Thank you very much.
Mr. Campbell all of the distinguished guests
on the platform, our friends here in Florida, in Jacksonville, we want
to thank you for coming out in such great numbers to welcome us on our
first trip to Florida since the nominating conventions, and I can only
say if this is any indication of the support we have, we're going to carry
Florida again in 1960, as we did in 1952 and 1956.
Now, you have been standing here, and I know
that certainly jammed in as you are that I should not talk too long, but
I have some things I want to say. I want to say them very directly. I want
to say them very forcefully, because I couldn't agree more with the man
who just introduced me so eloquently as to the tremendous importance of
this election.
I am very proud of my party. I am very proud
of the candidates of our party in this State who are on this platform with
me, but I say to you today, as the man who introduced me said a moment
ago, that the requirements for leadership in America at this time are more
important than my party or the other party. What must count is what is
best for America - and that's the way we should vote in this election this
time.
I have noted an increasing tendency on the
part of our opponents simply to base their case on one theme, and that
is: Vote the party. Vote the party. Vote the party. Vote as your fathers
did. Vote as your grandfathers did, but don't think of the man. Think of
the party.
My friends, that isn't enough for a Republican
to do. That isn't enough for a Democrat to do. I say today that each and
every one of us must not vote simply by the patterns of the past. You must
not vote by the labels that men wear. You must vote as your own conscience
indicates what America needs in the way of leadership today, and I say
that at this time that what we stand for, what I stand for, what my colleague,
Cabot Lodge, stands for, what our platform stands for is more in accord
with the great traditions of the man that this city was named after, Andrew
Jackson, than what was adopted in Los Angeles as the Democratic platform
- and I think all of you will agree with that.
I know that you will hear over and over again
party loyalty requires Democrats to vote only for the Democratic candidate.
I say that a man or a woman who is truly loyal to the Democratic Party,
to the great principles of Jackson and Jefferson and Wilson cannot vote
for that platform or for the men who run on that platform. They will vote
for us because we stand for those principles, and they do not.
And, now, if I could put this in terms of
the great issue of our time: What is the most important issue? Let me tell
you. It is the survival of this Nation. It is the future of these young
people as well as ourselves. It is the future of the world, and everything
else is insignificant compared to that, because we can have everything
else - the better jobs, the best medical care, the best housing in the
world - and it won't make any difference if we're not around to enjoy it.
And, so, I say the first test for the next
President of the United States is this: Is he qualified, by background,
by experience, by judgment, to keep the peace, but, more than that, to
keep the peace without surrender, without surrender of principle or territory
anywhere in the world.
Now, my friends, obviously I present my case
to you, but I also ask you to judge me on my record as you judge my opponent.
I ask you to consider what I say as you consider what he says, and then
you determine: Which of the two men for President, which of the two men
for Vice President, have the kind of experience, have the kind of a program,
not that just a party needs - that isn't enough - but the kind of experience
and program that America needs, and even that isn't enough - that the cause
of freedom needs in this critical period, and I begin with this. You must
consider our experience. What is that experience? Well, for 7½ years
Cabot Ledge and I have sat with the President in the Security Council,
in the Cabinet. We have participated in the making of the great decisions
on Quemoy and Matsu and Lebanon, the others during this last 7½
years in the field of foreign policy.
Now, a lot of people will not agree with what
I am about to say. I think that record is a good one. Others say that it's
a bad one, but I'll say this: That all this political criticism you have
been hearing about President Eisenhower's leadership in the field of foreign
policy - and you've heard what they have said. Oh, we haven't had the initiative.
We've been losing our prestige. He's done this wrong and he's done that
wrong, and why doesn't he do this, that, or the other thing? Listen, my
friends, the American people aren't dumb. The American people aren't going
to be fooled by a lot of double talk. Democrats and Republicans alike who
overwhelmingly voted for President Eisenhower in 1952 and 1956 know that
he produced the goods, and they know that in 1953, when we came in, we
were in a war that wasn't being ended and there was no end in it. And what
has happened in those 7 years? Well, we got America out of one war. We've
kept her out of other wars, and we do have peace without surrender today,
and we want to continue the leadership that brought that peace - and that
is what we will do.
But then there are those who will say, "Well,
now, just a minute, Mr. Nixon. What about the present? What about America's
strength? What about these charges that our economy has been standing still?
What about the charges that America has been standing still? We're a second-rate
nation," they say, "in the field of economics. We're a second-rate nation
and will become so militarily. We're a second-rate nation in the field
of science and in education."
All these things you have heard talked up
and down the line. Well, just let me say this, my friends: Anybody who
says America has been standing still for the last 7½ years hasn't
been traveling in America. He's been traveling in some other country, because
I've seen America, and you in Florida know how America has grown.
As a matter of fact, I think it really got
into its most ridiculous phase the other day. My opponent was speaking
up in New York State. I was there just this morning, incidentally, and
for you lucky Floridians I want you to know in Buffalo this morning it
was a cold 45o - and we're glad to be in
this sunshine down here in Jacksonville with you. But in upper New York,
my opponent made this amazing statement, one actually that he ought to
be ashamed of and he should apologize to the American people for making,
and this is what he said: He said, "I'm tired of reading in the paper"
- and, incidentally, I'll quote him without notes - he said, "I'm tired
of reading in the paper what Mr. Khrushchev is doing." He said, "I'm tired
of reading in the paper what Castro is doing." He said, "I want to read
in the paper what the President of the United States is doing."
Let me tell you something, my friends. If
he'd just stop talking long enough, and start reading, he'd find out what
President Eisenhower has been doing. Now, I'll tell you, he hasn't been
doing some of the things that my opponent would ask. He hasn't been apologizing
or expressing regrets to Khrushchev, and we don't want him to, and I'm
not going to. Also, he hasn't been abandoning at gunpoint some islands
of freedom in the Pacific which would invite war and invite attack, and
we're proud of President Eisenhower for not following my opponent's advise
on that score, too, because America certainly learned its lesson in Korea
- that when you draw a line and say we will only defend this particular
point, it is not an invitation to peace. It is certainly an invitation
and an assurance of war, and, it's the firm policy that we've had that
the American people like. It's that firm policy that we will continue.
And it's true that President Eisenhower hasn't
been acting like Mr. Khrushchev. But, thank God, he hasn't been making
a fool of himself at the United Nations, either, and we don't want him
to.
So, I say to all of you today - I say - Yes,
there are grave problems in the world. I say, yes, we have not and will
not have solved all those problems in my lifetime, but I say this: The
question is not when the Communists are on the loose whether you have problems.
The question is how you handle them. The question is whether you have the
experience and the judgment. The question is whether you're weak, whether
you are naive or whether you're firm and strong and know what you're doing.
And now let's look at our qualifications in
that respect. Both Cabot Lodge and I know who our enemies are abroad. We
know Mr. Khrushchev. We have sat opposite him at the conference table.
We have dealt with him, and I say to him: We haven't been fooled by him
in the past, and we won't be fooled bv him in the future, and that's what
America needs. That's what we need to keep the strength that we need.
Now, what does that mean we will do? And these
are the things we will do if you give us the opportunity. First, we will
see that America continues to be what she is today - the strongest Nation
in the world. We will ask Americans to pay whatever is necessary to maintain
that strength, because, my friends, as long as we are the strongest, that
means the enemies of peace will no dare start anything any place in the
world, and this is what I pledge to you: America will continue to be strong,
and we will increase our strength as necessary to meet whatever threat
there is abroad.
Second, we will see that our diplomacy is
firm, firm oil principle, firm without being belligerent, because - let
me say this - you don't have to get down to the level of Mr. Khrushchev.
You maintain your dignity as President Eisenhower has, but you also never
give in on principle. We stand firmly for the right, as he stands firmly
for the wrong, and that is the way to assure peace and to assure the victory
of freedom throughout the world.
And then the next point I would make is this: In
addition to this firmness, in addition to this strength militarily, America
must move forward economically, and by moving forward economically, what
I mean is this: Mr. Khrushchev, I remember, when we were in Moscow, made
this statement to me. He said, "Mr. Nixon," he said, "I'll admit you're
ahead of us economically at the present time, but," he said, "you know,
we're moving faster than you are." He said, "Our system is better than
yours is, and," he said, "we're going to catch you in 7 years, and" he
said, "when we catch you, I'm going to wave to you and say, 'Come along;
follow us; do as we do or you will fall hopelessly behind."'
You know what the answer is? The answer is:
He won't catch us, not in 7 years, not in 70, if we quit thinking of America
as second rate and act like a first-rate country at home and abroad - and
that's what we're going to do.
But I'll tell you this. There is a danger
that he will catch us if we depart from the principles that have made America
great, if we follow the advice of our opponents and say every time there
is a problem: "Turn it over to the Federal Government. Weaken the individuals.
Weaken the States. The Federal Government is the answer."
There is a danger he will catch us if we adopt
huge new programs which will raise our taxes, raise our prices and sap
the energies of 180 million Americans. There is danger that he will catch
us if in our economic principles we do not follow the policy that the way
to greatness in America is not through strengthening the Federal Government,
but through strengthening the will and the determination of 180 million
free Americans. That's the way to greatness in this country.
And, so, I ask you: You've been listening
to me. What's this doctrine that I speak? This is bigger than the Republican
Party. It's as big as America, itself These are the words of Jackson. This
is the philosophy of Jefferson. This is also the philosophy of Lincoln.
This, my friends, is what America needs today, and those apostles of gloom
and doom and defeat and retreat who say, "Turn everything over to the Federal
Government; weaken the States; weaken the individual" - that's the wrong
road, and America is not going to take it. We're not going to go back to
what we left in 1953, and that's all they offer, and we're not going to
do it. That's why we're going to vote our way this year, in the year 1960.
And, so, I say to you: If you vote for us,
we will be firm for the right. We believe that firmness will assure the
peace, and we believe weakness would lead to war, weakness militarily or
diplomatically. We will also keep America strong at home militarily, keep
her strong economically, moving America ahead with all Americans moving
together, because none must be left behind, and, in addition to that, above
everything else, we will stand in the high councils of this world for the
things Americans most deeply believe in, for the ideals that are our great
advantage in this struggle, and what are they? These ideals do not come
from a leader - he can only talk about them - but they come from people.
These are the ideals that caused a quarter of a million Poles a year ago
in the streets of Warsaw to greet my wife and me in that Communist country
with the greatest demonstration of affection perhaps ever accorded a visitor.
They were shouting - they were cheering - "Niech Zyje America" - "Long
Live America" - and as they stopped the car, it stopped in the middle of
the town time after time - and I looked in their faces, grown men and women,
over half of them, crying, tears streaming down their cheeks. Why? Not
because America was strong militarily. They knew that. Not because we were
rich economically, but because we stand for something more than that.
We stand for ideals, bigger than my party
and bigger than yours, if it's the other party, as big as the whole world,
itself - our faith in God; our belief in the dignity of men; our belief
that the rights that men have to equality come from God and not from men,
and, therefore, cannot be taken away from men; our belief that every nation
has a right to be independent and all people have a right to be free. These
things America came into the world to preserve. These things it is America's
destiny now to extend, because it isn't enough to hold the line against
communism. We must wage a great offensive for victory without war, and
we believe, my colleague and I, that we have the background, that we know
the problem, and, with your help, that we can lead America because your
help is necessary.
This kind of strength, the strength of our
ideals, must come from you. It comes from the homes, from the churches,
from the schools of America. And, so, I say: Keep this country strong at
home. Keep its ideals strong. See that these young people know what a privilege
it is to be an American. See that they're proud of this country. See that
they're willing to stand for our system as the Communists, unfortunately,
in some instances, are willing to stand for theirs. And if you do that,
we will win. We will win this struggle for freedom, and it will be a better
world for our children and for ourselves, but also for children and for
people all over the world.
This is our mission, and it is this cause
that I ask you to work in. Don't work for it just because you like us as
men, if that is the case, not just because you like our party, if that's
the case; but if you believe that what we stand for is what America needs,
if you believe that ours is the leadership that America and the free world
needs, then, my friends, 3 weeks remain.
Go out and work for this cause, work for it
in this State of Florida. Spread the word throughout this State, and if
you work, as you really can, if you believe as deeply as we believe, we
will win, and it will be a victory not just for a man, not just for a party,
but for America, itself, and that is what we all want.
Thank you very much.