 President Lyndon B. Johnson's
Remarks Before the National Convention
Upon Accepting the Nomination
August 27, 1964
Chairman McCormack, my fellow Americans:
I accept your nomination.
I accept the duty of leading this party to victory this
year.
And I thank you, I thank you from the bottom of my heart
for placing at my side the man that last night you so wisely selected to be the
next Vice President of the United States.
I know I speak for each of you and all of you when I say
he proved himself tonight in that great acceptance speech. And I speak for both
of us when I tell you that from Monday on he is going to be available for such
speeches in all 50 States!
We will try to lead you as we were led by that great
champion of freedom, the man from Independence, Harry S. Truman.
But the gladness of this high occasion cannot mask the
sorrow which shares our hearts. So let us here tonight, each of us, all of us,
rededicate ourselves to keeping burning the golden torch of promise which John
Fitzgerald Kennedy set aflame.
And let none of us stop to rest until we have written into
the law of the land all the suggestions that made up the John Fitzgerald Kennedy
program. And then let us continue to supplement that program with the kind of
laws that he would have us write.
Tonight we offer ourselves--on our record and by our
platform--as a party for all Americans, an all-American party for all Americans.
This prosperous people, this land of reasonable men, has no place for petty
partisanship or peevish prejudice. The needs of all can never be met by parties
of the few. The needs of all cannot be met by a business party or a labor party,
not by a war party or a peace party, not by a southern party or a northern
party.
Our deeds will meet our needs only if we are served by a
party which serves all our people.
We are members together of such a party, the Democratic
Party of 1964.
We have written a proud record of accomplishments for all
Americans.
If any ask what we have done, just let them look at what
we promised to do. For those promises have become our deeds. And the promises of
tonight I can assure you will become the deeds of tomorrow.
We are in the midst of the largest and the longest period
of peacetime prosperity in our history. And almost every American listening to
us tonight has seen the results in his own life.
But prosperity for most has not brought prosperity to all.
And those who have received the bounty of this land--who sit tonight secure in
affluence and safe in power--must not now turn from the needs of their
neighbors.
Our party and our Nation will continue to extend the hand
of compassion and the hand of affection and love to the old and the sick and the
hungry. For who among us dares to betray the command: "Thou shalt open
thine hand--unto thy brother, to thy poor, and to thy needy, in thy land."
The needs that we seek to fill, the hopes that we seek to
realize, are not our needs, our hopes alone. They are the needs and hopes of
most of the people.
Most Americans want medical care for older citizens. And
so do I.
Most Americans want fair and stable prices and decent
incomes for our farmers. And so do I.
Most Americans want a decent home in a decent neighborhood
for all. And so do I.
Most Americans want an education for every child to the
limit of his ability. And so do I.
Most Americans want a job for every man who wants to work.
And so do I.
Most Americans want victory in our war against poverty.
And so do I.
Most Americans want continually expanding and growing
prosperity. And so do I.
These are your goals. These are our goals. These are the
goals and will be the achievements of the Democratic Party. These are the goals
of this great, rich Nation. These are the goals toward which I will lead, if the
American people choose to follow.
For 30 years, year by year, step by step, vote by vote,
men of both parties have built a solid foundation for our present prosperity.
Too many have worked too long and too hard to see this threatened now by
policies which promise to undo all that we have done together over all these
years.
I believe most of the men and women in this hall tonight,
and I believe most Americans, understand that to reach our goals in our own
land, we must work for peace among all lands.
America's cause is still the cause of all mankind.
Over the last 4 years the world has begun to respond to a
simple American belief: the belief that strength and courage and responsibility
are the keys to peace.
Since 1961, under the leadership of that great President,
John F. Kennedy, we have carried out the greatest peacetime buildup of national
strength of any nation at any time in the history of the world.
I report tonight that we have spent $30 billion more on
preparing this Nation in the
4 years of the Kennedy administration than would have been
spent if we had followed the appropriations of the last year of the previous
administration.
I report tonight as President of the United States and as
Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces on the strength of your country, and I
tell you that it is greater than any adversary. I assure you that it is greater
than the combined might of all the nations, in all the wars, in all the history
of this planet. And I report our superiority is growing.
Weapons do not make peace. Men make peace. And peace comes
not through strength alone, but through wisdom and patience and restraint.
And these qualities under the leadership of President
Kennedy brought a treaty banning nuclear tests in the atmosphere. And a hundred
other nations in the world joined us.
Other agreements were reached and other steps were taken.
And their single guide was to lessen the danger to men without increasing the
danger to freedom.
Their single purpose was peace in the world.
And as a result of these policies, the world tonight knows
where we stand and our allies know where we stand, too. And our adversaries have
learned again that we will never waver in the defense of freedom.
The true courage of this nuclear age lies in the quest for
peace.
There is no place in today's world for weakness. But there
is also no place in today's world for recklessness. We cannot act rashly with
the nuclear weapons that could destroy us all. The only course is to press with
all our mind and all our will to make sure, doubly sure, that these weapons are
never really used at all.
This is a dangerous and a difficult world in which we live
tonight. I promise no easy answers. But I do promise this. I pledge the firmness
to defend freedom, the strength to support that firmness, and a constant,
patient effort to move the world toward peace instead of war.
And here at home one of our greatest responsibilities is
to assure fair play for all of our people.
Every American has the right to be treated as a person. He
should be able to find a job. He should be able to educate his children, he
should be able to vote in elections and he should be judged on his merits as a
person.
Well, this is the fixed policy and the fixed determination
of the Democratic Party and the United States of America.
So long as I am your President I intend to carry out what
the Constitution demands--and justice requires--equal justice under law for all
Americans.
We cannot and we will not allow this great purpose to be
endangered by reckless acts of violence. Those who break the law--those who
create disorder--whether in the North or the South--must be caught and must be
brought to justice.
And I believe that every man and woman in this room
tonight join me in saying that in every part of this country the law must be
respected and violence must be stopped.
And wherever a local officer seeks help or Federal law is
broken, I have pledged and I will use the full resources of the Federal
Government.
Let no one tell you that he can hold back progress and at
the same time keep the peace. This is a false and empty promise. To stand in the
way of orderly progress is to encourage violence.
And I say tonight to those who wish us well--and to those
who wish us ill--the growing forces in this country are the forces of common
human decency, and not the forces of bigotry and fear and smear.
Our problems are many and are great. But our opportunities
are even greater.
And let me make this clear. I ask the American people for
a mandate--not to preside over a finished program--not just to keep things
going, I ask the American people for a mandate to begin.
This Nation--this generation--in this hour, has man's
first chance to build the Great Society--a place where the meaning of man's life
matches the marvels of man's labor.
We seek a nation where every man can find reward in work
and satisfaction in the use of his talents. We seek a nation where every man can
seek knowledge, and touch beauty, and rejoice in the closeness of family and
community.
We seek a nation where every man can, in the words of our
oldest promise, follow the pursuit of happiness--not just security--but
achievements and excellence and fulfillment of the spirit.
So let us join together in this great task.
Will you join me tonight in rebuilding our cities to make
them a decent place for our children to live in?
Will you join me tonight in starting a program that will
protect the beauty of our land and the air that we breathe?
Won't you join me tonight in starting a program that will
give every child education of the highest quality that he can take?
So let us join together in giving every American the
fullest life which he can hope for. For the ultimate test of our civilization,
the ultimate test of our faithfulness to our past, is not in our goods and is
not in our guns. It is in the quality--the quality of our people's lives and in
the men and women that we produce.
This goal can be ours. We have the resources; we have the
knowledge. But tonight we must seek the courage.
Because tonight the contest is the same that we have faced
at every turning point in history. It is not between liberals and conservatives,
it is not between party and party, or platform and platform. It is between
courage and timidity. It is between those who have vision and those who see what
can be, and those who want only to maintain the status quo. It is between those
who welcome the future and those who turn away from its promises.
This is the true cause of freedom. The man who is hungry,
who cannot find work or educate his children, who is bowed by want--that man is
not fully free.
For more than 30 years, from social security to the war
against poverty, we have diligently worked to enlarge the freedom of man. And as
a result, Americans tonight are freer to live as they want to live, to pursue
their ambitions, to meet their desires, to raise their families than at any time
in all of our glorious history.
And every American knows in his heart that this is right.
I am determined in all the time that is mine to use all
the talents that I have for bringing this great, lovable land, this great Nation
of ours, together--together in greater unity in pursuit of this common purpose.
I truly believe that we someday will see an America that knows no North or
South, no East or West--an America that is undivided by creed or color, and
untorn by suspicion or strife.
The Founding Fathers dreamed America before it was. The
pioneers dreamed of great cities on the wilderness that they crossed.
Our tomorrow is on its way. It can be a shape of darkness
or it can be a thing of beauty. The choice is ours, it is yours, for it will be
the dream that we dare to dream.
I know what kind of a dream Franklin Delano Roosevelt and
Harry S. Truman and John F. Kennedy would dream if they were here tonight.
And I think that I know what kind of a dream you want to
dream.
Tonight we of the Democratic Party confidently go before
the people offering answers, not retreat; offering unity, not division; offering
hope, not fear or smear.
We do offer the people a choice, a choice of continuing on
the courageous and the compassionate course that has made this Nation the
strongest and the freest and the most prosperous and the most peaceful nation in
the history of mankind.
To those who have sought to divide us they have only
helped to unite us.
To those who would provoke us we have turned the other
cheek.
So as we conclude our labors, let us tomorrow turn to our
new task. Let us be on our way!
NOTE: The President spoke in late evening at the
Democratic National Convention in Convention Hall at Atlantic City, N.J. In his
opening words he referred to Speaker of the House John W. McCormack of
Massachusetts, permanent chairman of the Convention.
The nomination took place on the President's 56th
birthday. A birthday party in his honor was held in the ballroom at Convention
Hall.
Source: Public Papers of the Presidents of the United
States: Lyndon B. Johnson, 1963-64. Volume II, entry 541, pp. 1009-1013.
Washington, D. C.: Government Printing Office, 1965.
Lyndon Baines
Johnson Library and Museum
|