Senator KENNEDY. Ladies and gentlemen, first
of all, I want to present to you a great and distinguished Governor of
the State of Ohio, who was one of the first of those who supported my candidacy,
and has been my constant friend and supporter since, Gov. Mike Di Salle.
[Applause.]
Jim Griffin, Mayor Franko, Democratic Chairman
Jim Sulligan, ladies and gentlemen---
[Response from the audience.]
Senator KENNEDY. That is the first time that
photographers have ever moved for anybody. [Laughter.]
I don't know what is happening to the United
States when we can get this many thousands of people to come to a public
meeting at a time when the world series is in effect. [Applause.] I think
maybe Mr. Nixon is wrong. I think maybe the people of this country have
been reading the paper, and I think they know that this is an important
election. [Applause.]
I don't think they are buying that line, "You
have never had it so good." I want Mr. Nixon to come to this square and
tell the people of Youngstown---
[Response from the audience.]
Senator KENNEDY. I want him to tell the people
of this valley, "You never had it so good." We will settle the question
on November 8, whether we have never had it so good or whether we must
do better, and I don't think on that question the people of Youngstown
or the people of Ohio or the people of the United States will hesitate
to say, "Yes, we can do better. Yes, we must do better. Yes, we must move
forward." [Applause.]
It just so happens that 8 years ago this very
time, Governor Stevenson carrying his campaign in 1952 came here and spoke
in this very spot, and he read in the morning newspaper and he mentioned
in his speech that the steel capacity and production of Youngstown was
104 percent of capacity. Well, I read in this morning's paper and last
week's paper and 2 weeks, 3 weeks 4 weeks 5 weeks, 6 weeks, 3 months ago,
the steel capacity of this community is 44 percent of capacity.
[Response from the audience.]
Senator KENNEDY. Thousands of steelworkers
have been out of work not 8 weeks, not 18 weeks, but they are going on
26 weeks, and after that they go on relief. "You never had it so good."
[Response from the audience.]
Senator KENNEDY. In 1864, Abraham Lincoln,
when awaiting the returns in the election of 1864, finally heard that Ohio
had voted for him, and he sent out a word, "Thank God, Ohio has saved the
Union." I hope on November 8, 1960, we can send out the same wire. I hope
Ohio will go Democratic. [Applause.]
The people of Ohio need no speeches. I believe
the issues are crystal clear, and they are very sharp and very different.
They all go to the picture which the two candidates and the two parties
see in America. Mr. Nixon sees a strong America, increasing in vitality
and energy, spreading its influence throughout the world, the tide of freedom
rising, all men turning to the United States for encouragement and assistance
and example.
I see a strong and great country, but I see
a country that must he stronger, I see a powerful country that must be
more powerful, I see a people full of vitality and energy, but I see a
leadership that has been standing still. [Applause.]
You don't need speeches, living in this community.
Here in this community which should be the pulsebeat of the United States,
which is the American Ruhr Valley, which is the source of energy for the
United States along the Ohio Valley - when you go 44 percent of capacity
in October, at the very time when the automobile industry is tooling up
and making its most cars for the year, if you are 44 percent of capacity
now, what will it be in December, January, February, and March, if this
administration continues its policies that have led us to this position,
not only here in Youngstown, but all over the United States; not only in
the United States, but all over the world?
About 3 weeks ago, after a vote in the United
Nations, and, indeed, on last Friday, Mr. Nixon said, "Look what has been
happening in the United Nations if you want to see how our prestige has
grown." I looked at that vote yesterday on the admission of Red China.
In 1952, there were seven votes for the admission of Red China into the
United Nations. Yesterday there were 34. How many African nations voted
with us yesterday? How many of the new nations voted with the United States
or voted with the Chinese Communists? How many abstained? How long will
they abstain?
Mr. Khrushchev does not stay in New York because
he enjoys New York. He stays there because he is carrying out his consistent
campaign to destroy us. I do not believe that the American people in 1960,
faced with the most serious challenge in our long history, are going to
choose to buy the line that we are doing everythmg that must be done, that
everything is moving forward as it should move, that we are moving in national
and international strength as never before. I don't agree with it, and
I want it clearly understood that I do not agree with this administration's
leadership; that I downgrade not the United States, but the Republican
leadership; that I do not consider the philosophy which Mr. Nixon is expressing
in this campaign to represent the real needs of the United States, and
I do not believe the Republican Party will serve the people and the cause
of freedom as it must be served if we are not only to endure but to prevail.
Our disagreements are deep.
I come from a party which believes in $1.25
minimum wage. [Applause.] Mr. Nixon leads a party which in 1935 voted 99
percent against the 25-cent minimum wage. And Mr. Nixon last week said
$1.25 minimum wage is inflationary. I would like to see any American get
along who lives in political life, from the President, Vice President,
to the two candidates, on $1.25 an hour.
(Response from the audience.)
Mr. Nixon considers medical care for the aged
tied to social security to be, and I quote him accurately, "too extreme."
There are 17 million Americans and there is not anyone here who does not
have a part of his family or he, himself or she, herself, will be some
day in the same position. There are 17 million Americans over the age of
65 who live on an average social security check of $78 a month. There are
9 million of them that have less than $1,000 a year. What kind of housing
do they live in with less than $1,000 a year? What kind of food do they
eat? Beans. What kind of clothes do they have? And when they get sick,
when their wife has a heart attack and needs daily nursing care, where
do they go? They come here for public assistance, and under the bill which
the President signed, they must take a pauper's oath. They must say that
they are medically indigent before they can get help. What do we propose?
We propose putting it under social security, which has served our people
for 25 years. It will cost each working man and woman under social security
less than 3 cents a day. And when they are 65, if they are men, and 62
if they are women, and they become ill, they will receive back what they
put in. They will pay their own way. They will live in dignity. They will
be protected, and that is what we stand for. [Applause.]
These are the issues: What kind of a country
are we going to build? How are we going to stimulate the economy of this
country? What monetary and fiscal policies will we follow, which will provide
full employment for our people? How will we protect their unemployment
compensation if they are out of work? How will we be sure that they are
adequately cared for when they are searching for work? How will we take
care of our children and make sure that they have the best educational
system in the world?
Those of you who work for a living know that
your children must be well educated if they are going to work their way
in the 1960's and the 1970's. Industry is changing-steel and all the rest.
And only the best educated can be sure of the good jobs. Sixty to seventy
percent of Negro children never finish high school. What kind of jobs will
they get? What will their housing be like? What are their chances of being
unemployed if they are working as laborers? Unless they finish high school,
unless they have a chance to go to college, if they have the talent to
go to college, if they have the ability and motivation, how are they going
to pay for their way through life; how are they going to meet their responsibilities?
Thirty-five percent of all children, our brightest children, in the top
half of your high school classes, do not go to college. Why? Because under
our society we have not been able to work out a system where the best can
be educated, and in these changing times, when science and automation and
technology is changing the face of our country, is changing your work,
is changing your lives, I believe we have to recognize the new problems
and those new responsibilities.
I run in the tradition of Woodrow Wilson and
Franklin Roosevelt and Harry Truman. [Applause.] But I recognize also in
1960 that we are going to face problems that they never dreamed of, and
it is our responsibility, as an entirely new generation, to bring new solutions
to new problems, so I come here today and ask your help in this campaign.
I ask you to help build America. I ask you to join in building a stronger
country. I ask you to join us in caring for the sick, in educating our
children, in providing full employment for those who want to work, in building
America where there is no discrimination, where there is a chance for all
who have talent and for all who want to work. That is the ancient Democratic
position in this century, and I am proud to be associated with it.
The division is clear. It is between those
who stand still and those who move forward, between those who look to the
past, between those who want to protect a special position or special interest,
and those who work for the people. I come here to Ohio, the center of the
United States, and ask your help in this campaign. We are going to beat
the Republicans. [Applause.]
We are going to move ahead. We are going to
carry this fight to Mr. Nixon and the Republican Party in the next 3 weeks,
and come November 8, there should be no undecided voters. Everyone will
have a chance to register his opinion. And then it is your decision. Then
it is your decision and I come here today and ask your help. Thank you.
[Applause.]