I have carried my call to the New Frontier
into seven different States - Maine, New Hampshire, California, Alaska,
Michigan, Idaho, and now Washington. From Aroostook County to Anchorage,
the oldest part of the Nation to the newest, I have met the American people
- I have listened to them and I have found them ready for one basic change:
Action.
They want action at home to keep pace with
needs, to help the unfortunate, to build a still greater nation. And they
want action abroad, to match the rise in Communist power, to meet the turbulent
revolutions reshaping our globe.
I believe the American people elect a President
to act. I believe the crises of the 1960's require him to act. And I believe
the voters all across the country in November 1960 are going to call for
action.
I am in this campaign as your candidate for
President of the United States. That is the greatest office in the world
- the only office that speaks for all the people. The Congress cannot do
the job alone - that ought to be clear to everyone by now. If this Nation
is to reassert the initiative in foreign affairs, it must be presidential
initiative. If we are to rebuild our prestige in the eyes of the world,
it must be presidential prestige. And if we are to regain progressive leadership
on our domestic problems, it must be presidential leadership.
If the President does not move, if his party
is opposed to progress, then the Nation does not move - and there is no
progress. But this country cannot afford to stand still in the 1960's -
for the whole wide world is moving around us.
The next President of the United States will
face problems unlike those any President ever faced before. Here at home
we are only beginning to sense the impact of automation, machines replacing
men, we are only beginning to feel the pressures on our schools and colleges
- on the cost of medical care for the aged - on farms caught in a cost-price
squeeze - in cities caught in a downward spiral of slums, high taxes, and
the flight to outlying areas.
The world is changing, too. The old era has
ended. The old ways will not do. A few years ago, most Americans had never
heard of Nasser, Lumumba, Castro, or even Khrushchev. We did not know of
any serious Communist problems in the Middle East, in Africa or in Latin
America.
But now there are new leaders, new nations,
new weapons of destruction. The balance of power is shifting. The gap between
rich and poor is growing. And the world in which we are only a tiny minority
is restless, watching and on the move.
There is only one area of change which this
State knows better than any other - and that is the change in the military
balance of power. This State knows firsthand about seapower. You know firsthand
the changes in our relative power - and I mean relative to that of the
Soviet Union.
For we are no longer assured of protection
by our oceans, in an age when an ICBM can reach our shores in less than
20 minutes. We are no longer assured of time to mobilize in an age when
one enemy warhead contains more explosive than all the bombs dropped in
World War II put together. And we are no longer assured of being first
in the world in every phase now and in the foreseeable future.
The people of Washington are proud of their
contribution to national defense - and you are aware of its contribution
to your economy. But I cannot believe that there is one person in this
State or Nation who would not like to see the arms race ended - the threat
of war recede - and the billions now spent on weapons of destruction turned
to schools and hospitals and homes and dams. With careful planning for
reconversion, this State would enjoy a greater boom under disarmament than
it ever enjoyed in the cold war.
For peace is our deepest aspiration. And when
peace comes, we will gladly convert, not our swords into plowshares, but
our bombs into reactors and our missiles into space vehicles. "Pursue peace,"
the Bible tells us - and we shall pursue it with every effort and energy
we possess.
But it is an unfortunate fact that we can
prepare for peace only by preparing for war. We can convince Mr. Khrushchev
to bargain seriously for peace only when our strength makes clear to him
that no war will ever be to his advantage - and that the balance of power
is not moving his way. We cannot do that by arguing with him - and we can't
do that by smiling at him. The only way we can get his agreement to disarmament
is by our strength of armaments, enough to stop the next war before it
starts.
That requires only one kind of defense policy
- a policy summed up in one word - first. I do not mean first when. I do
not mean first if. I do not mean first but. I mean first in military power
across the land - and first in diplomacy, prestige, science, education.
The next President of the United States -
whether he is a Democrat or a Republican, and whether he likes it or not
- must be prepared to submit to the new Congress a whole new set of defense
goals. It will require a reevaluation of our commitments around the world
- a reevaluation of our base system - a reevaluation policy.
For we are moving into a new era - and the
old concepts will not do. The old plans of organization will not do. The
old leadership will not do. And I believe that the Democratic Party is
prepared to offer the new leadership and the new ideas our Nation will
need.
I do not say that all these decisions will
be easy. They will not be popular.
They would not all be guaranteed to work.
But I would remind you that 340 years ago
today a little band of men and women set out to find a new life on a new
frontier. They sailed from Plymouth, England, and they called their ship
the Mayflower.
Their course was risky and uncertain - they
knew hardship and sacrifice lay ahead. But they sailed on because they
were moved by man's deepest aspiration - the eternal desire to be free.
Now, 340 years later, the freedom those hardy
Pilgrims won on a small Massachusetts beachhead is in danger again. Once
again we must commit ourselves to great ends. Once again we must take uncertain
risks - sail uncharted sea - explore unconquered territory.
I have called this challenge the New Frontier.
I have made it the theme of my campaign. I do not run for the Presidency
to emphasize what services this country will offer the American people
under a new administration - I run emphasizing the service which the American
people must offer their country. My call is not to those who believe they
belong to the past - my call is to those who believe in the future.
Will you join me in this endeavor: Will you
be pilgrims and pioneers on the New Frontier? I cannot promise you safety
- I cannot even promise success. But I pledge you an administration that
will get this Nation moving again, toward a new and better world where
freedom is secure.