Senator KENNEDY. Governor Williams, Lieutenant
Governor Swainson, and the next Governor, Senator McNamara, and the next
Senator, Senator Hart, Don Jennings, who is going to be a great Congressman
from this district, ladies and gentlemen, I want to express my appreciation
to the Governor. Every time he introduces me as the potentially greatest
President in the history of the United States, I always think perhaps he
in overstating it in one or two degrees. George Washington wasn't a bad
President, and I do want to say a word for Thomas Jefferson. But otherwise
I will accept the compliment. [Laughter and applause.] In any
case, I am grateful for his support now - Hoover was a great President,
too [laughter] and Dewey was a great candidate [laughter].
I want to express my appreciation to the Governor
for his present support and his support before the Convention. I spent
the day in the State of Michigan, following Walter Reuther around, and
I want to say that what I think has been particularly impressive has been
the quality of the party leadership here in the State of Michigan, and
the wholehearted support and confidence and support that the people of
this State have given the Democratic leadership. I appreciate what the
Governor said about the St. Lawrence Seaway. I know that in the State of
Massachusetts at that time it is not very popular, but it is a source of
satisfaction to me that when I ran for office for reelection to the Senate
2 years ago, I secured in the State of Massachusetts the highest vote that
was ever given, and I say that because the people of Massachusetts recognized
in the long run that a rising tide lifts all the boats, and what is good
for one part of the United States is good for all parts of the United States.
[Applause.]
I do not consider a politician's chief duty
to consider how he can gain popularity at the moment. His chief duty, his
chief obligation, in fact, his only reason for service, is to tell the
truth to the American people, not to serve to please them, but to serve
them. That is the responsibility in the difficult years of the 1960's.
[Applause.]
My criticism of this administration basically,
my criticism of the Republican Party is that in the most dangerous years
that this country has ever faced, they still use a slogan, "You've never
had it so good." I don't go around the country criticizing present leadership
because I enjoy it. I admire the President of the United States as a man,
but I do not believe that we can continue the same kind of leadership in
the future. [Applause.] A Gallup poll taken in 10 countries a few
months ago asked the people of those countries who they thought would be
first in 1970, militarily and scientifically, the Russians or the United
States. Now, if you had asked them 10 years ago everyone of them would
have said the United States. But in 1970, a majority of the people of those
countries thought that the Russians would be first, both militarily and
scientifically. That is what hurts the United States. If they think we
are on the decline and the Russians are on the rise, if they think that
our brightest day is somewhere in the past and now the future belongs to
the Soviets, then all those people who want to go with the winner turn
against us and move in the direction of Moscow and Peking. I want it said
in 1970 that we are first, scientifically and militarily, educationally,
economically. We should be first because we represent the greatest system
of government ever devised. But this system, if it is going to work, requires
that all of us dedicate ourselves again. I don't run for office telling
you what I am going to do for you. I run for office asking you to join
with me in rebuilding the prestige of the United States, in demonstrating
that we are the greatest country on earth. This country is ready to move.
[Applause.] This country is ready to move and we are ready to move with
it. Thank you. [Applause.]