Senator KENNEDY. Ladies and gentlemen, Governor
Ribicoff, the next Congressman from this district, Gene Sugarman, Mayor
Wagner, distinguished guests, ladies and gentlemen, I come to New York
City by myself and ask your support. [Applause.] I come to the Bronx as
an old Bronx boy. I used to live in the Bronx. [Applause.] I agree
it was the Riverdale end of the Bronx, but it was the Bronx, and therefore
I come back here to this part of New York City, to New York, and ask your
support in this campaign. [Applause.] This campaign is coming to an end
Tuesday night. Then you have to decide. You have to make your judgment.
I made my judgment long ago that the basic issue of this campaign was the
question of whether the people of the United States believed it was time
they started moving again, that they started going forward again, and that
the greatest contribution that they could make to the cause of freedom
was to build a strong and vital society here in the United States. Mr.
Nixon has chosen a different road. [Response from the audience.] He has
gone to the American people in the 1960's, in the time of change and revolution,
saying, "We're never had it so good," saying our prestige in the world
has never been higher. I recall in 1935, when Winston Churchill was warning
of the dangers of the Nazi rise, Stanley Baldwin, the leader of the Conservative
Party, told the people of England that everything was being done in its
own good time. He won that election and England almost lost the war.
In 1960 we tell the truth. We stand for the
public interest, and I believe on Tuesday, November 8, the American people
are going to choose to go forward. [Applause.]
Mr. Nixon has not presented a program for
the future - tell them the Syracuse game is over [laughter]. Ladies and
gentlemen, this speech will come to an end very quickly. I come here today
and ask your help. I ask you to join us. I ask your support on Tuesday.
I ask your help in building a stronger country here, providing educational
opportunity for our children, in providing jobs for our people, in providing
medical care for our older citizens, tied to social security, in providing
opportunity for all men and women of talent to build their society here
in the United States that will serve as an example of freedom. This is
an important election. It involves a high office. It is the highest responsibility
that a citizen of a free country can have, to pick the President, and it
is the President's responsibility to set before the American people the
unfinished business of our society, to rally them to a great cause.
The Presidency, as Franklin Roosevelt said,
is above all a place for moral leadership, and I believe in 1960 the people
of the great Republic, as in 1932, are going to choose to go forward, and
right in the lead will be the Bronx County of New York. Thank you. [Applause.]