Senator KENNEDY. Governor Brown, ladies and
gentlemen. I want to express my appreciation to all of you having come
down and meeting us at the station, and I am also delighted to he in the
hometown of my friend and colleague with whom I served in the U.S. Congress
for 14 years - Clair Engle. [Applause.] His successor, Bizz Johnson, has
been campaigning with us, and I am delighted to be accompanied across the
face of California by your distinguished Governor, Pat Brown. [Applause.]
I campaign for the office of the Presidency
in a very difficult and dangerous time in the life of our country, and
I do not do that if I am elected all of the problems of California and
the United States and the free world will be solved. But I do believe that
it is vitally important if the security of the United States is going to
be protected, if our position as a leader of the free world is going to
be maintained, that we recognize the close relationships between the vitality
of our own domestic economy and our position around the world. If we stand
still here at home, we stand still around the world. The reason that Woodrow
Wilson and Franklin Roosevelt and Harry Truman were so successful in their
foreign policy was because they were so successful in their domestic policy.
When Franklin Roosevelt harnessed the TVA and the Central Valley, and Bonneville,
he demonstrated to a watching world that this country was moving, and,
therefore, they were prepared to follow his leadership in their great efforts
to obtain their freedom and independence. This valley is a great natural
resource, not of the State of California only, but of the United States.
This belongs not to one State but to all the people, and, therefore, I
think it appropriate that the United States participate in the development
of the resources of the Western United States and the resources of the
State of California. [Applause.]
I would like to make it clear that when the
people put their shoulders to the development of great dams, then I think
that power should be distributed in a way that benefits the people. I don't
think the people should pay for irrigation and have the power distributed
by a private company. I think the people should benefit. [Applause.]
I come from a section of the United States
that has problems entirely different from California. We have too much
water. You have too little. But it is a fact that in this century the two
Americans who recognized the importance of the development of natural resources
to the United States were both from Eastern United States. One was a Republican,
Theodore Roosevelt, and the other was a Democrat, Franklin Roosevelt. I
can assure you that if we are successful in this campaign, we are going
to move ahead on all fronts, on the development of our national economy,
on the development of our natural resources, rebuilding our country, so
that by the year 2000, when two people live in this country for every one
that lives today, this will then be a strong and rich country whose security
is assured. I run for the office of the Presidency in the most difficult
time in the life of our country, in many ways the most difficult in a hundred
years. In the election of 1860, as Abraham Lincoln said, the issue was
whether this country could exist half slave and half free. I think the
issue in 1960 is whether this world can exist half slave and half free.
If it is going to move in the direction of freedom, if it is going to
move in the direction of the things which we value, then the United States
has to lead. I don't promise you an easy future, but I can promise you
that if we are successful, this country will begin to move again.
This country will begin to lead again. This country will go forward. Thank
you very much. [Applause.]