 President Gerald R. Ford's Remarks in Kansas City Upon
Accepting the 1976 Republican Presidential Nomination
August 19, 1976
Mr. Chairman, delegates and alternates to this Republican Convention:
I am honored by your nomination, and I accept it with pride, with gratitude,
and with a total will to win a great victory for the American people. We will
wage a winning campaign in every region of this country, from the snowy banks of
Minnesota to the sandy plains of Georgia. We concede not a single State. We
concede not a single vote.
This evening I am proud to stand before this great convention as the first
incumbent President since Dwight D. Eisenhower who can tell the American people
America is at peace.
Tonight I can tell you straightaway this Nation is sound, this Nation is
secure, this Nation is on the march to full economic recovery and a better
quality of life for all Americans.
And I will tell you one more thing: This year the issues are on our side. I
am ready, I am eager to go before the American people and debate the real issues
face to face with Jimmy Carter.
The American people have a right to know firsthand exactly where both of us
stand.
I am deeply grateful to those who stood with me in winning the nomination of
the party whose cause I have served all of my adult life. I respect the
convictions of those who want a change in Washington. I want a change, too.
After 22 long years of majority misrule, let's change the United States
Congress.
My gratitude tonight reaches far beyond this arena to countless friends whose
confidence, hard work, and unselfish support have brought me to this moment. It
would be unfair to single out anyone, but may I make an exception for my
wonderful family-Mike, Jack, Steve, and Susan and especially my dear wife,
Betty.
We Republicans have had some tough competition. We not only preach the
virtues of competition, we practice them. But to- night we come together not on
a battlefield to conclude a cease- fire, but to join forces on a training field
that has conditioned us all for the rugged contest ahead. Let me say this from
the bottom of my heart: After the scrimmages of the past few months, it really
feels good to have Ron Reagan on the same side of the line.
To strengthen our championship lineup, the convention has wisely chosen one
of the ablest Americans as our next Vice President, Senator Bob Dole of Kansas.
With his help, with your help, with the help of millions of Americans who
cherish peace, who want freedom preserved, prosperity shared, and pride in
America, we will win this election. I speak not of a Republican victory, but a
victory for the American people.
You at home listening tonight, you are the people who pay the taxes and obey
the laws. You are the people who make our system work. You are the people who
make America what it is. It is from your ranks that I come and on your side that
I stand.
Something wonderful happened to this country of ours the past 2 years. We all
came to realize it on the Fourth of July. Together, out of years of turmoil and
tragedy, wars and riots, assassinations and wrongdoing in high places, Americans
recaptured the spirit of 1776. We saw again the pioneer vision of our
revolutionary founders and our immigrant ancestors. Their vision was of free men
and free women enjoying limited government and unlimited opportunity. The
mandate I want in 1976 is to make this vision a reality, but it will take the
voices and the votes of many more Americans who are not Republicans to make that
mandate binding and my mission possible.
I have been called an unelected President, an accidental President. We may
even hear that again from the other party, despite the fact that I was welcomed
and endorsed by an overwhelming majority of their elected representatives in the
Congress who certified my fitness to our highest office. Having become Vice
President and President without expecting or seeking either, I have a special
feeling toward these high offices. To me, the Presidency and the Vice-Presidency
were not prizes to be won, but a duty to be done.
So, tonight it is not the power and the glamour of the Presidency that leads
me to ask for another 4 years; it is something every hard-working American will
understand-the challenge of a job well begun, but far from finished.
Two years ago, on August 9,1974, 1 placed my hand on the Bible, which Betty
held, and took the same constitutional oath that was administered to George
Washington. I had faith in our people, in our institutions, and in myself.
"My fellow Americans," I said, "our long national nightmare is
over."
It was an hour in our history that troubled our minds and tore at our hearts.
Anger and hatred had risen to dangerous levels, dividing friends and families.
The polarization -of our political order had aroused unworthy passions of
reprisal and revenge. Our governmental system was closer to stalemate than at
any time since Abraham Lincoln took the same oath of office. Our economy was in
the throes of runaway inflation, taking us headlong into the worst recession
since Franklin D. Roosevelt took the same oath.
On that dark day I told my fellow countrymen, "I am acutely aware that
you have not elected me as your President by your ballots, so I ask you to
confirm me as your President with your prayers."
On a marble fireplace in the -White House is carved a prayer which John Adams
wrote. It concludes, "May none but honest and wise men ever rule under this
roof." Since I have resided in that historic house, I have tried to live by
that prayer. I faced many tough problems. I probably made some mistakes, but on
balance, America and Americans have made an incredible comeback since August
1974. Nobody can honestly say otherwise. And the plain truth is that the great
progress we have made at home and abroad was in spite of the majority who run
the Congress of the United States.
For 2 years I have stood for all the people against a vote- hungry,
free-spending congressional majority on Capitol Hill. Fifty-five times I vetoed
extravagant and unwise legislation; 45 times I made those vetoes stick. Those
vetoes have saved American taxpayers billions and billions of dollars. I am
against the big tax spender and for the little taxpayer.
I called for a permanent tax cut, coupled with spending reductions, to
stimulate the economy and relieve hard-pressed, middle-income taxpayers. Your
personal exemption must be raised from $750 to $1,000. The other party's
platform talks about tax reform, but there is one big problem-their own Congress
won't act.
I called for reasonable constitutional restrictions on court-ordered busing
of schoolchildren, but the other party's platform concedes that busing should be
a last resort. But there is the same problem-their own Congress won't act.
I called for a major overhaul of criminal laws to crack down on crime and
illegal drugs. The other party's platform deplores America's $90 billion cost of
crime. There is the problem again- their own Congress won't act.
The other party's platform talks about a strong defense. Now, here is the
other side of the problem-their own Congress did act. They slashed $50 billion
from our national defense needs in the last 10 years.
My friends, Washington is not the problem; their Congress is the problem.
You know, the President of the United States is not a magician who can wave a
wand or sign a paper that will instantly end a war, cure a recession, or make
bureaucracy disappear. A President has immense powers under the Constitution,
but all of them ultimately come from the American people and their mandate to
him. That is why, tonight, I turn to the American people and ask not only for
your prayers but also for your strength and your support, for your voice, and
for your vote.
I come before you with a 2-year record of performance without your mandate. I
offer you a 4-year pledge of greater performance with your mandate. As Governor
Al Smith used to say, "Let's look at the record."
Two years ago inflation was 12 percent. Sales were off. Plants were shut
down. Thousands were being laid off every week.
Fear of the future was throttling .down our economy and threatening millions
of families.
Let's look at the record since August 1974. Inflation has been cut in half.
Payrolls are up. Profits are up. Production is up. Purchases are up. Since the
recession was turned around, almost 4 million of our fellow Americans have found
new jobs or got their old jobs back. This year more men and women have jobs than
ever before in the history of the United States. Confidence has returned, and we
are in the full surge of sound recovery to steady prosperity.
Two years ago America was mired in withdrawal from Southeast Asia. A decade
of Congresses had shortchanged our global defenses and threatened our strategic
posture. Mounting tension between Israel and the Arab nations made another war
seem inevitable. The whole world watched and wondered where America was going.
Did we in our domestic turmoil have the will, the stamina, and the unity to
stand up for freedom?
Look at the record since August, 2 years ago. Today America is at peace and
seeks peace for all nations. Not a single American is at war anywhere on the
face of this Earth tonight.
Our ties with Western Europe and Japan, economic as well as military, were
never stronger. Our relations with Eastern Europe, the Soviet Union, and
mainland China are firm, vigilant, and forward looking. Policies I have
initiated offer sound progress for the peoples of the Pacific, Africa, and Latin
America. Israel and Egypt, both trusting the United States, have taken an
historic step that promises an eventual just settlement for the whole Middle
East.
The world now respects America's policy of peace through strength. The United
States is again the confident leader of the free world. Nobody questions our
dedication to peace, but nobody doubts our willingness to use our strength when
our vital interests are at stake, and we will. I called for an up-to-date,
powerful Army, Navy, Air Force, and Marines that will keep America secure for
decades. A strong military posture is always the best insurance for peace. But
America's strength has never rested on arms alone. It is rooted in our mutual
commitment of our citizens and leaders in the highest standards of ethics and
morality and in the spiritual renewal which our Nation is under- going right
now.
Two years ago people's confidence in their highest officials, to whom they
had overwhelmingly entrusted power, had twice been shattered. Losing faith in
the word of their elected leaders, Americans lost some of their own faith in
themselves.
Again, let's look at the record since August 1974. From the start my
administration has been open, candid, forthright. While my entire public and
private life was under searching examination for the Vice-Presidency, I
reaffirmed my lifelong conviction that truth is the glue that holds government
together-not only government but civilization itself. I have demanded honesty,
decency, and personal integrity from everybody in the executive branch of the
Government. The House and Senate have the same duty.
The American people will not accept a double standard in the United States
Congress. Those who make our laws today must not debase the reputation of our
great legislative bodies that have given us such giants as Daniel Webster Henry
Clay, Sam Rayburn, and Robert A. Taft. Whether in the Nation's Capital, the
State capital, or city hall, private morality and public trust must go together.
From August of 1974 to August of 1976, the record shows steady progress
upward toward prosperity, peace, and public trust. My record is one of progress,
not platitudes. My record is one of specifics, not smiles. My record is one of
performance, not promises. It is a record I am proud to run on. It is a record
the American people-Democrats, Independents, and Republicans alike-will support
on November 2.
For the next 4 years I pledge to you that I will hold to the steady course we
have begun. But I have no intention of standing on the record alone.
We will continue winning the fight against inflation. We will go on reducing
the dead weight and impudence of bureaucracy.
We will submit a balanced budget by 1978.
We will improve the quality of life at work, at play, and in our homes and in
our neighborhoods. We will not abandon our cities. We will encourage urban
programs which assure safety in the streets, create healthy environments, and
restore neighborhood pride. We will return control of our children's education
to parents and local school authorities.
We will make sure that the party of Lincoln remains the party of equal
rights.
We will create a tax structure that is fair for all our citizens, one that
preserves the continuity of the family home, the family farm, and the family
business.
We will ensure the integrity of the social security system and improve
Medicare so that our older citizens can enjoy the health and the happiness that
they have earned. There is no reason they should have to go broke just to get
well.
We will make sure that this rich Nation does not neglect citizens who are
less fortunate, but provides for their needs with compassion and with dignity.
We will reduce the growth and the cost of government and allow individual
breadwinners and businesses to keep more of the money that they earn.
We will create a climate in which our economy will provide a meaningful job
for everyone who wants to work and a decent standard of life for all Americans.
We will ensure that all of our young people have a better chance in life than we
had, an education they can use, and a career they can be proud of.
We will carry out a farm policy that assures a fair market price for the
farmer, encourages full production, leads to record exports, and eases the
hunger within the human family. We will never use the bounty of America's
farmers as a pawn in international diplomacy. There will be no embargoes.
We will continue our strong leadership to bring peace, justice, and economic
progress where there is turmoil, especially in the Middle East. We will build a
safer and saner world through patient negotiations and dependable arms
agreements which reduce the danger of conflict and horror of thermonuclear war.
While I am President, we will not return to a collision course that could reduce
civilization to ashes.
We will build an America where people feel rich in spirit as well as in
worldly goods. We will build an America where people feel proud about themselves
and about their country.
We will build on performance, not promises; experience, not expediency; real
progress instead of mysterious plans to be revealed in some dim and distant
future. The American people are wise, wiser than our opponents think. They know
who pays for every campaign promise. They are not afraid of the truth. We will
tell them the truth.
From start to finish, our campaign will be credible; it will be responsible.
We will come out fighting, and we will win. Yes, we, have all seen the polls and
the pundits who say our party is dead. I have heard that before. So did Harry
Truman. I will tell you what I think. The only polls that count are the polls
the American people go to on November 2. And right now, I predict that the
American people are going to say that night, "Jerry, you have done a good
job, keep right on doing it."
As I try in my imagination to look into the homes where families are watching
the end of this great convention, I can't tell which faces are Republicans,
which are Democrats, and which are Independents. I cannot see their color or
their creed. I see only Americans.
I see Americans who love their husbands, their wives, and their children. I
see Americans who love their country for what it has been and what it must
become. I see Americans who work hard ' but who are willing to sacrifice all
they have worked for to keep their children and their country free. I see
Americans who in their own quiet way pray for peace among nations and peace
among themselves. We do love our neighbors, and we do forgive those who have
trespassed against us.
I see a new generation that knows what is right and knows itself, a
generation determined to preserve its ideals, its environment, our Nation, and
the world.
My fellow Americans, I like what I see. I have no fear for the future of this
great country. And as we go forward together, I promise you once more what I
promised before: to uphold the Constitution, to do what is right as God gives me
to see the right, and to do the very best that I can for America.
God helping me, I won't let you down.
Thank you very much.
NOTE: The President spoke at 10:45 p.m. in Kemper Arena. His remarks were
broadcast live on radio and television.
Source: Gerald R. Ford Library and
Museum
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