Senator KENNEDY. After that speech, I am ready
to put the question right now. Are we going to vote Democratic? [Response
from the audience.]
Adam, I am going to sit down and turn it all
over to you. [Laughter.] Congressman Powell says he is my senior. I respect
age. I admire his speech. It was very good. [Applause.]
Mrs. Roosevelt, Senator Lehman, Mayor Wagner,
Governor Harriman, Governor Williams, distinguished Democrats, ladies and
gentlemen, I am grateful for the generous introduction of my friend and
colleague with whom I have served in the Congress for 14 years, and I am
happy to come to this hotel, a little late, but I am happy to come here.
[Applause.]
I am delighted to come and visit. Behind the
fact of Castro coming to this hotel, Khrushchev coming to Castro, there
is another great traveler in the world, and that is the travel of a world
revolution, a world in turmoil. I am delighted to come to Harlem and I
think the whole world should come here and the whole world should recognize
that we all live right next to each other, whether here in Harlem or on
the other side of the globe. [Applause.]
We should be glad they came to the United
States. We should not fear the 20th century, for this worldwide revolution
which we see all around us is part of the original American Revolution.
When the Indonesians revolted after the end of World War II, they scrawled
on the walls, "Give me liberty or give me death." They scrawled on the
walls "All men are created equal." Not Russian slogans but American slogans.
When they had a meeting for independence in Northern Rhodesia, they called
it a Boston Tea Party. They quoted Jefferson, they quoted Jackson, they
quoted Franklin Roosevelt. They don't quote any American statesmen today.
There are children in Africa called George Washington. There are children
in Africa called Thomas Jefferson. There are none called Lenin or Trotsky
or Stalin in the Congo, or Nixon. [Laughter.] There may be a couple called
Adam Powell. [Laughter.]
But we have to prove what they hear we are
talking about, what we are preaching about, what the Declaration of Independence
says, what the Constitution says. We have to prove that we mean it, not
last year, not 10 years ago, not during Roosevelt's administration, but
today, 1960, the years after. If we are going to live by these high words
we are going to have to live it every day. We can't turn it on and off.
[Applause.]
Here in New York today we just concluded a
conference on constitutional rights and American freedom. People who work
in this field for years have come here from all parts of the country and
they sit right here today. They did not begin to work on it today or last
week. They worked on it years ago and they are going to continue to work
on it for years to come, and it is a source of satisfaction to me as the
standard bearer for the Democratic Party that here in front are the men
and women of all parts of the country who led this fight, and you know
them all. [Applause.]
When the vote comes in the House and Senate,
as Adam Powell knows and Senator Lehman knows, who provides the majority
of the votes on every issue, on civil rights, on housing, and minimum wage,
sickness, health, good days and bad, who provides the majority of the votes,
who offers the amendments, who tries to get them through? A majority of
the Democrats. And the record shows that the majority of those who oppose
are Republicans and on all the issues.
I don't lead a party which believes $1.25
an hour is extreme. Mr. Nixon said that on the debate a week ago. That
is the same party that voted 90 percent against 25 cents minimum wage.
I don't lead a party which voted 90 percent against social security, which
ran a presidential candidate, Alf Landon, in 1936, calling for the repeal
of social security, and yet that is the same party in 1960 that voted against
medical care for the aged. I think the record tells us something. By their
fruits you shall know them. [Applause.]
Nineteen hundred and sixty has brought up
a real difference. Everyone talks about civil rights now, but the Republican
candidate is the only one who talks about rights and talks about human
rights in the North and States rights in the South, the only one who has
a Negro traveling with him in the North but not in the South, the only
one who sent Senator Scott of Pennsylvania to represent him in the North
instead of Barry Goldwater who represents him in the South.
There is only one candidate, and I hope that
is me, who is willing to talk about his record on civil rights. I never
concealed my votes for FEPC, for title III, for majority rule in the Senate.
Mr. Nixon talks of what will be done in the future, not what he has done
for his party has done in the past, for his past is a record of opposition
to FEPC, both as a Congressman and as a Senator, and as a consistent do-nothing
policy as Chairman of the Government Contracts Commission. After all the
Government spends a lot of money and there are a lot of companies involved.
How many times have they really acted in order to compel them to provide
that when they spend the money they should spend it in a way that people
are treated fairly. That is all we ask.
This is Mr. Nixon's record, and I think it
is a record that we should consider in the next 4 weeks. I want to make
it clear that all this is important, not only to ourselves, but all those
who look to us in the cause of freedom. When an African diplomat cannot
get a good house in Washington, it isn't because he is an African. It is
because his own people, the Afro-Americans in this country, cannot get
good housing.
This isn't a matter that we turn on and off.
What we are speaks louder than our words, and if we are building a better
society here, if we are treating our people fairly, regardless of their
race or their religion, then everyone who comes to our country will see
what we are and go away impressed. [Laughter.]
This is the unfinished business that we have.
Woodrow Wilson, Franklin Roosevelt, Harry Truman, each of their generations
met their responsibilities. Now it is ours. Now it is ours to finish the
job. Last Saturday at the vote of the United Nations, do you know how many
African nations voted with us on the question of Red China? Two. Do you
know which ones they were? Liberia and the Union of South Africa. None
of the rest voted with us. More countries voted against us in Asia than
voted with us last Saturday on the admission of Red China. What has happened
to America? We are the great revolutionarv people. We believe in freedom.
We believe in independence. The Communists do not. They preach a doctrine.
They are colonialists, and we are not, and yet for some reason we have
lost the imagination of a people and they are beginning to gain it. What
is wrong? I believe it is important that the President of the United States
personify the ideals of our society, speak out on this, associate ourselves
with the great fight for equality. [Applause.]
The white people are a minority in the world.
We want to hold our hand out in friendship. We want to be as Franklin Roosevelt
was, a good neighbor to Latin America by being a good neighbor in the United
States. [Applause.] If a Negro baby is born here and a white baby is born
next door, that Negro baby's chance of finishing high school is about 60
percent of the white baby. This baby's chance of getting through college
is about a third of that baby's. His chance of being unemployed is four
times that baby's. His chance of owning a house is one-third. His
chance of educating his children is that much less. His chance of being
a Federal district judge is non-existent because there aren't any. They
point to those who work in the Federal service, messengers, laborers, clerks,
typists. How many heads of departments? How many members of the Foreign
Service are of African descent? There are over 6,000 people involved in
the whole Foreign Servic - 23 out of 6,000. That is not very many, when
Africa will poll one-fourth of all the votes in the General Assembly by
1962. One-fourth of all the votes of the General Assembly by 1962 will
be African.
Again, he will have the same vote as the United
States in the General Assembly. We want them to join us in moving forward.
We want to move forward ourselves. We want to build a stronger America.
We want to provide equality of opportunity for that child and that child.
Whatever ability they have, whatever motivation they have, they will have
a chance to develop that equally, but it is a doctrine and we stand for
it, and we are going to move ahead on it, whether we win or lose this election.
This I can tell you. [Applause.]
So I come to Harlem today to ask you to join
us, to register this week, to vote, to stand for progress, to move, to
go forward, until the United States achieves this great goal of practicing
what it preaches. Thank you. [Applause.]