Senator KENNEDY: I have seen that face someplace,
but I don't know exactly where [laughter]. I have seen that one, too. [Laughter.]
In 1952. [Laughter.]
Governor Williams, John Swainson, the next
Governor of the State of Michigan [applause], my friend and colleague and
valuable Senator in the United States Senate, Pat McNamara [applause],
the candidate for Congress from this district [applause], ladies and gentlemen:
I want to express my thanks to all of you, particularly those of you who
are college students who can't vote, who came down here anyway. [Applause.]
I recognize that the sacrifice is not extensive as I am doing the work
this morning and you are not in class. [Laughter.] I am glad that
you are participating actively in the political process. Artemus Ward 50
years ago said, "I am not a politician and my other habits are good." [Laughter.]
I believe all of us recognize now in a free society that we are all politicians,
in a sense we are all officeholders, in a sense we all bear part of the
burden of maintaining free government. And this election of 1960, I believe,
is one of the most significant elections of the 20th century, because we
have candidates and political parties who divide sharply over the responsibility
which the United States must bear, the burdens it must assume, the obligations
it must meet in the next decade, if we are not only going to endure but
prevail.
I hold the view that in these difficult and
dangerous times it is the function of the opposition, if it is going to
meet its responsibility as a party, to try to suggest alternative courses
of action. I do not downgrade the United States. I have the greatest confidence
in it. I have the greatest confidence that it can meet its responsibilities.
But I do downgrade its present leadership. [Applause.] I do
believe that this leadership and the leadership which is suggested by the
Republicans for the future falls to take into account the sober problems
which the United States faces at home and abroad. You come from the State
of Michigan. Here in this State which is one of the great industrial complexes
of the United States, you are going to see in the next 5 and 10 years the
problem of maintaining full employment at a time of automation, at a time
when we have increased our productive capacity more than our ability to
consume, and to maintain full employment and prosperity in this State and
country in the next decade will take far greater imagination, and far greater
vigor, and a far greater sense of what is needed than this administration
has shown. [Applause.]
If the United States is going to maintain
its position of being a friend of freedom in Latin America, if we are going
to be successful in this struggle which is now going on, not merely on
the island of Cuba, but all over Latin America, we have to be identified,
not merely in the fight against communism, but in the fight against poverty
and disease, in the fight that those people are waging for a better life
for themselves, and in my judgment the United States is not now in their
minds identified with that fight.
If we lose that psychological struggle, if
Castro or his counterparts in other countries of Latin America are able
to suggest that we are indifferent, that we are rich, that we are prosperous,
that we do not look at their problems, I believe the future of Latin America
will be far different than it could be if we identify ourselves as Franklin
Roosevelt did with their problems, with their opportunities and join with
them. [Applause.]
Those of you who may be supporters of the
opposition party [response from the audience] - supporters of Mr. Nixon
and Mr. Lodge, you should take scant comfort in the fact and Mr. Nixon
in the debate before the one last night referred to our votes in the United
Nations as a source of strength and prestige, and the next day, the Saturday
after the Friday on the question of the admission of Red China, two African
nations voted on the same side as we did, Liberia, which after all we helped
found, and the Union of South Africa, which is outside the compartment
of the rest of Africa because of its policies toward its Negroes. The rest
of Africa - Guinea, Ghana, all the rest - none voted with us. More countries
in Asia voted against us than voted with us. How can you take satisfaction,
as young Republicans, in the record of our country in the last 8 years
in outer space? How can you take satisfaction in the fact that in 1959
the United States not only had a lower economic growth than the Soviet
Union, but one-half of that of Western Germany, less than Italy, less than
France, less than Japan? [Response from the audience.]
Percentage points? Economic growth, economic
growth, finding jobs for people. There are 7 million Americans today, only
2 years after the recession of 1958, that are either unemployed or working
2 or 3 days a week. If you feel that that is a good record, if you feel
that the United States has shown sufficient vision, sufficient foresight,
sufficient recognition of the changing nature of our time, then you should
stay with the Republican Party and Mr. Nixon. [Response from the audience.]
But if you believe that the United States has to demonstrate a whole new
concept in our relations abroad, if we have to associate ourselves intimately
with the problems of these people, if you are not satisfied to have the
United States offer the Congo 300 scholarships last June and the year before
200 for all Africa - do you know how many of those Congolese students are
here in the United States now as the result of those scholarships? Seven.
If you think that is a good record, stick with Mr. Nixon. [Response from
the audience.]
Well, I want to say to you five girls, I appreciate
that. [Laughter.] In any case, Republican or Democrat, success or failure
in November, this is a great country. I don't think there is a disagreement
on that. The whole question really in this election is, What must the United
States do what must the leadership set before the American people as the
unfinished business, what responsibilities must we meet? What philosophy
of government, what philosophy of our times, must motivate our President
and our Congress? I hold with the Democratic Party on this occasion. I
think this year we serve the national interest. I have bad news for you,
gentlemen. I think we might even beat you in Michigan. [Response
from the audience.] Thank you. [Applause.]