The following 23 Senators, who with Senator Kennedy and a few others (including 5 Republicans) supported each of the key civil rights measures this session, joined Senator Kennedy in the attached joint statement.
E. L. Bartlett, Alaska
John A. Carroll, Colorado
Joseph S. Clark, Pennsylvania
Clair Engle, California
Ernest Gruening, Alaska
Philip A. Hart, Michigan
Vance Hartke, Indiana
Thomas C. Hennings, Jr., Missouri
Hubert H. Humphrey, Minnesota
Henry M. Jackson, Washington
John F. Kennedy, Massachusetts
Warren G. Magnuson, Washington
Eugene J. McCarthy, Minnesota
Pat McNamara, Michigan
Wayne Morse, Oregon
Frank E. Moss, Utah
James E. Murray, Montana
Edmund S. Muskie, Maine
John O. Pastore, Rhode Island
William Proxmire, Wisconsin
Jennings W. Randolph, West Virginia
Stuart Symington, Missouri
Harrison A. Williams, Jr., New Jersey
Stephen M. Young, Ohio
[From the Office of Senator John F. Kennedy, Room 362, Senate Office Bldg., Sept. 1, l960]
The time has come to set the record straight on civil
rights legislation in this windup session of Congress. All the Senators
joining me in this statement, as well as many others sharing these views,
support effective civil rights legislation.
We have not tried to match the 11th hour Republican
tactic of substituting staged political maneuvering for effective legislation.
Rather than yield to their efforts to play politics with a great moral
question, we will take this issue to the American people.
The Republican leadership of the Senate knows full
well that under the parliamentary situation of these final crowded weeks
- and in the political atmosphere of rancor that developed - no significant
civil rights measure could have passed. This same political atmosphere
has also prevented action on a farm bill and on adequate minimum wage,
housing, health care for the aged, and education bills.
But progressive legislation has not been the aim
of the Republican leadership. Their aim has been:
(1) To block the minimum wage bill (which in its first year of operation would have raised the wages of an estimated 1 million Negro workers), the aged health care, housing, and education bills (which also would have meant major advances in the rights of our lower income and minority group members). A majority of Republicans voted against the minimum wage bill, all but one voted against social security health care for the aged and not one Republican on the House Rules Committee was ready to let adequate education and housing bills come up for final action.If the majority of Republicans were sincere about the two token proposals they now press, they would not have supplied the votes that defeated them this spring, when, led by the minority leader, they proposed by a 2-1 margin the very bills he now advances.
(2) To embarrass the Democratic Party, which can point with pride not only to a more meaningful platform but to the only record of legislative achievement in this field in over three-quarters of a century.
(3) To conceal their own empty, negative record.
SEPARATE STATEMENT BY SENATOR KENNEDY
In order to implement this pledge and assure prompt
action I have asked Senator Clark and Congressman Celler to constitute
a committee to prepare a comprehensive civil rights bill, embodying our
platform commitments, for introduction at the beginning of the next session.
We will seek the enactment of this bill early in that Congress.
Further, I give my assurance that in whatever position
I hold in public office I will support and take every step necessary to
protect the full constitutional right of every American.