Now, let me tell you what I think you should
have in mind - you, your friends, and all of those with whom you work -
as you judge how you should vote on November 8.
All of you who recall our last television
debate will recall we had a few disagreements, and one toward the last
in particular will be of interest.
You remember the question was raised as to
whether in an election this year we should be thinking primarily of the
party or of the man, and coming down to the simple answers, Senator Kennedy
suggested it was the party that was important, and my answer was the one
that I gave then and that I will give to you again now. I say that in this
election, 1960, for the Presidency of the United States, the issues are
so important, the need for finding the best man, regardless of party, is
so important, that what should come first is not our party, but America,
the Nation, and that is the way we present our case.
And I present the case for Cabot Lodge and
myself on that basis. We say: Examine our experience and our background
and qualifications, and we ask for the support of the American people only
if you believe we are the ones the Nation needs, only if you believe, regardless
of your party, that this is what America needs, and I realize that in 1952
and 1956 millions of Democrats joined with Republicans and Independents
to elect our ticket, and I predict this year, as I see what is happening
in California, in New York, in Pennsylvania, in the South and the North
and the East and the West again that millions of Democrats and Independents
will join with Republicans in electing our ticket, because they think it
is the best for the Nation and for America in this critical period.
I would like to have the time to tell you
all the things that I believe we can and should do for this Nation in the
next 4 years. I will summarize in just a word: First, we recognize that
the major issue overriding all the rest is that the next President will
have the responsibility of keeping the peace without surrender for America
and for the world.
Now, it isn't appropriate for me to comment
on my own qualifications in that respect, but I do have a right to say
something about my running mate, and I will say this: That I don't believe
that any man in the world has had more experience or could have done a
better job than he has in representing us at the United Nations and in
fighting for the cause of peace and freedom.
And I say to you that we will work together,
work together in that cause.
Now, what can you expect from us? And
this I want you to listen to very carefully. We are men who know what peace
demands in this age. We are men who know Mr. Khrushchev. We have sat down
across the table from him. We've had the opportunity to know the ruthless
fanaticism which dominates his every move, and, therefore, that means that
we will insist that America have the strength militarily, the strength
economically, the strength in all areas, that we will be able to represent
America abroad and never be in a position where we are weaker than those
who threaten peace and freedom, and I pledge to you that America will continue
to be, whatever the cost, the strongest nation in the world, and this all
Americans want.
We will couple that strength with seeing that
our economy moves forward, moves forward so that Mr. Khrushchev can never
realize his boast of catching us or passing us, and he never will, believe
me, provided we remain true to the great principles that made America the
country that it is today.
And also I tell you that we will couple our
strength, military and economic, with something else. We will couple it
with a firm diplomacy. We will always go the extra mile, as President Eisenhower
has, to negotiate for peace; but we will remember, in dealing with this
man, that the road of concessions, making a concession without getting
one in return, is not the road to peace. It is the road to surrender or
the road to war.
And whether it is Quemoy or Matsu in the Pacific,
or whether it is expressing regrets at Paris, I say we're not going to
have any woolly, fuzzy thinking in the next administration with regard
to what the United States is doing.
And I say to you, too, that I say all these
things because I know this is the road to peace, and I know that those
who advocate the other policies, well intentioned as they may be or intended
to be, will make the mistake of giving in on these great principles, or
making concessions, and will not gain what they want or think they want.
They will only whet the appetite of the dictator, and it will lead us down
that road that we all do not want to travel.
And, so, these things we pledge to you. And
then the last thing I would say is more of a personal note. I suppose all
of you who are here - and there are many in this audience that Pat and
I know personally; we've campaigned this great valley, all over this State,
and there must be literally thousands whom we've shaken hands with or who
have worked in other campaigns - I suppose some of you wonder what you
think about when you travel over the country, and I would like to tell
you what I thought about tonight.
We looked down on Los Angeles, one of those
clear, smogless nights. We saw the lights of all the homes, and you know
what I thought about We thought of the future of all the children
in those homes. We thought of the responsibility of the next President
of the United States to see that they have a better life than even we have
had, to see that they grow up in a world of peace and freedom, to see that
we hand on to them our heritage even better than we received it from our
fathers. This we thought of, and then, looking back over the campaign,
there are memories, memories which will stay with us all our lives.
I remember a little girl in the lobby at 8
o'clock in the morning in --------, Nebr. As we were coming down - she
was about 8 years of age - she came up to me and she said, "Mr. Nixon,
I hope you make President." And she says, "You know what I do? I make a
wish for you every time I go under a bridge."
And I think of all the little girls or little
boys making a wish every time they go under a bridge, the most precious
thing they could give up, because they have confidence and faith in what
they believe we stand for.
I remember a woman who had just celebrated
her hundredth birthday. She was in a wheelchair. I shook hands with her
and, speaking in a very clear voice, out in Wisconsin, she said to me,
"Mn Nixon, this is probably the last time I will ever vote. I think it
is the most important vote I will ever cast. I am casting it for you."
What do you think? What does a man think when
he hears things like this? I'll tell you what you think. We remember the
people from whom we came. We remember the responsibilities that we have.
We think of the really great privilege it is to live in this country, and
I can only say to you this: I would like to declare: "This is a time for
greatness and I am the great man of the times," but I cannot say that.
Greatness is not something that comes from a man's ambition. Greatness
is not something that is written on a campaign billboard. Greatness is
something that comes from people in a free country, and only as a leader
comes from those people, only as he represents their highest aspirations,
their highest ideals, their greatest hopes, can he hope even to be worthy
of the name great.
And I only say to you, my friends, here in
California, that I hope that in these months ahead, I can represent those
ideals that are deepest in your hearts, the ideals that have made America
the great country that it is. If I can do this, then I will be worthy of
your trust - and that is my deepest hope and deepest prayer.
Thank you very much.