Thank you very much.
This is certainly a very great welcome as
we arrive here on our last western swing of the campaign, and I can only
tell you, as I see this packed coliseum here in the heart of the inland
empire, that this can mean only that we are on the way to a great victory
in the State of Washington.
I mean not only victory for our team at the
national level, our candidates for President and Vice President, but also
for the reelection of your Congressman Walt Horan in this district, of
Catherine May in the next district and for the new Governor of the State
of Washington, a great governor, Lloyd Andrews.
For those in our television audience and for
those in this hall who wondered why we had two introductions, I want you
to know that was my fault. We were a little late arriving at the airport
due to some technical difficulties getting off at our last stop, Casper,
Wyo. As a result, we arrived at different times in the hall here. But I
want to say this: I don't know when I enjoyed being introduced twice, more
than I did today right here in this great city.
As we enter the last days of this campaign,
of course, the issues that will decide it are becoming clearer and clearer.
It seems that in this campaign it has taken more time than usual for those
issues to get home to the American people. But you know that our people,
while they sometimes will come rather late to a realization of what they
are deciding in a political campaign, generally reach conclusions and make
very, very good conclusions in the end, before the campaign reaches the
voting stage.
Today, as I bring this campaign to the great
Northwest, I welcome the opportunity before this tremendous audience and
before this audience on television and radio, to delineate, to sell out
the issues - the choice that you will have on November 8, a choice which
I think is one that must be made not on the basis of whether you're a Republican
or a Democrat, not on the basis of how your father or your grandfather
voted, or how somebody else tells you to vote, but on one test only. I
say, my friends, that the need for leadership in America and the world
is such, today, that America and the American people must make the decision
on the basis of which of the two candidates for the Presidency and which
of the two candidates for the Vice Presidency can best provide the leadership
which will serve America and the cause of peace without surrender in the
world.
I say that because this, I find, is the mood
of the country. I have now been in 49 States, more States than have ever
been visited by a presidential candidate. As you know, I will go to Alaska
which will make 50 States since this convention and I want you to know
that in every State in which I go I find the same mood. I find people not
thinking in terms of simply voting a party label. I find people looking
at the candidates and listening to what they have to say, sometimes waiting
to make up their minds, because the people realize that this decision is
such an important one. Therefore, let me now indicate to you the roads
that I think America has offered to it, in this particular phase of the
campaign.
Let me indicate to you the choice you will
make when you cast your votes on November the 8th.
First, basically, what we have to recognize
is that for the last 7½ years Cabot Lodge and I have been part of
the present administration. I'm proud of the record of that administration.
I'm proud of the President of the United States and the leadership he has
given to this country.
I believe that we should take that record
and not stand on it, but build on it. I believe that we can take that record
and, from the base which it has provided, build a better America at home,
and that we can build a new world abroad. I think this is possible.
I believe that my colleague and I have had
some experience that is worth considering - experience which enables us
to tell the American people: We will follow President Eisenhower but we
will go forward from this position, go forward in the way that the great
progressive American people always want to go. That is one choice, and
then there is another choice. There is the choice that is offered by our
opponents. They say that this record is one on which we should not build.
They say that this record is one that has been disastrous for the American
people. To quote them exactly, in the field of foreign policy, they say
that the 7½ Eisenhower years have been - and I quote - years of
"defeat and retreat and stagnation."
They say at home that as far as the Eisenhower
years are concerned, they have been - and I again quote - years of "standing
still" for America.
My friends, if those two charges are true,
I do not deserve - my colleague does not deserve, Walt Horan, Catherine
May do not deserve - your support; but if those two charges are not true,
then we believe we do deserve your support.
And now let's look at the charges.
One: Has America been standing still? Do we
have to get her going again.
Well, the answer, my friends, is not to listen
to me, not to listen to my opponent, but to listen to your own commonsense
and look around you at the development in the State of Washington - look
around you at the development in this community. America has had the greatest
progress in the last 7½ years of any period in our history - and
we're proud of that progress.
Have this in mind. Education: Three times
as many classrooms built in this administration as in the previous administration.
Health: We have found a greater improvement
in medical care in this administration than in any administration in history
- more hospitals built, for example, than in any period before.
Highways: The greatest highway program in
history.
Wages: We find the greatest increase in real
wages in this last period of any increase in history, and we remember that
in the previous 7 years of the Truman administration there was no increase
in the real wages of Americans. Why? Because inflation ate up every bit
of the increase.
What do we find, then, in other fields? We
find that in addition we have had progress in the kind of fields in which
we, in the Pacific Northwest, and the Far West are particularly interested.
I refer, for example, to reclamation; and
with the Secretary of the Interior sitting right here on the stage - Fred
Seaton, a man who has given tremendous leadership to his country and to
this administration - I am glad to nail one of the worst fabrications,
falsehoods, lies that you can name in this campaign, and that is that this
administration has been a period of standing still in reclamation.
I tell you, my friends, that is the exact
opposite of the truth. We have had more progress in reclamation in this
administration than in any administration in history - and we're proud
of it.
You say, prove it. You know, you hear about
new starts and we've had new starts - 30 percent more during the Eisenhower
years than in the previous 7 years.
What about the future? A program of development
which will be greater than any in the history of our country. Where do
the candidates stand on it? Well, my friends, look at my record. Compare
it with my opponent's. He has opposed these projects because he came, of
course, from New England. Now he's changed his mind. But I'm not a Johnny-come-lately
on this. I have been for these projects, and I think that you can be sure
that we will move forward in reclamation under our leadership.
So the charge that America has been standing
still simply doesn't stand up.
Let's look at the period as far as foreign
policy is concerned. Retreat and defeat and stagnation for America? Why,
my friends, those adjectives are all right. The only trouble is that Mr.
Kennedy's applying them to the wrong administration. He was thinking of
Harry Truman's administration.
You remember when I was here. You remember
that right here in Spokane, when I spoke out in the outdoor meeting, I
pointed to the record of the 7 Truman years. Do you recall ? Six hundred
million people went behind the Iron Curtain during those years. Do you
recall the policies that led to the war in Korea? Because of foolishness
in the State Department, because an American Secretary of State did what
Mr. Kennedy would do today - draw a line and say to the Communists, "come
and get it," draw a line in the name of peace, but draw it and invite war.
My friends, we had enough of that kind of
foolishness in 1953. And I say we don't want any part of it in 1980.
But now you have the choice. You have the
choice and I ask you to consider it - consider it in your own minds, and
consider it on the basis of the records. If you believe the charge that
we have been standing still; if you believe the charge that our foreign
policy has failed, then your choice is clear. But my friends, if you know
the truth - and the truth is that we have been moving forward - if you
know the truth, that under this administration we have given the United
States peace, ended one war, and kept out of other wars, if you like what
you've had, and if you want leadership that till build on it, then that
is what we offer, and that is what we will give you, if you give us the
opportunity on November the 8th.
But let us move from here. Where do we go?
What kind of a future does America face? What kind of future does the world
face?
At home, my friends, we can have the greatest
progress that the world has ever known - even greater than we've had in
the last 8 years, greater because we have a bigger base on which to build,
greeter because we have within our people and within ourselves the ability
to move forward; but, my friends, we want to move forward by relying on
what is the real motive power for growth in this country.
Let me put it this way: You've heard a lot
about new frontiers in this campaign. Believe me, all Americans want to
cross new frontiers. That's the spirit that made America great - that's
the spirit that developed the West. But, my friends, if we've going to
develop new frontiers, if we're going to move across them, we can't move
across them in an old jalopy with a new paint job, I can assure you of
that.
New frontiers! How has the West developed?
It was not developed by a group of Americans saying we're weak, that we
can't take care of our own problems, that we're going to send all the problems
to the Government. Government didn't develop the West. It helped, but how?
It helped by allowing and inspiring individuals, and it was the individual
pioneer spirit that developed the West and developed America - and that's
what we need in the United States today, if were going to develop the new
frontiers.
So, in these fields, in the field of education,
in the field of housing, in the field of health, in the field of better
jobs for more Americans and higher wages, we offer progress - but progress
in which the Federal Government, recognizing its responsibility, does not
take responsibility from individuals, but encourages maximum participation
by individuals and by the States where they can do the job.
What is the other choice? Well, the other
choice is one that you've been hearing a great deal about. It's one that
sounded very good for a while. It's one, however, where the very wise American
people finally caught up with what the truth was.
You recall it started with this kind of reasoning:
One: We were standing still;
Two: We have to get going again ;
Three: There are some new frontiers;
Four: I will lead you over these new frontiers.
But, there was a catch - and the catch was that in order to lead you, you've
got to give me your money - only $15 billion of it - but $15 billion of
your money, I've got to have.
Now, with this $15 billion - and that is what
the programs of my opponent's platform - that is what his promises - will
cost at a minimum, in my opinion; $15 billion, because he's even added
to the platform by promises since then - $15 billion a year more spent
by Government in Washington.
For what? In the name of progress. Will it
produce progress? The answer is: "No." The answer is "No," because it fails
to take advantage of, and fails to use, what I indicated a moment ago was
the real basis for progress - and that is the creative genius of 180 million
free individual Americans. It puts the emphasis on what the Government
does.
But let's go further. Here's this $15 billion,
and my opponent goes on to say to the American people through these past
few weeks: "I will give you this progress by sending this money." But then
he says: I'm against raising taxes.' And then he says: "I'm for balancing
the budget, and against deficit spending."
So, what's this package that is offered? "I'm
going to give you programs that will cost $15 billion, but I'm not going
to raise your taxes, and I'm not ping to unbalance the budget."
This is the best medicine-man show that ever
came to town.
But my friends, you remember those old medicine
men who used to come to town? They used to come in and, boy, they really
sold that medicine for a while. It would cure anything, cure anything you
imagined - snake bite, bronchitis, pneumonia, anything you wanted - same
medicine; just a different label every time.
And the medicine man got away with it for
awhile, but finally the truth began to catch up with him. The truth began
to catch up, as the people found out that what he was selling didn't cure.
In some instances it was a deadly poison and believe me, that's exactly
what my opponent's program is. It won't cure. It's a poison to the economic
system of America.
Now, why do I say it's a poison? My friends,
do you know what paying for the promises that have been offered in this
campaign would do to you, to the housewives who try to balance the family
budget, to the retired people - people living on pensions and social security!
You know what it would do to you? Go back to the 7 Truman years. We forget
so quickly, but you'll remember this. I remember what happened. I remember,
and you remember. People who lived on pensions and social security were
driven to the wall, because their Government broke faith with them and
cut the value of the dollar in half.
You remember what happened to your wages.
Wages went up in those 7 years, but did it help you? No, because prices
went up 50 percent - they ate up everything. My friends, this is what we
have here. You cannot spend $15 billion a year more paying for the promises
my opponent has made - you cannot do that and balance the budget; and you
cannot do it without raising taxes. You can't do those three things at
the same time. Anybody who says you can is an economic ignoramus, and there's
no question about it.
What does it mean, then? It means that these
promises, which sound so good, mean higher taxes and higher prices for
the American people.
Now, if this means progress, that would be
one thing; but here's the catch - it does not mean progress. It will stifle
individual initiative. It will stifle that kind of new invention and new
investment which creates more jobs for America if that kind of program
were put into effect. It would result, in my opinion, in the very kind
of economic downturn and recession that my opponent so glibly and irresponsibly
has predicted.
Let me say this: There will be no recession
if we are elected because our programs are built on a sound foundation;
but there could be if they are, because their programs will discourage
the faith that Americans have in their own economic system. It's just as
simple as that.
So, those are the two roads to the future.
I think it's pretty clear which road you want to take. Build but build
on a sound basis. Build on the basis where the Government spends every
dollar that is necessary for progress in this country, but build on the
basis where the Government, in spending that money, still recognizes that
you must never break faith with the people - still recognizes that the
cruelest hoax of all, the cruelest thing you can do to people, is to take
their money and destroy any value of what they earn, what they save, what
they have saved for their old age, for their security. I promise you -
all of you who are saving for pensions, all of you who are saving for social
security - I promise you that never again will the Government of the United
States break faith with you, and that when you earn a dollar today you
will be able to get a dollar's worth tomorrow or 5 years or 10 years from
now when you retire - and you want that certainty for your future.
Now, let us talk about the other roads that
they offer, the roads in the field of foreign policy. Here we find another
choice, our opponents again saying that our policies have been policies
of defeat and retreat, and we saying and pointing to the record of what
we have done. My friends, what do they offer? You know what we will do.
We have been part of this administration. We both know Mr. Khrushchev.
We both, I think, have proved that we can handle him and not be fooled
by him, and that means something in today's world, I can assure you.
What is your choice on the other side? Your
choice on the other side is a man who three times in the course of this
campaign has disagreed with the President. Three times he's shot from the
hip, rashly and impulsively, and three times if he had been President he
would have made errors that would have been disastrous to America, and
the cause of freedom and peace
The first one was on Quemoy and Matsu - you
remember that one - drawing the line, and that would have invited Communist
attack, the very same thing that brought on the Korean war. The President
was right. He was wrong.
The second one was with regard to the President's
conduct at the Paris conference. You recall what he said then. He said
the President could have apologized, could have expressed regrets to Khrushchev
for the U-2 flights. He was wrong. The President was right, right because
no President can ever apologize for defending the security of the United
States against surprise attack.
And then, my friends, the third point you
will recall if you heard our last debate, was on Cuba where he said the
President wasn't going far enough, and where he, in effect, advocated policies
that were universally interpreted as meaning intervention in the affairs
of Cuba. And what would that have meant? It would have invited the very
kind of intervention from abroad that could have brought war to this hemisphere
and to the world.
Three times up; three times down. How many
tests does he get? All that I can say is this, my friends: I realize that
he and his apologists and defenders say, "But, Mr. Nixon, he's changed
his mind. He says now he supports the President on Quemoy and Matsu." That's
right - he says now he didn't really mean "apologize and express regrets."
That's right - he says now that on Cuba he's been misinterpreted, but that
actually he's changed his mind perhaps, and now supports the President.
Maybe he did, but my friends, remember this: When you're a candidate, you
can say things - you can make mistakes and take them back the next day
and nobody is the worse for it. But when you're President - sitting there
in that oval room in the White House - when you make a mistake, it's for
keeps: When you make a decision, you don't get a chance to take it back.
I've seen the President make decisions. I
remember the day we went into Lebanon, and I remember that on that day
he knew the decision involved war or peace; and he took a risk, but he
knew that there was a greater risk if we didn't go in. He was right. What
if he had been wrong?
My friends, I say to you today you have the
test - the test, and the men who have been through the fire of decision,
men who have had the experience of these last 7 years; men who will not
guarantee you perfection, because nobody can do that, but who will reduce
mistakes to a minimum.
And then you have the choice, on the other
side, of a man who has been rash, who has been impulsive.
What is the answer? I say that we cannot use
the White House in these critical periods as a training school to give
experience to a man at the expense of the American people.
And now, if I could make my last point, this
is one that I particularly feel very strongly about, as this campaign nears
its close, seeing a great audience like this, having seen the tumultuous
reception that we had in the center of the city, having had a change to
visit with some of those who were at the airport, I recognize the tremendous
responsibilities that I will have or that my opponent will haves, whoever
is the next President of the United States I just want to say to all of
you here today that in this political campaign you will hear of much that
is wrong about America. You will hear predictions about what is going to
happen abroad and at home that will be terrifying. I would not want to
conclude without concluding on a note of faith.
My friends, have no doubt about it. America
is not only the strongest country in the world militarily and the strongest
country in the world economically; but, more than that, America, is honored
in the world - and I'll tell you why.
I have been to 54 countries. We are honored
not because we're strong, but because we stand for and believe in the right
things. You know what they are? Our faith in God; our belief in the rights
of men; our believe that the rights men have to freedom and to equality
of opportunity do not come from men, but that they come from God and, therefore,
cannot be taken away by men; our belief that nations have a right to be
independent, that men have a right to be free.
Oh, those things, you say - those are just
words. What can they mean in a great world struggle in which the Communists
have missiles and productivity ?
My answer is this: My friends; the militarists
and the materialists throughout history have underestimated the strength
of ideals:
One hundred and eighty years ago America was
a weak country militarily. We were not a rich country, but we were one
of the strongest countries in the world because the believed in ideals
that were greater than America - and today I tell you we will win this
struggle for the peace of the world. The reason we will win is because
we're on the right side. I have seen it in the faces of people in 54 countries
around the world. I have seen it in the faces of people in the heart of
Russia, itself, in Siberia. I have seen it in the faces of 250,000 people
in Poland on a Sunday afternoon, in Warsaw. I know - I have faith - that
the great American people will remember that the real source of their strength
is their faith in what we believe, and that this comes not from your Government,
not from a leader, but from you - it comes from the schools; it comes from
the churches; it comes from the homes of America.
And so, my last plea to you is this: keep
America strong at home. Keep the young people of America instilled with
a burning faith in our country's future, and also with a recognition of
those ideals that have made us great. If you do that, then the next President
of the United States will be able to lead America and the free world to
a great victory over the forces of slavery, over the forces of injustice,
and to victory without war.
That's what we want. That's what we must have
- and, with your help, we will have it.
Thank you.