Senator KENNEDY. Mr. Mayor, Congressman Machrowicz,
the next Governor of the State of Michigan, John Swainson, ladies and gentlemen,
I am honored to be in the strongest Democratic city in the United States.
[Applause.] A city which in good time and bad, in fair wind and storm,
in rain or in shine, turns out and votes Democratic and supports the progressive
movement in this country. [Applause.] I come here tonight as the standardbearer
for the oldest political party on earth, but I come as the standardbearer
for the youngest party on earth, and that is the Democratic Party. [Applause.]
And I stand here with your mayor, with my distinguished friend and colleague
of 14 years in the Congress of the United States, your Congressman who
speaks for this district, and who also speaks for the United States, Ted
Machrowicz [applause], with Pat McNamara, who sits next to me in the U.S.
Senate and speaks for Michigan and speaks for the country, and speaks for
progress, and who I am confident you will reelect to the U.S. Senate on
November 8. [Applause.] And with John Swainson, who carries on a great
tradition of your distinguished Governor, Mennen Williams, and will lead
Michigan through the 1960's, when progress will be needed. I come here
tonight and ask your support in this campaign. You cannot be alive today,
you cannot be a citizen of this State, you cannot be a citizen of the United
States, without knowing that what we are now doing is not good enough.
Mr. Nixon may run around the country saying "You never had it so good"
[response from the audience], but I want him to make that speech in Michigan
tomorrow. [Response from the audience.]
On November 15 of this year there will be
more automobiles in inventory than ever before in our history. This year
in September we built 29 percent less homes than last year. Can you believe
that an administration which has permitted economic strength of the United
States to decline, which has permitted our prestige and image around the
world to begin to fade - do you think that candidate or that party which
has stood still for 25 years can lead the United States in the 1960's?
[Response from the audience.] I do not.
I stand here tonight not saying that there
are new and easy solutions to the problems which disturb our tranquillity,
but I can tell you that I am a member of a party which has believed in
progress, and I run against a party which has opposed every single piece
of progressive legislation which this country has tried to pass in the
last 25 years, minimum wage, social security, housing, housing for the
aged, and all the rest. The Republican Party has said no, and we have said
yes, and we are going to say yes on November 8. [Applause.]
This is an important election because the
presidency of the United States is an important office, and what is at
stake is not merely the position of our own country, our own strength,
our own vitality, our own energy. What is at stake is the entire cause
of freedom itself. In the words of the Polish national anthem, as long
as you live, as long as the United States lives, so the hope of freedom
all around the globe continues to exist. When we stand still, when we begin
to fade - they want you to sit down here [applause], you see, the people
run this party. [Laughter.] You tell us what you want and we will
do it. [Applause.]
Well, now, we will just finish up what I was
going to say, and that is this, and we will speak to everybody around here.
The function of the President of the United States, the President of the
United States, is to build a strong society here, to maintain full employment,
to educate our children, to provide security for our aged citizens, to
provide justice for our people, to build an image of a society on the move,
so that people around the world who wonder what the future holds for them,
who wonder which road they should take, they decide, "We want to go with
the United States; they represent the future."
As long as the United States lives, so freedom
lives. As long as we build our strength, as long as we are on the move,
as long as we are a progressive society, then the future belongs to us
and not to Mr. Khrushchev. [Applause.]
My disagreement with this administration has
been that they have permitted the United States to fade as an image of
strength around the world. Every recent poll taken abroad shows that more
and more people begin to think that the future belongs to the Communists
and not to freedom. I don't. I think the future belongs to freedom I think
the future belongs to those who want to be free, and that includes the
great majority of the population of the world. But we have to give them
leadership. We have to show that freedom can be strong. We have to show
the people of Eastern Europe that the struggle is not over, that our brightest
days are ahead, that we do not recognize the present situation, and that
all people someday will be free. That is the basic objective of the American
society. [Applause.]
During the American Revolution, Thomas Paine
wrote, "The cause of America is the cause of all mankind." Now I think
in the revolution of 1960, the cause of all mankind is the cause of America.
We serve not only ourselves; we serve others, those who wish to follow
our example. And in order to serve them, in order to be faithful to our
trust, in order to hold out the lamp of hope to all those now subjugated
who hope someday to be free, we have to build a strong society here. We
have to demonstrate that in any contest with the Communist system, that
we are going to win. I am not satisfied as an American to be first, if,
first, but, first when, first, sometimes, first perhaps. I want to see
the United States first, period. And that is our objective. [Applause.]
Mr. Nixon presides over the past; we look
to the future. He wants to lead a country standing still. We wish to lead
a country moving ahead. All those who share the view with me of a great
and progressive country in a world that is free, I hope that you will support
us on November 8 and give us an opportunity to get this country moving
again. [Applause.]
One hundred years ago in the campaign of 1860,
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 know His hand is in it. But if He has a place and a part for me, I believe that I am ready.Now, 100 years later, we know there is a God, and we know He hates injustice. We see the storm coming, and we know His hand is in it. But if He has a place and a part for us, I believe that we are ready. Thank you. [Applause.]