Senator KENNEDY. Mr. Robinson, Congressman
Bolling, Mrs. Lawson, Mr. Reeves, ladies, and gentlemen, I regret that
the Republican member has not shown up as yet to debate with Congressman
Bolling or Mr. Nixon. I would like to present their case for them. [Laughter.]
But I would rather speak for our case. I would also rather address myself
to the matter which is before you. I am confident that Congressman Bolling
has done this effectivdy because I know no one in the Congress over a long
period of time, even before his period in the Congress, who has shown greater
responsibility and vigor in extending the benefits of our constitutional
system to all Americans. Therefore, I am delighted and honored that he
would represent us here tonight. [Applause.]
A political campaign is an important time
because it gives the American people an opportunity to make a judgment
as to which course of action they want to follow, which leadership, which
viewpoint, which political philosophy, and it is also an important time
for political parties, because it does give the political party an opportunity
not merely to live off its past successes, but also consider where it is
going in the future, what contribution it can make. That responsibility
falls particularly heavily on a minority party, a party out of power, because
it is its function under our system to present alternatives, to suggest
better ways of accomplishing the goals which all America seeks, and I believe
this responsibility falls particularly heavily in 1960, because we face
many problems here and abroad which I believe transcend any since 1932,
since the administration of Franklin Roosevelt, and in many ways transcends
any that we have faced since the administration of Lincoln 100 years ago.
The great question, of course, is can we make
freedom work here and around the world. Can we sustain it? Can we demonstrate
over a long period of time that our system represents the best means of
organizing human society? The hard, tough question for the next decade,
and indeed for the rest of the century, is whether we in this country with
our freedom of choice, our breadth of opportunity, our range of alternatives,
can we mobilize sufficient strength, can we set a sufficient example, can
we extend the hand of friendship with sufficient warmth that we can mobilize
and not only endure but prevail over a Communist system?
In order to maintain our freedom, to meet
our commitments, to the Constitution, to the great moral principles enunciated
by this country's leaders, we have to, as I say tonight, set a high example,
and I believe it is the function of our party, the Democratic Party, in
the early days of the l960's to move this country closer toward that example.
I said last week on television and gave some
statistics which I don't think most Americans know or believe strongly
enough; the prospects, percentagewise, of a Negro child getting through
high school, of that child getting to college, of that child becoming a
professional man, of that child when it is born owning its house, of that
child being unemployed or the average income that that child will have,
or the prospect of whether that child goes to work for the Government,
what his rating will be, whether he will be a district judge, and now we
have only 1 that is a Negro out of some 200, the chances of that child
getting through high school are about a third. The same percent getting
through college is one-quarter of a white baby being born in the house
next door, the chance of owning his house is far less of a percentage,
and the chances of being unemployed are far greater.
I think we cannot afford in 1960 to waste
any talent which we have. It is a matter of our natonal survival as well
as a matter of national principle, and I believe that the President of
the United States must take the leadership in setting the moral tone, the
unfinished business, in setting the sights of Americans to the goal realizing
the talents in an equal way of every American. Every American's talents
are not equal. Every American will not finish school or college or own
a house, but that should be on the basis of his contribution to society,
his energy, his vitality, his intelligence, his motivations, not based
on the color of his skin. That is the goal of the society which I think
we should work toward in the 1960's. [Applause.]
Let me say I think the President of the United
States has a great opportunity. This is a place preeminently for moral
leadership as Franklin Roosevelt said, and I believe if the President of
the United States indicates his strong support of the extension of equal
constitutional rights to all Americans wherever they may live, if he stands
strongly behind the principle of equality of opportunity of education and
employment, I believe this country will then recognize the moral imperative
behind the laws which the Congress has passed, or which the Constitution
promotes.
Secondly, I believe the Congress has a responsibility.
Title 3, I believe, would be important as it would give the Attorney General
the right as you know to carry out suits as he now has in the case of voting,
but which I believe he has not carried out with vigor. I believe in equality
in opportunity of employment which is extremely important and then I believe
we have to improve our educational standards for all children, regardless
of their color, all children, white and Negro. We are producing about half
as many scientists and engineers as the Soviet Union. We have to improve
our educational system as a whole, and we have to improve our economics
as a whole.
If we attempt to patch up those areas in our
national life where equality of opportunity is not provided, if we give
force and vigor to the concept of that equality, if we sustain it with
laws, if we sustain it by executive action, if we sustain it by moral force
and if we lift the economy of the whole and all Americans, then I believe
we will be meeting our responsibility to the 1960's.
Also we have a clear reminder that we who
are white are a minority in this global world, and all those over the world
who are colored are now reaching greater and greater power, the whole course
of history for the past 150 years has been toward freedom.
I have had a basic disagreement not only with
the administration's policy in the past 8 years, but also on the question
of colonialism versus freedom. I spoke of this matter when it involved
Indochina and the Democrats and Algeria and the Republicans. I spoke as
it involves all of Africa, Latin America and Asia. We have the desires
of these people to be free. If there is any experience that should give
us courage, it is not that one-quarter of the nations of Africa are neutral.
We were neutral for 125 years in our own history. The fact is they are
free and independent. They have now won their freedom and they do not choose
to lose it, provided they are given an opportunity to develop their resources
under a system of freedom. Man's desire to be free is the strongest force
not only in this country but around the world. We should associate ourselves
with it.
I said tonight when we offered 300 scholarships
to the Congo, we offered only 200 to Africa. You cannot educate a man in
the Congo overnight. Education is a long process that takes years and experience
and we should have been looking at Latin America and Asia years and years
ago and not moving into these areas where you think you can pour in money
and educate them for leadership overnight. [Applause.]
Finally, let me say that I believe that the
contribution that the Democratic Party can best make is not merely in the
contest between Mr. Nixon and myself. The question is, What is the viewpoint
of those who sustain us? I believe the viewpoint of those who sustain us,
of the central channel of the party which I represent was carried out at
the convention and was carried out on the platform. I believe it is carried
out on the record of the Congress. That record is not perfect, and there
are shortcomings in any two-party system, but I believe the central movement
forward of the Democratic Party in this century has been full. It has been
willing to meet new problems in new ways. It has been willing to break
new ground. It has been willing to mobilize the best talent we have got
and I think it can do it in the sixties, and can do it better than it did
it before because the needs are greater.
Let me say your needs are great. There is
no need for providing the right to vote in some States where Negroes are
denied the vote unless they vote to the fullest. [Applause.] Unless in
those communities where they are given their rights to participate in the
political process they do it as free individuals, not part of some great
organization or other, but speaking as individuals giving their considered
judgment on what is best for their country and what is best for themselves
and what is best for the cause of freedom. So it is, I believe, that you
have a chance to make a singular contribution to the life of this country.
Every educated man or woman who is a Negro
has not only the opportunity to advance their own private interests - and
I think this is true of every American - but they have the obligation to
advance the common cause, advance the interests of their own people because
in doing that I think they advance the interests of their country. [Applause.]
I hope it will be possible for more and more
of them to serve the United States outside our boundaries, in the Foreign
Service, in the information services, as doctors and nurses, not just in
Africa, but in Europe, Asia, Africa, freely in areas and indicating our
great contribution, our strong belief that we want to use all the talent
that we can get. Actually a far greater responsibility rests upon the Negro
leadership than it does upon the leadership of almost any other group,
and I believe that by meetings such as this you are meeting that responsibility.
We emphasize always the public interest, to
emphasize the necessity for it in a responsible, steady way, and I believe
in the 1960's we can move in this area. We can provide a better life for
our people, that we can provide better, stronger human rights for all American
and I want to make it clear win or lose in this election, the is and I
regard it as a close, hard fought election, the issues will probably be
down to the end, but my own judgment is win or lose, I can assure you that
the Democratic Party in the future, as it has in its great moments in the
past, particularly when it has had a President to speak for it - I believe
the Democratic Party can in the future be identified with the cause of
a better life for all Americans of all sections of the United States regardless
of any circumstances of their race or religion and that they will hold
any office to which they aspire based on their competence and ability and
strong feeling for this country. [Applause.]