Mr. Vice President, Mr. Secretary, Mr. Meany, friends:
I want to express my warm welcome
to you to this historic room, and to express my great appreciation to you
for your effort in joining together to commit ourselves once again to the
goal of equal opportunities for all.
This is a cause which you understand
very well. The labor movement, after all, was originated by those who were
being denied their equal opportunity. Whether it was because they were
working 12 hours a day, 6 or 7 days a week, whether it was because they
were immigrants, whether it was because of one reason or another, the labor
movement began as a union of those who were the least privileged in our
society.
So it seems to me very natural
that those who took into their ranks and, indeed, built their ranks upon
the immigrants, upon women who were exploited, upon men who worked too
long, upon young people who were put to work under adverse conditions,
old people who were dismissed when they were too old to sustain the burdens
of long employment, that the labor movement would be, as it has been for
the last 30 years, the natural center and core of the effort to provide
better opportunity for all of our fellow citizens. Whatever their racial
descent, whatever their religion, whatever their color, whatever region
of the country they come from, this is a cause to which labor has been
associated for 50 years.
So we asked you here together
today not to invite you to participate in something new, but to join together
with you in attempting to make more realistic, more active, the promises
of the National Government, the promises of the labor movement, the promises
of the American Constitution, the promises of the whole concept of our
country. So I don't think that I need speak to you on this matter at all.
I want to commend the Vice President
for his long efforts with all of the people of our country in making this
cause more successful, and the labor movement, itself, the Secretary of
Labor. This is something you know all about. This is something you're doing.
This is something we can all do better on. This is something I know you
will do everything you can to improve.
The work of the labor movement
isn't done. When the work of the labor movement is done, then all of you
might just as well go home and stay in bed. The work of the labor movement
goes on. It's wholly unfinished.
There are too many areas of
our country where there isn't equal opportunity, where people aren't adequately
paid, where they work too long, where their rights are not guaranteed.
And as long as that's true, there's a need for the American labor movement.
So that I ask you today to join
in an old cause and a new one, and that is to make sure that in the ranks
of labor, labor itself practices what it preaches. This is true of labor;
it must be true of all of us. It must be true of the National Government.
We must make sure that in our employment practices in the National Government,
in all grades, that we practice what we preach, that we make it possible
not only to permit equal opportunity, but also to encourage it, to not
merely treat all those who apply to use equally, but to make sure that
we invite and encourage and stimulate equal opportunities. That requires
some work.
So I welcome you all here today.
I'm glad to know that the labor movement is true to its great ideals. To
tell what you are doing is very important to our country, and it's important
to the labor movement.
This is a good cause which merits
your support. And I know from long experience that you'll be in the front
ranks, not only in committing yourselves to it, but, what's more important,
implementing your commitments.
We're glad to have you today.
Thank you.