Senator KENNEDY. Senator MeNamara, Governor
Williams, Congressman-to-be O'Rourke, Governor-to-be Swainson, distinguished
guests, ladies and gentlemen, I first of all want to express my appreciation
at the courtesy of the Governor of this State, my friend and colleague,
Mennen Williams, with whom I have worked closely in recent months in building
a stronger and more responsible Democratic Party. [Applause.]
I believe that the record that he has made
in this State will last, and I think the things for which he has fought
in Michigan, better education, fair equality for Americans, regardless
of their race or their color, the movement forward of the State of Michigan
- I think those things will last and so will his reputation, as a distinguished
public servant. I am delighted to salute him on the occasion of visiting
his State Capitol - Governor Williams. [Applause.]
And I am delighted to tour the State of Michigan
with my colleague in the U.S. Senate Senator McNamara. Senator McNamara
has been chairman of the Committee on Aging of the Senate. There are 17
million Americans over the age of 65 who live on an average social security
check of less than $78 a month. Many of them live, at least 9 million of
them live, on less than $1,000 a year, and until Senator McNamara began
to turn the spotlight of public attention on this problem, they were forgotten.
I salute him for a job well done, a job still unfinished. [Applause.]
And this job will not be finished until we provide medical care for the
aged under social security.
Finally, let me say that I am glad to be here
with a young and progressive figure from the State of Michigan, who I believe
will succeed Mennen Williams as a great Governor, who will lead Michigan
forward - John Swainson. [Applause.]
And lastly I want to pay tribute to what I
hope will be the Congressman from this district, Congressman-to-be O'Rourke.
[Applause.] I knew him when I was a member of the Rackets Committee and
he was carrying out courageous actions against those who lived off the
reputation of labor and management. He is a young man of courage and even
though this ticket may be overbalanced with some Irish names, O'Rourke,
Kennedy, and McNamara, nevertheless, I hope you will support him. [Laughter
and applause.]
The State of Michigan has many problems and
so does the United States, but most of the problems a Michigan has
are the same problems that our country has. If someone in this country
of ours finds their income drop in Connecticut, and they decide that they
will not buy a new car this year, you feel it in Lansing, and you feel
it all over the State of Michigan. If our steel industry produces at 50
percent of capacity, you feel it here in Michigan. If we build 200,000
less homes a year than we should, which we are now doing, you feel it here
in Michigan. Michigan is a great industrial State, and it is sensitive
to the rises and falls of the American economy. Michigan, itself, can only
move forward - you can provide employment for the 180,000 of the citizens
of this State who are now out of work only if the economy of the United
States is on the rise. Fifty percent of our capacity in steel is unused.
One-third of our steel-workers are part time or out of work. Seven percent
of the labor force of Michigan is unemployed. Michigan in a very real sense
and the United States never fully recovered from the recessions of 1958.
Unless this country is able to stimulate the economy of the United States
to move ahead 4 percent or 5 percent a year, we are not going to find jobs
for all the young men and women of this State who get out of high school
and college next year.
Where are they going to find work in Michigan
or in the United States if there are 4 million people unemployed and 3
million employed part time? We have to do better than that. We have to
do better than that, not only because we should adopt the national goal
of full employment, but also if the U.S. economy drags, we are not able
to maintain our strength as a nation, and if we do not maintain our strength
as a nation, all those who look to us with confidence and hope for leadership
turn in another direction. The place to start is here in the United States.
The place to build our prestige in the world is here in the United States.
The place to build strength for freedom is here in the United States. If
we are on the upward move, if the wave of our vitality and energy as a
nation is coming in, if we are providing employment for our people, if
we are consuming all that we produce, if we are able to provide a better
distribution of the great wealth of this country than we have in the past,
then the United States is strong, and when the United States is strong,
the world is strong, the chance of freedom is strong, the U.S. influence
is strong, our prestige is greater. [Applause.]
I do not suggest in any way that the problem
ot maintaining full employment, the problem of solving automation, the
problem of stimulating our housing industry, the problem of increasing
educational opportunities, the problem of caring for our aged, the problem
of balancing supply and demand in agriculture, the problem of maintaining
our military strength, the problem of disarming, if we can disarm, under
safe conditions - I do not suggest that there are easy answers to the most
difficult and complicated problems that this country has ever faced. The
only question is, Has this administration, and has Mr. Nixon, my opponent,
and has the Republican Party not only indicated the problems but has it
attacked them with vigor in recent years? [Response from the audience.]
That is the decision which you must make.
Have we done what needs to be done? Do you feel as an American that this
country is meeting its responsibilities at home and abroad in full measure?
Do you feel we can do better? Do you feel we must do better? It is upon
your judgment of that great question that the decision of November 8, 1960,
will be made. I believe an election time serves more than to have candidates
make speeches. I hope it is a chance, as it has been in our history, for
the United States to make a determination as to what it wants to be and
what it must do. It was true in 1932, it was true in 1912. I think in 1960
that the people of this country are coming to a conclusion that if this
State and country are going to maintain their freedom, if we are going
to occupy a position of leadership in the world, then we have to move again.
I believe that will be the result of the election of 1960, which, in many
ways, will transcend the results of any party's success. I believe in part
as a result of this campaign, in part by the force of events and the pressure
of history, that the United States in the 1960's will fulfill its destiny
as the leader of the free world. This country will move again. Thank you.
[Applause.]