Senator KENNEDY. Governor Meyner, your next
Congresswoman, Mrs. White, your next Congressman, Jerry Taub, your next
U.S. Senator, Thorn Lord, ladies and gentlemen, for 6 years I represented
Middlesex County, Mass., in the House of Representatives. I would like
to represent Middlesex County, N.J., in the White House. [Applause.] Every
4 years, ever since Alf Landon ran as a Republican and got snowed under,
the Republican candidates for President run on a plank that says it really
doesn't matter which party wins, what matters is which candidate wins.
I think it matters which candidate wins, but I think it also matters which
party wins. Because the two parties stand for different things in different
times. I drive to work every morning past the Archives Building in Washington,
and on that building it says, "What is past is prologue." The past tells
us something of the future, and it is a fact, though we all regret it,
that since the administration of Franklin Roosevelt in 1933, the Republican
Party has tried to block for the last 25 years every progressive piece
of social legislation that we have tried to pass. You name it. Social security
- they voted against it. Minimum wage, housing, unemployment compensation,
and in the last session of the Congress in August, when we brought up a
bill for medical care for the aged, we received 45 Democrats and 1 Republican
who supported it, and we were told it would be vetoed if it passed. I want
to say right here that that bill must pass next year, and there will be
a President, we hope, in the White house who will not veto it but encourage
it. [Applause.]
If anyone thinks that all the things that
had to be done by the people of the United States working together, for
the care of the aged, the education of our children, to provide full employment
and decent housing and decent wages, if you feel that all the things that
could he done have been done, then I agree with you it is not time for
a change. But if you feel that this is a great country, but it could be
greater, if you feel that our generation of Americans has, as Franklin
Roosevelt said about his generation of Americans, that we, too, have a
rendezvous with destiny, then I ask your help in this campaign. [Applause.]
The point I want to make is that we cannot
be strong abroad, that we cannot he respected, that we cannot stop the
Communist advance, unless we are strong here at home, unless we are building
a better country and a better society, where all Americans regardless of
their race or religion, are citizens of the United States. [Applause.]
The Democratic Party has been identified in
this century as it has been throughout its history stretching back to Jefferson
and Jackson, and in this century Woodrow Wilson's New Freedom, Franklin
Roosevelt's New Deal, Harry Truman's Fair Deal - they stood for a better
America, and we stand today on the threshold of a new frontier. [Applause.]
I ask you to join with us in rebuilding the
power of this country, in building a stronger America, a better life for
our people, and also a day when the United States once again will be looked
upon in Latin America and Africa and Asia as the friend of freedom, the
way of the future, the hope of the future, the country with which they
wish to be associated. Mr. Khrushchev and Mr. Castro may be confined to
Manhattan Island next week, but they are not limited in their expansion
in Latin America, and Africa and Asia. I think it is time that the United
States started its forward move again. I think the future can belong not
only to us, but to all those who believe in the cause of freedom. I ask
your help in this campaign. I ask you to join us in making this country
move again. Thank you. [Applause.]