Senator KENNEDY. Congressman Hays, Governor
Di Salle, County Chairman Gosney, Democratic Chairman Bill Coleman, ladies
and gentlemen, I want to express my regrets to all of you for having kept
you. I want to express my thanks to all of you for having stayed. We did
the best we could. We were not out walking. We were out working here in
the State of Ohio, and I am delighted to be here now. [Applause.]
Salem, Ohio, is 1,000 miles from Salem, Mass.,
but they are sisters under the skin. They are part of an America, and they
stand in a great American tradition, which it is our responsibility in
these times and in our generation to maintain. The motto of the city of
Salem in Massachusetts is a palm tree, an Indian, and the motto is "To
the farthest islands of the Indies," because Salem, Mass., and the young
men who sailed from that port, sailed to the East Indies to make their
fortunes. The East Indies. Salem, Mass., and Salem. Ohio, are all bound
together in 1960. We rise or fall together. We rise or fall as freedom
is maintained in this Ohio Valley, on the shores of Massachusetts, and
on the farthest island of the Indies. I come tonight as the standard hearer
of the Democratic Party to tell you that you in Ohio and the people of
the United States have a very clear choice to make, and that is whether
in their judgment the leadership of this country, its vigor and vitality,
in the great problems that face us, will maintain that freedom, whether
here or in the Far East. I want to make it very clear that there are sharp
issues which divide Mr. Nixon and myself, which divide the Republican Party
and the Democratic Party, and they are in our concept of what is happening
to our country. He has run on the slogan, "We have never had it so good"
and I run on the slogan "We must do better." I come here to this valley,
which has seen a steel crisis, which has seen one-third of the steelworkers
in the United States, either unemployed or working part time, I come to
an America that must maintain its strength, not only because it must defend
the welfare of its people, but also because it must defend freedom. This
is no time for the United States to misjudge the course of events. And
I disagree wholly with the interpretation which the Vice President gives
to the course of events in this country and around the world. In our Friday
night debate, in talking about whether the power and prestige of the United
States has risen or declined, Mr. Nixon said, "Look at the voting in the
United Nations over the past 7 years. This is the test of prestige."
There is the quote. Now, look at that for
just one minute. You who are here tonight, who must live in these years
of our days, and who must face up to the sober responsibilities that go
with being a citizen of the United States, yesterday we had a vote. The
most important vote in the United Nations this year. And I am ready to
rest my case in my issue with the Vice President as to what is happening
to our country on that vote yesterday, the vote, as Mr. Nixon said, in
the United Nations.
The question was on the admission of Red China,
and we have fought it for many years. The United States won by the narrowest
margin we ever had. In yesterday's vote, 34 countries voted against us.
But that was not what was alarming. In Africa, which will constitute by
1963 one-quarter of all the nations of the General Assembly, which is the
great center of a struggle today between communism and freedom, only two
African nations voted with us. One was South Africa, which is disliked
cordially on the continent and the other was Liberia which has had intimate
American ties for 150 years. Two nations in all of Africa voted with us
yesterday, and the decline has been steady year by year.
In 1952 85 percent of the General Assembly
voted with us. In 1953, it was 81. In 1954, it was 79. In 1955, it was
77. In 1956, it was 66. In 1957, it was 63. In 1958, it was 61. In 1959,
it was 60 percent. This year it was 56 percent. Two nations in all of Africa
voted with us yesterday on Red China. How many nations in all of Asia voted
with us? Seven. The remaining either abstained or voted against us.
More nations voted against us in Africa and Asia yesterday than voted with
us. If Mr. Nixon wants to use that as the test of the United States prestige,
I will use it.
Last week, in the United Nations, there was
another test, and that was on the motion of the five neutral countries
to force a meeting between Khrushchev and President Eisenhower, against
the wishes of President Eisenhower and in accordance with the wishes of
Mr. Khrushchev, we won that vote only because a two-thirds vote was necessary.
Actually we got beaten, 37 to 41. Not a single country in Africa on that
vote voted with us. They either abstained or they voted against us.
I agree with Mr. Nixon that these votes are
a test of our prestige. But I can take no satisfaction in them. I can take
no satisfaction in coming to this valley and seeing pottery mills, seeing
steel mills working part time, seeing rivers that are polluted, seeing
an administration which has twice vetoed the area redevelopment bill, which
has vetoed a hill to clean our rivers, which has vetoed twice in the last
12 months a housing bill, which considers $1.25 minimum wage an extreme,
which considers medical care for the aged as extreme, and I quote Mr. Nixon
accurately. I stand tonight in this city of Salem, in the State of Ohio,
where Franklin Roosevelt stood and Woodrow Wilson, and I come here tonight
and ask your help in this campaign. I ask your help in building the strength
of our country. This is a great country, but it is our obligation as long
as we bear responsibility, it is our obligation to make a greater country.
And this is a powerful country, but it is our obligation to make it a more
powerful one. There are no secrets in this campaign. You who live in Salem
can make your own judgment as to whether you believe that the course of
events in the world and the force and vigor of our country is moving us
where it should move us or whether history will record that in the last
years of the fifties the tide began to go against us, the tide began to
ebb. That is the question which you have to decide. What kind of leadership
do you want? Do you want leadership which tells you that all is well?
That never before have we been so secure? Two thousand years ago,
Demosthenes in orating to the Athenians, against the onrushes of Philip
of Macedonia, said, "Our peril is from people who tell us what pleases
us, rather than what causes our peril." And I do not come here tonight
to say what pleases, because I believe that we have 3 weeks to present
our case and to make it clear that if you join with us it is because you
believe we can do better. It is because you believe we must do better.
And, therefore, I come here tonight to this city, and ask your support
in this election. I ask you to join us in rebuilding the spirit of this
country, the sense of national destiny, so that African leaders and Latin
American leaders and Asians will once more turn to the great Republic for
inspiration and example. We want them to be quoting the next President
of the United States. I don't want them only to quote Lincoln and Jefferson
and Wilson and Roosevelt. I want them to look to the future with us. I
want to prove Khrushchev wrong, when he says that our society is a sick,
and dying, and faltering horse. I stand for the future. I believe our opponents
stand for the present, and they have made it very clear that they consider
necessary for our survival. I disagree, and on that basis, the issue is
joined. [Applause.] I am glad to come to this district which
has been ably served in the House of Representatives by Congressman Wayne
Hays, who came to the House in 1948, and who served as a member of the
House Foreign Relations Committee, who has spoken for the interests of
this district but also for the interests of the United States, and we stand
on the program of the future. I come here today from a part of the United
States which has close ties with this part, but I come here in the spirit
of asking your help, asking you to join us, asking you to get this country
moving again, asking you to look to the future. That is why we are going
to win. Thank you. [Applause.]