Senator KENNEDY. Governor Ribicoff, Congressman
Monagan, the next Congressman from this district [applause], Senator Dodd,
[applause], Congressman Kowalski [applause] - my name is Kennedy and I
have come to ask your support. [Applause.]
Back in 1956 when I was a candidate for the
vice presidential nomination, my name was placed in nomination by your
distinguished Governor, and the first State support that I received was
Connecticut, 4 years ago. [Applause.] And the first public official in
the United States to support my campaign for the Presidency was Gov. Abe
Ribicoff. [Applause.] My debt to Connecticut is great, and I come here
in the last 48 hours of this campaign to the greatest rally that we have
had in this entire campaign, right here in this city. [Applause.]
It is now a quarter to 3. Dick Nixon has been
in bed for 4 hours. [Applause.] Let me make it clear I do not come here
with an escort. I come by myself. [Applause.] We are not electing a committee
next Tuesday; we are electing a President of the United States. [Applause.]
You have seen these elephants in the circus that go around the ring, and
they grab the tail of the elephant in front, and that is what Nixon is
doing. [Applause.] That was all right in 1952 and 1956 but there is no
elephant out in front now. Now we are moving ahead. [Applause.]
Anyway, New England has not had a Democratic
President since Franklin Pierce, 104 years ago, and I think it is about
time. [Applause.]
This campaign really is fought over one issue,
and it is an issue which I believe importantly affects the welfare of this
country. Mr. Nixon has chosen to go to the people of this country in the
year 1960 saying at home our prosperity has never been greater, that we
have never had it so good and saying abroad that our prestige has never
been higher. [Response from the audience.] I run as a candidate for the
Presidency with a view that this is a great country, but it must be greater.
[Applause.] I want to see us build here in this country a strong and vital
and progressive society that will serve as an inspiration to all those
people who desire to follow the road that we have followed. [Applause.]
At the time of the American Revolution, Thomas
Paine said, "The cause of America is the cause of all mankind." Now in
1960, the cause of all mankind is the cause of America. [Applause.] We
defend freedom. If we succeed here, if we can build a strong and vital
society, then the cause of freedom is strengthened. If we fail here,
if we drift, if we lie at anchor, if we don't provide an example of what
freedom can do in the 1960's, then we have betrayed not only ourselves
and our destiny, but all those who desire to be free and are not free.
[Applause.] That is why I think this election is important. That is why
this is an important campaign.
Mr. Nixon and I disagree completely on the
obligations that all of us have, and the sense of this country, and I think
this is a campaign that must be won if we are going to move this country
ahead. [Applause.]
On Tuesday night, the first State of the Union
to vote and have its results is the State of Connecticut. [Applause.]
It will be about 3 or 4:30 in California when the results of Connecticut
are announced. This State is important. What you do is important.
You can have an effect here and across the country, and I come here tonight
and ask your help. [Applause.]
Franklin D. Roosevelt, in 1936, accepting
his second Presidential nomination, said:
Governments can err, Presidents do make mistakes, but the immortal Dante tells us that Divine Justice weighs the sins of the coldblooded and the sins of the warmhearted in a different scale. Better the occasional faults of a government living in the spirit of charity than the consistent omissions of a government frozen in the ice of its own indifference.We don't want that. [Response from the audience.]