Thank you very much, Jerry Ford
May I request that all of those who have signs
hold them down so the people in back can see a little better?
If you will just pull your signs down, then
the people in back can see.
Thank you very much.
Certainly, as Jerry Ford and your county chairman
have indicated, this is a crowd that will never be exceeded in this campaign
or any campaign for that matter, and Pat and I want to express our appreciation
to you for giving us one of the greatest welcomes of this whole campaign
right here in Grand Rapids.
Incidentally, as we were coming along, I had
a very great compliment paid to me. At least it will appear that way to
my daughters. One of the youngsters alongside of the road said something
that Pat overheard. She said, "You know, he almost looks like Maverick."
But certainly having all of the young people
here out of school and also all of you of voting age is an opportunity
which I, as a
candidate, have welcomed, and it's one that I do not want to miss on
this occasion, but before I speak of the campaign for the Presidency I
want to say something about Jerry Ford and about the candidates for State
office. First, he is not on the platform because he was unable to make
his way through the crowd, but I think that the people of Michigan, after
many years of bad government at the State level, are entitled to good government,
and with Paul Bagwell you'll get the best government in the United States.
And I have been thrilled by the fact that,
as we have whistlestopped through Michigan today, we have had the biggest
crowds in the history of every town we have been in on that whistlestop
tour - and this can mean only one thing: that Michigan is going to vote
for Paul Bagwell on the State ticket, for Jerry Ford for Congress, and
I think for our national ticket as well on November the 8th.
Jerry Ford is one who needs no words from
me in this district, but I want to say to you that, as one who has been
a close personal friend of his from the time I came to the Congress and
he came, as one who knows that he has worked with the President so closely
in these past few years, I don't think there is any one man - and I use
these words advisedly - who is more valuable in the House of Representatives,
Democrat or Republican, than Jerry Ford of this district in Michigan -
and let's have him back with the biggest vote ever from this district.
And, finally, there is another man who was
unable to get here. Al Bentley has been circling in the air trying to catch
up with our train, but certainly at the Senate level he will be one of
the most articulate Senators that Michigan could ever have - and for Al
Bentley I give my all-out support as I appear here in Grand Rapids.
And, now, my friends, I want to talk to you
very briefly, because you have been standing here a long time and you're
crowded, but very directly, about what I think is the most important decision
that you will be making this year as voters - not only this year, but perhaps
in your whole life. I say that because the time is past in this critical
century in which we live and in this critical decade of the sixties in
which what happened in Washington was not particularly important as far
as people living in a community like Grand Rapids. Now what we do in Washington,
what the next President of the United States does in Washington, will affect
the lives of everybody in this State and in this city. So, consequently,
I urge you to make a decision. I urge you to make it on the basis of what
the men stand for, and, what is more, I urge you to work for the man whom
you think is best between now and election day, because it is that important
to you. Now, let me tell you why I believe these issues are important.
First of all, sometimes I know that when you
hear talk about spending in Washington or spending at the State level,
you must think: Why should I worry about that? I got plenty of troubles
worrying about my family budget without worrying about the Federal budget
or the State budget.
And I know sometimes that you must feel: Why
is it that men like Jerry Ford, a member of the Appropriations Committee,
fights for fiscal responsibility, fights for a Government that will spend
as much as is necessary, but not a penny more than is necessary? Why is
it that this is necessary to make this kind of a fight?
Well, my friends, there is an answer to that.
During the darker days of World War II, one of the world's great statesmen
was asked this question: He said, "Why are the allies fighting? What are
they fighting for?"
And his answer was this: He said, "Well, if
we quit fighting, you'll soon find out." And that's the same thing with
regard to the fight that Jerry Ford, Paul Bagwell, A1 Bentley, and I are
putting on and will put on in this great field, because, my friends, when
we quit fighting against extravagant use of your money in Washington or
in Lansing, you know what it means here in Michigan. You know that it means
that the State's credit begins to drop. You know that it means that even
the State employees begin to wonder where their next pay checks are coming
from. You know the effect is to discourage new business from coming into
Michigan, and you know the effect has been even to discourage the businesses
that are already here, and cause them to leave Michigan.
My friends, that kind of extravagant government
hasn't been good for Michigan. That kind of irresponsible government hasn't
been good for Michigan. You're not going to continue it in Michigan, and
I say we're not going to have that kind of government for all the 50 States
of the United States by sending it to Washington, D.C.
When you think that programs of our opponents
would each year cost approximately the whole gold reserve of this country,
you can get an example of what this spending can mean - and I say to you
that I am going to fight for all those programs that we need - in education,
in medical care, in all the rest - that will spell progress; but, my friends,
I am going to oppose every program that will raise taxes or raise prices
for the American people, because I know that's what you need and what you
want.
And I say to you today that, as we make that
fight for you, we are making it because we realize that the money we spend,
the promises we make; are not paid by our money, and not by Jack's money,
either, but by yours. We realize, therefore, that we are rendering a real
service to you when we see that you get your money's worth.
Now, the second point I want to cover is one
that is particularly appropriate for me to cover in this city, and in this
area, which is the home of Senator Vandenberg. He was a great fighter for
peace, but he was also a great fighter for freedom, and I am proud of the
fact that I stand here as a member of the team that has served for 7½
years with President Eisenhower and in those 7½ years we got America
out of the war she was in. We have kept it out of other wars, and we do
have peace without surrender today - and we're going to continue that kind
of leadership, with your help.
Cabot Lodge and I stand for that kind of leadership.
We know Mr. Khrushchev. We have sat opposite him at the conference table,
and I can tell you, knowing him as we do, we will not be fooled by him.
I can also tell you that in these days it is, I believe, certainly something
we must avoid at all costs. We must avoid inexperience, the kind of inexperience
where well-intentioned mistakes could lead either to war on the one side
or surrender of principle or territory on the other.
Let me tell you something: There have been
occasions in these last 7 years when I have seen the President make decisions,
occasions when if he had made a mistake, the wrong decision, it might have
led to war; it might have led to surrender of principle of territory, but
because he was wise, because he did the right thing, my friends, we're
here today - and I say to you that when we consider the record of my opponent,
when we consider what he has said in this campaign, disagree and criticize
the President for what he did on Quemoy and Matsu - he thought we should
have drawn a line as we did in Korea - criticize the President because
the President did not apologize to Mr. Khrushchev, did not express regrets
- he said he could have expressed regrets, could have expressed regrets
or apologized to him for the U-2 flights - disagreed with the President
on Cuba and advocated a policy which, around the world and particularly
around this hemisphere, has dismayed our allies - I say that on those three
counts alone that they prove that we cannot afford any opponent's inexperience
abroad or his extravagance at home, and the American people are going to
vote that way on November the 8th.
What do we want then? What can we have? I'll
tell you what we want. We want leaders in Washington, D.C., who know only
one boss, and that is the American people.
We want leaders in Washington, D.C., who can
go there and be independent, independent so that they can always put the
interests of the people first; but, beyond that, in this field of foreign
policy my friends, what we need is to believe in the right things, to stand
for the right things, to be strong militarily, firm diplomatically, but,
above all, we must stand for freedom not only for ourselves, but for people
throughout the world.
Why do I say this? I say it, my friends, because
the moment you surrender freedom or the moment you disappoint the hopes
of freedom any place in the world, you run the risk, of losing it here,
and we Americans have had a tradition from the time of our foundation for
standing for not only freedom for ourselves, but for all mankind.
It is this crusade that Cabot Lodge, my colleague,
and I ask for your support and your votes to lead. We want to fight for
peace, fight for it the only way that it's effective, from strength and
with firmness. We want to strengthen the United Nations and the instruments
of peace, and we also want to keep alive for all the world the hope of
freedom because we believe that is America's destiny, and we believe you
think so, too.
So, this is my message to you today. If, clearly
apart from the parties of which we are members, clearly apart from any
labels we may wear, you in your hearts believe that Cabot Lodge and I are
the men America needs in this critical period, then I say: Here's your
chance to strike a blow for freedom, to strike a blow for peace by working
between now and election day in this great crusade for peace and freedom
for all mankind.
Thank you very much.