BY SENATOR JOHN F KENNEDY,
DEMOCRATIC DIGEST, NOVEMBER-DECEMBER, 1960
Fellow Democrats:
November 8th, a few days hence, will settle
a question of profound moment - whether we are to continue an 8-year era
of quietude or whether we are to move forward once again as a Nation with
the determination and majesty to meet the challenges of the 20th century
That day marks the end of a long campaign,
but with your help it will mark a new beginning. The choice is yours and
your own personal effort to get out the vote will be crucial. To all of
you who will pitch in on election day, may I offer my warmest thanks.
And to all those who have been laboring so
strenuously in the campaign on behalf of myself and the Democratic Party,
I also wish to express my deepest appreciation.
Working with you has been an experience I
shall not forget, for I have seen a dedication and spirit that gives me
hope for the years ahead.
I have seen a response to the challenge of
the New Frontier that I dared not hope for - a renewed sense of this country's
historic purpose, a willingness to sacrifice one's time and energy for
a better future with a cheerfulness that has always animated purposeful
men and women in adverse times.
And these are adverse times, though the Republican
Party has striven hard to obscure the fact to spare itself the heavy task
of leading our country to greatness. Nor has the Republican candidate shown
any sign that he can or will point the way.
Five months ago, a prominent governor declared
that the Republican Party could not "march to meet the future with a banner
aloft whose only emblem is a question mark." But no new flag has since
arisen in the Nixon camp.
The American people know this and your response
to the Democratic Party's call for a nation awakened and rededicated is
evidence to me that the tide is turning.
It is turning away from the self-satisfied
delusion that time is always on the side of the righteous.
It is turning away from the counsels of complacency
that would have us believe that our prestige was never higher.
It is turning away from the dangerous theory
that bigger talk can substitute for a bigger stick.
It is turning away from the kind of mentality
that suggests freedom can best be preserved by suppressing dissent while
an unfriendly visitor is on our shores.
It is turning away from the official lethargy
that merely reacts and rarely initiates.
It is turning away from the entrenched and
the timid who have a 19th century excuse for avoiding every 20th century
need and from the slogan makers who put bold new names on empty policies.
It is turning away from the shallow sincerity
that shares every worthwhile goal, but rejects all the worthwhile methods
or means.
I am confident that America is ready to lay
aside this lackluster record and move ahead again with realistic determination,
hard work and dedication to something larger than personal comfort.
The American people want a government and
a nation that faces the world with strength and confidence, with an unwavering
attachment to the principles that made the founding of this country an
inspiration to all mankind.
They want a country strong enough that it
need not be petulant and provocative, strong enough that it need not fear
sitting down in true negotiation.
They want a government and a nation that greets
the aspirations of mankind as a rewarding challenge and not a worrisome
disturbance.
They want a nation making genuine progress
in meeting its unsolved problems, not only because they want it invulnerable
to the accusations of a watching world, but also because they want a nation
that does what should be done.
They want a nation inspired by a government
whose voice is principled and clear, whose servants are motivated by a
sense of creative purpose and not a painful sense of duty to be discharged
as rapidly as possible.
I believe there is a hunger in the land for
an infusion of new spirit, new courage, new idealism into our national
life.
It can be done and will be - with your help
on election day.
We cannot let it go by default, for history
is replete with elections that were won by that "one extra vote" - beginning
with President Truman, who gained majority of electorial votes by approximately
one extra vote in each of the precincts of California and Ohio, and going
back to Rutherford B. Hayes, Thomas Jefferson, and John Quincy Adams, each
of whom was elected by the margin on one electoral vote.
Franklin Roosevelt might never have become
President had he not had the benefit of two extra votes a precinct when
he ran for Governor of New York in 1928.
Charles E. Hughes would have been our President
had Woodrow Wilson not won in California by 3,800 votes in 1916.
Such are the slim margins by which our history
is shaped. Once again, this election and the Nation's course for the next
four years is up to you. Will you help?