Senator KENNEDY. Matt Welsh, Senator Hartke,
Congressman Denton, Mr. Mayor, national committeewoman and Mrs. Price,
Grover Cleveland's strongest supporter [laughter] and ladies and gentlemen,
I am delighted to come to this community only 3 or 4 days after Mr. Nixon,
because I think this community and this State has a very clear decision
to make on next November 8, which affects the welfare of this district,
and affects the welfare of this State, and affects the welfare of this
Nation. I consider the judgment which you will render on November 8 to
be rendered at a most significant time in the life of our country, a year
which bears resemblance to 1932, and which bears resemblance to 1912,
when the United States elected Woodrow Wilson.
This is one of the great turning points in
our history. The whole world in the next 4 or 8 years will be entirely
different than it is today. By the end of 1964 or the end of 1968, this
country and the world will be in a stronger position or will be weaker,
and I believe that the decision which you make on November 8 will affect
the lives of everyone here today, will affect their chances for work, will
affect their security when they are over 65, will affect the kind of housing
you will live in, will affect small businessmen in this country, who rises
or falls, depending on the economic prosperity of the United States as
a whole.
I know there are those in this State who say
that Indiana should cut its ties with the Government, that Indiana should
move its own separate way. Who is going to buy your production? Who is
going to buy what you produce in this State? Who is going to buy your corn
and your hogs and your products, unless this United States is moving ahead?
Indiana is not a separate State. It is part of the United States. And Indiana
and Evansville and the United States will rise or fall depending upon the
leadership which is given to this country in 1960. [Applause.]
Mr. Nixon has placed the issue very squarely
and very frankly. He has said, and I use his slogan, "You have never had
it so good." Well, anyone who agrees with that ought to vote for Mr. Nixon.
But anyone who agrees that we can do better, anyone who agrees that the
unfinished business before this country, anyone who believes that the United
States has a great and historic destiny to fulfill in the 1960's, to defend
its own security, and to maintain freedom around the world, I want their
help. I want them to join with us. [Applause.]
If you agree with a policy of no new starts,
a policy which does not develop the resources of the Wabash or the Ohio
Rivers, if you agree that $1.25 minimum wage in a company making more than
a million dollars a year is excessive, and, to use Mr. Nixon's words, "extreme";
if you believe that medical care for the aged tied to social security is
too extreme, if you believe that these programs which I believe are essential
to the maintenance of full employment, if you believe that they are too
extreme, then you should vote for Mr. Nixon. If you believe that the area
redevelopment bill, which has been vetoed twice, which would mean so much
to this community and other communities, which are hard hit by chronic
unemployment, and you want it vetoed a third time, you should vote for
Mr. Nixon. If you believe that Thomas E. Dewey and William McKinley and
Harding, and Coolidge and Landon are the kind of leaders that the United
States needs in the sixties, then you should vote for Mr. Nixon.
But if you stand with Woodrow Wilson and Franklin
Roosevelt and Harry Truman, then I want your help. [Applause.]
Indiana has not voted Democratic in a presidential
election since 1936, 24 long years, and you have had a good opportunity
to see the kind of leadership which they have produced here in this State,
and you have had a good opportunity to make a judgment as to the kind of
leadership they would give this country in the 1960's. Any candidate who
runs in 1960 with 4 million unemployed and 3 million working part time,
126 surplus labor areas where people have been out of work for many months,
anyone who says in that year that you have never had it so good, I could
not disagree with more. This is a great country, but I think it can be
a greater country, and this is a more powerful country [applause] - this
is a more powerful country but it can be stronger. I am not impressed by
those who say they can stand up to Khrushchev when Mr. Castro has successfully
defied them from 90 miles away. [Applause.]
I am confident that this district will send
Congressman Denton back to speak for this district and speak for the country
[applause] and will send Matt Welsh to be Governor of the State of Indiana;
and give honesty and integrity back to this State. [Applause.] And that
Vance Hartke and those of us who serve in Washington will be given the
opportunity to lead this country as we have in other great occasions, and,
therefore, I come today and present to you a clear alternative between
the Republican Party and the Democratic Party, between the party of progress
and the party of standing still, between the party that looks ahead and
the party that says, "We ought to stay where we are." I ask your help in
this campaign, not merely because it affects our party, but because, as
this is the most dangerous time in the life of our Country, I don't think
we can possibly afford to stand still.
During the war between the Spartans and the
Persians, and after 300 Spartans were wiped out at Thermopylae, they carved
a sign in the rock which said, "Passerby, tell Sparta we fell faithful
to her service."
Now, in 1960, and in the sixties, we are asked
to live in the service of this country. We are asked to contribute to it.
We are asked to build a stronger and better society, and I come here today
to this community to ask you to join us. Thank you. [Applause.]