Senator KENNEDY. Mayor Daley, Congressman Dawson,
members of the assembly, representatives, ladies and gentlemen, I want
to express my thanks to all of you for coming over and giving me a warm
hand of friendship. I think this is an important election. Mr. Nixon has
said that party labels don't make so much difference; what we want is the
man. I think we want the man who is a Democrat, because the Democratic
Party stands for the people. [Applause.]
Every program which we now put forward and
which both parties now endorse was written into the statute books over
the opposition of a substantial group of the Republican Party, things which
make life decent for all Americans, a chance for social security, for minimum
wage, for unemployment compensation, for public housing. I have stood for
those things in 14 years in the Congress. Mr. Nixon now says he stands
for them. But I was in Congress when he was. I remember when he made effort
after effort to get better housing for our people, to get a better minimum
wage. I am chairman of the Subcommitee on Labor. We tried to put through
a minimum wage of $1.25 an hour. The average wage to laundrywomen in five
large cities of the United States, and most of them are Negro women, is
65 cents an hour for a 48-hour week. Every time that we fail to build better
homes and public housing, we fail our people. There are 5 million homes
in the United States, in the cities of this country, that lack plumbing
of any kind. Fifteen million American families live in inadequate housing.
The average social security benefit is less than $78 a month for someone
who is retired, and out of that he has to pay food and housing and medical
care. Anyone who says that there is nothing left to do, that all the things
that had to be done were done by Truman or Roosevelt, I think is wrong.
I think we in our time still have responsibilities left if we are going
to build a stronger society here in the United States. I gave some figures
on television which are true, which is if a white baby and a Negro baby
are born in houses next to each other, that the Negro baby has one-half
as much chance of finishing high school, one-third as much chance of getting
to college. There are four times as many chances that he will be out of
a job. Why should it be so? And he will live on the average 7 years less.
Why? It is because they do not have a fair chance to develop their talents.
That is what we want in this country. [Applause.]
You cannot possibly maintain your families
unless you get a decent education. You cannot possibly live in decent homes
unless you are treated fairly and secure a decent job. As it is now, the
first to be fired at the time a recession comes are mostly those who are
Negroes, because they have not had a chance to finish school and because
they have not had a chance to learn skills. Everyone says we should do
these things because the Communists are talking about them. I think we
ought to do them because that is the way we build a better country - that
is the way we build a better country. [Applause.]
This is not just a problem for one section.
I read a story in the New York Herald Tribune yesterday morning that 14
of the delegates who had come from Africa to this country for the first
time wanted the United Nations moved from the United States to another
country because they had not been treated with courtesy here in this country.
I want to build a strong society here, not merely because we sit in a goldfish
bowl, but because by building a stronger society we show we really believe
in the cause of freedom.
I am speaking today to the Polish Congress,
which is meeting downtown. The great Polish hero who helped free the United
States was Kosciuszko. When Kosciuszko died, he was given a good deal of
money by the Congress, and he left his money to Thomas Jefferson to free
the American slaves. He was a Pole. He fought here for freedom and he wanted
everyone to be free. That is the spirit in which we move in the United
States today. [Applause.] What we want for ourselves, we want for others.
We want freedom and a decent standard of living, which is what people want
around the world. Franklin Roosevelt was a good neighbor around the world
because he was a good neighbor in the United States. [Applause.]
I come here today and I ask your help. I support
the Democratic platform, which stands for equality in the rights of man,
and I stand for it as the Democratic candidate. Whether I am President
or Senator, we will continue this fight until every American, regardless
of their religion, regardless of their race or creed, steps forward and
stands in the sun. Thank you. [Applause.]