Senator KENNEDY. Governor Di Salle, Congressman-to-be
Mr. Sullivan, local candidates, ladies and gentlemen, I want to express
my thanks to all of you for coming today. This election is important and
I think your presence today indicates that you recognize that upon your
decision of November 8, upon the decision that you render as to which political
party and which candidates and which political philosophy will lead this
country, rests in good measure the position of the United States in the
1960's.
I come here today as the Democratic candidate
for the Presidency, and I divide the problems which our country will face
in the 1960's into two parts. in the first place, we have our responsibilities
toward our people in this country, toward the 15 million Americans over
the age of 65 who live on an average social security check of less than
$78 a month. And yet this administration has refused to provide medical
care for the aged tied to social security in the same way as they opposed
social security itself 25 years ago.
But in this area, and in minimum wage and
in housing and in social justice, we move in the tradition of Franklin
Roosevelt. [Applause.] I want to emphasize that that is only one phase
of our problems in the 1960's. The other phase deals with the problem that
you and this community face every day, every day at this airbase, and it
deals with what I consider to be a most important policy for the next President
of the United States.
In 1941 Albert Einstein and several other
people came to see Franklin Roosevelt and told him that an investment of
over $2 billion would make the United States the strongest military power
in the history of the world by cracking the atom. Franklin Roosevelt could
have dismissed it, but the same man who saw in the Tennessee Valley an
opportunity for harnessing the resources of that valley for the service
of our country was the same man who said "Yes" to that long gamble and
provided security for the United States in the last 20 years.
Now the same situation faced the United States
in 1954 and 1955, and that was the question of how important it was to
be first in outer space, and what answer did this administration give.
It regarded it as a scientific experiment. Mr. Wilson, the Secretary of
Defense said he was not interested to know what was on the other side of
the moon. He said money spent on basic research was unimportant because
he was not interested to find out why fried potatoes turned brown.
The result is that the Soviet Union today
is No.1 in outer space. The difference between Franklin Roosevelt's response
at the beginning of World War II and this administration's response to
this question in the middle fifties, in my opinion, indicates a basic difference
between the two political philosophies that are now contending. I could
not possibly say what the problems will be in the 1960's that are going
to face the United States, that are going to be new. No one knows.
Dwight Eisenhower and Adlai Stevenson did not run on the question of outer
space in 1952, nor did Wendell Willkie and Franklin Roosevelt run on harnessing
the atom in 1940. There are going to be problems entirely new in space,
in the air, in the water, under ground, in men's minds. In 1957 we had
more people in West Germany in U.S. Embassies than we did in all of Africa,
because no one imagined in 1953, 1954, and 1955, and 1956 that Africa would
come to be one of the most important continents of the world. We have in
the whole Foreign Service today 26 Negroes, out of 6,000 people. And yet
a majority of the world is colored, and Africa will hold one-fourth of
all the votes in the General Assembly.
Mr. Nixon went to Cuba in 1955. He praised
the competence, and I quote him, "and stability of the Batista regime."
Three years later Mr. Castro was to dominate Cuba. With all of the effects
it has on our own security, the problem that you have to decide - you cannot
tell what is going to happen in this country in the next 4 or 8 years.
You have to make a judgment as to which candidates in discussing the problems
that we now face, the problems that we now see, the responsibilities which
the President and the Government and the people must meet, which candidate
in your judgment and which party comes closest to being prepared to move
into the 1960's. And on that basis I stand here as the descendant, politically,
of Thomas Jefferson, who made the Louisiana Purchase, of Woodrow Wilson's
new freedom, of Franklin Roosevelt, who extended the boundaries of our
influence around the globe.
There are in Africa today children called
Roosevelt, Washington, Jefferson. There are none called Mr. Nixon.
[Laughter.] I do not say these problems are easy. The problem of full employment,
of automation, of increasing educational opportunities, of providing for
constitutional rights for all Americans so that every American can realize
his talents, of providing an image around the world to Africa and Asia
and Latin America of a vital and vigorous and revolutionary society - all
that is incumbent upon us as citizens.
The question is which party, which candidate
can best move this country, can best strengthen the cause of freedom, can
best assemble the talent that is in our country to move to the far horizons
of human experience and knowledge.
I come from the oldest political party on
earth, the Democratic Party, but I come with a party which is young, which
is willing, in my opinion, to move out,to move beyond, that does not run
in 1960 on the platform of "We've never had it so good." I run on a program
that we must do better, that we owe it to ourselves and our country and
our system to give it the best we have. I come here to Ohio today, as we
move into the last 3 weeks of a great presidential campaign which involves
a very basic decision by each of you: What do you see for yourselves?
What responsibility would you like our country to bear? Do you feel
the tide of history is moving with us? Do you feel we are riding
the crest? Or do you feel that there is around the world a sense
that America's high noon is past? I don't believe it. I hold the
view that the tide and history can move with us, that those people who
desire to be free outnumber those who are willing to sell their lives to
the Communist system, but we have to give leadership. Therefore, I ask
your support in this campaign, not saying that life will be easier, but
promising that if we are successful this country and freedom will move
again. Thank you. [Applause.]