy, ladies and gentlemen,
as the Democratic standard bearer in 1960, I come to the mother of the
Democratic Party, Virginia, and ask your help. [Applause.] I am honored
by the generous introduction of your distinguished former Governor, and
I am proud to sit here on this platform with leaders of the Democratic
Party of Virginia, Virginia which began under Thomas Jefferson the Democratic
Party. I cannot believe that in 1960 Virginia would vote for a Republican
of the strip of Richard Nixon. [Applause.]
I come here today to this State which has
nourished the Democratic Party in good times and bad, which began this
party, which gave it growth, which gave it intellectual conviction, and
I come here to this State and ask your support in the last 4 days of this
campaign. [Applause.] I believe that Virginia and the Nation join in concerning
ourselves with the future of our country. I do not believe that any citizen
of the State of Virginia who bears the proud title of Democrat can possibly,
in 1960, determine that the destinies of this country should be placed
in the hands of a candidate and in the hands of a party who have opposed
progress for the last 15 years. [Applause.]
Mr. Nixon [aircraft noise] - goodby, Dick
[laughter] - I don't care how many rescue squad operations are now being
organized around the country to save Mr. Nixon. I rode through the streets
of New York by myself. I did not require [applause] - I did not require
Henry Cabot Lodge or Nelson Rockefeller or President Eisenhower to go by
my side. [Applause.] The point of the matter is that a team is not
running for the Presidency. We have one man who runs, one candidate, and
the people of Virginia and the people of the United States must decide
whether a candidate who runs on a platform of standing up to Khrushchev,
who will not come into a studio and have a fifth debate, who needs an escort
guard to take him around the State of New York, whether he can lead the
American people or not. [Applause.] You have all seen these elephants at
the circus, with their heads full of ivory, thick skins, long memory, no
vision, and when they move around the circus ring, they grab the tail of
the elephant in front of them. [Laughter.] Mr. Nixon grabbed that tail
in 1952 and 1956, but he is the lead elephant now, and the people of the
United States do not want a candidate who needs an escort to meet the American
people in the last 5 days of the campaign. [Applause.]
I come here today and ask your help. This
party was begun by Thomas Jefferson. This party of the Democrats is a national
party. I run as the presidential candidate, Lyndon Johnson, of Texas, as
the Vice President. We stand as a united party, North, South, East, and
West. The strength of the Democratic Party is the fact that it is a national
party, that it speaks for all the people, that it represents all interests,
and most of all represents the public interest. [Applause.]
I have been reading speeches by Mr. Nixon
and others that if we get into office, that we are going to spend this
country blind. I do not know a fiscal record which has been marked by greater
imprudence than the record of this administration in fiscal matters in
the last 8 years, and I am going to prove it. [Applause.]
Do you know in the last 3 months the United
States has lost $1 billion in gold? One billion dollars in 3 months has
flowed out of this country. In 1952, the U.S. gold reserves were $11 billion
more than the debts that we owed to foreign debts. Today our foreign debts
are $3 billion more than our gold reserve. A dangerous deterioration in
our world position of $15 billion in the last 8 years.
In the past month our estimated tax revenues,
because of a decline in our economy, have gone down from $2 to $3 billion
in the last 3 or 4 months. In the last few months, our gross national product
has actually declined by $3 billion. The Soviet Union is moving ahead at
7 percent a year. Our average growth in the last 8 years is 2½ percent;
in the last 9 months it is minus 0.3 percent. In the most difficult and
dangerous time in the life of our country instead of growing, instead of
providing opportunity for our people, instead of providing the sinew that
makes it possible for us to defend our country, we are actually falling
behind.
In the last few months, the cost of living
has reached an alltime high. Therefore, I believe we can do much better.
I believe we are going to have to do much better. I want to make it clear
as the leader of the Democratic Party in this campaign, as a Member of
Congress for 14 years, if I am elected President of the United States,
we commit ourselves to a sound monetary and fiscal and responsible monetary
policy that will move this country ahead and meet our obligations. [Applause.]
From fiscal 1954 to fiscal 1960, the last
6 years, we increased the national debt by $21 billion. In the last 6 years,
$21 billion. We incurred budgetary deficits of more than $18 billion, and
piled up the largest single peacetime deficit in 1 year in the history
of the United States $12 billion. Never before in the history of the United
States did any administration in peacetime have a larger deficit
than this administration in 1958, 12 billion. They would have had an increase
in the debt of more than $10 billion except a Democratic Congress in the
last 6 years cut the budget requests of the President of the United States
by $10 billion. So if we are going to talk about fiscal responsibility,
if we are going to talk about meeting our obligations, if we are to talk
about balanced budgets, I want to look at the record.
This administration in 1952 on a commitment
to reduce Federal spending to $60 billion a year, it is $73 billion. It
has never been close to $60 billion. They have spent 46 percent more than
Harry Truman spent. They have added 106,000 new Federal employees. I think
it is about time the American people knew. [Applause.]
I don't believe that any Democratic President
or any Democratic Congress could perform the miracles of Mr. Benson. Do
you know that in the last 3 years the Department of Agriculture has cost
more than it cost in the 20 years of the Democratic Party? In the last
8 years they have spent more money in the Department of Agriculture than
they spent in the whole history of the Department of Agriculture. That
is the record that Mr. Nixon is running on. [Applause.]
The interest rate policy of this administration
has added $3 billion a year to the tax bill of the American people. If
you buy a house today, $10,000, 30-year mortgage, you pay $3,200 more for
that house on interest rates alone than you would have paid in 1952. Who
are the spenders? [Applause.]
I was chairman of the Senate Subcommittee
on Governmental Reorganization which steered 30 Hoover Commission recommendations
through. Mr. Hoover wrote me a letter praising us for the work we had done
on Government economy. I do not intend to become President of the United
States in order to liquidate the dollar. I become President of the United
States because I think we can do a much better job than the Republicans
can do. [Applause.] And I make the following commitments:
First, we Democrats do not intend to devalue
the dollar from its present rate. We will defend its value and its soundness.
Second, we will seek a balanced budget over
the years of our administration, seeking a budget surplus in good years
as a brake on inflation.
Third, we will place less reliance on a high
interest rate policy which discourages investment, which I believe is vital
to our growing economy, and which has been a major contribution to two
recessions, 1954 and 1958, and which has slowed down business in 1960 so
that the rate of unemployment in this area of Virginia is higher than the
national average.
And, fourth, we will begin a large-scale effort
to assist those communities in the United States, communities that are
represented by Pat Jennings, by the people of West Virginia, which have
been hard hit, chronically [applause] which have seen men and machines
go idle. Here in this rich country of ours we are producing steel at about
55 percent of capacity. We built this year 30 percent less homes than a
year ago. By November, the middle of November of this year, we will have
more cars unsold than we have ever had in our history. That is the record
Mr. Nixon runs on. And I believe we can do much better. [Applause.]
I come to Virginia and ask your help. Every
citizen of this State is a citizen of the world. You do not need the reassurances
of any man about our position in the world. You know it well. This State
would not have survived unless the citizens of this State had had foresight,
and you know as Virginians and as citizens of the United States that the
United States has to be stronger, we have to do better. You cannot possibly
place your reliance in a candidate who has chosen in 1960 to run on a platform
that we have never had it so good, that our prestige has never been higher.
I ask your support, the descendants of those Americans who in other days
faced the truth. [Applause.]
This State nourished the great Republic. Its
leaders protected this country during our early years, and I do not believe
the citizens of Virginia would choose in 1960 to place their confidence
in a leader who is not wholly frank with them, who does not tell them the
truth, the truth with the bark off. [Applause.]
This State and country is going to have to
do better. That is the real issue of our times. If you are satisfied, if
you believe that everything that needs to be done is being done, in its
proper measure, if you believe that our power and prestige is increasing
around the world, if you are satisfied, if you are confident, Mr. Nixon
is your candidate. [Response from the audience.] But if you share
my view that the Republican Party is not equipped by its very nature, by
the interests it represents, to lead our country in a changing and vigorous
time in the life of our country, in a world of change, in a world of revolution,
in a world which sees new countries rising and old countries falling, which
sees the Communists carrying on a steady offense against us - I believe
that whether the struggle is in outer space or whether it is for the economic
survival of this country, I believe the Democratic Party, made up of men
of commitment, made up of men who look to the future - I believe you should
place your confidence with the Democratic Party once again. [Applause.]
And I believe the presence on this platform of Governor Battle and Governor
Almond, and distinguished Members of Congress, I believe that that indicates
better than anything their good judgment that Virginia should go Democratic
in 1960. [Applause.]
Virginia was Democratic when Massachusetts
was Federalist. Virginia was Democratic when Massachusetts was Whig. Virginia
was Democratic when Massachusetts was Republican, and I do not want it
said that Virginia was Republican when Massachusetts was Democratic. [Applause.]
[Aircraft noise.] There are more Republicans
leaving town today than ever. [Laughter.]
This campaign is just about over, and I am
sure we are all going to be glad. It is 4 more days. The issues are joined.
The differences between us are acute. The differences which separate Mr.
Nixon in the past and us in the future are sharp. You can make your own
judgment. You can make your own judgment about your community, your State,
your country, and the world. But I come to this State with its long and
ancient history, and I come here as one who knows Virginia, whose two brothers
attended the University of Virginia, who feels at home in Virginia. [Applause.]
Who feels at home in Virginia, who knows as a Democrat that he is among
friends, and I come here and say, How could Virginia possibly put its confidence
in Richard Milhous Nixon and the Republican Party in 1960? [Applause.]
I believe a Democratic tide is rising in the
Nation. I believe the people of this country are committed to looking forward.
I believe that they know in good times and bad, regardless of what may
be said or read, the record of the Democratic Party is shown to you all.
It is a responsible and progressive record. All those Republicans who come
down here to worship at the shrine of Thomas Jefferson and Woodrow Wilson
and Andrew Jackson fought against them all their political lives. [Applause.]
The Republican Party ruined Woodrow Wilson and his hope for the League
of Nations. [Applause.] The intellectual predecessors of the Republican
Party, the Whigs, censured Andrew Jackson for trying to prevent the flow
of money, in this country, prevent it from being dominated by a small group
in Philadelphia.
John Quincy Adams, who represented my State
in the Senate, was expelled from the Senate by the Republicans in those
days, because he supported Thomas Jefferson and the Louisiana Purchase.
They come down here and say, "We are all for Wilson, Jackson, Jefferson,
and the rest. [Response from the audience.] They are even beginning
to say a few kind words about Franklin Roosevelt. Harry Truman, of course
- 20 years from now they might even speak a good word for him, but he won't
about them. [Applause.]
This is an ancient struggle between those
who look to the future, between those who share the inheritance of Jefferson,
and what was it? It was a willingness to look life in the eye, to look
to the future, to plan to decide what is best for our country and to move
ahead, to be committed to no faction but to be committed to the truth.
That is the inheritance of Thomas Jefferson. And on that inheritance I
run in 1960, and ask your help. Thank you. [Applause.]