Senator KENNEDY. Governor Ellington, Senator
Gore, Members of Congress, ladies, and gentlemen, I want to express my
great appreciation to you all and to the Governor for the generous invitation
to come today. This fair is an evidence of the traditional desire of Americans
to improve themselves and improve their work. In the past 2 weeks, I have
been in the fairgrounds in Portland, Maine, in Palmer, Alaska, and in the
States of Oregon and California. In every fair we see Americans collecting
themselves together and preparing themselves for a better future. I am
particularly glad to come to this fair on Farmers Day. I have been in the
Congress for 14 years and I come from a section of the United States which
does not directly depend on agriculture. But if the economy and experience
of our country has told us anything, if the lesson of the twenties and
the lesson of the fifties has any meaning for us today, it is that we cannot
be prosperous as a nation unless agriculture is prosperous also.
[Applause.]
I must say that I wholly disagree with the
programs put forward by this administration for the support of American
agriculture, because it has brought the dairy farmer of this country to
an average income across the Nation that he had between 1939 and 1941.
The only program which has worked well in recent years has been the program
on tobacco, and the reason has been because we have had a high support
price and an effective balance between supply and demand. [Applause.] My
judgment is that a new administration must put forward an agricultural
program which has two basic ingredients: First, a balance between supply
and demand. A determination must be made as to how much we can usefully
consume here in the United States, how much we need for our surplus foods
to take care of our own people, and how much we can usefully distribute
in the cause of peace around the world. And then we should put a limit
on the production. Five percent surplus production in milk or in cheese
or butter or tobacco or wheat or corn breaks the market price 15 or 20
percent. I think effective control with a high support price is the common
denominator which must affect all agricultural programs across the United
States, if we are going to have security for the American farmer. [Applause.]
Therefore, though I come from a section which
is not agricultural, I know enough about the experience of our country
to know that if our agriculture is prosperous, we will be prosperous in
our cities. If our cities are prosperous, we will be prosperous,
we will be prosperous in our country. A rising tide lifts all the boats,
and I preach the doctrine of the interdependence of the American economy:
A strong America from one shore to the other, north and south, east and
west, in which all Americans share their prosperity. I want to express
my appreciation. I come as the Democratic nominee for the office of the
President, and I come to this area of Tennessee which was the home of Andrew
Jackson, who helped found the party which I now lead. I therefore am honored
to come to this State, and I am grateful to you all for the courtesy in
permitting me to say hello. Thank you. [Applause.]