Senator FONG. It is my distinct honor, great
privilege, to present to you the young man who has come up from grocery
boy to become Vice President of the United States, and whom I know is going
to be President of the United States. Dick Nixon. [Applause.]
Vice President NIXON. Well, Hiram, I am very,
very honored to be here in your neighborhood among the people that know
you and among those that, having known you, gave you such wonderful support
in your campaign for the U.S. Senate. And I, of course, would like to think
that this crowd is here because I'm here, but I know different. [Applause.]
I know they're here because you're here, and I'm awfully happy to have
you on my side, believe me.
And may I say, too, that I want to apologize
for our being a bit late, but we have a press bus traveling with us and
we've had a little difficulty getting it through the traffic, even though
we've had a motor escort along. And we appreciate your standing here and
waiting for us, but let me tell you this: I don't feel particularly sorry
for you because I can think of nothing more pleasant than standing in the
gracious, soft sun of Hawaii - as you have. [Applause.]
Now, if I can be heard above the leis, may
I say that I deeply appreciate not only your presence but the remarks that
Hiram has made about Pat and about me. I think sometimes that when
you think of people in high government positions there is a tendency to
think of us as being apart from you, when actually, of course, we are one
of you. And as I stand here and I look at this splendid shopping center,
I naturally do have a tendency to think of the days I was growing up. I
give the credit (as Hiram very properly did) to Pat, because I took very
good advice when I was graduated from law school. I remember I had a professor
of law the first year, when all the young men came in, bright-eyed, bushy-tailed,
thinking they were going to go out and make great successes in the world.
He said: "Now, gentlemen, I've going to give you some advice. If you forget
everything else you learned in the law, remember this: marry for money
and practice law for love." [Laughter.] Now, I did both. I
married for love, but in the early days when I was practicing law, Pat
was teaching. Now she can't teach, at least not in school for money,
but believe me, I'm awfully glad she could do that eighth grade arithmetic
because I couldn't and certainly for our oldest, Tricia, who will be going
into the ninth grade next year, and our youngest, Julie, the fact that
Pat could still help them with that homework meant that I could do the
Government's work while she was doing the homework.
And so, I give advice to all of you who may
be going into political life: It helps to marry a teacher because it can
be very handy in the years ahead. The only trouble is that when you
marry a teacher it takes them from the work they do. And I can think of
nothing, nothing which is more important, than the work that our teachers
do. When I think, for example, of the small amount of time that I can spend
with our two girls (and we'd like to spend more, but when you travel around
the world and you campaign and make speeches and work late in an office
you hardly know how old they are and you have to ask them sometimes what
happened in the last year since we saw them) - and then you realize that
to put those young people, your children, the most precious things in your
life, to put them in the hands of teachers for far more than the time you
spend with them - I think we ought to give a hand to all the teachers today,
not just to Pat - how about it ? [Applause.]
Now, if I could just talk briefly on the election
that is coming up, what it means, and what I would like for you to think
about in these next 3 months.
Ordinarily, when you hear of somebody running
for political office, and I think you would expect me to talk this way,
you hear him or her (as the case might be) lay out the reasons why you
should support that individual, who is talking, for the office he seeks.
I am not going to tell you today why I am the man who should hold the highest
office in this land. That is a decision which you must make, and
that is a decision which we as Americans will all abide by. I happen
to believe that this country is a Nation of destiny. I happen to
believe in the good sense of the American people and I think through the
years, in selecting our Presidents, they've done really a remarkable job
for the country. We've had some very great Presidents in our history, some
of them have been members of my party and some of them have been members
of the other party, but the decision must be yours, and the kind of a leader
the country needs cannot be determined by me, it can't be determined by
my opponent, but it has to be determined by millions of Democrats and Republicans
and independents throughout this country. The important thing is: Determine
it on the basis of the issues - not the personalities; not the party label
- but the issues. What do you think America needs? What do you think
your family needs? What do you think the world needs at this point?
Then measure us against those needs and you will do the best job for America.
And in that connection, may I say that as
I stand here and I think of the store in which I grew up, I know that probably
uppermost in the minds of most of the housewives here is a very simple
problem: It isn't the Federal budget or it isn't Governor Quinn's State
budget, but it's the family budget. You go in there and whether you're
buying ground beef (I used to grind hamburger as a youngster and was pretty
good, too, not too much fat and no pork in it, real good ground beef and
it was only 25 cents a pound then, too, but it's a little higher now) -
I know when you go into the store, a housewife is thinking of buying the
specials, because you realize - particularly as your family gets a little
bigger, that, unless you do, you're not going to be able to meet that budget
at the end of the month.
Now what does that have to do with what we
do in Washington? Simply this. It's very easy for a public official to
come before you and tell you that all the problems you have are going to
be solved by what he's going to promise to do for you in Washington. In
effect, he says: "We'll do this, we'll do that, we'll do this." What he
doesn't tell you many times is that every dollar he spends in Washington
comes right out of your pockets, and that every time we spend an unnecessary
dollar in Washington, every time we add an unnecessary dollar to the Federal
budget, it makes it harder for you to balance the family budget.
I'll tell you why I say this. There are some
very important expenditures for the Federal Government to make for our
national defense and that must come, above everything else, for our highways,
for our schools, and all of these areas in which you are interested. But
never forget this, that we also owe an obligation to the taxpayers of this
country not to spend a dollar that we don't need to, because as we save
money there it means that you will be able to go in that store and make
the ends meet at the end of the month.
And that's why I don't come before you and
tell you that we're going to solve all your problems in Washington, because
if I did I would be working not in your interests but against your interests.
It's a lot easier to make promises, but it certainly is more responsible
and better for you if we only do those things that need to be done and
leave for you the right to choose as to how you spend your own money.
Now, if I could go to another point in speaking
of matters of what we do for America. I, of course, am very proud to be
a member of the Eisenhower administration. I happen to believe that President
Eisenhower will go down in history as one of the great Presidents, not
only because he brought the Nation peace, not only because we have enjoyed
the greatest prosperity of any 8-year period in the history of this country,
not only because he's restored dignity and integrity to the conduct of
the Nation's business in Washington, D.C., I think he will go down as a
great President because he is a great man. But let me say that while I
think his record - our record - is a wonderful one, I don't believe we
should just stand on it. I think a record's not
just something to stand on, but something to build on. I come from
California and you in Hawaii are like us in California, you are of the
West and we, in the West, believe in progress. And so we must move forward,
there is work to be done and jobs to be done in America; there are cities
to be revitalized; there are better schools to be built, better health
for our older people. These can come, but these things can come with the
right kind of leadership in Washington, and I can only say that I know
what it means; I know what it means to live in a family of modest means
and I can assure you that certainly your interests will come first in our
administration as we build the better America of the future.
And the last thing I have to say today is
the most important of all. You know, the most moving thing about this crowd,
I may say, is not the older people that are here - all of you, you can
vote - but the young people. And these young people, my two daughters,
your boys and girls, what we want for them is a better life than we had,
a life where they have an equal chance to make their way ahead, to become
Senator or Governor or Vice President or the wife of the Vice President,
as the case might be; we want all that for them, but we also want above
everything else (and I say this just after having gone to Pearl Harbor
and leaving a wreath there at there at the Arizona), the most important
thing is that our young people grow up in a world of peace
with freedom, the most important thing of all. [Applause.]
And we can have that, we can have that kind of a world, but it's going
to take the best leadership America can produce, leadership that will keep
America strong militarily - second to none in the world - and that must
come first; leadership that will be firm diplomatically - with no apology
for keeping the intelligence activities of this country so there will never
be another Pearl Harbor as far as America is concerned. [Applause.]
It means also - it means also waging the battle
for peace with the same determination and dedication that you wage a battle
to win the war, and that means fighting for freedom, not just to keep it
for ourselves because that isn't enough, but to expand it for the people
throughout the world. But remember: This world is not just a static world,
it changes, and the Communists are attempting to impose and extend communism
and slavery throughout the world. It isn't enough to stand pat where we
are, to defend what we have; we must fight to extend freedom throughout
the world; this kind of leadership is essential if we're going to have
a world of peace. [Applause.]
And it is necessary, too, that we convince
the peoples of the world on both sides of the Iron Curtain, both sides,
that we believe in peace, that we believe in justice, that we believe in
the dignity of man and the equality of opportunity for all - regardless
of background, religious, racial, color, whatever the case might be. And
that is why I have said in each appearance I've made in Hawaii and I say
it today, that what we need in waging peace in the world is more of the
spirit of aloha throughout the world today. [Applause.]
And so, may I thank you for standing here
and waiting so long, for listening so patiently, and may I just say as
a final word that for a miner's daughter born in a tent city in Ely, Nev.
- for the son of a - not a supermarket operator but a very small country
store, born in Yorba Linda, Calif., and growing up in Whittier - to stand
here in front of a crowd in the 50th State of the Union is as proud a moment
as I can imagine. And I only hope that whatever happens this November that
between now and then, and thereafter, that we will be worthy of the faith
and confidence that our party has placed in us and that we will be worthy
of the traditions of America. And remember, all of you, the American dream
is not just a dream, it does come true - Hiram Fong's life proves it, and
my life and Pat's life proves it, too.
Thank you very much. [Applause.]
Senator FONG. (Introduces Vice President Nixon
to the chairman of the rally and to the city and county clerk.) Mr. Vice
President, I want to thank you very, very deeply - from the bottom of my
heart - in behalf of all of these people here for the very, very inspiring
message you have given to us. You make us feel very good because we have
tried to live the life that you say that we should and all the people of
the world should. We thank you for coming to this fifth district, we thank
you for doing us this very, very great honor; we thank you for giving us
a lot of "face." Let's give Dick Nixon and Pat a big hand, [Applause.]
Vice President Nixon. Hiram, all I can say
after that - I'm going to take him with me to introduce me around the country.
Senator FONG. Now, only 1 minute more. This
can only happen in Hawaii. Fruitgrower [garbled] says he's got a big pomelo
which is the symbol of blessing and good luck and long life and everything,
and he wants to present it to the Vice President.
FRUITGROWER (garbled). Mr. Vice President,
I am honored and privileged to be allowed by our esteemed Senator, Hiram
Fong, to present you with a symbol and a token of great blessing. This
fruit - every Chinese home during Chinese New Year will display this reverently,
and it is time from time immemorial, it is a slight token of great blessing,
it is named "The Great Blessing." I have the greatest pleasure to present
it to our next President of the United States. [Applause.]
May I add that this fruit is grown in the
playground of esteemed Senator Hiram Fong. [Applause.]
Vice President NIXON. You know, my friends,
the next time that anybody tells you that America is a second-rate country,
the next time that anybody tells you America has lost its sense of direction
and purpose and value, just remember this moment. Because certainly this
was in finest American tradition and I thank you very much.