Senator KENNEDY. Thank you very much. I want
to say how much I appreciate your coming to the airport to meet me tonight.
I know the reason that you do it is because you share the view that I have
that it is essential to this country and to the State of Pennsylvania that
the Democrats win this election. [Applause.]
I think the issue is a plain one and I think
we attempted to discuss it last night. [Applause.] That is the question
of whether the United States can do better, whether this is a great country
that must be greater, a powerful country that must be more powerful. I
do not run for the Presidency on the slogan "You never had it so good."
I think we can do better, and I hope that all those who share my views
that this country has a most important destiny, to be the chief defender
of freedom at a time when freedom is under attack all over the world, I
hope that you feel as I do, that the Democratic Party which in this century
produced Woodrow Wilson and Franklin Roosevelt and Harry Truman as a contribution.
I ask your help in this campaign. I think here in this State of Pennsylvania
this issue may well be decided. It is my judgment that the next President
of the United States will carry Pennsylvania on November 8. [Applause.]
I would not have been nominated at the Democratic
Convention if I had not secured the support of the Pennsylvania delegation.
Now that you have done that, I hope you will go the rest of the way. We
have a chance to be of service. This is a great country and I think it
deserves the best of us.
I must say, looking back on the record of
the past 25 years, that Mr. Nixon has said party labels don't mean much;
what counts is the man. I think party labels mean something. The Republicans
never would have nominated me, and the Democrats never would have nominated
Mr. Nixon. [Applause.] I believe in the Democratic Party because I think
it has been of service to the people. I think it looks to the future, and
I think it recognizes that there must be placed before the American people
during the next 10 years the unfinished business of our society, the things
we must do to keep our people working, to provide security for our old
people, to provide good education for our children, to provide a defense
second to none. I hope it may be said at the end of the next President's
first term that during those years the world started to look to the United
States again, and wondered what the United States was doing, and wondered
what the President was doing, not what Mr. Khrushchev was doing. I am tired
of hearing it. [Applause.]
I will close by again expressing my thanks.
I think we have a chance to really be of service now. I think that when
we serve our country, we serve not only our own people, but we serve the
cause of everyone who wants to be free, also. During the American Revolution,
Thomas Paine said, "The cause of America is the cause of all mankind."
I think in 1960, the cause of all mankind is the cause of America. If we
succeed here, the cause of freedom succeeds. If we fail, the cause of freedom
fails. That is why I run for office this year, feeling that we must do
better that we must be stronger, because what we do I think depends upon
the future of the world. This is a great opportunity for all of us. I think
if we can rewrite the history of the world in the next 4 or 8 years, we
can be of service to ourselves and all those who look to us and historians
will later write that these were the great years of the United States.
Thank you. [Applause.]