Vice President NIXON. Thank you very much.
President Hutcheson, delegates to this convention,
your guests, and my fellow vice presidents on the platform, it is a very
great honor to be invited to address this convention and particularly to
be here on a day in which we are going to participate in a debate on television.
I would say, Mr. President, that you have
a rather unusual distinction in this respect. You get the opportunity to
see live the two candidates who tonight millions of Americans are going
to be able to see only on their television screens. This indicates the
tremendous importance of your organization. It indicates the interest of
both political parties and both candidates in your goals and also in your
support.
I am here to talk to you about your goals
and your support, as will be my opponent, and I deeply appreciate the spirit
in which your invitation was extended and the graciousness of your reception
today.
I, of course, would like to begin my remarks
by finding a point of reference in which I could identify myself with the
members of this organization and with the delegates to this convention.
You know, when you're around campaigning you
always try to say, "Well , I used to be a member of this organization or
that, or I have a cousin or an uncle or an aunt who was," and that immediately
gets you on the right plane with them. So, I've been doing a little looking
into my family background in the last 2 or 3 days to see what relationship
I could have to the Carpenters. I cannot say that I'm a member of a union,
although Mr. Khrushchev has done quite well in trying to make me a member
of the Grocery Clerks Union. I can only say I would rather be a grocery
clerk in the United States than to have his job in the Soviet Union.
I can say, however, something about my father.
My father, as you probably are aware, was a Californian, but like almost
all Californians he came from the Midwest. He spent his early years in
Ohio, and while there his vocation was that of a streetcar
motorman. He used to tell us when we were growing up - there were five
boys in our family - that the reason he left Columbus, Ohio, and quit the
job with the streetcar company was that he had attempted to Organize with
another group of motormen, a group of individuals, who would force the
company to close the platforms on which the motormen used to have to stand.
As my dad used to explain it, in those days they stood out on the end of
the car in order to run the car and there was no protection whatever, and
he said for years afterward that the reason he had chilblains - that was
the term used - was that his feet used to get cold because of the lack
of protection. He said also that a year after he left the streetcar company,
after this ill-fated attempt to organize the motormen had not succeeded,
they did put protection up so that no other motorman in the Columbus streetcar
railway did get chilblains. So at least my dad was in an organizing
venture that succeeded, although it did not while he was there.
But I have even a closer identification. You
know what candidates usually like to say when they come before any audience
is something to the effect that they were born in a log cabin. Now, I cannot
say truthfully that I was born in a log cabin, but can say something that
I doubt many other candidates can say. That is that my father built the
house I was born in, because in addition to being a streetcar motorman,
he was somewhat of a jack-of-all-trades. He worked in the oilfields in
California to supplement the very, very modest income that came off a 6-acre
lemon grove, which was not too productive, and he also was a carpenter.
In those days, in our tiny town of Yorba Linda, I remember he often supplemented
our very meager family budget by odd jobs.
I want to make it very clear though
that I am, as my wife will tell you, very poor about the house. I inherited
none of my father's ability as a carpenter or to do things with his hands,
but at least I am proud of his identification, and I only wish that he
could be here to hear me speak to this organization.
So much for the personal identification.
May I now turn to your particular concerns
to some of the reasons why I feel this organization very appropriately
has both the candidates for the Presidency, one on the Republican ticket
and one on the Democratic ticket, before you.
First, speaking of our Republican ticket and
the thing that we stand for, I know that you realize how proud I am that
the father of your president, Bill Hutcheson, for many years headed the
Labor Committee of the Republican Party. I hope that we can be worthy in
our party of the leadership that he gave to that labor committee. I also
hope that we can be worthy of the goals which he set for the labor movement
in that particular position. I hope we can be worthy not only as a party,
I hope we can be worthy in our conduct of the business of government in
Washington, D.C., in the event we should succeed in this election campaign.
I also wish to pay my respects to what this
organization has done m a field in which I have had considerable experience.
You know, in my early days in the Congress,
from 1947 until I went to the Senate in 1950, I had the responsibility
for investigating the attempts of the Communists to infiltrate various
American organizations. Those attempts went on then. They are continuing
today. One area where the Communists had a failure of massive proportions
was in their attempt to infiltrate the labor movement. They particularly
failed in those particular union organizations which are represented by
this group today, in the building trades, and I think it is only accurate
to point out that one of the first unions to adopt a rule making it absolutely
illegal and impossible for Communists either to belong to the union or
to hold office in it were the Carpenters who, long before other institutions
in this country and other leaders saw the insidious danger of communism
and saw that their goals were not the goals of free trade unions, that
the Carpenter's Union in 1928 took this stand. For that you are to be commended,
for the leadership that you gave not only to the union movement but to
America as well.
May I say also that you deserve a tribute
which I, in my capacity as Vice President of the United States, and as
a candidate for the Presidency wish to pay, for maintaining the high standards
for skills and for crafts in the United States.
You know, we often hear the things that are
wrong about this country, and we must never forget that in pointing up
those things that are wrong, which we should do in order to correct them,
that America has an awful lot of things that are right about it.
In that connection I remember my meeting with Mr. Khrushchev in Moscow
when we were standing in that model kitchen. Some way or another the conversation
got around to construction, housing and apartments and the like, and I
pointed out to Mr. Khrushchev the difference in construction in our country
and in his, as I saw it, the advantages that we had. He was proceeding
to point out what he considered his advantages. He made a very interesting
statement at that point. He said, "But, Mr. Nixon, your construction in
the United States is of very poor quality." He said, "Why, you build your
houses with sawdust."
I couldn't understand what he meant, and then
I learned later that he had seen some motion picture in which there had
been a demonstration of how building went on in the United States, and
what he referred to, of course, as sawdust, was insulation.
Now, insulation, of course, is something that
was unheard of in the Soviet Union, and here it showed, one, his ignorance
of the tremendous development in the United States in the field of building
and in other fields; and, also, it indicates how far we are ahead in the
area of construction and housing.
So when we think of the things we are behind
in, let us remember that here is a place, due in great part to the skills
of this organization and organizations like it, due in great part to the
skills that you have contributed to, a place where the United States is
first in the world. We're first in the world in construction, in quality
of housing, and Americans and all free peoples can be proud of that today.
In determining what subjects you would be
primarily interested in, I, of course, as will my opponent, Mr. Kennedy,
have a wide variety to choose from. First, I could talk about those technical
aspects of the various laws which affect the building trades. I could,
for example, refer to the fact that, as far as common situs picketing is
concerned, I happen not to be a Johnny-come-lately. If you will check
the records, you will find in 1949, when I was a Member of the House, that
I joined with Senator Taft and others - he was then a Member of the Senate
- in introducing legislation which would have corrected the inequities
which arose out of the Denver Building Trades case. It is unfortunate
that we have been unable to get such legislation passed in the intervening
years.
I could point out other areas where I think
my views have been similar to and have represented the views of this organization
in the technical aspects of labor legislation.
On the other hand, it is only accurate to
say that in some aspects my views have not coincided with the views of
this Organization or others, for that matter, in the labor union field,
as far as technical labor legislation is concerned.
I point this out because I think it is only
fair that when a candidate for the Presidency comes before any group that
he lay it on the line as to what he believes, that he make clear those
areas where he agrees and he make clear also those areas where he does
not agree.
What I do want to say is this: As far
as the goals which Mr. Hutcheson described in his speech this morning -
I had a report of it - are concerned, certainly I believe in those goals:
better housing, better health, better jobs. These are goals that all of
us seek as Americans.
And if I could talk to that point for just
a moment, let me make one particular issue absolutely clear. I think sometimes
when we talk about how we are going to achieve a better life for Americans,
we tend to confuse these goals which we seek with the means that we should
use to seek them.
As far as the goals are concerned, all Americans,
Democrats, Republicans, independents, want a better life for the people
of this country. All Americans certainly want progress for the people of
this country. This is true of my opponent. He wants it. I know he is sincere
in believing that the means he would use to reach those goals are the best
means.
I think you have to realize, and I think you
do realize, as Mr. Hutcheson pointed out, that I too believe that the means
that I would use to achieve these goals that all Americans seek are the
best ways to get to these goals. The question, in other words and I think
we should have this clear throughout the campaign, is not whether the two
candidates for the Presidency disagree on their desire to have a better
life, more progress for the American people. The question is: Which is
the kind of a program, which of the candidates can furnish the leadership,
which will produce that progress?
Now on that score, you have to look at our
records first, and in looking at the records I should point out, and I
think it is only fair to point out that - while the charge has been made
that under our administration, of which I am proud to be a part, America
has been standing still, that we have not been moving forward, that our
administration has worked in the interests of the rich and not in the interests
of the poor, that we've been for the employers and against the employees,
that we're for management and against the wage earner - that, in view of
these charges, some of which I realize were made in the heat of a political
campaign, when you look at the record, the record knocks down every one
of them, and I want to talk about that record for just a moment.
Let's put it in terms of your members. Let's
put it in terms of the carpenters, 900,000 strong, around America. What
do they want, and how has this administration been effective in meeting
those wants?
Well, first of all, they want jobs with good
wages. What do we find as far as the record is concerned? As far
as the whole economy is involved, when we cheek the progress in this administration,
we find that real wages - I'm speaking of wages after you take inflation
out - went up only 2 percent in the 7½ years of the administration
that preceded this one. Real wages, on the other hand, went up 15 percent
during the Eisenhower administration's 7½ years.
So, you see, you have here a comparison which
I think certainly is very fair. You have 15 years to divide. Half the time
we had one administration and one party in power; the other half we had
another administration, the Republican Party in power, and when we look
at the record, not at what people say they are going to do, but what they
do do, I say that this administration has been good for the wage earners
and good for the carpenters of America, individually, and better for them
than was the previous administration.
Let me put it in terms of the carpenters themselves,
and you can go back and check these figures, because they come right from
the Bureau of Labor Statistics. We find that as far as the increase in
your real wages is concerned, hourly wages, after you take inflation out,
that they increased 70 percent more in the 7 years of the Eisenhower administration
than they did in the 7 years of the Truman administration.
And so I say to all the carpenters of America,
I say to the 67 million jobholders of America when you test the two administrations
in terms of performance, we've done a better job. Wages have gone up and
we have held the line on prices so that those wages have meant a real increase
in take-home pay, a real increase in the ability of the average family
to meet the family budget. This is the first point that I would make.
Now, another point that I think should be
made is this; we find that our wage earners in this country - and certainly
all of the members of your organization would say this - they not only
want high wages and good jobs, but they also want other things which mean
a good life for their children and for their families. You want better
schools. You want better schools. You want better housing, and you, of
course, make a tremendous contribution in producing them. You want better
highways. You want better health, better security in your old age.
Let's check the two administrations on this
particular point, and what do you find? In the case of schools, not only
were more schools built in the Eisenhower 7 years than in the Truman 7
years, more were built in the Eisenhower 7 years than in the 20 years preceding
it. So, on that score I say we have a good record to present. Hospitals?
We have built more hospitals in this 7 years than in the preceding 7 years.
Health? We find generally the standards of health care have been improved
more in this 7 years than in the preceding 7 years. Highways? You know
the record there.
I say that in any index that you take in these
areas that I have mentioned, that when you look at the record that this
administration has produced, we have produced on the promises that we have
made. Our record has been better than theirs. Now that, of course, is a
view of one who is prejudiced. I'm part of this administration and I want
you to know that. I want you to listen to my opponent and consider what
he says, but after you've heard our promises, after you've heard what we
both say, that we are for the great goals that you want for your families
and for your members, you do not have to rely on what we say. Look at what
we've done. When you look at what we have done, I say we have a good record.
It is one that has meant not only good times for the people of this country
generally; it has meant good times, good wages, good jobs for the members
of this great organization.
And that's what you pay off on. You pay off
on the performance, not simply on the promises. But this is the past. And
so everybody here certainly raises a question, "What about the future?"
Are we going to stand still? And my answer is twofold.
First, America has not stood still in these
last 7½ years. We have seen the greatest progress in those 7½
years that we have ever had in the history of this country.
But, secondly, we cannot stop here.
We must continue to expand our growth, to deal with our problems and we
must move into those areas in which there are weaknesses in the economy
and move in effectively.
Now the question is, Who can do the better
job? Can our opponents or can we?
Again I say I believe that the programs that
we offer for housing, the programs that we offer for schools, for hospitals,
for jobs, for real income for Americans will produce more effectively than
will theirs.
I am saying, in effect, that if you want progress
for America, if you want America to move forward, we believe we know the
way. We believe that the way they would have America go would not produce
progress; it would in the end take us back to the time when we had very
little progress, and I'm speaking of the administration which preceded
this one.
Let me give you an example of this. Am I suggesting
here that I am coming before this group and saying that this progress is
going to be created by what the Federal Government does? Am I telling you
that we are going to produce more progress for America in all these areas
because the Federal Government Is going to spend more than our opponents
would have it spend? My answer is "No." So I'm sure many people would say,
"Well, now, just a minute, Mr. Nixon. Don't you have a weak case here?
Your opponent can come in here and he is going to advocate more spending
by the Federal Government for schools, for housing, for medical care, for
progress generally than you will. How then can you stand before any American
audience and say that your way is going to produce more progress than his
when the Federal Government is going to spend more under his program?"
Now put yourself in my position for a moment.
Obviously I want to be elected, my opponent wants to be elected. If that
were all I am interested in I could just come in here and say, "I'll raise
him. If he's going to spend $2 billion on schools, I'll spend 4. If he's
going to spend a billion dollars on health, I'll spend 3."
That would be very simple to do. I'll tell
you why I don't do that. I don't do that, one, because if I made such a
promise I couldn't keep it; and two, I don't do it because if I made such
a promise I shouldn't keep it, because progress, my friends, is not measured
solely in terms of how much the Federal Government spends.
Let me put it another way. It isn't a question
of how much the Federal Government spends. It's a question of whether it
spends its money for the right things.
In that respect, may I just suggest this,
if you carry the argument to its logical extreme and you were to say, "Well,
the more the Federal Government spends the better," we might as well go
whole hog and have the Federal Government do everything - and that's the
worst kind of government that we could have. So we must take each one of
these fields, whether it's education or housing or health, or any of the
others that I have mentioned, and we must have the Federal Government do
the right things, not simply judge our programs in terms of who is spending
the most money.
Let me put it still another way. In speaking
of the right things, I am simply trying to say that the great source of
progress, the motive for progress, in this country is not what government
does - Federal, State and local - but what private enterprise, individual
enterprise, as represented by this organization, does.
Our gross national product is approximately
$500 billion today. Of that amount approximately $100 billion is spent
by government. The other $400 billion - where does that come from? It comes
from what individual enterprise, nongovernment enterprise does.
Now, if we want progress - more jobs for carpenters,
for example, at higher wages, more building, more construction - where
are you going to get it?
Yes, we can expand this hundred billion dollars
that government, Federal, local, and State, does spend. We can expand that,
but the way to get most progress is to stimulate and inspire the expansion
of the $400 billion sector because there's where the jobs are. There's
where the most progress is.
So today I do not tell you that the Federal
Government is the answer to all of our problems. I do not tell you that
I will raise my opponent's offers in these fields, but I do tell you this.
The programs that we adopt, programs for progress in health, in education,
in welfare, in housing, in all of these areas, are programs that are right.
They are programs that have the Federal Government do those things that
it ought to do, but they are programs that would have the Federal Government
primarily recognize that the way to great progress in this country is not
through expanding the functions and size of the Federal Government but
through expanding the creative opportunities for 180 million free Americans.
And now if I could touch on one other point.
The question may well be raised, "But, Mr. Nixon, when you talk about this
business of what the Federal Government does, aren't you putting a dollar
sign on dealing with the problems of human misery? Aren't you putting a
dollar sign on, for example, what we are going to do in the field of depressed
areas, or in the field of housing or the others that you have mentioned?"
My answer is we can never put a dollar sign
on what Americans will do for other Americans, but my answer also is this:
When you have a President who adopts policies that have the Government
spend more than it needs to or that have the Government spend more than
it takes in, he, when he does that, is creating human misery by that very
action.
What do we find? When the Government
spends more than it needs to, the people have to pay the bill.
These promises that candidates make - they're
not paying them with their own money. They are going to make these promises
with your money, and I say that it's the responsibility of the President
of the United States to see that every dollar of the people's money is
spent that needs to be spent, for defense or any other area, but that not
$1 is spent that doesn't need to be spent.
Why? Because when we spend less in Washington
it means that people have more to spend for themselves.
Why do I say that I cannot go along with the
program that would inflate our currency? Not because I'm concerned
about bankers and their interest rates and the like. From a political standpoint,
there are very few bankers and there are an awful lot of wage earners.
The reason I say that is that the people who are hurt the worst by policies
such as were adopted in the Truman administration, when we found the value
of the dollar going down 36 percent are not the bankers. They are smart
enough and they have enough money to hedge against it. People who are not
bankers may be smart enough to hedge against it, but they don't have the
money to do it.
So what do we find? We find the retired workers,
we find the wage earners trying to make their wages, as high as they may
be, meet the family budget at the end of the month. We find that all these
people are the ones who are affected. They're the ones on which inflation
takes its cruelest toll.
What I am really trying to say to this group
is this. Don't judge a presidential candidate on the basis of what he promises.
Remember the promises he makes you pay for. Don't judge a presidential
candidate on the basis of what he says the Federal Government is going
to do. Remember the question is not whether the Federal Government does
the most things for people. The question is whether it does the right things.
When you hear a presidential candidate, remember
that the strength of America is not inputting all of our problems over
to Washington. The strength of America is in increasing the responsibilities
and encouraging the creative activities of free American citizens.
These things I believe, and I can only say
in that connection, adding one other point, we need all these things -
jobs, good housing, better school - but above all we need to be around
to enjoy them, and the great issue, the great test you must put both of
us to is: Which of the candidates can provide the leadership that will
keep peace for America without surrender and that will extend freedom throughout
the world?
I do not need, before this group, to indicate
my views in detail on this issue. They will be discussed many times in
the course of this campaign. I will only give you my credentials.
I know the Communists. I think I know Mr.
Khrushchev. I know how tough they are. I know how determined they are,
how fanatical they are to rule the world. I know that if America is to
lead the free world, as she must, to peace and to freedom we must always
be stronger than they are militarily, and I will insist that whatever funds
are necessary to maintain an absolute superiority in military strength
must be expended.
I know, too, that we're in an economic race
with Mr. Khrushchev. I remember when I was in Moscow he said, "Mr. Nixon,
we're behind you now, but we're moving faster than you are. We're going
to catch up with you, and when we go by you we're going to wave and say,
'Come on, follow us, do as we do; you're going to fall far behind.'
He said he was going to catch us in 7 years.
He isn't going to catch us in 7 years. He isn't going to catch us in 70
years because his system is wrong. It has fatal flaws in it that will show
up.
But, my friends, it isn't enough for me simply
to say that. America must produce to the full, and we must adopt programs
that will get the most out of this great economy of ours, so that we can
stay ahead in this race in which we are already well ahead, producing almost
twice as much as does the Soviet Union.
I know, too, as far as this world struggle
is concerned, that we must recognize that in dealing with Mr. Khrushchev
and his colleagues they do not react like the leaders of the free world,
like Mr. Macmillan, Mr. De Gaulle, Mr. Adenauer. These men respect power.
They respect firmness. They despise weakness, whether it is military or
economic or diplomatic. I believe that it is essential that we be firm
in dealing with them, that we never make a concession without getting a
concession in return, that we never reduce our armaments without getting
absolute assurance that they are doing likewise, and that we do all these
things without at the same time being belligerent, keeping cool, keeping
dignified, as President Eisenhower did in Paris and as he did again in
his magnificent speech to the United Nations when he spoke for the whole
free world so eloquently 2 days ago.
I have told you today that I am for the things
that I believe you believe in and that all Americans believe in. We're
for peace without surrender, we are for a better life for our citizens.
We're for progress into the future. You have to judge as to whether our
programs are best for you, best for America.
My last plea is simply this: In making that
judgment, make it on the basis of the programs. Make it on the basis of
our records. Make it on the basis of what you know about the men.
In that connection, I can only repeat, as
I have before, I know what the problems of our people are. I believe that
as far as this country is concerned, we today are the most fortunate people
in the world to live in it. I believe, with all the weaknesses that have
been pointed out, and there are some that America's strengths are the wonder
of the world, and we can continue to make her stronger.
But as far as the decision is corrected, I
ask you to make it in this light, not in terms of simply voting the party
label, but in terms of what we stand for and what our backgrounds are,
because remember, when we elect a President, we don't think in terms of
party alone. We think in terms of America.
I say to this great convention here today,
only if you believe that what I stand for, what I believe in, will be best
for America, best for your children, as well as for yourselves, do I ask
for your support. If you believe that, I do ask for your support. If you
do not believe it, I respect you for your opposition.
Thank you very much.