Senator Hickenlooper, Congressman Schwengel,
Congressman Chiperfield, all of the distinguished guests here on the platform,
this great audience here in this hall in Davenport, those who are listening
on television and radio: First I want to say that this ends one of the
most exciting days of campaigning of this whole campaign. We started this
morning whistle stopping through southern Illinois. We came up through
the line and in every place we stopped we had the biggest crowds in history
at those station stops.
And then tonight when we arrived here we had
a reception at the airport that certainly equaled and probably exceeded
any that we have ever had in terms of color and enthusiasm: all the way
into the city, the torchlight parade with the "Nixon Girls" - and we thank
them, all 250 of them, who participated - and then after that the opportunity
to hear at the hotel just before we came to the beginning of this rally,
but before that the speech by the President of the United States which
I'm sure you heard, too.
Then, after I came in for the first time,
I had the treat of hearing the man who I believe ought to be serving and
will serve with Bourke Hickenlooper as the junior Senator from the State
of Iowa, Jack Miller.
I hadn't heard him speak before but believe
me, he can lay it on the line and that's what we need down there in the
U.S. Senate.
That allows me to say also, as when I visited
Iowa before, on my first visit that I'm tremendously impressed with your
State ticket here, with Norman Erbe and others, and I'm glad to see this
State return to the Republican fold at the State level.
I proudly support all of those candidates
and also of course I want to say a word for your own Congressman, for Fred
Schwengel. I want to say something about him that is a little bit unusual.
You know we often speak of our colleagues in the House and Senate in terms
that are rather impersonal, in terms of their service, and I could speak
of him in that way. But you know a man best either through his parents
or his children. His children, particularly, reflect the kind of man he
is and it happens I know his daughter, Dot. She works in my office and
if he's half as good as Dot he must be a tremendous person.
I'm glad also to have my friend, Bob Chiperfield
here. I'm going to have more to say about him tomorrow when I speak at
Rock Island. But all in all, just let me say this my friends: when you
elect a President, remember he needs help. He needs it in the Senate; he
needs it in the House, so give us your support for our Republican candidates
for the House and the Senate in the State of Iowa and the State of Illinois.
Now the only problem that I have at this point
in the evening is that everything I was intending to say virtually has
already been said by the President.
As a matter of fact, what he didn't say, Jack
Miller said. But I have a couple of things left over and I do want to say
some things which happened here that even the President couldn't have said
tonight; some things which are very close to my heart, some things which
relate not only to the people of Iowa but to all the people of this great
midwestern part of the United States. It seems a long time, Bourke, since
I was here a few days ago and we did not whistle stop but motor caravaned
from the Nebraska border over to Des Moines. Since that time we've traveled
to States all over this Nation. We have seen immense crowds and in the
past week we had our first whistle stop tour by train.
Let me tell you a bit about it. It started
in Pennsylvania and ended with a tremendous rally in Pittsburgh. The neat
day we were in Ohio, ending with the rally in Cincinnati, which was on
television. Some of you may have seen it here.
The following day we traveled up through the
heart of Ohio, through Columbus, where my father used to work on the street
railway as a motorman, then ended that night in a rally in Toledo, Ohio.
The following day we went up through Michigan ending with a rally at Muskegon.
And the point about all these States, these key States, Pennsylvania, Ohio,
Michigan, Illinois, and now Iowa - I say that here the Republican cause
and tide is running strong, and Democrats by the thousands are joining
with us to support our ticket.
Now I want particularly to talk to that point.
We expect Republicans, of course, to vote for our ticket in view of our
splendid record. But why is it that the Democrats and Independents are
now turning to our leadership as they did in 1952 and 1956? Because they
do not have confidence in their own ticket and they realize that the more
as this campaign goes on. They realize that whoever is President of this
country is going to have to be the leader of the free world and the Commander
in Chief of the Armed Forces of this country. They realize that the requirements
of the Presidency, as the President himself indicated tonight, in this
critical year, 1960, and the burdens are greater than those that have fallen
upon perhaps any leader in history. They realize that it is essential in
making the decision as to who should be President that it not be made simply
on the basis of the labels we wear but that it has to be made on what we
stand for, on our experience, on our background. And it is on that basis
that I again present my case, the case of our ticket, to the people of
Iowa, to the people of Illinois, and to all others who may be listening
by television and radio tonight.
There are many issues. Many of them have already
been touched upon. But I would just like to add a word with regard to this
issue by moving America forward. As the President well pointed out tonight,
anybody who says America is standing still has got a hole in his head.
Remember, the last candidate that ran against the President had a hole
in his shoe. Well, since that time, things have moved along so well that
people can get their shoes half-soled, at least, since 1952.
As far as standing still is concerned, of
course, they're getting off that record a bit. You know why? Because they
can't sell it. The American people know better. Look around in your own
community. Look at the buildings that have gone up in these last 8 years.
Look at the schools that have been built. Look at the highways that have
been built. Look at the progress that has been made. You can't fool the
American people by saying, "Look, you've been standing still for 8 years,"
when they realize that they were standing still and started to move when
Eisenhower was elected President.
You can take any index you want - housing,
health, schools, anything you want and you will find that America has moved
more in these last 7½ years than in any administration in history.
And we will move even faster in the years ahead, because we've got a bigger
base to build on, and that's why I say tonight, to all Americans, that
we are a progressive people who want to go forward and we know the way.
Our opponents have lost the way. They lost it and they prove that they
lost it because what do they advocate? Oh, yes, they talk about these new
frontiers. They sound very good. But, you know, when you go back to the
frontier times, do you know how we crossed the frontiers of America? That
wasn't done by a weak people saying, "We've got to have the Government
work out all these things." The reason that Americans were able to cross
and conquer the frontiers was that they had individual pioneer spirit and
that's what we need today to conquer the frontiers of the future.
Let me just spell out in very simple terms
two items that I think illustrate the difference in approach in what my
opponent offers in this campaign and what we offer. Jack Miller's speech
reminded me of it. First, education. Now let's think in terms particularly
of higher education. I've often said on this whistlestop tour today that
perhaps the most exciting day in my life, next to the day that Pat said
"Yes," was the day when I received a letter back in the year 1934 from
Duke University indicating that I was going to get a scholarship to study
law. If I hadn't received that scholarship I wouldn't be here today because
I couldn't have afforded to go to law school. My parents could help me
some, but I needed the scholarship. Now, today, all of us in America realize
that as a matter of national urgency we must not waste the talents of any
young man or woman who has the ability to make a contribution to America
and who ought to go to college, but who can't afford it because of the
money.
But now comes the difference in approach.
Our opponents would suggest that the way to handle this problem is to say,
"Well, the Federal Government will take over. We'll set up a Federal program
that will handle this from top to bottom."
Now let me tell you what our program is. We already have a Federal
program, as you know, of student loans, loans for those,
particularly, who were going to make contributions in the field of
national security. And so, we build on that to begin with. We add to that
a program of scholarships, a limited number, for those students who would
be unable to pay back loans, but who have extraordinary ability and who
want to go on to college. But we don't stop there. The major part of our
program is this: We feel that what we have to do is not only to have these
Government programs, which will take care of part of this problem, but
we want to give the American people a chance to do it in the way that they
traditionally have done it. And I might say, in that connection, I know
that in this audience tonight, listening on television and in this hall
tonight, there must be literally thousands of parents who did what my parents
did and worked hard. I remember my mother used to get up in the morning
and bake pies, 5 o'clock every morning; we sold them at the store - worked
hard so that they could help their children get through school.
So, what I say is that, in addition to these
Federal programs, what we need is to set up a system where we give tag
credits and tag deductions to parents who help to send their children to
college. That allows it to be done in the American way.
In other words, you see the difference. We
are trying to encourage individual responsibility.
Now let's take medical care for the aged.
I can speak from a personal standpoint about this. I remember the year
my father died, just before the last election in 1956. My father and mother
both had operations that year.
They were very expensive. They were able to
take care of them out of their limited savings, but it was hard. Now I
know that in the country today there are literally hundreds of thousands
of people who, when they get past the stage of earning, have catastrophic
illnesses which come to them. And the question is: How are they going to
be able to take care of them?
We wrestled with that problem, as Bourke and
Fred and Bob here can tell you, in this last Congress. We wrestled with
it trying to find the solution. Now here again we have two diametrically
opposed plans. Our opponents say, "Well, we can't handle it at the individual
level. We can't handle it at the State level. So what we've got to do is
to have a Federal program that will be compulsory and that will compel
everybody who is under social security to have health insurance if they're
over 65." Everybody, of course, pays the bill, all up and down the line
on the basis of your social security. Now, let's look at that program for
a moment. First of all it's compulsory. Second, it doesn't cover 3 million
people over 65 who don't happen to be on social security.
Now what is our answer? Our answer again does
it, I believe in the American way, the individual way. First of all we
have a program which is State and Federal. Second our program is one which,
instead of saying to the individual, "You have to have a Government program,"
he can have a private program, if he wants. He can buy private health insurance.
But third we say that, whereas we believe that everybody over 65 who wants
health insurance ought to be able to get it, and our program enables him
to do so, we say that no program should compel anybody to have health insurance
if he doesn't want it. That is the American way to deal with this problem.
And, so, here you see two different programs.
We want to keep what we have today, and that is the best medical care in
the world, and you aren't going to keep it if you set up a compulsory system
run by the Federal Government in Washington, D.C. You can keep it with
the kind of system which we would set up, as I have pointed out.
Let me turn now to a third problem - the farm
problem. I discussed that in detail when I was in Iowa before. I have already
indicated through a statement that I have issued covering my remarks tonight,
my attitudes on it, which you can read in the papers. I would like to summarize
those attitudes for our television audience.
First of all, we begin by recognizing, as
I did in my speech when I was here in Iowa at the plowing contest and the
one the following week in South Dakota, that it is essential that we find
a program under which our farmers will get a fair share of our increasing
national prosperity. They're not getting that today. They can get it, and
there is a way to do it. The question is: What is the way?
Well, first of all, I'll tell you that there
is the wrong way. And the wrong way, as you might imagine, is the one that
our opponents are offering in this campaign. I can tell you that it's the
worst farm program, certainly from the standpoint of the farmers, that
has ever been offered in the history of this country. The 60 percent of
American agriculture, for example, that has been free until now will be
put under rigid control - 250 more products - from Washington. You know
how many Government-compliance inspectors you've got now; you would have
four times as many. You would have $250 million more a year to send around
administrators to be sure that the law wasn't broken. You would have fines
and even jail sentences to be sure that the farmers complied with the quotas.
Under this managed scarcity - and that's the best way I can describe it
- about a million jobs would be destroyed on the farms. One-fifth of all
our agricultural marketings would be eliminated. You would be reducing
acreage. Take wheat, 38 to 46 percent; cotton, 35 to 40 percent; soy beans,
20 to 25 percent; feed grains, 30 to 35 percent.
Incidentally, these are not political figures
developed by a political staff. They come from the career people at the
Department of Agriculture, who my opponent said would be able to describe
his program and cost it out - and this is exactly what they say it would
do.
As far as the farmer is concerned, it would
put upon him a straitjacket worse than anything he has ever experienced
before, and one that has certainly been described as the most drastic farm
program insofar as controls are concerned that we can possibly imagine.
It goes the wrong way, in other words, the
wrong way as far as the Nation is concerned, and also as far as the farmers
are concerned.
In that connection, just let me say this one
thing: We hear a lot about where America is second these days. Now, a lot
of this talk is nonsense, certainly in the field of farm production. Here
is one place we can be proud of the fact that we're first in the world,
and we're going to stay first in the world, because we find that in the
United States approximately 7 million farmers and farmworkers produce as
much as it takes 50 million farmers and farmworkers to produce in the Soviet
Union.
You see, my friends, that gives us a tremendous
advantage in this struggle between communism and freedom - the productivity
of our farmers. But if we adopt a program like this we run the risk of
becoming second in agricultural production. That is one of the reasons
we've got to be against it, apart from the fact it would not help the farmers
in the long run. It would do nothing but hurt them.
Now, what is the answer? Well, the answer
is, I believe, the program we have advocated, a program which is based
not on scarcity, but on abundance, a program which would lift the surpluses
off the farmer's back by distributing far more of them abroad and by finding
new markets at home; a program that during that period that we were getting
rid of the surpluses, lifting them off the farmer's back, w e would compensate
the farmers through payments in kind and keep farm income moving up.
This is the kind of farm program that moves
in the direction of freedom, and control by the farmers of the program
rather than by a bunch of bureaucrats in Washington who ought to get their
hands out of the farm business.
And I will only say this: I don't pose as
a farm expert. But I know some, including the Senator from Iowa, Bourke
Hickenlooper. And I can say that there is nothing that is going to be of
higher priority, if I am elected, than breaking this bottleneck that exists
between the executive and the legislative branches of the Government, in
getting an imaginative farm program that will make an all-out attack on
surpluses, one that will certainly deal with this problem in an effective
way.
I think it can be done. I think it can be
done with good, strong leadership. I think it can be done also with the
assistance of the Secretary of Agriculture, who, as I have indicated, I
believe should come from and represent the great heartland of American
farming, the Midwest of the United States.
Now, another point that I would like to touch
upon: People suggest to me, "Well, Mr. Nixon, we're a little worried. Maybe
things haven't been standing still. Maybe you do have some good programs,
but we read in the paper the day before yesterday" - and these were tremendous
scare headlines in the Detroit paper when I was there "that Senator Kennedy
predicts recession." Now, I want to talk to that point. That is probably
the most despicable, and the most ignorant comment made in this campaign
to date.
Now, first, I want to tell you why it was
ignorant - and that's pretty easy. It was ignorant because in the very
same paper - and he should have known this - the headline immediately below
it was: "New car sales at alltime high."
Now, my friends, if there's going to be a
recession, the American people apparently weren't let in on it because
if they're buying more cars than ever, they have faith in the economy and
they think it's going to go ahead.
And just let me tell you something: This economy
is going to go ahead. It is sound. We have seen unemployment move down
last month more than seasonally and employment rise more than seasonally.
New car sales are moving up. This means that steel and other production
move up.
And all I can say is, what will destroy -
and this is the despicable part of this comment - that confidence? You
know what it is? It is more of this kind of scare tactics where we try
to talk ourselves into a recession.
But here again I don't think our opponent
is going to get away with it, because I'll say this: The American people
are just too smart. They aren't going to believe it. He may have more dollars
than you have, but you've got more sense than he has.
I guess I don't have to spell out the kind
of sense I meant.
I have one last point that I want to mention.
It is one which the President discussed with great eloquence and conviction
tonight. He spoke much too generously about my qualifications, but I want
to speak very frankly to this audience, to the American people, the people
of this area, about the chance for peace, for freedom, in these critical
years ahead.
The easy thing for me to say - and the political
thing - would be: Elect me and elect Cabot Lodge and all your troubles
so far as the world is concerned will be over. I could say that, but that
wouldn't be true, because I know the men in the Kremlin. I have seen their
hard faces. I have had Khrushchev shake his fist in my face and talk about
his missiles. I know that he is ruthless, fanatical, cold, and that he
has only one aim - and that is to conquer the world. At the present time,
fortunately, he says he will accomplish his aim without war. But make no
mistake about it, he's determined to accomplish it - he and all the Communist
leaders - by any means, if necessary. And, therefore, as long as you have
adversaries like that, they're going to make trouble for us. They're going
to make trouble all over the world. You saw it, if you picked up your papers
today. They picked up a couple of Communist spies in New York. They're
here now, in America. Their agents are all over the world, and they will
continue to be. They will continue to stir up trouble.
The question in these critical years that
we enter is not whether or not we're going to have trouble, because they're
going to make it. The question is whether we're going to be firm and mature,
and not be knocked off balance, and not be panicky, and not shoot from
the hip, and not be rash and impulsive. This is the question that the American
people have to decide.
I cannot tell you that I won't make any mistakes.
But I will tell you this: I have been through the last 7½ years.
I have seen the President make great decisions. I remember the Monday morning
that he made the decision to go into Lebanon. He paced the floor, in that
oval office at the White House. I was sitting there, the only other person
in the room, and the President finally said, "We'll have to do it." The
decision was made. If he had made that decision the wrong way he wouldn't
have had a second chance.
My point is this: We cannot afford in these
critical times to have as President of the United States a man who does
not think first before he acts.
And I can pledge to you that I know what this
responsibility is. I know the men in the Kremlin, and I am confident that
with Cabot Lodge's assistance we will avoid mistakes certainly as well
as any two could avoid them in these critical times. But, more than that,
we're not simply going to stop at fighting for peace, which we should.
We also are going to try to represent at its best the American ideals of
freedom to all the world. Why is this essential? Because only as we stand
for the extension of freedom throughout the world can we effectively meet
the thrust of the Communists who are fighting to communize the world.
And, so, I say in conclusion to you: If you
believe that we are the team that can keep the peace, keep it without war,
then we say, go out and carry the State of Iowa and Illinois for our ticket.
Thank you.