Senator KENNEDY. Senator Smathers, my friend
and colleague of many years in the House, your distinguished Congressman
Charley Bennett, Mayor Burns, Senator Dickinson, distinguished guests,
ladies and gentlemen: I am grateful to Senator Smathers for his introduction
of me tonight. I served with him in the Congress for over 14 years, and
when I was married he stood up for me at my wedding. We are friends, and,
therefore, I am honored by his introduction to you who have supported him
on the several occasions for the Senate of the United States. I appreciate
it, and I am glad to be in Jacksonville. [Applause.]
My older brother, who was in the U.S. Navy
as a flier, graduated from the Jacksonville Air Base in 1942. My first
sea duty was to take a motor torpedo boat from Rhode Island to the Hutchins
Naval Base here in Jacksonville, where I stayed a month. So I am glad to
be back in Jacksonville. [Applause.]
Mr. Nixon had a few critical remarks to make
in this same park, and one of them was about the Democratic Party. I love
these Republicans who every 4 years say the party doesn't mean anything;
what counts is the man. I think what counts is the man the party puts up.
The Democratic Party never would have nominated - the Democratic Party
never would have nominated Alf Landon. They never would have nominated
Thomas E. Dewey, and they never would have nominated Richard Milhous Nixon.
[Applause.]
I don't understand Mr. Nixon. He journeys
to Phoenix, Ariz., to call on his southern manager, Barry Goldwater, and
there he says, "I support the Republican Party from top to bottom. I am
a Republican." He writes to Clarence Budington Kelland, "I am an economic
conservative. I am all the way."
Then he comes to Jacksonville and says, "Party
does not mean anything. What counts is the man." "I am a practical conservative"
- whatever that may be.
But I am a Democrat. I am a Democrat. [Applause.]
The work of my party is not so bad that I have to deny it every 4 years.
[Applause.] No Democratic candidate for the Presidency in this century
ever ran on a slogan of "Keep Cool with Coolidge' [laughter], or "Return
to Normalcy" (whatever that might be) with Warren G. Harding, or "Two Chickens
in Every Pot." Where do they get those slogans and where do they get the
candidates?
We ran on the slogan of the new freedom with
Woodrow Wilson. We ran with Franklin Roosevelt and the New Deal. And we
ran with Harry Truman and the Fair Deal. [Applause.] I don't say that parties
are an end in themselves, and I don't say that anyone should select a man
merely because he has a party label. But I believe in this difficult and
dangerous time that the parties do mean something. He said we were not
in the Jackson tradition. He goes down to Virginia and says we are not
in the Jefferson tradition. Then he goes down and says we are not in the
Woodrow Wilson tradition and then we are not in the Franklin Roosevelt
tradition. Well, he is in the McKinley, Coolidge, Harding, Dewey tradition,
right down the line. [Applause.]
Let me make it clear that the Democratic Party
is a national party. I am proud that Lyndon Johnson is running with me.
I run as a Democrat. [Applause.] The Democratic Party will
continue to serve our entire country. This State sends two U.S. Senators
to the Senate. It sends every Congressman but one as a Democrat to the
Congress. It is about to elect a Democratic Governor. Now, can you tell
me why Florida puts its confidence in the Democratic Party, why I come
here to Jacksonville and am introduced by your Senator, Senator Smathers?
I sit here with your Congressman, Congressman Bennett. They have served
with Mr. Nixon and they have served with me. They have served with Republicans
and they have served with Democrats, and they have chosen to support our
ticket. [Applause.]
Thomas Jefferson founded the Democratic Party
when he went on a botanical expedition up the Hudson River with James Madison,
searching for butterflies, and they met people in New York and they formed
the tie between the rural South and the industrial North, and that tie
has been maintained to the present time. I come to Jacksonville, not chasing
butterflies, but coming here at this time and asking your support, and
I come here and ask you to join, ask you to join us in serving our country.
Mr. Nixon said this morning that I should
be ashamed of myself, to quote him, and that I should apologize - I don't
know to whom - for saying that the United States is not doing as well as
it must do economically and militarily. Well, I say it here right in the
park, and I do not express the slightest bit of regret, because it is my
function and it is my duty, as the standard bearer for my own party, to
tell the American people the truth as we see it, and then let you make
your honest judgment. [Applause].
Mr. Nixon said this morning Mr. Khrushchev
never fooled him. I did not invite Mr. Khrushchev to travel around the
United States with Mr. Henry Cabot Lodge as a guest of the American people.
[Applause.] I didn't invite him to Camp David. I was glad he came. I approved
of his trip. But who does Mr. Nixon think he fools in the last 3 weeks
of an election, who does he think he fools when he says we will have no
more debates after this week, as he goes around the country casting his
innuendoes, suggesting that we in the Democratic Party are not as devoted
to the cause of freedom, implying that for some reason or other we were
misled by Khrushchev and he understood him all the time? I was not the
Vice President of the United States who presided over the communization
of Cuba. [Applause.]
Franklin Roosevelt, traveling 20 years ago,
said, "Every place I went in Latin America they cheered 'Long live democracy.'"
I suppose Mr. Nixon read that just before his trip. I would have thought
when the first rock hit him that he would have begun to wonder what had
happened. [Applause.]
He talked movingly today, this morning and
this afternoon and every day about the cheers the Polish people gave him.
What has this administration ever done for the Polish people? What has
this administration done in building the strength and prestige of the United
States? He talks about not losing a single inch of free territory. Cuba?
Now Laos. Possibly Guinea. Ghana voting with the Communists, possibly later
in the year another country, Communist influence growing, the candidate
for the Presidency of Brazil travels not to Washington to get our blessing,
but to Havana to see Castro. Does anyone think that Mr. Nixon was right
when 5 years ago our experienced Vice President pointed his finger at some
unknown face and said, "Communism is on the decline in Latin America"?
I don't believe that that is the experience that the American people are
going to want for 4 more years.
I knew a banker once who served 30 years as
president of a bank. He had more experience until his bank went broke than
any other banker in Massachusetts. But if I ever go in the banking business,
I do not plan to hire him, and he knows the operation from top to bottom.
[Laughter.]
I want to make it clear that this is an important
election, and I believe the alternatives are very clear to the people of
this country. It is between a candidate who when hazard and danger and
opportunity and challenge are facing us as the defenders of freedom around
the world, campaigns on the slogan, "We've never had it so good." I don't
run on that slogan. I run on the slogan "We must do better." [Applause.]
This isn't the end of the struggle. We have
not finished with Mr. Castro. This is a struggle for freedom in Latin America
that will go on for the next 10 years. It is a struggle that will go on
for the next decade in Africa. It is a struggle that is now going on tonight
and will go on for the next decade in Asia. The question you have to decide
is whether this administration and Mr. Nixon demonstrated sufficient foresight,
sufficient knowledge of the twisting currents that surround us, that ebb
and flow through every country of the world. Do you feel the balance of
power of the world is shifting with us? Are you satisfied to be second
in outer space? Producing in 1950 twice as many scientists and engineers
as the Soviet Union and today one-half. Our economic growth is one-half
or less that of the Soviet Union every year. The Soviet Union last week
produced more steel than the United States, mostly because 50 percent of
our steel capacity is unused.
Florida depends on the economy of the rest
of the country. You depend on people visiting the State. You depend on
business being good around the country. A rising tide lifts your boats.
But this tide is not rising. Our strength is not growing and up. Our challenges
are growing. This is a great country, and I have the greatest possible
confidence that our generation of Americans can meet any challenge presented
to us. But how can we do so when our leadership decides that rather than
tell the people the truth, they will carry on this campaign of vague innuendo
and suggestion, reassuring our people that everything is all right, the
same thing that Stanley Baldwin and Neville Chamberlain did in the thirties
to England and England's fall was all too close.
We don't run on that basis. But if that is
what the American people want, if they want to close in and let the future
pass them by, take Mr. Nixon. But if you want to move again, if you want
this country to meet its responsibilities, if you have confidence that
there is nothing we cannot do, once given the opportunity to do so, if
you believe that people want to be free as they do, that Khrushchev and
Castro and the rest of them represent a system which is as old as time,
domination of one man by another, which goes against the grain of every
person whether they live in the Soviet Union or whether they live in Cuba
- they want to be free. They may be misled, they may be dominated by a
police state, they may be scared in other countries that the tide is moving
in the direction of the Communists. But ultimately they want to be free.
Our experience has shown it best. Hungary's
experience showed it. Poland's experience showed it. East Germany showed
it. Tibet has shown it. The world will show it. But people will not stay
free, this country will not lead, unless we are prepared to meet our responsibilities,
and on that basis I come here tonight and ask your help. [Applause.]
I ask you to join us in starting again to
move this country forward. In 1936, Franklin D. Roosevelt said, "This generation
of Americans has a rendezvous with destiny." Now, in 1960, an entirely
new generation of Americans is about to assume the leadership of this country,
and you as citizens of this city and State have to make your determination
of what you want your country to be. The candidates are sharply divided.
They present different views of different problems. And it is on your good
judgment, your long view, your concern about your own fate, the lives of
your children, the security of your country, the cause of freedom, it is
on the basis of your good judgment that I rest my case. I want Mr. Khrushchev
and Mr. Castro to know that a new generation of Americans has a rendezvous
with destiny, and men who fought for this country's freedom in Africa and
Italy and the South Pacific are about to strike another blow for freedom
in this great country of ours. Thank you. [Applause.]