Senator KENNEDY. Mr. Bush, President Truman,
Senator Symington, Governor Blair, Mayor Tucker, John Dalton, Ed Long,
members of the Congress, ladies, and gentlemen: The big news story of the
past 7 days was not Mr. Khrushchev or the presidential campaign; it was
the news out of Boston that Mr. Ted Williams had retired as an active ballplayer
for the Boston Red Sox. It seems that at 42 he was too old. It does show
that perhaps experience doesn't count. [Laughter and applause.]
Massachusetts and Missouri are closely linked
in the history of the United States. Both have been cradles of American
freedom. The French who founded the city of St. Louis and the Germans who
came after were searching for a freedom stronger and better than they had
ever known, and if there is one principle that has stood out in the careers
of the men that this State has sent to Washington, it has been their devotion
to freedom and their willingness to fight for it. If there is one principle
that has stood out in the career of Senator Stuart Symington, it is the
principle that to protect individual liberties you must be strong as a
nation. And there is one principle which stood out in the career of the
late beloved Senator Hennings. It was that to be strong we must protect
individual liberties. [Applause.]
And every citizen of my State and yours, every
citizen of this free Nation and every other, is obligated to the Missourian
who fought for both liberty and strength, President Harry Truman.
[Applause.]
Last Thursday night in Boston Mr. Nixon dismissed
me as, and I will quote him, "another Truman." I regard that as a great
compliment. [Applause.]
But observing the content of Mr. Nixon's campaign,
I have no hesitation in returning the compliment. I consider him
another Dewey. [Laughter and applause.] Like Mr. Dewey, he represents a
do-nothing party. Like Mr. Dewey he is a say-nothing candidate, and like
Mr. Dewey he will win nothing in November. [Applause.]
Some of the experts are saying that this is
1928 all over again. For the sake of the farmer, the worker, the merchant,
and the teacher; for the sake of all those who remember the days of 10-cent
corn and 10-percent interest, I trust it will not be 1928 all over again.
I think it will be 1948 all over again. [Applause.]
I think the American people are going to turn
thumbs down just as they did in 1948 on a candidate who is running away
from his party, who is trying to hide his party's record, and who is now
saying, "Me, too" to all the Democratic programs he fought during his entire
political public life. [Applause.]
Harry Truman, attacked in 1948 from both left
and right, carried the banner of a liberal, responsible Democratic Party
that believed in the people and I am proud to carry the same banner in
1960. [Applause.]
Much is different between 1948 and 1960, but
much is the same. It was 2 years earlier, in 1946, that President Truman
brought to Fulton College one of the great figures of the English-speaking
world, and on that historic day in March Winston Churchill bluntly confronted
our Nation, and the world, with the fact that from Stettin in the Baltic
to Trieste in the Adriatic, an Iron Curtain had descended across the continent.
He warned the world that time is plenty short, that we cannot, and I quote
him, "Take the course of allowing events to drift along until it is too
late," and that "Our difficuties and dangers will not be removed by closing
our eyes to them or by merely waiting to see what happens."
He called for action to establish conditions
of freedom throughout the world, to strengthen our Western alliances and
the United Nations, and he particularly emphasized these words which have
meaning for us today. "From what I have seen of our Russian friends and
allies during the war, I am convinced that there is nothing they so much
admire as strength, and there is nothing for which they have less respect
than weakness. We cannot afford, if we can help it, to work on narrow
margins, offering temptations to a trial of strength."
These prophetic words of 1946 are true in
1960. If we are to protect our heritage of freedom, if we are to maintain
it around the world, we must be strong, militarily, educationally, scientifically,
and morally strong, and that is why I am dedicating this campaign to the
goal of a stronger America, to the proposition that this Nation is strong,
but can be stronger; that this Nation is powerful but can be more powerful.
Mr. Nixon says that my call for a stronger
America demonstrates a lack of confidence. If by that he means a lack of
confidence in Republican leadership, if by that he means a lack of confidence
in his policies and in his platform, if by that he means a lack of confidence
in the same Republican campaign promises that have been repeatedly broken
in the last 8 years, then he is absolutely correct, I do lack confidence
in that leadership and so do the American people. [Applause.]
But I have great confidence in this Nation
and in the American people. I have confidence that this Nation is strong
enough to permit a free and open discussion of the great probems which
face us in this difficult and somber time in the life of our country. I
have confidence in our ability to close the missile gap, to modernize our
conventional forces and to give this country the kind of defensive strength
that Stuart Symington has been warning for years we will need if we are
going to remain free at the end of the next years.
I have confidence in this Nation's ability
to look out for its older citizens, to see that they have a decent pension
and a decent home and decent medical care. The people who oppose this program
for medical care under social security are the very same people who fought
President Roosevelt in 1935, the very same people who supported Alf Landon
in his campaign in 1936, running on the single platform of repealing social
security. They said then it would mortgage our future and socialize our
economy. But the Democratic Party of Franklin Roosevelt had confidence
in the United States, and I have equal confidence that we can do a far
better job than this administration has done in this area, as in so many
others. I have confidence in an America where the farmer is not treated
as a second-class citizen, where he can obtain, through joint action, by
his own efforts and the co-ops and governmental action, the kind of bargaining
power in the marketplace that will permit him to have a decent, livable
income. I think it is time that this Nation faced up to the agricultural
revolution which is a great asset, which is a great source of defense,
which is a great source of peace, and a great source of security to us
in a hungry world. And I cannot believe that the same programs which have
left us with $9 billion of surplus food rotting away in a country which
has over 4 million people living on surplus food packages, and hundreds
of millions around the world - I cannot believe that the American people
in 1960 are going to endorse that kind of an agricultural program again.
I think we can do a better job. [Applause.]
We have confidence in the United States. That
is the difference between the Republicans and the Democrats this year.
They say we have never had it so good, and we say we can do better. They
say they have never done so much, and I say we can do more. And I say we
have to do more, because if the United States is not prepared to realize
its potential to the fullest, to have the best educational system in the
world, to give our citizens their equal constitutional rights, to move
ahead as a vital and strong economy, then this country is not going to
be able to sustain itself and will not serve as the chief defender of freedom
around the world. What has been good enough in the past will not be good
enough in the 1960's. The United States has no other country to which it
can turn, if world events go against us. We are the only sentinel at the
gate. Therefore, it is incumbent upon us for our own survival, as well
as for our responsibility to the cause of freedom all over the globe, that
we move ahead in all these areas, that we build a stronger and more vital
society here in the United States, one that can serve as an inspiration
to people all around the world, who stand today on the razor edge of decision,
trying to decide whether the future belongs to the Communists or whether
it belongs to us. I think it belongs to us, but I do not believe it is
going to belong to us merely by wishing it. I think it will come when the
next President of the United States sets before the American people the
unfinished business of our society, our national goals, what we must hope
to achieve in the next 10 years, if we are going to maintain our independence,
if we are going to build our strength, if we are going to provide greater
security for ourselves and for those who wish to move in the same direction
that we are moving.
Latin America and Africa and Asia all stand
now wondering which road to take. They will come with us if we can demonstrate
here in this country that we are moving ahead, that we are solving our
problems, and that we are holding out the hand of friendship to them. The
reason that Franklin Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson and Harry Truman were
successful in their foreign policy was because they were successsful in
their own country. [Applause.]
The New Freedom of Woodrow Wilson had its
logical extension in the 14 points. The New Deal of Franklin Roosevelt
was the domestic counterpart of the good neighbor policy, and the Fair
Deal of President Truman had its match in the Marshall plan and NATO and
point 4 and the Truman doctrine. You cannot move abroad unless you move
at home.
Mr. Nixon has said that "I am a conservative
at home and a risk-taker abroad." I am neither. I do not believe that in
the United States and in the world, as difficult and somber as tbe world
around us, I think we need a progressive at home, a progressive society,
one that moves ahead, one that solves its problems, one that serves as
an example, as it sits on a most conspicuous stage.
That is the decision before the people of
the United States this year, which road they want to take; whether they
feel what we are now doing is good enough or whether they have confidence
that there are unrealized powers in our free society. I think that in 1960
the American people are going to say "Yes" to the next 10 years. They are
going to give it the green light. [Applause.]
As one indication of how serious is the debate
now taking place, last week, Monday night in the debate, I said that our
power superiority is threatened by growing Soviet hydropower, a growth
which is so rapid that it threatens to overtake the United States by 1975.
Mr. Nixon said later this week that that statement was false. He boasts
of tremendous power development during the past 8 years, and he asserted
that the Russians can overtake us only if we did nothing for 15 years,
while they built eight Grand Coulee Dams a year. That is his charge and
what are the facts? The facts were reported last year by a committee of
the U.S. Senate, over which Mr. Nixon occasionally presides. [Laughter.]
That committee's findings, and I quote, were "Although the United States
is still far ahead, the Russians could overtake us in 1975, in 15 years,
unless we speed up or they slow down. Both countries will have," the Senate
said, "an equal power generating capacity which will be 337,500,000 kilowatts
in 1975."
It would not take eight Grand Coulee Dams
a year to bridge the gap. It would not even take three. The facts of the
matter are that this year the Soviets are building three dams larger than
Grand Coulee, two of which are more than twice as large.
On this issue of power development, economic
growth, of better schools, of a sound agricultural program, of moving ahead
in a whole variety of areas, I think there is a very sharp difference between
the two political parties. Mr. Nixon has said recently that parties don't
count, what counts are the men. But I think what counts are the kinds of
parties and the kind of men that those parties produce. I would not have
been nominated by the Republican Party, nor would have Harry Truman, and
the Democrats never would have nominated Richard Nixon. [Applause.] The
fact is that the parties tell something. The political parties run like
rivers through the history of this country, and their force and power and
direction, and the movement of the flow all tell something about the movement
in the future. What is past is prologue and the record of our two parties
is written for the future as it has been for the past. I think the Democratic
Party has again a rendezvous with destiny, an opportunity to be of service,
not only to ourselves, not only to our own country, but to all those who
look to us.
Wilson, Roosevelt, and Truman have been the
Democratic Presidents who have led this country in the 20th century. McKinley,
Coolidge, Harding, Landon, Dewey, and the Vice President have led the Republican
Party in the 20th century. I cannot believe, faced with the difficult problems
that this country now faces, that the American people are going to turn
back to a Republican leadership. I cannot believe that the American people
are going to say in 1960 that we have never had it so good, and we want
more of the same. I think they are going to want to cross the new frontier.
[Applause.]
I think that all those who agree that we never
want to have a trial of strength agree that it is incumbent upon us to
rebuild the strength of the United States.
In 1964, this city will observe its 200th
anniversary. I hope the next President of the United States comes to that
occasion, and I hope he is able to say that this country has turned the
corner, that the tide of history is once more moving in the direction of
freedom, that America is on the way. I do not say that that job will be
easy. During the next 4 years, the American Presidency will be at all times
what Harry Truman called "the loneliest job in the world." There will be
dangers and difficulties on every side for our country. There will be crises,
both within and without. But it is, I think, our intention to bear in mind
the words of Lincoln during the darkest days of the Civil War. Many were
fearful of the outcome and many were concerned about our survival, and
when a delegation called on the President to express its fears, Lincoln
told them of an experience of his youth. "One night in November," he said,
"a shower of meteors fell from the clear night sky. A friend standing by
was frightened. But I looked up and between the falling stars I saw the
fixed stars beyond, shining serene in the firmament, and I said, 'Let us
not mind the meteors, let us keep our eyes on the stars.' "
As we face a difficult and sometimes dangerous
future, let us look beyond the fiery meteors of the present and look to
the steady stars that have guided this country through so many difficult
times. Thank you. [Standing ovation.]