Mr. Rosenbloom and Mrs. Freeman, Mr. Bailey and Mr.
McCloskey, Mr. Speaker:
I first of all want to express,
I know, on behalf of all of us, our great appreciation to Miss Clooney,
Miss Remick and Danny Thomas for coming from a far distance to help us
tonight. I wish we could all just applaud them.
I want to also express my appreciation
to President Truman. I must say it is nice to have a former President who
speaks well of you, and we are glad to have him here tonight. His only
request has been, since I have been President, to get his piano up from
the cellar, and we have done that - and we are going to run on it.
And I also want to express my
appreciation, and the appreciation of us all, to the Vice President for
his tribute to Speaker Rayburn. I must say that the merger of Boston and
Austin, as he said today, was really the last merger that the Attorney
General has allowed, but it has been one of the most successful. And as
a loyal and faithful friend, I think we have worked together better than
any President and Vice Presidential team in history, at least since Roosevelt
and Truman.
I spoke a year ago today, to
take the Inaugural, and I would like to paraphrase a couple of statements
I made that day by saying that we observe tonight not a celebration of
freedom but a victory of party, for we have sworn to pay off the same party
debt our forebears ran up nearly a year and three months ago.
Our deficit will not be paid
off in the next hundred days, nor will, it be paid off in the first one
thousand days, nor in the life of this administration. Nor, perhaps even
in our lifetime on this planet, but let us begin - remembering that generosity
is not a sign of weakness and that Ambassadors are always subject to Senate
confirmation, for if the Democratic Party cannot be helped by the many
who are poor, it cannot be saved by the few who are rich. So let us begin.
I want to express our thanks
to all of you for helping. What we are attempting to do tonight is to lay
the groundwork for the Congressional campaigns of 1962, and we realize,
I think, all the Members of the House and Senate, that history is not with
us, that in this century only in 1934, during the periods of the great
pre-eminence of the Democratic Party did the party in power ever win seats,
let alone hold its own. But we believe in 1962 that the Democratic Party,
both at home and abroad, is best fitted to lead this country - and therefore
we start tonight on the campaigns of 1962.
This is - though we like to
think of ourselves as a young country - this is the oldest republic in
the world. When the United States was founded there was a King in France,
and a Czar in Russia, and an Emperor in Peking. They have all been wiped
away, but the United States has still survived. We are also members of
the oldest political party on earth, and it is a source of satisfaction
to me that when we attempt, in this administration, to rebuild our ties
with Latin America, to strengthen our Alliance for Progress, we trod in
the same steps that Franklin Roosevelt trod in, nearly 25 or 30 years ago.
And when we attempt this year
to build more closely the Atlantic Community, we trod in the same steps
that President Truman trod in, nearly 14 years ago, when he developed the
Marshall plan and NATO.
And when we stand with the United
Nations against the desires of those who make themselves our adversaries,
and even our friends, we stand where Woodrow Wilson stood nearly 50 years
ago.
And when we make a great national
effort, to make sure that free men are not second in space, we move in
the same direction that Thomas Jefferson moved in when he sent Lewis and
Clark to the far reaches of this country during his term of office.
I am proud to be a Democrat,
and in my opinion, in November of 1962, any Member of the House, the Senate,
the State legislature and the Governor can stand with pride on the record
of the Democratic Party.
To govern is to choose, and
the people of the United States, I believe in this vital year, when we
are faced with the greatest hazards that we have faced in our long history,
should be faced with a choice. I do not believe there is room in the United
States for two parties who believe in lying at anchor.
The role of the Democratic Party,
the reason it has outlived the Federal Party, the Whig Party, and now holds
responsibility in the executive branch and the House and the Senate, after
this long history, has been because it has believed in moving out, in moving
ahead, in starting on new areas, and bringing new programs here and abroad.
That is the function of our
party. We have no other function. And I believe in 1962 the Democratic
Party should run as it has run in the past, as a progressive party, ready
to defend its record, ready to recognize in a changing and vital world
that our party must move with it.
So we come tonight in the beginning
of a long campaign, and we ask your help, because what we start tonight,
we believe can be finished in November, and I believe that the interests
of this country will be served by our party as it has on so many vital
occasions in the past - and the fire from our effort can light the world.
Thank you.