SPEECH BY SENATOR JOHN F. KENNEDY,
CIVIC AUDITORIUM, OAKLAND, CALIF.,
SEPTEMBER 8, 1960
Senator KENNEDY. Governor Brown, Congressman
Miller, Mrs. Engle, Attorney General Mosk, Congressman Shelley, Congressman
Cohelan, Mrs. Price, distinguished guests, my sister, Pat, ladies and gentlemen.
[Laughter.] It just shows what 14 years in the Congress can do to a man
who is full of zip.
I appreciate that introduction very much,
George. I am delighted to be here tonight, and I am particularly glad to
be here in the company of three distinguished Members of Congress who have
spoken powerfully for the interests of the people of northern California
and have also spoken for the people of the United States, Congressman Miller,
Congressman Cohelan, and Congressman Shelley. [Applause.]
Senator Jackson, Governor Brown, and I have
been working on the railroad all day today. [Laughter.] We came all the
way from Oregon to Oakland. But the truth of the matter is that our train
is headed for Washington, D.C. [Applause.] The fact of the matter
is that the election of 1960 is 2 months from tonight, and I think that
2 months from tonight the Democratic Party is going to regain the Chief
Executive Office. [Applause.]
Pat Brown, since he has been Governor, has
written, with the help of a Democratic senate and a Democratic legislature,
a whole program of human rights. I think if we can get the Democrats in
control of the Congress and of the Executive, in the next 4 years we can
write into the program of this country a program of human rights. I ask
your help. [Applause.]
This is not merely a contest between the Vice
President of the United States and myself. This is a contest between two
political parties and in spite of the fact that every 4 years the Republican
Party has what Adlai Stevenson called the liberal hour, the record of the
Republican Party is written in the last 4 years in the bills that did not
become law, in the opposition they have had toward every piece of creative
legislation since Woodrow Wilson's new freedom to the present effort that
we made in the month of August in the Congress. They have opposed, they
have stood against progress. I think their time is coming to an end. [Applause.]
For the fact of the matter is that the Republican Party that we oppose
is the same old party. There is no new Republican Party. There is the same
old party, stretching back into history from the days of McKinley, through
Coolidge and Harding and all the rest, and I think that in this great year
of 1960, the American people are going to choose progress. [Applause.]
In 1936, speaking before 100,000 people in
Franklin Field, Franklin Roosevelt accepted the second presidential nomination,
and in that speech he said:
Governments can err, Presidents do make mistakes, but
the immortal Dante tells us that Divine Justice weighs the sins of the
coldblooded and the sins of the warmhearted in a different scale. Better
the occasional faults of a government living in the spirit of charity than
the consistent omissions of a government frozen in the ice of its own indifference.
[Applause.]
The fact of the matter is that where Franklin
Roosevelt set before our country its unfinished business, the agenda of
the American society, this party has only set ceilings and limitations.
The difference between the Democratic Party and the Republican Party is
we have faith in this country. We don't think what is happening now is
good enough. We think we have a great country, but we think it can be greater
and we are going to make it greater. [Applause.] Away back in 1933, the
new President's friend, Robert Sherwood, contrasted the spirit of the New
Deal with the moribund atmosphere of the outgoing Republican Party in a
brief poem.
"Plodding feet, tramp, tramp,
The Grand Old Party breaking camp,
Blare of bugles, din, din,
The New Deal is moving in."
Today, on every major crisis that faces this country,
from the plight of our citizens here in the United States to the problems
that we face abroad, we hear no blare of bugles, din, din. We see only
plodding feet, tramp, tramp, and the Grand Old Party breaking camp. [Applause.]
I don't say that this administration has remained
silent on all these issues. In fact, on occasions they remind me of the
exhortation from King Lear that goes:
I will do such things. What they are, yet I know not.
But they shall be the terrors of the earth.
[Applause.]
As there are 15 million Americans in the richest
country on earth who live in substandard housing, as long as there are
5 million homes in the cities of the United States that lack plumbing of
any kind, as long as there are nearly 15 million Americans who are not
covered by the minimum wage of even a dollar, as long as the average wage
for laundry women in five large cities of this country is 65 cents an hour
for a 48-hour week, as long as there are over 100,000 people in the State
of West Virginia alone who wait every month for a food package from the
U.S. Government, which includes some grain, some rice, and this summer
they are going to add lard - and when the President of the United States
was asked about it at his news conference in May, he said, "We distributed
$5 million in West Virginia last year." Five million dollars of surplus
food to keep more than 100,000 people going for an entire year. I think
it is time for a change. [Applause.]
As long as there are 9 million Americans over
the age of 65 who receive incomes of less than $20 a week, 3 million more
receiving incomes of less than $40 a week, amounts on which they cannot
possibly afford to pay for their medical bills, and yet in the August session
of the Congress, in our attempt to tie medical care for the aged to social
security, we received the support of only one member of the minority party,
Senator Case of New Jersey - that is the record of that party and we are
going to defeat them in November. [Applause.]
This country needs the Democratic Party, for
so long as there is one child without a decent education, so long as there
is one family without a decent home, so long as there is one able-bodied
citizen who wants to work and can't find it, so long as there is one retired
American who lives out his life without dignity or hope, so long will we
need the Democratic Party. [Applause.]
Let me make it very clear that if we are successful
in January, we are going to recommend the following programs:
First, we are going to make sure that those
Americans who are retired, who are on social security, who do need medical
care, shall have it under the social security system. [Applause.]
Second, I think this country needs the Democratic
Party because the Democratic Party intends to use the full legal and moral
authority of the Federal Government, including, in particular, the Presidency,
itself, to put an end to racial and religions discrimination in this country
of ours. [Applause.] For we believe in the right of every American to stand
up for his rights, even if to do so he has to sit down for them. [Applause.]
Third, America needs the Democratic Party
because the Democratic Party believes in an obligation of the Federal Government
as well as the States to make sure that we have the best educational system
in the country, well paid and well trained teachers, teaching children
in decent classrooms. That is an object of our political party. [Applause.]
And under a Democratic Party, lastly, we are going to enact into law a
bill for housing which was vetoed a year ago by the President of the United
States and which was buried in the Rules Committee of the House of Representatives
this year without a single Republican voting to send it to the floor of
the House. [Applause.]
Franklin Roosevelt once reminded us that we
cannot be content if some fraction of our people, whether it be one-third,
or one-fifth, or one-tenth, is ill fed, ill clothed, ill housed and insecure,
and despite today's vital needs the Republican Party in this century, in
fact since the end of Teddy Roosevelt's administration, has been a contented
party, a satisfied party, a believer in maintaining things as they are.
We think we can do better. We think we can
strengthen this country. We think we can increase its security. We think
we can make it once again an object of hope around the world. [Applause.]
Only a party which recognizes its obligations
to its own citizens, only a country which feels that it must move ahead,
only that kind of a country can present a vivid image to the world at large.
The reason that Woodrow Wilson, Franklin Roosevelt,
and Harry Truman were so successful in their day, the reason that Adlai
Stevenson has had a strong image in spite of his defeats [applause], the
reason that these men have been great symbols of the American Revolution
in their time around the world was because they acted here at home. Woodrow
Wilson's New Freedom, Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal, Harry Truman's Fair
Deal, Adlai Stevenson's New America - and we are going to put those programs
together in the New Frontier of the 1960's. [Applause.] I believe this
country can meet our challenges.
I am in this campaign in 1960 remembering
the words of a great American a hundred years ago in the election of 1860.
In that election, Abraham Lincoln wrote to a friend, "I know that there
is a God, and that He hates injustice. I see the storm coming and I know
His hand is in it. If He has a place and a part for me, I believe that
I am ready."
Today, in 1960, as we see the storm breaking
around our shores, we know there is a God and that He hates injustice,
and we believe that He has a place and a part for us. I believe that we
are ready. Thank you. [Applause.]