Senator KENNEDY. First of all, I would like
to have Congressman Mel Price of this district come up here and wave. [Applause.]
And then Senator Paul Douglas, who I know you are going to send back to
the U.S. Senate. [Applause.] And then we brought over from
Missouri to see what a great State you have in Illinois - Senator Stuart
Symington. [Applause.]
We also have the Secretary of State
here in Illinois. [Applause.] And I am running for President. [Applause.]
Ladies and gentlemen, I want to thank
you all for coming here today. I run for the office of the Presidency with
full recognition of the tremendous responsibilities which the U.S. Constitution
and events gives the President of the United States. He is not only the
Commander in Chief, but he also is the center of our entire constitutional
system. I have served in the Congress for 14 years, in the House and in
the Senate, and I am sure that Paul Douglas and Mel Price would agree that
the Office of the President is key. We can take action to provide aid to
education. We can take action to provide medical care for our older citizens.
We can take action to try to stimulate the American economy. But in the
final analysis whatever we may do depends on the President of the United
States, depends on his vigor, depends on his concept of what needs to be
done to make this a stronger and a better country. The Presidency is key.
I can assure you that if I am successful in this campaign, I do not run
saying life will be easy, because I think the difficulties of the sixties
will press upon us, but I do run for the office of the President with the
greatest possible confidence in this country, with the greatest possible
confidence in its ability to fulfill its historic function of being the
chief defender of freedom in a difficult and dangerous time. I think one
of the chief tasks of the next President of the United States is to set
before the American people the things we must do in order to protect ourselves,
in order to maintain our freedom, and in order to meet our commitments
to freedom around the world.
I am not satisfied as an American to
be second in space, to be turning out one-half as many scientists and engineers
as the Soviet Union, to have our economic growth increasing one-third as
much as the Soviet Union, and one-half as much as Germany, France, and
Italy. Last year, the United States had the lowest rate of economic growth
of any major industrialized society in the world, and the result of that
is this year only 50 percent of our steel mill capacity is being used.
We have the highest unemployment in this month of any month except for
the two recessions of 1954 and 1958, and the one in 1949, ever since 1945.
This country is moving into a serious and difficult time in the life of
our country, and in our relations around the world. We stand on the razoredge
of history. In the next 10 years Africa and Asia and Latin America will
begin to move in one direction or another, will begin to decide whether
the future belongs to us or whether it belongs to the Communists, and I
think our responsibility is to make this country move with sufficient vigor
and sufficient force so the people around the world can decide the future
belongs to us, to solve our problems, to build a better society here, to
hold out the hand of friendship to those who look to us for leadership.
I am not satisfied with the drift of events today. I am not satisfied to
be reading every day that Khrushchev and Castro and the Chinese are on
the upward march. I want to read that the United States is once again asserting
its leadership as a great and free country, which offers a ray of hope
to all those who wish to follow our example.
I think this is the most difficult time of
our history, even more difficult than the 1930's. I think the election
of Franklin Roosevelt insured the maintenance of freedom in this country.
The great task for the United States is to defend the cause of freedom
here and around the world in the sixties, by building a strong and vital
country, by maintaining our defenses, by building an educational system
second to none, by providing full employment for our people, and demonstrating
that Mr. Khrushchev is wrong when he says the United States is a sick and
dying and faltering horse. I don't believe it. I think we represent the
way of the future. I think the Communist system is as old as Egypt. But
I think it is our function as American citizens at this criticial time
in our development to demonstrate our vigor and force again, to look to
the future, to say we are not satisfied with things as they are, to say
this is a great country that can be greater, a powerful country that can
be more powerful. That is the responsibility of all of us as citizens of
the United States, as believers in freedom, those determined to maintain
it.
One hundred years ago, Lincoln wrote to a
friend, "I know there is a God, and that He hates injustice. He can see
the storm coming and He has His hand in it. But if He has a place and a
part for me, I believe that I am ready."
Now, 100 years later, we know there is a God
and we know He hates injustice, and we see the storm coming. But if He
has a grace and a part for us, I believe we are ready.
I ask your help in this campaign. I ask you
to join us in the journey to the new frontier. I ask you to help build
a stronger America. Thank you. [Applause.]