Senator KENNEDY. Ladies and gentlemen, Congressman
Foley, Congressman Lankford, Senator, I want to express my thanks to all
of you for coming here tonight and also to express my hope that the State
of Maryland will send back to the U.S. Congress Congressman Foley and Congressman
Lankford, who have served their districts and have served the United States.
[Applause.]
I come here tonight as a candidate for the
office of the Presidency of the United States. [Applause.]
And I run for that office with full recognition
that the United States is moving through a most difficult and dangerous
time, but can move through it, I believe, with renewed vigor and confidence
if it is given leadership, and I do not believe that Mr. Nixon, since his
nomination has indicated any understanding or willingness to face up to
the problems that this country faces. [Applause.]
I find myself running against many candidates.
I run against the "Old Nixon" and the "New Nixon." I run against a man
who in May could write to Clarence Budington Kelland, of Arizona, that
he had been all his life, and I quote him, "an economic conservative,"
and who could say this week in California that he was a "practical progressive.
I run against a man who wanted to send American
troops into Indochina in 1954 and yet could say last year at the time of
difficulty in Tibet that he was unconcerned about the Communist advance
in that area. I run against a man who on this desperate occasion in the
life of the free world can say that our prestige has never been higher,
that our strength has been unequaled, that this country is on the ascendency,
that, if U.N. and other standards are used to test our prestige, it is
secure and could not be better. I could not disagree more. [Applause.]
It seems to me that the basic responsibility
for the next President of the United States is to do what Franklin Roosevelt
did in the 1930's, to set before our country its unfinished business. And
only the President of the United States could do that, not the Senate.
I represent Massachusetts in the Senate and Senator Engle represents California,
but only the President of the United States speaks for Massachusetts and
California, only the President of the United States speaks for the United
States.
I believe it incumbent upon the next President
to set before us the things we must do in order to maintain our strength,
in order to build a more vigorous society, in order that the people of
our country may express better the real opportunities of freedom, and in
order that we may hold out ourselves to the world as an example as we sit
on a most conspicuous stage of what freedom would really be. That is the
assignment and the burden that all of us, as citizens of this country,
must bear in the 1960's.
I do not run for the Presidency with any expectation
that life will be easy for any of us, but I do run with the greatest possible
confidence in the vitality of our system, in our ability to move forward,
in our willingness to assume all challenges that come our way, once we
are given the direction, once we are given the leadership, once we are
informed of what our goals must be if we are going to protect ourselves
and those who look to us for help. [Applause.]
I think Franklin Roosevelt set before us in
his second acceptance speech in 1936 the issues which separate our two
parties. In that speech he said:
Governments can err, Presidents do make mistakes, but the immortal Dante tells us that Divine Justice weighs the sins of the coldblooded and the sins of the warmhearted in a different scale. Better the occasional faults of a government living in the spirit of charity than the consistent omissions of a government frozen in the ice of its own indifference.And I believe, in the plight of our schools, the decline of American agriculture, our inability at this competetive time to maintain full employment and full use of our facilities, in our policy of no new starts in the development of our natural resources, in our willingness to accept a secondary position in the development of scientists and engineers, and the building of our cities, I believe that we have followed too often in this administration the words which T. S. Eliot wrote in his poem, "The Rock":
And the wind shall say: "These were a decent people, their only monument the asphalt road and a thousand lost golf balls."We can do better than that. [Applause.]