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Annual Convention, Automotive Service Industry Association, Chicago, IL, March 8, 1971
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The original documents are located in Box D31, folder "Annual Convention, Automotive
Service Industry Association, Chicago, IL, March 8, 1971" of the Ford Congressional
Papers: Press Secretary and Speech File at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library.
Copyright Notice
The copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of
photocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted material. The Council donated to the United
States of America his copyrights in all of his unpublished writings in National Archives collections.
Works prepared by U.S. Government employees as part of their official duties are in the public
domain. The copyrights to materials written by other individuals or organizations are presumed to
remain with them. If you think any of the information displayed in the PDF is subject to a valid
copyright claim, please contact the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library.
Distribution: 20 of Ford
District media am 3/8/71
m Office Copy
AN ADDRESS BY REP. GERALD R. FORD, R-MICH.
REPUBLICAN LEADER, U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
BEFORE THE 1971 ANNUAL CONVENTION
OF THE AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE INDUSTRY ASSOCIATION
AT THE PALMER HOUSE HOTEL, CHICAGO
3:30 P.M., MONDAY, MARCH 8, 1971
FOR RELEASE ON DELIVERY
It is a pleasure to be here with you today. The theme of your convention
is one that sets the spine to tingling and the brain to stirring. The Challenges
of Change in the Seventies.
We all know that men must be challenged to strive mightily and to achieve
lofty goals. We know that change is the essence of progress, that change requires
challenge, and that challenge involves the clash of differing ideas.
This is the kind of time we are living in--a time of challenge, a time of
change, a time when different ideas are colliding.
We meet in exciting--and trying times. These are times when momentous
decisions must be made--decisions today which will determine the quality of our
lives tomorrow.
It is a time for a realistic assessment of our problems--a time for a
resolve to solve those problems as quickly and expertly as circumstance will permit.
It is a time for positive action, for leadership, for creativity, and for
boldness.
The challenge of our times is to confront the great problems and to employ
the American genius and the spirit of enthusiasm needed to overcome them.
How are we to do this? There must be created within our country a new
feeling of common purpose--a resolve which will produce two-way cooperation
between government and the people, a working together of one with the other toward
needed solutions.
I will talk with you today about a number of challenges--the challenge of
militant Communism in the Middle East and Indochina and the search for peace; the
challenge posed by the economy, where we must wrestle with the hangover from the
inflationary binge of the late 1960s while making a transition from wartime to
peacetime; the challenge of the environment, where astronomical sums will be needed
to restore and maintain our physical environment and to assure our survival; and
the challenge of governmental reform, where we must restructure the Federal govern-
ment so it becomes the servant and not the master of the people.
(more)
GERALD LIBRARY
Digitized from Box D31 of the Ford Congressional Papers: Press Secretary and Speech File at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library
-2-
I speak first about the Middle East--because while it is Vietnam which has
torn this Nation apart and ravaged its soul it is in the Middle East that the
danger of World War III is the greatest. It is there that we have most to fear a
head-on collision with the other nuclear super-power, the Soviet Union.
We work ceaselessly for peace in the Middle East, but all the time we are
aware that the Soviet Union has arrogantly and flagrantly embarked on a drive to
turn the Mediterranean into a red sea, undermine the southern flank of NATO, and
expand Russian influence across Africa from the Indian Ocean to the South Atlantic.
If we were to allow the Soviet Union to crush Israel indirectly, through
the weapons the Soviets have placed in Egyptian hands, this would mean the end of
hope for all free nations of the Mediterranean and even western Europe. It would
give the Soviet Union dominance throughout the Middle East--throughout the entire
Mediterranean area. We will not let that happen.
The situation in the Middle East is most complex. There will be no settle-
ment until both sides are prepared to make some sacrifices.
The Administration last August put forward the initiative which resulted in
a cease-fire and now the Jarring Talks. Some progress has been made through
indirect negotiations. There are indications that the Jarring Talks will continue.
This gives us reason to hope.
There are those who are inclined to condemn the Israelis for refusing to pull
back to their prewar boundaries. Personally, in view of past history, I find
Israel's attitude completely understandable. A nation which is confronted by
hostile powers backed by the military might of the Soviet Union cannot be blamed
for seeking secure and defensible borders.
While we seek to achieve a settlement of the Middle East conflict, we
continue to resist Communist aggression in Southeast Asia and to work for peace
in that war-torn region of the world.
Some critics charge that President Nixon has widened the Vietnam War. This
is a fiction. It is North Vietnam which made the Vietnam War an Indochina War-by
using Laos and Cambodia as supply and staging areas for attacks on South Vietnam.
The Vietnam War is a political war, but this does not mean that the Allied
Forces should ignore sound military policy.
Sound military policy dictated that the South Vietnamese move into Cambodia
and Laos, seek to disrupt the Communists' supply lines and hit the enemy in
sanctuaries used to launch attacks against South Vietnam.
(more)
-3-
The Cambodian Operation was a great success. I supported it from the outset.
The tremendous improvement in our casualty figures is tangible proof of our success.
Two years ago American combat deaths averaged 278 a week. In 1969 the figure
decreased to an average of 180. In 1970 U.S. casualties fell to 80, and in the
last six months they have diminished to 51.
I also support the Laotian incursion. If it is successful--and I believe it
will be despite the tough going--great benefits will flow from it.
At a minimum, effective disruption of enemy supply lines in Laos will
prevent major enemy attacks on South Vietnam for six months to a year. Meantime,
U.S. withdrawals from South Vietnam will be accelerated in time and number.
We have drawn our forces in Vietnam down from an authorized strength of
549,500 men to 326,000--and we will be down to 284,000 men by May 1. In April,
the President will have an option to announce further withdrawals.
Our goal in Vietnam is to make it possible for the South Vietnamese to
determine their own future. With the incursions into Cambodia and Laos and
continued progress in Vietnamization, we have moved considerably closer to that
goal. Prospects are good that we will achieve it.
Anyone who wants to see the South Vietnamese government gain the upper hand
against the Communists cannot help but be heartened by the incursions into Cambodia
and Laos.
A year ago at this time the enemy had a port through which supplies were
pouring--the port of Sihanoukville, now called Kompong Som. With the help of
Prince Sihanouk's government, enemy supplies came up Highway 4 through Pnomh Penh
and flowed into the sanctuary areas opposite the border of South Vietnam, 30 miles
from Saigon.
The North Vietnamese had seized a corridor of land extending all the way
from the northern Panhandle of Laos through the Ho Chi Minh Trail and along the
border with South Vietnam and Cambodia, all the way to the sea. From this sanctuary
area the enemy mounted his attacks against South Vietnam and against U.S. forces.
Following the Cambodian cross-border operations last spring, this sanctuary
area was cleaned out along the South Vietnamese border, and the new government of
Lon Nol in Cambodia shut off the use of Sihanoukville port so that the enemy found
himself totally dependent on the supplies coming down the Ho Chi Minh Trail.
In 1971 it made good sense not only to move in against the sanctuaries the
enemy was attempting to reestablish in Cambodia but to move into the trail areas
(more)
-14-
in Laos at the most vulnerable points in order to completely disrupt the enemy
supply effort.
If the Laotian operation succeeds, it is reasonable to assume that the
South Vietnamese can stand up against the Communist threat when the military burden
is turned over to them completely. I look forward to saluting an independent and
viable South Vietnam.
Our withdrawal from South Vietnam has, of course, had a tremendous impact
on our economy. And at the same time that we have reduced Defense Department
personnel by 750,000 and cut Vietnam War spending in half, we have deliberately
cooled off the rest of the economy to bring inflation under control.
Now we must stimulate the economy while continuing to fight inflation. We
are doing exactly that.
We have cracked down on steel and oil price increases and on inflationary
pressures in the construction industry.
The President has sent the Congress a full employment budget which is
obviously expansionary. The Federal Reserve Board is cooperating as far as
monetary policy is concerned, although the Board cannot make any commitments.
We have accelerated depreciation on new plant and equipment for tax
purposes.
What we need now is an upsurge of consumer confidence to get the economy
rolling.
We can rely on President Nixon's prediction that 1971 will be a good year
and 1972 will be better.
I also see 1971 as a good year and 1972 as better as we step up our efforts
to enhance our physical environment.
Two key organizations have been established at the Federal level to fight
pollution, and both are working aggressively. One is the Environmental Protection
Agency, which has taken strong action against pollution on the land, in the air and
in the water. The other is the President's Council on Environmental Quality.
While 1970 was a year of progress, we must greatly improve upon what has
been done. President Nixon has proposed a comprehensive program, embracing not only
tough plans for air and water pollution control but the establishment of a national
land use policy. His program will be implemented through 21 bills sent to Capitol
Hill. It is time for the Congress to act.
Congress acted last year on air pollution control with the tough Clean Air
Amendments of 1970. Those provisions will be carried out in the months ahead.
(more)
-5-
I am sure the automotive industry will do everything possible to meet
automotive clean air standards by the deadlines of 1975 and 1976. At the same
time, I feel sure that realities will be recognized in the event that all possible
efforts fail to bring achievement of our goals by the deadlines now established.
There is a still greater challenge than restoring our environment--one that
is perhaps even more difficult of attainment.
I speak of providing all of our citizens with an opportunity to participate
in American society and in the shaping of governmental decisions affecting their
lives.
This is a challenge which eclipses all others. It is central to our future
as a Nation. It is basic to our growth as a people. It goes to our philosophy
of government and touches the lives of every one of us.
The challenge is whether any man, woman or child really counts in America
anymore whether the system has become more important than the individual whether
we have all become just digits cranked into a computer operated by a faceless
bureaucracy.
There is a better way--a better way to control the vast federal bureaucracy.
The answer is "Federal Revenue Sharing.' It is an idea whose time has come.
I talk about it today not in a partisan vein. There are Democrats who
support it, as well as some who oppose it.
Let's look at revenue sharing from the standpoint of political philosophy.
What is the conceptual basis for revenue sharing? I believe that government
is best which is closest to the people.
What is the President asking? He is asking the Congress to appropriate
$5 billion to be shared by the states and cities with no strings attached. This
comes under the heading of general revenue sharing. He is also asking the Congress
to take about 130 categorical grant-in-aid programs, lump them together under six
general purpose headings of education, urban development, rural development,
transportation, job training and law enforcement and let the states and cities
decide how to pursue their priorities under those broad purposes.
What the President is saying is
give State and local government a chance.
Let's transfer to the local political arena hundreds of decisions now being made
in Washington or the Administration's regional offices.
When this nation first was formed, countless important decisions were made
in town meetings across the land. Slowly but surely, more and more of the power
(more)
-6-
flowed to the central government. This was inevitable as the nation grew. More
and more of its problems became national in scope, demanding national answers.
With the advent of the New Deal, a revolution occurred. A people paralyzed
by a great depression saw the Federal Government assume powers never before
visualized. A crisis was at hand. Extreme measures were called for.
Today we are living through a new kind of crisis-a crisis which has so
slowed the wheels of social progress as to create a new kind of paralysis,
of musclebound government with too much power and money in the hands of the federal
bureaucracy.
President Nixon has pointed to a way out of this crisis-a way to prove that
government can work.
It can be done by bringing government back to the people--by making an
investment in the local political process through Federal revenue sharing. Status
quo government cannot be accepted. As times change, we must reform government--so
that instead of sliding further into musclebound ineffectiveness it at last can
deliver the services it promises and bridge the gap between promise and performance.
Through Federal revenue sharing--by putting the money where the problems
are--we will be returning government to the people. As Abraham Lincoln so well
expressed it, "In leaving the people's business in their hands, we cannot be wrong."
The American people will be heard--and they should be heard, at all levels
of government.
There is opposition to revenue sharing. But what man has made, man can
change. And we must have the courage to change what should be changed.
Money is power. Moving money back to the states and cities means a flow
of power back to the people. This is where the power belongs.
Every individual wants to count for something. Under the revenue-sharing
philosophy of government, he can.
We must think in terms of people, not just programs. We must replace
computers with compassion.
Lincoln said: "This country, with its institutions, belongs to the people
who inhabit it."
Let's make this country belong to the people again. Let's give the individual
the feeling of determining his own destiny, of being able to make things happen.
This is old politics. This is new politics. This is the shape of things to
come. This is the right response to the greatest challenge of the Seventies. This
is the way to build a new and greater America.
###
AN ADDRESS BY REP. GERALD R. FORD, R-MICH.
REPUBLICAN LEADER, U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
BEFORE THE 1971 ANNUAL CONVENTION
OF THE AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE INDUSTRY ASSOCIATION
AT THE PALMER HOUSE HOTEL, CHICAGO
3:30 P.M., MONDAY, MARCH 8, 1971
FOR RELEASE ON DELIVERY
It is a pleasure to be here with you today. The theme of your convention
is one that sets the spine to tingling and the brain to stirring. The Challenges
of Change in the Seventies.
We all know that men must be challenged to strive mightily and to achieve
lofty goals. We know that change is the essence of progress, that change requires
challenge, and that challenge involves the clash of differing ideas.
This is the kind of time we are living in--a time of challenge, a time of
change, a time when different ideas are colliding.
We meet in exciting-- trying times. These are times when momentous
decisions must be made--decisions today which will determine the quality of our
lives tomorrow.
It is a time for a realistic assessment of our problems-- time for a
resolve to solve those problems as quickly and expertly as circumstance will permit.
It is a time for positive action, for leadership, for creativity, and for
boldness.
The challenge of our times is to confront the great problems and to employ
the American genius and the spirit of enthusiasm needed to overcome them.
How are we to do this? There must be created within our country a new
feeling of common purpose--a resolve which will produce two-way cooperation
between government and the people, a working together of one with the other toward
needed solutions.
I will talk with you today about a number of challenges--the challenge of
militant Communism in the Middle East and Indochina and the search for peace; the
challenge posed by the economy, where we must wrestle with the hangover from the
inflationary binge of the late 1960s while making a transition from wartime to
peacetime; the challenge of the environment, where astronomical sums will be needed
to restore and maintain our physical environment and to assure our survival; and
the challenge of governmental reform, where we must restructure the Federal govern-
ment SO it becomes the servant and not the master of the people.
(more)
-2-
I speak first about the Middle East--because while it is Vietnam which has
torn this Nation apart and ravaged its soul it is in the Middle East that the
danger of World War III is the greatest. It is there that we have most to fear a
head-on collision with the other nuclear super-power, the Soviet Union.
We work ceaselessly for peace in the Middle East, but all the time we are
aware that the Soviet Union has arrogantly and flagrantly embarked on a drive to
turn the Mediterranean into a red sea, undermine the southern flank of NATO, and
expand Russian influence across Africa from the Indian Ocean to the South Atlantic.
If we were to allow the Soviet Union to crush Israel indirectly, through
the weapons the Soviets have placed in Egyptian hands, this would mean the end of
hope for all free nations of the Mediterranean and even western Europe. It would
give the Soviet Union dominance throughout the Middle East--throughout the entire
Mediterranean area. We will not let that happen.
The situation in the Middle East is most complex. There will be no settle-
ment until both sides are prepared to make some sacrifices.
The Administration last August put forward the initiative which resulted in
a cease-fire and now the Jarring Talks. Some progress has been made through
indirect negotiations. There are indications that the Jarring Talks will continue.
This gives us reason to hope.
There are those who are inclined to condemn the Israelis for refusing to pull
back to their prewar boundaries. Personally, in view of past history, I find
Israel's attitude completely understandable. A nation which is confronted by
hostile powers backed by the military might of the Soviet Union cannot be blamed
for seeking secure and defensible borders.
While we seek to achieve a settlement of the Middle East conflict, we
continue to resist Communist aggression in Southeast Asia and to work for peace
in that war-torn region of the world.
Some critics charge that President Nixon has widened the Vietnam War. This
is a fiction. It is North Vietnam which made the Vietnam War an Indochina War--by
using Laos and Cambodia as supply and staging areas for attacks on South Vietnam.
The Vietnam War is a political war, but this does not mean that the Allied
Forces should ignore sound military policy.
Sound military policy dictated that the South Vietnamese move into Cambodia
and Laos, seek to disrupt the Communists' supply lines and hit the enemy in
sanctuaries used to launch attacks against South Vietnam.
(more)
-3-
The Cambodian Operation was a great success. I supported it from the outset.
The tremendous improvement in our casualty figures is tangible proof of our success.
Two years ago American combat deaths averaged 278 a week. In 1969 the figure
decreased to an average of 180. In 1970 U.S. casualties fell to 80, and in the
last six months they have diminished to 51.
I also support the Laotian incursion. If it is successful--and I believe it
will be despite the tough going--great benefits will flow from it.
At a minimum, effective disruption of enemy supply lines in Laos will
prevent major enemy attacks on South Vietnam for six months to a year. Meantime,
U.S. withdrawals from South Vietnam will be accelerated in time and number.
We have drawn our forces in Vietnam down from an authorized strength of
549,500 men to 326,000--and we will be down to 284,000 men by May 1. In April,
the President will have an option to announce further withdrawals.
Our goal in Vietnam is to make it possible for the South Vietnamese to
determine their own future. With the incursions into Cambodia and Laos and
continued progress in Vietnamization, we have moved considerably closer to that
goal. Prospects are good that we will achieve it.
Anyone who wants to see the South Vietnamese government gain the upper hand
against the Communists cannot help but be heartened by the incursions into Cambodia
and Laos.
A year ago at this time the enemy had a port through which supplies were
pouring--the port of Sihanoukville, now called Kompong Som. With the help of
Prince Sihanouk's government, enemy supplies came up Highway 4 through Pnomh Penh
and flowed into the sanctuary areas opposite the border of South Vietnam, 30 miles
from Saigon.
The North Vietnamese had seized a corridor of land extending all the way
from the northern Panhandle of Laos through the Ho Chi Minh Trail and along the
border with South Vietnam and Cambodia, all the way to the sea. From this sanctuary
area the enemy mounted his attacks against South Vietnam and against U.S. forces.
Following the Cambodian cross-border operations last spring, this sanctuary
area was cleaned out along the South Vietnamese border, and the new government of
Lon Nol in Cambodia shut off the use of Sihanoukville port so that the enemy found
himself totally dependent on the supplies coming down the Ho Chi Minh Trail.
In 1971 it made good sense not only to move in against the sanctuaries the
enemy was attempting to reestablish in Cambodia but to move into the trail areas
(more)
-14-
in Laos at the most vulnerable points in order to completely disrupt the enemy
supply effort.
If the Laotian operation succeeds, it is reasonable to assume that the
South Vietnamese can stand up against the Communist threat when the military burden
is turned over to them completely. I look forward to saluting an independent and
viable South Vietnam.
Our withdrawal from South Vietnam has, of course, had a tremendous impact
on our economy. And at the same time that we have reduced Defense Department
personnel by 750,000 and cut Vietnam War spending in half, we have deliberately
cooled off the rest of the economy to bring inflation under control.
Now we must stimulate the economy while continuing to fight inflation. We
are doing exactly that.
We have cracked down on steel and oil price increases and on inflationary
pressures in the construction industry.
The President has sent the Congress a full employment budget which is
obviously expansionary. The Federal Reserve Board is cooperating as far as
monetary policy is concerned, although the Board cannot make any commitments.
We have accelerated depreciation on new plant and equipment for tax
purposes.
What we need now is an upsurge of consumer confidence to get the economy
rolling.
We can rely on President Nixon's prediction that 1971 will be a good year
and 1972 will be better.
I also see 1971 as a good year and 1972 as better as we step up our efforts
to enhance our physical environment.
Two key organizations have been established at the Federal level to fight
pollution, and both are working aggressively. One is the Environmental Protection
Agency, which has taken strong action against pollution on the land, in the air and
in the water. The other is the President's Council on Environmental Quality.
While 1970 was a year of progress, we must greatly improve upon what has
been done. President Nixon has proposed a comprehensive program, embracing not only
tough plans for air and water pollution control but the establishment of a national
land use policy. His program will be implemented through 21 bills sent to Capitol
Hill. It is time for the Congress to act.
Congress acted last year on air pollution control with the tough Clean Air
Amendments of 1970. Those provisions will be carried out in the months ahead.
(more)
-5--
I am sure the automotive industry will do everything possible to meet
automotive clean air standards by the deadlines of 1975 and 1976. At the same
time, I feel sure that realities will be recognized in the event that all possible
efforts fail to bring achievement of our goals by the deadlines now established.
There is a still greater challenge than restoring our environment--one that
is perhaps even more difficult of attainment.
I speak of providing all of our citizens with an opportunity to participate
in American society and in the shaping of governmental decisions affecting their
lives.
This is a challenge which eclipses all others. It is central to our future
as a Nation. It is basic to our growth as a people. It goes to our philosophy
of government and touches the lives of every one of us.
The challenge is whether any man, woman or child really counts in America
anymore--whether the system has become more important than the individual--whether
we have all become just digits cranked into a computer operated by a faceless
bureaucracy.
There is a better way--a better way to control the vast federal bureaucracy.
The answer is "Federal Revenue Sharing." It is an idea whose time has come.
I talk about it today not in a partisan vein. There are Democrats who
support it, as well as some who oppose it.
Let's look at revenue sharing from the standpoint of political philosophy.
What is the conceptual basis for revenue sharing? I believe that government
is best which is closest to the people.
What is the President asking? He is asking the Congress to appropriate
$5 billion to be shared by the states and cities with no strings attached. This
comes under the heading of general revenue sharing. He is also asking the Congress
to take about 130 categorical grant-in-aid programs, lump them together under six
general purpose headings of education, urban development, rural development,
transportation, job training and law enforcement and let the states and cities
decide how to pursue their priorities under those broad purposes.
What the President is saying is give State and local government a chance.
Let's transfer to the local political arena hundreds of decisions now being made
in Washington or the Administration's regional offices.
When this nation first was formed, countless important decisions were made
in town meetings across the land. Slowly but surely, more and more of the power
(more)
-6-
flowed to the central government. This was inevitable as the nation grew. More
and more of its problems became national in scope, demanding national answers.
With the advent of the New Deal, a revolution occurred. A people paralyzed
by a great depression saw the Federal Government assume powers never before
visualized. A crisis was at hand. Extreme measures were called for.
Today we are living through a new kind of crisis--a crisis which has SO
slowed the wheels of social progress as to create a new kind of paralysis,
of musclebound government with too much power and money in the hands of the federal
bureaucracy.
President Nixon has pointed to a way out of this crisis--a way to prove that
government can work.
It can be done by bringing government back to the people--by making an
investment in the local political process through Federal revenue sharing. Status
quo government cannot be accepted. As times change, we must reform government--so
that instead of sliding further into musclebound ineffectiveness it at last can
deliver the services it promises and bridge the gap between promise and performance.
Through Federal revenue sharing--by putting the money where the problems
are--we will be returning government to the people. As Abraham Lincoln so well
expressed it, "In leaving the people's business in their hands, we cannot be wrong. "
The American people will be heard--and they should be heard, at all levels
of government.
There is opposition to revenue sharing. But what man has made, man can
change. And we must have the courage to change what should be changed.
Money is power. Moving money back to the states and cities means a flow
of power back to the people. This is where the power belongs.
Every individual wants to count for something. Under the revenue-sharing
philosophy of government, he can.
We must think in terms of people, not just programs. We must replace
computers with compassion.
Lincoln said: "This country, with its institutions, belongs to the people
who inhabit it."
Let's make this country belong to the people again. Let's give the individual
the feeling of determining his own destiny, of being able to make things happen.
This is old politics. This is new politics. This is the shape of things to
come. This is the right response to the greatest challenge of the Seventies. This
is the way to build a new and greater America.
# # #