Senator KENNEDY. Congressman Thompson, ladies,
and gentlemen, I want to express my thanks to all of you for coming down
here and greeting all of us. I particularly want to express my appreciation
to Thorn Lord, who I hope you are going to elect as Senator from the State
of New Jersey. [Applause.] We need a good Democratic Senator from this
State, and I think Thorn can do the job. [Applause.] And Frank Thompson,
our Congressman, who has been in charge of our registration drive in this
campaign, who has registered 10 million new Democrats, I think, in the
last 2 months. Stand up, please. [Applause.]
I come here today as the standard bearer for
the Democratic Party in this most important election. Actually, there have
been many significant elections in the history of this country, and it
is my hope that as a result of this campaign, as a result of our efforts,
that the people of this country, all of them, Republicans and Democrats,
will come as a result of our effort of the last few months to some definite
conclusions about what our country must do. I believe if this election
is to serve a national purpose, the best purpose it can serve is to inform
our people, not of all the things that are good about our country, because
we know there are many things that are good about our country but the things
that we must do if we are going to maintain our country's freedom. That
is the purpose of this election. That is the purpose of our campaign, and
I must say on this great issue which goes to the freedom of our country,
the peace of the world, the success of freedom around the globe, I believe
on this great issue Mr. Nixon and I have sharp disagreements, and they
involve very definitely [applause] - Mr. Nixon's views are subject to change
frequently, so I think we disagree on this question. [Laughter and
applause.]
Yesterday in Arizona he made a speech to a
group that Senator Goldwater had gathered together, saying he is all for
the Republican Party and all of its candidates, and then he spoke about
an hour later and said "Well, the party does not make much difference;
it is the man." [Applause.] Well, I think it is the man who the party
selects that makes the difference. [Applause.]
Grover Cleveland said about 70 years ago,
"What good is a politician unless he stands for something?" And I say what
good is a political party unless it stands for something. And I want to
make very clear where we stand in 1960. We say that this is a great country
that must be greater. It is a powerful country that must be more powerful,
and as an American citizen of this country, as well as the standard bearer
of the Democratic Party, I want to make it clear that what we are doing
now is not good enough. Mr. Nixon runs on a slogan "We've Never Had It
So Good." He says that our prestige in the world has never been as high.
I don't agree with that. I don't agree with that. [Applause.]
As long as we are using only 50 percent of
our capacity in the production of steel, as long as our economic growth
is only one-third that of the Soviet Union, as long as 35 percent of our
brightest boys and girls who graduate from high school never get to see
the inside of a college, as long as the votes in the United Nations are
beginning to move against us, as long as Castro is strong not only in Cuba
but is spreading his influence throughout Latin America, I cannot say we
have never had it so good. [Applause.]
Mr. Nixon debates Quemoy and Matsu, and I
am delighted to debate them with him, because I believe in strength and
I believe in peace. But I also would like to hear him debate Cuba, Africa,
Latin America, economic growth [applause] - I saw in the paper that he
is going to discuss those two islands 4 miles from the coast of China for
the next 3 weeks. I am delighted to discuss those islands and our responsibilities
toward them an a toward peace and toward strength. But I would like to
also hear his plans to prevent the communization of other areas of the
world. What are his plans to prevent Africa from slipping, an area of poverty
and disease, what is his plan? And what is the administration's plan to
prevent Communist influence from growing in Africa? What is the program
of this administration toward Latin America?
Last June we offered 300 scholarships to the
Congo. You know that was more scholarships than we had offered to all of
Africa the year before? We had more people stationed in West Germany in
our Foreign Service in 1957 than in all of Africa? There are four countries
in Africa now members of the United Nations, and we don't even have an
American representative in any of the four. In the vote on the admission
of Red China into the United Nations, do you know how many African nations
voted with us? Two - one, Liberia which we helped found, and the other
the Union of South Africa. Every other country of Africa either voted against
us or abstained. Do you know more countries voted against us on that issue
from Asia than voted with us? Do you know why a candidate for the Presidency
of Brazil took a trip to see Castro? Because he realized the popularity
that Castro has been gaining in Latin America; because the United States
is indifferent. We gave more aid in the last 10 years to Yugoslavia than
we gave to all of Latin America combined.
These are the problems that we must discuss,
because they go to the security of every person here. Everyone here knows
that unless the balance of power in the world is moving in the direction
of freedom, then the United States is in peril. As long as countries in
Africa, and leaders, begin to feel that the future belongs to the Communists
and not to us, as long as they begin to fear the Russians more than they
trust us, as long as those people in Latin America think that we are uninterested
in their fight against poverty and disease and ignorance, as long as they
think we regard them merely as pawns in the cold war, then they begin to
wonder whether they should do what Castro has done.
These are the struggles which we are going
to face in the next 10 years. How could a free society increase its economic
growth? There are a good many people here who work, whose children will
be trying to get a job in the next 12 months. We are going to have to find
in the next 10 years, 25,000 new jobs a week for the next 10 years, to
provide jobs for all the people in our country who want them, and we are
going to have to do that at times when automation is taking the jobs of
men, when 1 machine can do the jobs of 10 men, and yet we are going to
have to provide full employment. We have 16 million Americans over the
age of 65 who live on an average social security check of less than $78
a month. How are they going to get by and find homes, shelter, and medical
care? These are the problems that the United States must face.
I am delighted to discuss any problems that
anyone wants to raise in this campaign, but I want to turn Mr. Nixon's
attention not only to the coast of China but to the United States and New
Jersey and the problems it faces and our people face. [Applause.]
In different times in our history the American
people have chosen the Republicans and at other times they have chosen
the Democrats. I believe in 1960 that when we analyze our perils and our
opportunities, because our opportunities are greater than our perils, I
believe the American people are going to come to the conclusion that it
is time this country started moving again. And that is the issue.
[Applause.]
In 1912, Woodrow Wilson of New Jersey ran
for the Presidency, and he ran on the slogan, "The New Freedom." I run
in 1960 not saying that if I am elected life will be easy but saying that
this is a great country which deserves the best from us all. This is a
great country which deserves the best that all of us can do. It is a country
which is the chief defender of freedom, and upon us and upon our willingness
to meet our responsibilities rests not only our own security, but rests
the hope of freedom all around the globe.
Abraham Lincoln said 100 years ago, "This
Nation cannot exist half slave and half free." The question is whether
the world can exist in 1960 half slave and half free, whether it will move
in the direction of freedom or whether it will move in the direction of
slavery, and upon us, upon our willingness to meet our responsibilities,
hinges this great question. I come to New Jersey and ask your help in this
campaign. [Applause.] And I can assure you that if we are successful we
will set before this country its unfinished business, and this country
will move again. Thank you. [Applause.]