Senator KENNEDY. Senator Douglas, Governor
Kerner, Congressman Price, ladies and gentlemen I want to express my appreciation
to all of you for your generous invitation to come here today. I am the
Democratic candidate for the Presidency and I run as a Democrat. [Applause.]
I am glad to be here in this stockyard because
this proves an important point. I come from Massachusetts, which is not
a great agricultural center, but I can tell you that Massachusetts will
not be prosperous unless the farmers of the United States are prosperous.
We heard today that International Harvester, which
makes farm machinery, has closed down today, and John Deere plants have
closed down; and the reason is that agricultural income has dropped in
the past few years almost 20 to 25 percent, and because when farmers go
down the rest of the economy sooner or later goes down. The farmers are
the No.1 market for the auto industry of the United States and the auto
industry is the No.1 market for the steel industry, and the steel is 50
percent of capacity. That is what we are producing this week. The Soviet
Union last week produced more steel than we did, because we are only using
half of our capacity and only slightly more than half of our people. The
economy of the United States is tied together. If the farmer prospers,
the city prospers, and if the city prospers the farmer prospers, and I
think the Democratic Party has understood that from the beginning. I think
Franklin Roosevelt and Truman and Woodrow Wilson fought for the people
of this country, fought to advance their progress, and we must fight in
1960 and 1961 and 1962. [Applause.]
As long as there are millions of Americans
who receive less than the $1 minimum wage for an hour of work, as long
as there are hundreds of thousands of farmers who are being driven off
the land in the last few years, as long as we are producing one-half as
many scientist and engineers as the Soviet Union, as long as our economy
is moving ahead at a slower rate, not only than the Soviet Union, but Germany,
France or Italy, I think there is need for new leadership. I don't say
that life will be easy if we are successful, but I certainly can assure
you that we are going to move this country and move ahead.
Paul Douglas said we have been on dead
center and I think we have been on dead center long enough. There are 5
million American homes in the cities of the United States that lack plumbing
of any kind; 15 million American homes which are substandard, and yet we
are not building anywhere near enough homes per year. I think a Democratic
administration, under the leadership of vigorous people, who look to the
future, can move this country into the sixties, and in strengthening the
United States, they strengthen the cause of freedom. This country will
not maintain its freedom, this country will not maintain its commitments
around the world, unless we have a strong and vigorous economy, able to
maintain our commitments, able to build, able to move. I come here today
and ask your support in this campaign. I feel that we have in 1960 the
same opportunity that we had in 1948 and 1932 and 1912, the chance to move
again. We have stood still long enough.
I ask your support in this campaign. I ask
you to join me in starting this country forward. Thank you.
I am going to save this hat and if I get elected
I will wear it in the inaugural parade. [Applause and laughter.]