Senator KENNEDY. Mr. Hayes, ladies and gentlemen,
it is a great honor to come to this convention to join my colleagues in
the Congress, Congressman Sullivan, Congressman Karsten, Congressman Mel
Price, and it is an honor and a pleasure to be before this Machinists Union.
I come here this morning not only to salute you in the work that you have
done for the members of your union, but I also salute you for the work
that you have done for labor as a whole and for the general public. This
union has had a long and laudable history. Its leaders, like M Hayes, Alvin
Walker, and Roy C. Miller, have served this country in important positions
in war and peace, during World War II and during the Korean war. Therefore,
as a member of the Labor Committee of the Congress for the past 14 years,
I am honored to be here this morning. [Applause.]
I come here this morning to ask you to join
me on the great task which lies before the American people, and that is
the task of responsibility of rebuilding the strength, vitality, and the
energy of the great Republic of the United States. The effort to which
I summon you will not be easy. The road ahead for America is perilous.
But I believe that with your help and with the help of all Americans, we
will find that our real greatness and our finest years lie ahead in the
1960's.
My campaign for the Presidency is founded
on a single assumption, the assumption that the American people are tired
of the drift in our national course, that they are weary of the continual
decline in our national prestige, a decline which has led to economic injustice
at home and peril abroad, and that they are ready to move again. [Applause.]
This is the central issue in this campaign,
the willingness of the American people to accept the great challenges which
now confront them, and to rise to those challenges with effort and dedication.
I believe that the guide that the American people will have to the choice
that they must make in November can be found in the history of the two
political parties. Mr. Nixon and I, the Republican Party and the Democratic
Party, have not been collected in amber nor frozen in ice or suddenly emerged
on the political scene. Our parties are like two histories, two rivers,
which flow back through our history, and you can judge the force, the power,
and the direction of those rivers by studying where they rose, where they
flow, and the course of those rivers throughout the history of the United
States. There is no better guide to the history of our two political parties
than to study their campaign slogans in the 20th Century - "Stand Pat With
McKinley," "Keep Cool With Coolidge," "Return to Normalcy With Harding,"
"A Chicken in Every Pot With Hoover," "Time for a Change." [Laughter and
applause.]
These are the weakest and least constructive
slogans in the history of American political thought. Contrast those slogans
with the slogans which we Democrats are proud of: Woodrow Wilson's "New
Freedom," Franklin Roosevelt's "New Deal" [applause], Harry Truman's "Fair
Deal," and Adlai Stevenson's "New America" [applause]. And you can contrast
the slogans of this campaign, the Republican slogan, "You Never Had It
So Good," with the Democratic slogan of "The New Frontier." [Applause.]
We are not talking just about political slogans.
We are talking about the spirit behind those slogans, what they represent
for our country, what actions were taken under them, what they meant to
the future of the American people.
The history of the Democratic Party is founded
in progress in this century, from the beginning until today, but the story
of the Republican Party is a different story. There is no new Republican
Party, no old Republican Party. There is only the same Republican Party
which for a half century has opposed every major piece of social legislation
passed by the Congress and approved by Democratic administrations.
[Applause.] A party which opposed social security, which tried to repeal
it, a party which opposed minimum wage and tried to repeal it, a party
which has opposed our efforts to pass in this Congress medical care for
the aged to the social security. [Applause.]
Franklin Roosevelt put it to us in 1936, when
before 100,000 people in Franklin Field, Philadelphia, he accepted his
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.]
I think in the last 8 years we have had a
Government frozen in the ice of its own indifference. Where Franklin Roosevelt
set before our country its unfinished business the agenda of our people,
this administration has set ceilings and limitations. I think it is time
we started to move again. I think it is time that the Democratic Party
reasserted its full vigor and vitality. [Applause.]
As long as there are 15 million Americans
who live in substandard housing, 5 million American families which lack
plumbing of any kind who live in our cities, as long as 9 million of our
older citizens receive an income of less than $20 a week, as long as there
are millions of Americans who lack the protection of even an inadequate
minimum wage of $1, as long as there are millions of Americans who lack
an opportunity to develop their full resources, as long as there are 100,000-odd
families in the State of West Virginia receiving inadequate surplus food
packages, so long as there is need for us to recognize there is unfinished
business in our society, in our generation, in our day. [Applause.]
I think with the help of the American people
we can return to the spirit of the Full Employment Act of 1946. We can
make our economy not the lowest in percentage of economic growth, which
it was last year, of any major industrialized society in the world, but
instead we can unleash its energy and start this country on the upward
climb. We can meet the problems which face the United States at home and
abroad by strengthening our economy, by assisting those who are old to
meet their problems, by educating our children, by moving this country
ahead here at home, we shall move this country at home and abroad. The
reason that Franklin Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson, and Harry Truman were successful
in their foreign policy was because they were successful here in the United
States. [Applause.]. Because they held out a sympathetic hand to
the people of this country, because their country had a sense of direction
and purpose, then people around the world wanted to be associated with
a vital and progressive country. But now people of Latin America, Africa,
and Asia, who stand today on the razor edge of decision, they look at us
and they look at the vitality of the Communist system, and they wonder
which way the future lies. I think the future lies with us, but we must
help that future we must work for it, we must not say we have never had
it so good. We must say we can do better. [Applause.]
I don't run for the office of the Presidency
in these difficult times saying that if I am elected life will be easy.
I think for Americans life will be more difficult and challenging in the
1960's than it has ever been in the past. But I do say that if we are successful
that I think it is possible for this country to regain its sense of national
purpose. We are the great defenders of freedom, not only here in the United
States, but all around the world. During the American Revolution, Thomas
Paine said, "The cause of America is the cause of all mankind." I think
today that the cause of all mankind is the cause of America. [Applause.]
And I don't think that there is any American who would not be willing to
bear burdens and meet his responsibilities if he can insure the freedom
of his own country and the success of freedom around the world. That, in
my opinion, is the great issue of the 1960 election - which party and which
candidates can build a stronger America and in building a stronger America
can advance the cause of freedom. [Applause.]
I call upon all of you to join us in a journey
to the new frontier. The voyage is a long and hazardous one, but we are
all partners in a great and historic journey. I think in many ways that
the brightest days of this country can be ahead. In the election of 1860,
Lincoln said, "This Nation cannot exist half slave and half free." I don't
think the world can exist indefinitely half slave and half free. I think
it is going to move by the end of this century in the direction of freedom
or in the direction of slavery. I think it is up to us to determine which
way it will go. I think it is up to the American people. [Applause.]
During that same election 100 years ago, Lincoln wrote to a friend, "I
know there is a God and He hates injustice. I see the storm coming, but
if He has a place and a part for me, I am ready." In 1960, we know there
is a God, and we know He hates injustice, and we see the storm coming.
But if he has a place and a part for us, I believe we are ready. Thank
you. [Standing ovation.]