Senator KENNEDY. Governor Lawrence, Mayor Barr,
Senator Clark, Congressman Powell, Dr. McClelland, Dave Roberts, Members
of the Congress, ladies and gentlemen, fellow Shriners, guests [laughter],
I am grateful to the Governor for his introduction and for putting it right
on the line. Mr. Nixon said in one of his franker moments, "I am a conservative
at home and a risktaker abroad," and I don't think the American people
want either in 1960. [Applause.] I think the American people in 1960 want
somebody who is liberal at home and who is careful abroad. I think they
want somebody who builds the strength of this country, who carries a big
stick and speaks softly around the world. [Applause.]
During my visit to Pittsburgh, I have seen
pictures of Mr. Khrushchev with Mr. Nixon's finger under his nose. Friday
night, after the debate, when I went over to shake hands with Mr. Nixon,
and the photographers came, suddenly the finger came up in my nose. [Laughter.]
I thought, here it comes; he is going to tell me how wrong I am about the
plight of America, and do you know what he said? "Senator, I hear you have
been getting better crowds than I have in Cleveland." [Applause.] That
isn't what the American people want in 1960. I think they want someone
and a party that stands for the truth, north, south, east, and west, that
runs on a record, not on leap year liberalism every 4 years, like the Republican
candidates always run. [Applause.] I wonder when he put his finger in Mr.
Khrushchev's nose whether he was saying, which he said on that interview,
"I know you are ahead of us in rockets, Mr. Khrushchev, but we are ahead
of you in color television." [Laughter and applause.] I would just as soon
look at television black and white and be ahead of them in rockets. [Applause.]
Mr. Nixon was in Oregon the other day. He
said we had been downgrading America. He said, "Look at the shopping center,
the biggest in the world. Have the Russians got anything like that?" They
have rockets, they are turning out twice as many scientists and engineers
as we are. Their economy, according to Mr. Dulles, the head of the Central
Intelligence Agency, is moving ahead at twice to three times the rate of
ours.
I suggest to Mr. Nixon to read the record
and that he bring Senator Scott home to study the truth. [Applause.] I
suggest that instead of Senator Scott traveling around the United States
in a truth squad which could not stand a lie detector [laughter] that he
come back to Pennsylvania and look at the problems of his people that he
is paid to represent. To tell Mr. Nixon, who said on Friday night there
is not going to be a recession, that the Wall Street Journal, which every
Republican candidate is committed by his platform to read every morning
[applause] - they said several weeks ago that there is a recession, but
the only question is when is it going to end. There is a recession, and
those who work part time - one-third of the steelworkers of the United
States who work part time or don't work at all, the 100,000 of them, I
want him to tell them there is no recession. I want him to come and tell
them they have never had it so good. [Applause.] I want him to tell the
thousands of families in Pennsylvania who wait every month for a surplus
food package from the Government, which is some rice, some flour, some
dried eggs, all adding up to $6.25 for a family of four every 30 days,
5 cents per person in the State of Pennsylvania, not India, not Russia,
not Latin America but here in Pennsylvania and West Virginia - nearly 5
million Americans wait every month for those packages, and finally this
summer they added lard to it.
And when we attempted to pass a bill for food
stamps, when I offered a bill to put the distribution of surplus food in
the Department of HEW, and add some meat, chicken, and milk, this administration
opposed it. I believe the American people in 1960 are going to move them
out. I believe they are sending Mr. Nixon right back to California. [Applause.]
I think the American people are tired of a
party which sends Barry Goldwater through the South calling for the repeal
of social security, saying they don't mean anything of this at all on civil
rights, and sending Senator Scott traveling through the North committing
them to all kinds of programs. I think the American people want a party
which stands on the record. I think they want a party which says, "I believe
in a party. I believe a party should stand for something," instead of a
candidate who says, "Party labels don't mean anything." I don't blame the
Republicans for saying that; I would say it myself [laughter and applause]
because that record is written on the books in the last 25 years. Will
you tell me one single piece of progressive legislation ever suggested
by the Republican Party in the last 25 years?
(Response from the audience.)
Mr. KENNEDY. I asked someone in Cleveland
that and the next day the Cleveland paper said, "Senator, you are so wrong.
You forgot what President Taft did on child labor in 1903."
Well, I was wrong. What have they done since
President Taft? What have they done on social secunty and minimum wages
and housing and resource development, on which they run and issue papers
today? Where do they stand when those measures were proposed? Where do
they stand in 1960 when we tried to move the minimum wage from $1 an hour
to $1.25? Mr. Nixon says it is too extreme. When we try to provide medical
care for the aged on social security, instead they pass a bill by which
you have to take a pauper's oath before you are entitled to medical care.
What do they do on resource development?
Their policy was officially called "No new starts." I cannot believe in
the most dangerous time in the history of this country, in 1960, when if
there was ever a time when we had to begin to move - I cannot believe that
they would put their confidence in a bankrupt political leadership, and
I believe the Republican Party's leadership relative to the needs of our
people is bankrupt. [Applause.]
I cannot believe that they are going to put
their confidence in a party which in 1952 came to Pittsburgh and promised
liberation for Eastern Europe, and now has a Communist satellite 90 miles
off the coast of Florida. I cannot believe they are putting their confidence
in a political party and leader who commits us to the defense of Quemoy
and Matsu even though he says in the same statement that the people don't
count, even though it is admitted that it is indefensible, even though
he states that the Chiefs of Staff, which is a fact, will not defend it
under certain conditions, but will under others, and two rocks 6 miles
off the coast of China - this is the party of peace and prosperity? By
their fruits you shall know them, and I think the American people know
them, and I believe they [applause] - Friday night in the debate Mr. Nixon
said our prestige has never been higher. Look at the votes in the United
Nations. It just so happens that the next day's vote was the best vote
of all, and look at our prestige. On the question of admission of Red China
into the United Nations, do you know how many African nations voted with
us? Two, Liberia, which has been tied to us for a century, and the Union
of South Africa, which does not represent African opinion. Two nations.
Nine nations in Asia voted against us, eight for us, and the rest abstained.
Not one of the new nations admitted from August on into the United Nations,
and there were 15 or so, not one of them voted with us. What about our
prestige? If that is the test, the United Nations. Why is it that they
decided to want to move in that direction and not with us? Why is it that
the candidate for the Presidency of Brazil felt it necessary to visit Castro
during his campaign? Why was it necessary for both candidates in Brazil
to take an anti-American position? How many Latin American politicians
in the next 5 years will do likewise in order to prove that they are good
Latins? How popular is it to be associated with the United States? What
is our image around the world? What are we identified with? The status
quo? The past? The special few in the interests in a few countries?
Those on their way out? Or are we identified with the fight against poverty
and hunger and the aspiration of the people? What would we stand for in
this country? Do we stand for a better chance for all our people? Do we
practice what we preach? And I agree what we preach is difficult to practice,
but we do preach it and we must practice it.
The Communists do not practice what they preach
and they preach a different doctrine. But we preach the best doctrine ever
known, the equality of man, the Government gets consent from the governed,
and that everyone is entitled to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness,
and we will maintain that position. [Applause.]
I came from Warm Springs, Ga., this morning,
the house where Franklin Roosevelt died, and I come to Pittsburgh, Pa.,
and invoke his spirit. I think it is incumbent upon us to continue a long
fight, which has gone on since this country began, which was divided from
the beginning.
We are the heirs of Jefferson. We could not
conserve and look backward if we tried. We must look forward. The Democratic
Party is the party of progress, and I cannot believe, in 1960, when the
world is in revolution, when all is movement, that here in the United States
we are going to say it is good enough what we are doing, there are no challenges
left, no unfinished business. It is merely a question of administration.
I think it is a question of force and vision
and foresight and vitality and energy, and I come here to Pittsburgh and
ask your help in this campaign. [Applause.]
Two thousand years ago, after the battle of
Thermopylae, where 300 Spartans were wiped out by all the Persians, they
carved above the graves a sign in the rock which said, "Passerby: Tell
Sparta we fell faithful to her service." Now, in 1960, in another crisis
of freedom, we are asked to live faithful to the service of the United
States and the things for which she stands, and that is our commitment
and that is the commitment of the Democratic Party. I can assure you that
if we are successful on November 8 we are going to set before this country
its unfinished business, the agenda for the American people in the sixties,
to build our strength, to maintain our freedom, to reestablish our position
as a source and inspiration and friend of freedom around the globe, as
a good neighbor to all those who wish to trod on freedom's road.
I come here to Pittsburgh and commit ourselves
to leading this country on November 8, if we are given the mandate, and
if we lead, we are going to get America moving again. Thank you.
[Standing ovation.]