Senator KENNEDY. Thank you, Governor, Congressman
Burke, Keen Johnson, your next U.S. Senator, and ladies and gentlemen,
I come here today to correct a historical misstatement. Richard M. Nixon
stood in this very same spot and claimed Thomas Jefferson as a Republican.
Not on his best day. I am going to get him back. Thomas Jefferson is a
Democrat.
I give you McKinley, Coolidge, Harding, Hoover,
Dewey, Landon. [Response from the audience.]
I don't blame him for claiming Jefferson.
They have very few they can claim. Theodore Roosevelt left the Republican
Party.
Abraham Lincoln, his successor, who tried
to carry out his policy, was assassinated, but they cannot take Thomas
Jefferson and they cannot take the United States in 1960, or the State
of Kentucky. [Applause.]
Richard Nixon speaking in Boston a few days
ago said that I was another Truman. I returned the compliment and said
that he was another Dewey. [Response from the audience.]
And I believe that Kentucky, which has looked
to the future on all occasions, which has recognized the national interest,
which has recognized that without a strong country we cannot be free, I
believe Kentucky is coming back to the Democratic Party. [Applause.]
This is an important election, and it is for
the welfare of this city, this State, and this country. I do not run for
the Presidency promising that if I am elected life will be easy. But I
do run for the country warning that this country cannot continue to think
that what was good enough before is good enough for the sixties, and any
party which runs in 1960 with a slogan of "You Have Never Had It So Good"
is going to be defeated. [Applause.]
We believe that this is a great country, but
we believe this country can be greater and we believe it is a powerful
country, but this country can be more powerful.
We want to tell the fire department there
is no fire here; it is just Democrats on fire. [Applause and response.]
Here in 1960, in this old city I come to you
and ask for your help. This State must go Democratic and so must the country.
The United States must rebuild its strength and prestige. The United States
must take a position in this country and in the world that we will not
be second to anyone, that we want to be first, not first but, not first
if, not first when, but first, and we shall be. [Applause.]
Here in the shadow of Thomas Jefferson I salute
the city of Louisville, which in 1956, carrying out the Supreme Court decision,
set an example to the country and set an example to the world. And I am
proud to be in this city tonight and salute you for what you have done
and what you are doing and what you will do in the future. [Applause.]
This choice that faces the United States is
as old as the country. This country has faced it in other years and other
occasions.
They are not going to break up this meeting.
We are going to go on, sirens or not, rain or not, sunshine or not. [Applause.]
It is as the Bible tells us, "It rains upon
the just and the unjust, "Republicans as well as Democrats. It rains on
Richard Nixon tonight in Philadelphia, I heard. [Applause.] But the Republicans
are all at home and we are out here meeting because we believe in our party.
[Applause.]
So I ask you to join in this campaign. I ask
Kentucky to join us, Kentucky which has supported in 1948 supported in
1932, supported in 1912, great Democrats, Woodrow Wilson, Franklin Roosevelt,
and Harry Truman. I stand where they stood. All those people who want to
stand still, all those people who believe that things are as good as they
can be, that the power of the United States is increasing as fast as it
must, who are satisfied to have this country drift at home and abroad,
they should join Mr. Nixon. But all those who look to the future, all those
who want this country to move again, all those who want this country to
get off dead center, I want your support, I want your support for the Democratic
Party. [Applause.] I want you to reelect Frank Burke and send Keen Johnson
to the Senate and join us in a great national effort. I ask your help.
[Applause.]
Finally, let me say that I do not underrate
the difficulty of this election. It will be hard fought in Kentucky and
all across the United States. But this is not merely a contest between
Mr. Nixon and myself. It is a contest between two parties and their different
philosophies between two outlooks, between one party which gives the green
light to the sixties, and the other party which stands still between a
party which moves forward, between a party which looks back, between a
party which produced Wilson and Roosevelt and Truman and a party that produced
Landon and Dewey and now in 1960 Mr. Nixon. I ask you to join us in this
effort. This struggle in the same as the struggle 100 years ago.
When Abraham Lincoln wrote to a friend during the election of 1860, he
said, "I know there is a God, and I know He hates injustice. I see the
storm coming, and I know His hand is in it. But if He has a place and a
part for me, I believe that I am ready."
Now, 100 years later, in the election of 1960,
we know there is a God, and we know He hates injustice, and we see the
storm coming, but if He has a place and a part for us, I believe that we
are ready Thank you. [Applause.]