Thank you very much. Mr. President, Ambassador
Lodge, Governor Rockefeller, my colleagues in the Congress, all of the
distinguished guests and this great audience here, certainly this is one
of the highlights of this campaign, probably the greatest day of the campaign,
with the President of the United States right here with us campaigning
in New York. [Cheers and applause.]
And we had a great day yesterday. We were
in Lancaster, Pa.; in Erie, Pa.; in Rochester, N.Y., and in Syracuse, N.Y.
I want to tell you something about this campaign.
As anyone who has been through national campaigns can tell you, there comes
a time when a tide begins to run - and that time in our campaign came about
10 days ago, as we left New York City, went down through Pennsylvania,
then got on a train last Monday and went through the heartland of the country,
2 days in Pennsylvania, 2 days in Ohio, whistlestopping then through Michigan,
then down through Iowa, and then 2 days in Illinois, back again to Washington,
then up to Pennsylvania, and then to New York last night and then here
today and I'll tell you what I have observed with regard to this trip up
to this point. At every stop that we made we found the biggest crowds they
had ever had in the political history of those particular places. [Cheers
and applause.] But, what is even more important, my friends, these crowds
were out to win. They're enthusiastic, and they are going to win. [Cheers
and applause.]
And for the benefit of all present here I
can say that I sense this great spirit in the State of New York, in Rochester,
in Syracuse, this morning in Brooklyn, and now here out in Nassau, and
I say to you that if you continue this spirit, if you continue to carry
it to your neighbors and your friends in these last critical days, when
this election will be decided in New York, when it will be decided in the
Nation, there's no question about the outcome on November 8. It will be
a great victory not just for a man or a party, but for America and the
whole free world - and that's what we're working for. [Cheers and applause.]
Now, you're going to have opportunities later
today to hear me and later in this campaign, on television, at a great
rally tonight, and also during the course of the other events which you
may attend. I have a privilege which is one I have had several times in
these last 7 years, the privilege of introducing the man who has led this
country away from one of the worst messes we've ever been in to the period
today in which every man and woman is proud to be an American citizen,
and proud of his and her President in Washington, D.C. [Cheers and applause.].
Before I do so, I think it is well to keep
the record straight, keep it straight with regard to the accomplishments
of this administration, because you must judge my colleague, Cabot Lodge,
and me by the fact we have been part of this administration. We've had
a rare opportunity. We have been in the presence of the President. We have
been with him when the great decisions have been made and, therefore, as
far as those decisions are concerned, we must take responsibility for them,
and we are proud to do so.
So, I say to you today, in introducing him,
it is well to keep the record straight, and as we flew by helicopter over
New York and up to this great area here and the plane landed it occurred
to me I could think of no better answer to one of the silliest comments
that has been made by our opponents during the course of this campaign,
and that is that America has stood still for 7 years and now we've got
to get her going again. Well, believe me, anybody who says America is standing
still hasn't been traveling through America, I can assure you of that,
as I have. [Cheers and applause.]
Look at this great area here. It was built
in the last 7 years.
Shopping centers; highways; three times as
many schools; more housing; more hospitals; the greatest progress in civil
rights not only in this administration - more than in the previous 20 years,
more than in 80 years.
My friends, we can be proud not only that
President Eisenhower has restored dignity and decency to the Presidency,
but that he has led America to the greatest progress we've ever had in
our history. [Cheers and applause.]
And, my friends, we can also be proud of another
thing: Cabot Lodge spoke of the great and awesome burdens of a President.
I have never been one in this campaign to say: This is a time for greatness,
and I am the man who is great. I know that that is a decision that only
the American people know in their hearts, in their minds and in their souls,
and you will determine it. I know, too, a man can be great only as the
people are great, only as he meets the challenge of the times; but, my
friends, I want to say this: I have known greatness in the sense that I
have seen the President, as Cabot Lodge has seen him, make decisions, decisions
that avoided war, decisions that avoided surrender, decisions that have
got us out of one war, have kept the peace without surrender - and, believe
me, that's what we're going to give you if we get the opportunity after
November 8, because that's what the American people want. [Cheers and applause.]
And I can only add to what Cabot Lodge has
said: It is very easy to do as our opponents have - to say the President
was wrong on Quemoy and Matsu in not surrendering two islands of freedom;
he was wrong in not apologizing to Khrushchev; he was wrong in what he
did in Cuba, and then to take it back the next day. My friends, it is very
easy to do that when you're a candidate; but, my friends, when the President
sits in that oval room in the White House, and when he decides something,
it's for keeps. He can't take it back, because once he does it then the
decision rocks around the world. I have seen decisions like that made.
I was there the morning that the decision on Lebanon was made. I was there
when Trieste was decided. I was there when the decisions on Iran, all these
others that have kept the peace, and kept it without surrender, were made
and, my friends, this I know: That America at this time cannot afford to
use the White House as a training ground to give experience to somebody
at the expense of the United States of America. [Cheers and applause.]
Do I suggest to you that there are going to
be no troubles if we are elected? No. We know the Communists. We know they
are ruthless. We know that they want not just Quemoy. and Matsu, not just
Formosa, but the world, and we know that the problems will be difficult,
but this I pledge to you: We have been through the fire of decision. We
know what it takes. We know that it takes firmness and strength, but never
belligerence. We know that it takes what the President has always said
- go the extra mile for peace and disarmament, but never make a deal which
would weaken the United States and those who are guarding the citadels
of freedom as against the Soviets. [Cheers and applause.]
We know, in other words, that what America
needs to keep the peace, what America, needs to have progress is the kind
of leadership that the man who is next going to speak to you has given,
the man who saved America. in 1953 from what we were in then, the man who
has always made us proud of our country, the man who is now the symbol
of peace and freedom for the whole world.
I only hope that Cabot Lodge and I can be
worthy of the United States and worthy of the man under whom we have worked,
President Eisenhower.
Thank you. [Cheers and applause.]