Senator KENNEDY. Lieutenant Governor and the
next Governor of Michigan, John Swainson [applause], my friend and colleague
in the U.S. Senate, Pat McNamara, the next U.S. Senator from Michigan [applause]
Mennen Williams, ladies and gentlemen and here is Tom Payne, your next
Congressman from this district. [Applause.]
This community is celebrated, as John Swainson
said, as one of the two birthplaces of the Republican Party, and the reason,
of course, was because when the Republican Party was founded on this occasion,
it served a great national purpose. It is the function of politicians and
of political parties to serve a national purpose. Grover Cleveland once
said - Grover Cleveland once said what good is a politician unless he stands
for something. And I say what good is a political party unless it stands
for something. [Applause.] The question which the people of
this community and the people of the State of Michigan and the people of
the United States must decide is which political party in 1960 serves a
great national purpose.
Mr. Nixon has said that party labels don't
mean very much, what counts is the man. I believe what counts is the man
the party nominates, what counts are the things for which the party stands,
and I believe in 1960, as in 1860 in this community, the Republican Party
stood for something. I believe in 1960 in the community the Democratic
Party stands for something. [Applause.]
I believe we stand for a great national purpose.
I believe that we stand for rebuilding the United States, for developing
our economy, for moving ahead here at home, and building our strength around
the world. We look to the future in the same way as in other days and in
other years Franklin Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson looked to the future.
I run against a candidate, Mr. Nixon, who
runs on the slogan "You never had it so good." I want him to run on that
slogan in the State of Michigan. I want him to run on that slogan in this
community. I want him to run on that slogan all over the State. The State
of Michigan has not recovered from the recession of 1958. Over 7 percent
of its people are out of work. And now at this hme,in October, when the
auto industry is at its height, what is going to happen in January, February,
March? What is the winter of 1961 going to be like here in this State,
and here in the United States? As long as in the fall of 1960 we are using
only 50 percent of our steel capacity, as long as 35 percent of our brightest
boys and girls never go to college, as long as there are things which are
left to be done, I think it is the function of the Democratic Party to
complete the unfinished business of this society, to get our country moving
again, to provide jobs for our people.
In the next 10 years we are going to have
to find 25,000 new jobs a week for the next 10 years. Which political
party do you think could do that better, which political party has stood
for full employment? [Response from the audience.] We are going to
have to build from 200,000 to 300,000 more homes every year than we are
now building. Which party do you think stands for that? [Response
from the audience. We are going to have to make it possible for every
boy and girl who is qualified to go to college, who has talent, to go to
college. Which party has stood for that issue in the past and in the future.
[Response from the audience.]
We are going to have to have to make it possible
for every American, regardless of his race or his religion, or the color
of his skin, to realize his talents, and we stand for that.
So I come to this community which 100 years
ago, 104 years ago saw the birth of a great party, and I come in 1960 to
that same community and say that on this occasion, in this year, in these
dangerous times, we in the Democratic Party serve the national interest
and the national purpose. I come here and ask your support, not merely
to build this State of Michigan, not merely to strengthen this community,
but to strengthen the United States, to move it forward, to have it stand
once again as an inspiration to all those who wish to be free. And I do
that shoulder to shoulder with Tom Payne, Pat McNamara, John Swainson,
and all those who believe that the years of the 1960's can be the brightest
in our history. Thank you. [Applause.]