Senator KENNEDY. Mr. Brown Representative Whelan,
Gordon Mrs. Neuberger, Mrs. Price, Mr. Sweetland, "Scoop" Jackson, ladies
and gentlemen, I want to express my appreciation to George Brown and to
the members of this organization for your kindness in having this dinner
tonight. I think this is an important election, and I think the State of
Oregon is heavily involved. You have a chance which is not given, I think,
to many States, to continue in office a distinguished name, borne by two
distinguished people. I refer, of course, to your next U.S. Senator, Senator
Neuberger. [Applause.] And I am confident that the people of
this congressional district will send back to the House of Representatives
with an overwhelming majority Mrs. Green, whose perhaps least distinction
has been that she has been the chairman of my campaign, but whose greatest
distinction has been won in the Halls of Congress on behalf of the interests
of this country. [Applause.]
I am delighted that we have here tonight our
friends from Brazil. They inhabit a beautiful country which I visited,
and I am delighted that they are coming here tonight, and traveling through
the United States to see the American labor movement at work. I have served
on the Labor Committees of the Congress now for 14 years, and I serve now
as chairman of the Subcommittee on Labor of the Senate. During that time,
I think it can be said that the labor movement has concerned itself not
only with the interest of its members, but also with the general public
interest. Labor has identified itself with the fight for aid for education,
with the fight for medical care for the aged under social security, with
the fight for housing, the fight for a better system of social justice
in this country, and for a stronger foreign policy abroad. They have been
concerned with what concerns our country. Therefore I am delighted that
I have received the endorsement of the AFL-CIO in this election.
[Applause.]
This is an important election because it comes
at a most important time in the life of our country. I think the August
session of the Congress offered in my opinion a very clear example of how
unfortunate it would be to have 4 more years of a divided government with
neither party bearing responsibility and both parties sharing power. After
passing in the U.S. Senate a bill providing for $l.25 minimum wage, we
failed in the conference to secure the passage of that bill. After passing
in the Senate of the United States a bill for aid for education, and a
bill for aid for housing, we failed to get both of those bills to the floor
of the House of Representatives for a vote, and every Republican member
of the Rules Committee of the House voted against them going to the floor
of the House of Representatives. We failed to secure passage of a bill
connected with the Forand bill, tying medical care for the aged to social
security. Instead of the bill that was finally passed we received the support
of one Republican Senator, Senator Case of New Jersey, and we were threatened
by a Presidential veto.
There is not any doubt in my mind that our
system of checks and balances, which I strongly support, cannot work effectively
unless the House, the Senate, and the Presidency are working together for
the general interest. I think that we can elect a Democratic President,
a Democratic House and a Democratic Senate, and I think when that is done
this country can begin to move again, and we will serve not only the interest
of your members, but also the interest of the public at large.
I came here tonight because I want your support
in this campaign. I want the support of the American labor movement and
the members of their families, and I want to make it very clear that I
want the support of all of organized labor. I have had my disagreements
with Mr. Hoffa and they continue, and I have had my disagreements with
Mr. Bridges and they continue. But I want the support, if I can get it,
of the members of the Teamsters Union and the Longshoremen's Union, because
I believe that the things we can work for in the Congress are in the interest
of the members of those unions, even though I may not agree with those
that head it up. My quarrel with them may continue. But I want to make
it very clear that I welcome the support of the members of those two unions.
Now let me say in conclusion that this is
going to be a very difficult and intense election. I think there are real
issues at stake here which affect the welfare of the people of this State
as well as the welfare of the people of this country. You who work in organized
labor are basically concerned with one great question, and that is the
maintenance of full employment in the United States. If your people can
find work at decent wages, then your interests are protected, and that,
in my opinion, must be a basic policy for the Government and for the free
enterprise system here in this country, to make sure that everyone who
wants to find a job can find one. Whether they work in organized labor
or whether they are teachers or doctors or nurses, whatever they may be,
the chance to work at decent wages must be a basic, fundamental premise
upon which our society must be based. I think this country is going to
have to move ahead. Last year we had the lowest rates of economic growth
of any major industrialized society in the world. One million five hundred
thousand people will come into the labor movement every year in the 1960's
and are going to have to find a job, and they come into the labor market
at the very same time when automation is revolutionizing employment. You
have seen it in your own city of Portland here. Therefore to find work
for these people, to make sure that machines make life easier, instead
of displacing men and women, I think it is going to be a basic domestic
problem for the next administration, regardless of whether it is Republican
or Democrat. This is a serious problem that faces us all. It affects you
directly. You live with it. But only by developing economic policies which
encourage the growth of the United States can we hope to maintain full
employment in the United States. We had a recession in 1954, we had a recession
in 1948, we have a plateau today, which may lead to some difficulties in
1961, unless we can get the economy of the United States moving at the
kind of growth which we see not just in the Soviet Union, but which we
see in Germany and France and England. All of those countries pretty nearly
doubled the economic growth of the United States last year. So these are
all matters which I think are extremely complicated.
In many ways they move beyond the problems
which the New Deal and the Fair Deal faced in their days. They are new
problems that require new solutions, and I think that the labor movement
has a great role to play. So I come here tonight and ask your help. I am
most grateful to Senator Morse for his wire. He and I worked closely together
in the Congress in this last session to secure the passage of a bill providing
$1.25 minimum wage. We failed, but I think that we have a chance in this
campaign to discuss these issues, to discuss our failures and the reasons
for them, and go to the people and ask them to make a decision, ask them
to give us a mandate to move this country ahead on all of the great fronts
which are traditional, I think, in the Democratic Party.
I run for office with the recognition that
in this century the great Presidents in many cases have been Democratic
Presidents, Wilson, Roosevelt, and Truman, and I think they have demonstrated
what can be done, and I think we can do it in the 1960's. Thank you. [Applause.]