Senator KENNEDY. Mr. Mayor, Otto Kerner, the
next Governor of the State of Illinois, Paul Douglas, present and future
U.S. Senator, the Candidate for Congress, Dorothy O'Brien, the candidate
from the next district; Lieutenant Governor-to-be Shapiro and my sister,
Eunice, Mrs. Sargent Shriver. [Applause.] She comes from Illinois. Ladies
and gentlemen, I come here today as the Democratic standard bearer in a
most important election. I have served in the House and the Senate for
14 years, and after all that time, without downgrading the importance of
the Congress, I recognize that I run for the key office, not only in the
United States, but also in the free world. On the desk of the next President
of the United States in 1961 will come questions involving our defenses
in the Far East, our relations with Latin America, our relations with Africa,
the whole question of what NATO is going to become, what it can be, a crisis
over Berlin, the position of the United States in outer space, the whole
question of our economic growth - all these are questions which disturb
the life not only of the President of the United States, but of all of
you. I come as the Democratic standard bearer with full recognition - maybe
you can just sit down. [Applause.] Let me put in not more than 4 minutes
what I consider to be the basic issues which separate Mr. Nixon and myself,
and the Republican Party and the Democratic Party in 1960. [Response from
the audience.]
First it is a question which involves the
future of every citizen of the city of Aurora. This community depends upon
industry. The whole question - it is hard to talk, girls, I know - I only
have 3 more minutes. One of the questions which Mr. Nixon and I have been
discussing in this campaign is the whole question of economic growth. That
is not an argument which is of interest only to economists. It concerns
the job of every man and woman here. We have to find 25,000 new jobs a
week every week for the next ten years to provide full employment in the
United States, 25,000 new jobs a week every week for the next 10 years,
and we are going to have to do that at a time when machines are taking
the place of men. When a machine takes the job of 5 men or 10 men, where
are those men going to get jobs. Ten out of the twelve International Harvester
plants in the State of Illinois have shut down for a month or 2 months
this fall in Illinois. Anyone who does not realize that this is one of
the great problems which is going to face us as citizens, anyone who does
not realize that today we are only using 50 percent of the capacity of
our steel mills, today in the last 5 or 10 years the farmers of Illinois
and the farmers of the United States, their income has dropped 30 percent
- this problem goes not only to the question of employment, but it goes
to the question of our strength in the competition with the Soviet Union.
We have increased our economic growth on the average of about 2.5 percent
in the last 8 years. Western Germany has increased theirs 5 percent, the
Soviet Union 7.5 to 8 percent. Unless we grow more, unless we employ fiscal
and monetary policies that stimulate employment, we are going to have a
recession in the winter of 1961 and it is going to be difficult to find
those 25,000 new jobs a week.
This is only one of the issues which separate
our two parties, agriculture, full employment, education, development of
our resources, care for the aged, a higher minimum wage, an economy that
is moving, a country that is moving, a country which stands for vitality
and energy and strength. Those are the issues which separate the two parties.
[Applause.]
I have here a clipping from this morning's
paper. It represents the results of a survey which was conducted all around
the world to ask the people of the world whether they thought the Soviet
Union or the United States was the stronger military power. And do you
know what the survey found? Do you know what the State Department found?
That a majority of the people in all 10 countries thought the Soviet Union
was No. 1. How do you like that as Americans, to know that the people of
the world [response from the audience] which used to regard the United
States as the strongest power, as the great hope for freedom, now regard
the Soviet Union as No.1. That is the question which disturbs me as an
American, and you have to decide as citizens of this country 2 weeks from
today. You have to make your decision of what you want this country to
be, what you want Illinois to be, how ready you are to move this country
forward. That is the question which separates Mr. Nixon and myself. [Applause.]
It is a contest between a candidate, Mr. Nixon,
who argues that our prestige has never been higher, in spite of the record,
who says that everything is being done in its good time, who says our influence
has never been greater, and between a candidate, myself, who says that
we are going to have to do much better. You have to decide which you believe,
what you want. It is a contest between the comfortable and the concerned,
between those who believe we can do better and those who say we have never
had it so good. And all of you as citizens of this country, as defenders
of freedom, 2 weeks from today must make your judgment of what you believe,
what you hope for our country; your willingness to see us stand still and
grow fat or your willingness to pick yourselves up and the country and
move ourselves forward and reestablish our leadership. [Applause.]
That is the question. No one can make that
judgment except you. No one can make it except you. Two weeks from today
you are going to make it. One hundred years ago in the campaign of 1860,
Abraham Lincoln wrote a friend - fortunately, as the Bible tells us, it
rains on the just and the unjust. There are some Republicans here and it
is raining on them, too. [Laughter.]
One hundred years ago, Abraham Lincoln wrote
to a friend:
I know there is a God and I know He hates injustice. I see the storm coming and I see His hand in it. But if He has a place and a part for me, I believe I am ready.Now, 100 years later, in the great times of 1960, we know there is a God, and we know He hates injustice, and we see the storm coming. But if He has a place and a part for us, I believe that we are ready. Thank you. [Applause.]