Ask the Scholar

Document scope · 1 page
doc
Scholar
Ask about this object, its catalog metadata, its source description, or the page inventory. For page-specific OCR and visual context, open one of the page chats.

Scholar Source Context

Document identity
localId
4525719
label
Lincoln Day Speech, February 12, 1955
core
doc
dtoType
document
pageCount
1
Source metadata
id
4525719
contentType
document
title
Lincoln Day Speech, February 12, 1955
collections
Gerald R. Ford Congressional Papers
Speeches
subjects
China
Taiwan
Republican National Committee (U.S.)
Civil rights
Economics
Housing
Labor
National security
imageCount
1
hasImages
yes
source
import
hasTranscription
no
Source extras
naId
4525719
coverageEndDate
logicalDate
1955-02-28
month
2
year
1955
coverageStartDate
logicalDate
1955-02-01
month
2
year
1955
levelOfDescription
fileUnit
recordType
description
ocrSource
nara-archive
Single page context
seq
1
pageIndex
0
type
document
mediaId
00a479f70304009e
ocrText
The original documents are located in Box D14, folder "Lincoln Day Speech, February 12, 1955" 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 The Council donated to the United States of America his copyrights in all of his unpublished writings in National Archives collections.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. Digitized from Box D14 of The Ford Congressional Papers: Press Secretary and Speech File at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library Lincoln Day Speech - 1955 Abraham Lincoln was a Republican; and Abraham Lincoln was the greatest President this country has produced. Now that is not the mere opinion of Jerry Ford, nor of the Republican National Committee, although we all agree with it wholeheartedly. That is the reasoned judgment of a group of sixty learned American historians who were asked to rate 29 American Presidents of the United States, They rated them as great, near great, average, below average and failure. When they had finished, six men were found among that select group of the "great." And the man heading the list, the unanimous choice of all the authorities, was our own Abraham Lincoln, a Republican, the first Republican President. As the historians went about the task of selecting the great chief executives of this Republic, they of necessity set up standards of value and of judgment. A great President, they found, was not necessarily a brilliant intellectual, nor an administrative genius, nor even a personality of immense magnetic charm. These non-partisan scholars concluded that a great President is one who exhibits and exercises "moral leadership" in meeting and solving wisely the most pressi ng problems of the day. Lincoln saw clearly the problems of his day. GERALE FORD LIBRARY Page 2 He used all the power of his office to face up to these problems and to do something about them. But, and this is most important, what he did was morally right and just. This is what made him great. John C. Calhoun was a brilliant political thinker, but his doctrines of nullification and secession were wrong, morally wrong. Robert E. Lee was a military genius, but he fought on the wrong side for that which was not morally defensible. Lincoln was morally right - both historians and philosophers agree. And Lincoln was a Republican. I submit to you, Mr. Chairman, that today we Republicans and we Americans have another great President. Great because he is providing the country with that moral leadership which it needs to survive the day to day crucial problems which constantly beset it. When Abraham Lincoln became President, the Democrat Party had been in power for a good many years. The American people then, in 1860, turned to the new Republican Party in hopes of finding a better government through the expression of the high ideals of Mr. Lincoln and his new Party. The major crisis facing President Lincoln was the preservation of the Nation, the saving of the Union. Mr. Lincoln and the new Republican Party took immediate steps to meet the obligations of their sacred oath to preserve and defend this Nation Page 3 and its Constitution. He was morally right. And today all we need do is look around us to observe the bulwark he helped construct so "that government of the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish from the earth." I submit to you, Mr. Chairman, that the major concern of your government today is the preservation and defense of this Nation. Just as Lincoln attacked the forces of destruction, a Republican President today is attacking the forces of evil threatening our way of life. Lincoln had his Fort Sumter, and Eisenhower has his Formosa. Whether to reinforce Sumter was the first major decision by the Lincoln Administration. To do so was to risk war for a righteous cause. A recent major decision of the Eisenhower Agministration and your Congress was whether to protect America by defending Formosa. I can assure you, ladies and gentlemen, that this decision was not made lightly nor in ignorance of the implications. The problems facing Formosa are intense and changing by the hour. When President Lincoln decided to fortify Sumter he did what was right. And when President Eisenhower announced our intention of securing and protecting Formosa he did what was right. In Lincoln's day the enemy attacked and a long and bitter war followed. But it is the opinion of the best informed authorities that our decisions regarding Formosa are a step away Page 4 from rather than toward war. By definitely announcing our intention of securing and protecting Formosa and the Pescadores, we dispel any false notions by the Chinese Communists that the United States will not defend these strategic islands. Our military experts contend that if Formosa falls into the hands of Red China, the free world will eventually lose the Philippines, Japan and the other Pacific allies. The loss of this valuable territory means the ruthless and dangerous enemy is thousands of miles closer to the shores of America. Hawaii would be our only outpost; the shores of California, Oregon and Washington would be our defense line. In these circumstances and under these conditions we are one united nation in our determination to halt the march of the Godless Communistic aggressors in the Kremlin or Peiping. Some Americans have expressed the fear that we are giving Chiang Kai-Shek a "blank check" encouraging him to attack the mainland and thus precipitate a general war. As a Representative in Washington, I am convinced that our government has a firm assurance that no such action will be taken. But I also want to assure you that this government believes in "preparedness". We do not expect to be weighed in the balance and found wanting at that crucial moment when some fanatic in Moscow or Peiping decides to strike. We do not accept the doctrine of preventive war; but we do accept the responsibility FORD & LIBRARY CERALD Page 5 of maintaining an adequate defense of our own soil, and of helping friendly nations preserve their freedom. We will cooperate with the free nations and the established international authority in meeting hostile action throughout the world. To do all this we must maintain a stability in our defense program. This calls for adequate reserve units, stockpiling of strategic and critical materials, mobile forces with increased firepower, and a well trained career Army, Navy and Air Force. We must be ready at every moment to halt an enemy attack and to take retaliatory measures. Let me re-emphasize that we will remain strong. On the internal, domestic front Lincoln too, had his weak and misguided souls whose loyalty lay in the direction of the enemy. There were the "copperheads" who would travel in fellowship with the enemy to weaken and destroy a nation. Today we have our fellow travelers and Communist aggitators who would destroy us internally by deceitful and treacherous methods. The Eisenhower Agministration has showed its adeptness at weeding security risks out of the government service. The administration has worked on the basic assumption that it is not a right but a privilege to work for the United States govern- ment. Individuals are deemed security risks for any of the fol- lowing reasons - unreliable conduct; deliberate misrepresentation; criminal, infamous or immoral conduct; uncured insanity or mental Page 6 disorder; being subject to coercion; attempting, conspiring, or aiding sabotage; treason, espionage or sedition; associating with anyone so doing; advocating the overthrow of the government; associating with anyone so doing; belonging to or associating with any group which shows a policy of subversion; violating security regulations, or serving the interests of another government. In 1953 the Eisenhower Agministration inherited the wreckage of a "soft" policy towards internal subversion from prior administrations. The President and the Republican Congress approached this problem with swiftness and dispatch. For proof, there is the recent case of the conviction of Caude Lightfoot, executive secretary of the Communist Party in Illinois. This and other convictions by the administration are examples of the tight rein our government is drawing daily over traitorous and disloyal Reds as they still seek to operate in America. The conviction of Claude Lightfoot for violating the Smith Act represents just one more step of the administration's determined fight against disloyalty and subversion in government. This drive has resulted in jail sentences for more than 50 Communist leaders, stripped the Communist party of all legal standing, led to the deportation of more than 100 Communist aliens, many of whom had enjoyed complete freedom of movement in the United States for decades. GERALD FORD LIBRARY Page 7 Another step made by the security conscious Eisenhower Agministration concerns a man by the name of Joseph Peterson who was a code expert in the National Security Agen cy. This man was caught and deprived of his subversive activities by means of a routine check made under the new security program of the Eisenhower Administration. Mr. Peterson will be residing behind bars for the next seven years. Here was a very sedous security risk who had been working for the government for years and who would still be on the payroll today, undetected and unapprehended, had this administration not acted promptly and vigorously. Before we criticize the administration's security program let's remember the cases of Claude Lightfoot and Joseph Peterson. Vice President Nixon knows a great deal about the Communist threat in this country. It was he who was mainly responsible for the conviction of Alger Hiss. Mr. Nixon has said repeatedly that Communism in government should not be a partisan issue because there is no difference in loyalty between Democrats and Republicans. But the facts are beginning to speak and as a result they reveal that the Truman Administrations were either blind or completely indifferent to the Communist threat to our Nation. The second fundamental problem in which Abraham Lincoln exercised his moral leadership involved slavery, or freedom Page 8 and equal rights for all American citizens. His Emancipation Proclamation was morally and eternally right, and I submit to you, ladies and gentlemen, that today the Republican Party under President Eisenhower's leadership is the party of Lincoln in extending and expanding the program of civil rights. Mr. Eisenhower's record in civil rights is distinguished and is one of which we may well be proud. The greatest advance- ments in civil rights have been within the last two years. We are all familiar with the Justice Department's splendid argument before the Supreme Court to the effect that it had ample constitutional power to outlaw racial segregation in the public schools and that it should do SO. The administration has, for the first time in history appointed a Negro secretary to the White House, and also made many appointments of Negroes to high administrative posts. President Eisenhower created the Committee on Governmental Contracts to help prevent discrimination on jobs covered by federal contracts. Vice President Nixon is chairman of this group. The Defense Department's program to wipe out segregation has made great strides SO that segregation no longer exists in Army units. In the District of Columbia 23 governmental agencies were ordered to end discrimination. And again in fulfilling his pledge to end segregation in the District of Columbia, President Page 9 Eisenhower ordered that in new contracts for District of Columbia services, the contractors must pledge no discrimination in employment. I could go on citing more examples but I will just mention one more. One that I regard as highly important. President Eisenhower believes segregation in our Nation's schools to be absolutely and morally wrong. At his direction discrimination shall be eliminated in education for the first time next fall when schools open up in the District of Columbia. Regardless of color children will go to the school nearest to their homes. It is the President's intention to make the District a model laboratory which will serve as a shining example to the rest of the nation in pioneering this field. Further, Mr. Chairman, Lincoln's greatness and his character was marked by faith in the democratic process, and faith in, concern for, and love of the common man. This, I think, is the place to present a challenge to every man and woman of the Republican Party. We must, every one of us, do everything we can to dispel the idea that our opponents form the party of the people, the party of the common man. We must demonstrate that the Republican Party has more to offer the "little people* of our land than the opposition. GERALD LIBRARY Page 10 This is a challenge, a serious one, but our very existence as a great political party and as a force for the preser- vation of the Nation depends on its success. I know that the Republican Administration stands firmly in back of the "little people." There are many areas of action in the Eisenhower Agministration which can be used to demonstrate this point. There are many examples, but I have chosen just four because, as a Republican, I am especially proud of the accomplishments in these areas. And after 20 years of "wrong-way" rule by Democrats, these four areas were ripe for progressive Republican legislation. They are - housing, labor, health, and social security. The Republican Housing Act of 1954 will raise housing standars of Americans, especially in the lower income brackets. But it will not only help more people acquire homes of their own; but it will assist communities in getting rid of slums and in improving older neighborhoods. In turn this will help strengthen and stimulate the Nation's entire economy, particularly the construction industry. Probably the cornerstone of this act is the expanded mortgage credit facilities. This means that provisions make it possible to buy new homes under FHA insured loans with much smaller down payments. Page 11 For example, on a $10,000 new home under FHA, a buyer previously had to make a down payment of $1,250. Now the required down payment is only $700, and 30 years instead of 20 years is allowed for payment. There are many other interesting and constructive facets of the Republican Housing program - much too numerous to go into here. But the main group of persons affected by this act are those who work mainly with their hands or the man who may take a lunch pail to work with him. Some groups want America to believe that the Republiczₙ Party doesn't stand solidly behind the working man. I think anyone who takes this view is either very ill-informed or extremely prejudiced. Let me demonstrate how the Republican record towards labor is constructive and in the best interests of the laboring man. An editorial in the New York Daily News of February 2nd entitled, "Echo From a 'Recession'," makes an interesting point from statement originating at the annual meeting of the American Federation of Labor's executive council which just met in Miami Beach. This news comes from the AFL's staff of economists, and concerns what happened to the American working man and woman in 1954, which a lot of labor leaders and Democrat politicians insisted on calling a recession year. Page 12 Let me quote in part from the editorial - "According to the AFL economists, U.S. workers did better with the money they made in 1954 than in any other year since World War II. It wasn't that they got huge raises in pay. They didn't. What happened was that the money the workers made was real money - meaning its purchasing power stayed put. The dough they earned in former years since the war looked bigger and bigger, but bought less and less. Inflation was steadily eating away the dollar's buying power. Inflation has now been stopped, the AFL research experts concede, and we have stable money - about the most valuable single asset any nation can have." The AFL doesn't identify who brought this great boon to the American people. This credit belongs to President Eisenhower and the Republican Administration, and to no other group or individual. On March 4, 1913, the Act of Congress creating the Labor Department was approved by President William Howard Taft. The purpose of the Department, as it was stated by the 62nd Congress, is "to foster, promote, and develop the welfare of the wage earners of the United States, to improve their working conditions, and to advance their opportunities for profitable employment." Our present Secretary of Labor James P. Mitchell, describing the importance of this purpose, said, "When the self-expression, the liberty and the properity of the working people are assured, it follows that the broader objective - the well-being, strength and greatness of FORD & LIBRARY GERALD Page 13 of our country and all its people - is also assured." Our Department of Labor provides three services to the wage earner. It cooperates in the supervision of a nationwide system of public employment offices of which there are 1800 local employment offices throughout the country. Their services are free to workers and employers alike. The Department carries on a special employment security program for veterans in order that they may better adjust to civilian life after their discharge from the service. This program includes a special veterans employment service, unemployment service, unemployment insurance system, and re-employment rights program. Statistical studies published by the Department aid young men and women to plan for careers, provide estimates of manpower resources and demands, provide employers and workers with labor market information, and make available information on the kinds of occupations in which women are employed, their opportunities for advancement and training and other valuable information which is useful to wage earners. In enforcing labor legislation last year alone three and one-half thousand children between the ages of 16 and 17 were removed from unlawful employment which were declared hazardous by the Secretary of Labor. & GERALD Page 14 But not only has the administration provided better working conditions for children, but it has taken an interest in protecting the health and safety of working men as well. The safety and health requirements of the Walsh-Healey Public Contracts Act specify that goods are to be manufactured under adequate safety and sanitary standards during the life of the contract. When poor conditions are corrected because of these provisions the improvements remain to safeguard workers after production is resumed for private industry. Last year, the Department found unsatisfactory conditions in almost 2000 of the 2563 establishments investigated for compliance under the law's safety and health provisions. President Eisenhower showed his interest in the health of the Nation in his message on that subject to Congress on Monday, January 31st. Contrast his sound recommendations with the prepaid compulsory program sponsored by his predecessor which was govern- ment regimentation and red-tape personified. President Eisenhower believes we must move forward to raise the health standards of all our people by a constructive middle course which steers clear of the pitfalls of socialism. The Republican Social Security Amendments of 1954 are further evidence of what our party has done and will do for the constructive welfare of the people. The coverage was expanded Page 15 10 million, benefits were increased for the ill and physically handicapped, the retired can earn more without losing benefits and other forward looking changes were made. In fact, retired persons can now earn $1200 a year, instead of $75 a month, or $900 a year, without a loss of benefits; and there is no restriction on earning of those over 72 years. It is estimated that this alone will affect 360,000 elderly workers. The Eisenhower Agministration tackled another critical problem when plans were formulated to solve the road improvements and construction problems from a national viewpoint. The nation needs new and better roads, not only to curb our high accident rate, but to promote the best interests of the country as to interstate commerce. And to create an efficient system of roads linking the country requires vast financial expenditures. The President is scheduled to ask Congress to double highway spending in the next ten years to untangle our national traffic jam. Although the President's highway proposal has not been officially submitted to the Congress, the blueprints for the program are well known. A Presidential fact finding committee on highway, headed by General Lucius Clay, has reported to the White House, and undoubtedly we can count on new Republican highway legislation which will bring roadbuilding results. We all know, Mr. Chairman, that Abraham Lincoln has been immortalized as a President who had time for the "little people." FORD & LIBRARY GERALD Page 16 It was a little girl in the East who suggested he grow a beard. He listened to her. The stories of his considerations to the pleas of mothers for soldier-sons is known to all of you. The consternation to which his Secretary of War, Mr. Stanton, was brought by the kindness and humanity of the President is familiar indeed. One of the last acts he performed in the White House as he left for the Ford theatre was to assure a distressed mother that she would have an audience with him the following morning. Eisenhower and the Republican Party of today also have time for the "little people." It was an E1 senhower who could apologize to a high school girl in Michigan for a State of the Union speech much too long. So, too, Mrs. Nettie Moulden who at age ten shook the hand of Lincoln, a few days ago shook the hand of Mr. Eisenhower at the White House on her 100th birthday anniversary. Her simple expression of a desire to see the President brought an immediate and favorable response from our leader. The Republican Party is a humane party; it is concerned with human beings and their welfare. But the Republican Party does not sponsor a wasteful, inefficient, socialistic scheme of things. We accept the President's premise that we are liberal in matters of human rights and conservative in the sphere of economics. We are moderate progressives with a dedication to the American philosophy of government and freedom of its citizens. CRALD Page 17 The gist of Fair Deal thinking, which Adlai Stevenson hopes to perpetuate in action, is that the federal government should blueprint the future of the American people and the national economy through a system of centralized planning and controls masterminded in Washington. Republicans believe that the American competitive system of free enterprise can be more productive and profitable for our citizens without piling up bureaucratic regulations from Washington. We want to provide the individual citizen with a climate favorable to economic activity which encourages private initiative. The federal government can help generate confidence in its people when it relies on a free economy with its great capacity to create jobs, incomes and increase production to raise our standard of living. We want to establish the best possible climate in which labor and management can work together profitably. We have no desire to set class against class. We oppose more and more handouts to TVA which has never paid interest on the money it receives from the taxpayers of Michigan and other states. It is legitimate to ask why should we in Michigan subsidize the Tennessee Valley so it can grow and develop without paying interest charges on the money borrowed from the federal treasury. It is paradoxical that while we thus assist them financially they are urging Michigan manufacturers to move their FORD & LIBRARY GERALD Page 18 factories to the Tennessee Valley. Our tax revision of 1954 was a step in the right direction. It is not perfect by any means. But dozens of inequities were rectified that had been legislated in the past 20 years of Democrat rule where taxes only went up and personal exemptions down. The Republican tax reduction legislation was a real attempt to promote justice, thrift, savings and investments in order toexpand the Nation's economy. We think, too, that the men and women in state government, and those serving on the local level also have the best interests of the people at heart. All wisdom does not reside in Washington. You who know your local problems should have the opportunity to solve those problems in your own way. We trust "the people" back home. But where a real need on a national scale can be demonstrated, we will not hide behind the fence of "state rights." In fields of health reinsurance, school construction, highway improvement, we must go forward. Likewise, the progress in social security, health, labor and housing already discussed, would indicate the humanitarian interests of this administration. Mr. Chairman, there is one final and solemn thought. This American way of life of ours rests ultimately on a fundamental belief in God. Lincoln knew this, and, we are told, carried his Mother's old Bible around with him in Washington. He especially liked the Psalms. I think most of you know that above all else Dwight D. FORD & LIBRARY GERALD Page 19 Eisenhower S leadership has been toward a stronger moral and spiritual emphasis in our way of life. His act of becoming a full member of a Washington church, his attention to worship on the Sabbath, his proclamation of days of prayer, his sincere interest in things of the spirit are well known to all of you. His prayer at the opening of the Inaugural Address was a statement of humble and sincere reliance on the power of God. Then there came the first informal meeting of the Eisenhower Cabinet. The President turned to his Secretary of Agriculture and asked him to deliver a prayer. This was done reverently. As he concluded his supplication, Mr. Benson spoke these words; "Gratefully we dedicate our lives to thee and to thy service; guide and direct us in our deliberations today, and always help us to serve with an eye single to thy glory" Then followed a The President sat in contemplation, period of silence. A To break the silence, he spoke with that Eisenhower genuineness, "I want this house to be an example to all the homes of our country." That, Mr. Chairman, is our President; that is our Republican leader; that is our Lincoln of today. Address Of Hon. Theodore R. McKeldin Governor Of Maryland Delivered At The Lincoln Day Dinner Of The Kings County Republican Organization In Brooklyn, N. Y., On February 12, 1955 In the heart of the capital city eternal and unchanging. Scornful of the two super-powers that be- of life, because the law of life is stride the world today stands a change, it is indeed a tomb in monumental structure dedicated to which are buried not only the re- the memory of a great man. In mains of two mortals, but also Moscow's Red Square, and at the freedom of the mind and spirit. It foot of the Mall in Washington is a reminder that although Lenin they stand, two masses of stone, and Stalin are dead, yet they claim silent, yet each clamoring for the rulership of the future, dominion attention of a vast nation. These over the souls of the Russian structures of stone are dumb, yet people, and it is blasphemy to dis- each voices the aspirations of a pute the claim. It is in reality a people dominating half the world. monument to what the law calls They are symbolical, but it is pre- mortmain, the grip of the dead cisely in its symbols that one may hand upon the living spirit. see most clearly displayed the The Lincoln Memorial in Wash- heart and mind of a civilization. ington is doorless, too, but be- The Parthenon in Athens, the cause it is wide open, - The light Forum in Rome, Westminster Ab- may enter, storm and sunshine bey in London, and Napoleon's arch may enter, the winds of heaven in Paris speak to us more elo- may sweep through it, and the quently of their epochs than do people may enter. High or low, the rhetoric of orators and the rich or poor, venerable patriarch tomes of historians. So may the or babe in arms, none is shut out two symbols of our own time, if for race, or color, or creed, and the we will pause long enough to study only price of admission is human- them and to understand. ity. Save for a marble statue, it is In certain respects they are simi- physically empty; but it seems to lar. Both are massive. Both stand me that its emptiness might well foursquare, planted solidly on the be described in the phrase that the solid earth, built not for the uses Arabian storytellers often applied of the moment but for all time. to deserts and mountain heights- Both are focal points of history "filled with nothing but the pres- and patriotic shrines. But beyond ence of God." these superficialities they are as For the walls are covered with widely different as the men they certain great truths that I believe memorialize and as the civiliza- Abraham Lincoln was inspired of tions that erected them. God to utter. His dead body lies The memorial in Red Square is elsewhere, but the living truth is secret, shut in and without doors, in the memorial; and it is our fortified at every point to resist faith that "man doth not live by vandals and containing two mum- bread only, but by every word that mied corpses. Like the Egyptian proceedeth out of the mouth of the pyramids, it is eloquent of the most Lord doth man live." He who has futile, yet most persistent of put into unforgettable words the human delusions, the idea that truth of the living God, lives inf men can be erected into gods, that truth and nothing that Rap- GERALD LIBRARY pens to his mortal frame can ex- may begin to feel what Lincoln's steadfast man in America was none policy every day, are more stead- tinguish that life. It is to this hearers were feeling when he of the fire-eaters who had passion- fast than those who quote, but principle as exemplified in the man urged upon them "malice toward ately demanded war to the death. misapply the words of Lincoln, or that the American people have none and charity for all," and dis- It was the man who valued a just Washington, or Jefferson, to jus- erected a memorial to the living missed victory in favor of "a just and lasting peace far more than tify measures that are neither rea- Lincoln who, although he suffered and lasting peace." If his counsel victory. It was the man whom they sonable nor right. the common fate, still lives in the was wise and good then, it is wiser accused of worse than shrinking truth that shall never die. There are among us, of course, and better now; his body was con- weakness. It was the man whom From the walls of the memorial signed to the earth long ago, but they called trimmer, time-server men So obsessed by the love of novelty that they will approve I take some words spoken, shall I "by every word that proceedeth and coward; but who, when the out of the mouth of the Lord doth any change merely because it is say on March 4, 1865, or this morn- war had grown red-hot, and the a change. These are men who ing? For when words apply to a man live," and words of wisdom braggarts and swash-bucklers had have never come fully alive, just situation the precise moment in and righteousness proceed from fled in panic, stood undaunted as those who would subvert truth time when they were first uttered the Lord. The living Lincoln is still "with firmness in the right." to tradition are already half dead. is not important; they are living our counsellor and guide. Lincoln saved the Union, not Neither immature minds, nor sen- words at the moment when their His profound fear is implicit in with his muscular, but with his ile minds can comprehend the mind wisdom and utility become appar- every word of that passage. It was spiritual strength; and he was of the living Lincoln which is ent. Consider the situation in not fear of the Confederacy. "With spiritually powerful precisely be- neither for nor against change, which our country finds itself in firmness in the right as God gives cause he lived "with malice to- neither scornful of nor dedicated 1955, 90 years later, and then us to see the right" he was ready ward none, with charity for all." to tradition, but committed to the imagine, if you can, that you read to face any armed foe steadily and Lincoln will save the Union again, search for truth and to nothing in today's newspapers this coun- calmly. But he knew that more will save it whenever it is threat- else. sel "With malice toward none, dangerous enemies were advancing ened if we allow his spirit to gov- This is the essence of that much- with charity for all, with firmness upon the nation as he spoke. He ern our thoughts and deeds. abused word "liberalism." The in the right, as God gives us to see knew that hatred in our own hearts the right, let us strive on to finish is a wilier and more elusive foe For he understood as only our liberal believes that the American the work that we are in * to than Stonewall Jackson and that greatest men have understood form of government is not like do all which may achieve and cher- how the destiny of America is the Statue of Liberty, finished and prejudice and vengefulness can crush a nation that the military oriented toward the rising, not the complete, but is like a tree, a liv- ish a just and lasting peace among setting sun, toward the future ing and growing thing. Normally, ourselves and with all nations." genius of Robert E. Lee could not struggling to be born, not toward the liberal looks toward the fu- Abraham Lincoln did not face overcome. If that was true in 1865, the dead past. His mind was large ture, but this does not mean that the problem of co-existence with a it is not a whit less true in 1955. enough to comprehend all the im- he never glances at the past. world half of which is dominated Let us, as Saint Paul advised, plications of Jefferson's dictum Truth is one and immortal; but it by Communism, but it is my belief "think on these things" in a day that the earth belongs to the liv- has more shapes than Proteus and that if he had done SO he would when it is boldly proclaimed that ing. One of those implications is The who would hold it firmly must have altered not one word of that "there is no substitute for victory" that government is a living organ- turn now this way, now that. Yet carefully studied utterance. He not even a just and lasting peace. ism that must assume new shapes if his grip upon it is never broken, was, in fact, facing an enemy Let us remember them when a if it is to flourish under new con- he is the most consistent of men whose armies had come closer to President's efforts to restrain the ditions. Lincoln would have been for he steers a true course, al- inflicting final defeat upon this re- hasty and proceed in accordance distressed and alarmed at the sug- though the short-sighted will call public than any other armed force with the law of nations are de- gestion that his words were to be him today a radical and tomorrow has come, before or since, British, nounced as "shrinking weakness." received as the law of the Medes a reactionary. Mexican, Spanish, German, Aus- Let us bear them in mind when the and Persians, that altereth not. In No man is today striving with trian, Italian and Japanese foes merchants of hate are asserting this famous letter to Greeley he more might for the peace that jus- we had, or we have since dealt that any attitude toward an op- expressed his readiness to adopt tice brings, or with more realiza- with effectively, and without ruin- ponent save one of blind fury is a any policy that would assure tion of the overwhelming necessity ous strain; but when Americans betrayal of the nation. For if the preservation of the Union; and for the achievement of this goal, rose against us we almost went un- day ever comes when Americans because he was always ready to than our President, Dwight D. der. It was to a badly shaken and reading the Second Inaugural re- shape his policy according to the Eisenhower. By his actions and by almost exhausted nation that Lin- act with nothing but incredulous facts he was accused of wavering his words the is seeking to do in coln addressed his words; it is un- scorn, then indeed Lincoln will be and inconstancy. our day what Lincoln sought to thinkable that he would be less in- dead - and the greatness of our Of course we know today that do in his. sistent upon justice and modera- country will be dead with him. Lincoln was the steadfast figure Only last month, in his State of tion were he addressing a nation Our position is difficult and peri- and it was those men who were the Union message, President superbly armed and possessing eco- lous, but this is not the nation's willing to subvert the truth rather Eisenhower named as first among nomic power that towers over the darkest hour. That came when than surrender one of their pet the purposes of our Federal Gov- world. Abraham Lincoln was President of theories who were inconstant. We ernment his obligation "to main- When enemy tanks, the modern the United States and nothing know it of Lincoln, but it is hard tain justice and freedom among substitute for cavalry, have pene- approached it. We shall do for us to realize that those men of ourselves and, to champion them trated the suburbs of Baltimore well now to remember that in the our own generation who adhere to for others S0 that we may work and circled within sight of the most fearful crisis through which the standards of reason and jus- effectively for enduring peace." He Washington monument, then we the country has passed the most tice, even if it means a shift in further placed particular stress on 2 3 our national obligation, "to labor kind of peace that should be just earnestly, patiently, prayerfully, and lasting. A man who is for for peace, for freedom, for justice, peace at any price is a stranger throughout the world." Many to Lincoln, for justice is more im- times has President Eisenhower portant than peace, and stability reiterated, since his inaugura- and order cannot be maintained tion, that we cannot hope to without justice. But whenever an achieve these goals unless our American strives with all his Government in all its dealings acts might for the peace that justice with "integrity and decency and brings, in that man Lincoln lives dignity." Just as Lincoln recog- again, speaks again, labors again. nized the importance of spiritual So we have left the Lincoln strength, SO has President Eisen- Memorial wide open, knowing hower, who recently summarized that no tomb, however, stately, his philosophy of government in could contain his living spirit. this striking phrase: "To keep "The whole earth," said Pericles, America strong, our Government "is the sepulchre of famous men, must have a heart as well as a not only are they commemorated head." by columns and inscriptions in Thus, President Eisenhower fol- their own country, but in foreign lows the path which the living lands there dwells also an unwrit- Lincoln continues to illuminate. ten memorial of them, graven not The man whose only policy is on stone but in the hearts of men." to do what seems to be reasonable It is true of this man. In all the and right in any situation that world there is no country SO re- may arise is a follower and spiri- mote that it has not heard some tual heir of Abraham Lincoln, al- whisper of his fame and been illu- though he may never parrot Lin- minated by the radiance of his coln's words or imitate any of his character. The work that we, his deeds. The ways and means that fellow-country-men are in, and any great man uses to attain his that we should strive on to finish, ends are, like his physical body, is to make all men in all lands part of the time, adopted to the realize that he is not dead, but time, and passing with the time. lives in the nation that he saved; It is the goal at which he aims for its lordly ambition is today that endures through generations, what it was yesterday and will be and all who aim at the same goal tomorrow and forever-not em- are his successors, although their pire, not dominion, not the power ways and means may be different. of arms or of gold but "to do all "To achieve and cherish a just which may achieve and cherish a and lasting peace among ourselves just and lasting peace among our- and with all nations" was Abra- selves and with all nations." ham Lincoln's goal. Note well the qualifications-it was not merely (Reprint from THE DAILY RECORD, peace that he sought, it was the Baltimore, Md., February 15, 1955.) 4 Lincoln Day Speech - 1955 Abraham Linsoln was a Republican; and Abraham Lincoln was the greatest President this country has produced. NOV that is not the mere opinion of Jerry Ford, nor of the Republican National Committee, although we all agree with it wholeheartedly. That is the reasoned judgment of a group of sixty learned American historiens who were asked to rate 29 American Presidents of the United States. They rates them as great, near great, average, below average and failure. When they had finished, six men were found among that select group of the "great." And the men heading the list, the unanimous choice of all the authorities, was our own Abraham Lincoin, a Republican, the first Republisan President. As the historians went about the task of selecting the great chief executives of this Republic, they of necessity set up standards of value and of judgment. A great President, they found, was not necessarily a brilliant intellectual, nor an administrative genius, nor even a personality of immense magnetic charm. These non-partisan scholars concluded that a great President is one who exhibits and exercises "moral leadership" in meeting and solving visely the most pressi: ag problems of the day. Lincoln saw clearly the problems of his day. FORD i LIBRARY GERALD Page 2 He used all the power of his office to face up to these problems and to do something about them. But, and this is most important, what he did was nevally right and just. This is what made him great. John c. Calhown was a brillient political thinker, but his doctrines of mullification and secession were wrong, merally wrong. Robert E. Lee was a military genius, but be fought on the wrong side for that which vas not morally defensible. Linecin was morally right - both histerians and philosophers agree. And Lincoln was a Republican. I submit to you, Mr. Chairman, that today we Republissns and we Americans have another great President. Gyeat because he is providing the country with that moral leadership which it needs to survive the day to day erucial problems which constantly beset it. When Abraham Lineeln because President, the Democrat Party had been in power for a good many years. The American people then, in 1860, turned to the new Republican Party in hopes of finding a better govermeent through the expression of the high ideals of no. Lincoln and his now Party. The major crisis fasing Pyesident Lineoln was the preservation of the Mation, the saving of the Union. Mr. Lincoln and the nev Republican Party took immediate steps to met the obligations of their secred oath to preserve and defend this Nation FORD & LIBRARY GERALD Page 3 and its Constitution. He was morally right. And today all we need do is look around us to observe the bulwark he helped construct so "that government of the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish from the earth." I submit to you, Mr. Chairman, that the major concern of your government today is the preservation and defense of this Nation. Just as Linsoln attacked the forces of destrustion. a Republican President today is attacking the forces of evil threatening our way of life. Lincoln had his Fort Sumter, and Eisenhower has his Formosa. Whether to reinforce Sumter was the first major decision by the Lincoln Administration. To do 80 was to risk war for a righteous cause. A resent major decision of the Eisenhower Agministration and your Congress was whether to protect America by defending Formose. I can assure you, ladies and gentlemen, that this decision was not made lightly nor in ignorance of the implications. The problems facing Formosa are intense and changing by the hour. When President Lincoln desided to fortify Sumber he did what was right. And when President Eisenhower announced our intention of securing and protecting Formosa be did what vas right. In Lincoln's day the energy attacked and a long and bitter var followed. But it is the opinion of the best informed authorities that our desisions regarding Formosa are a step away BERALD FORD Page 4 from rather than toward war. By definitely announcing our intention of securing and protecting Formosa and the Pescadores, we dispel any false notions by the Chinese Communists that the United States will not defend these strategic islands. Our military experts contend that if Formosa falls into the hands of Red China, the free world will eventually lose the Philippines, Japan and the other Pacific allies. The loss of this valuable territory means the ruthless and dangerous enemy is thousands of miles closer to the shores of America. Hawaii would be our only outpost; the shores of California, Oregon and Washington would be our defense line. In these circumstances and under these conditions we are one united nation in our determination to halt the march of the Godless Communistic aggressors in the Kremlin or Peiping. Some Americans have expressed the fear that we are giving Chiang Kai-Shek a "blank check" encouraging him to attack the mainland end thus precipitate a general war. As a Representative in Washington, I am convinced that our government has a firm assurance that no such action will be taken. But I also want to assure you that this government believes in "preparedness". We do not expect to be weighed in the balance and found wanting at that crucial moment when some fanatic in Moscow or Peiping decides to strike. We do not accept the doctrine of preventive war; but we do accept the responsibility GERALD FORD LIBRARY Page 5 of maintaining an adequate defense of our own soil, and of helping friendly nations preserve their freedom. 160 will cooperate with the free nations and the established international authority in meeting hostile action throughout the world. To do all this we must maintain a stability in our defense program. This calls for adequate reserve units, stockpiling of strategis and critical materials, mobile forees with increased firepower, and a well trained career Army. Havy and Air Fores. We must be ready at every moment to halt an enemy attack and to take retaliatory measures. Let me re-emphasize that we will remain strong. On the internal, domestic front Linceln too, had his weak and misguided souls whose loyalty lay in the direction of the enemy. There were the "copperheads" who would travel in fellowship with the enemy to weeken and destroy & nation. Today we have our fellow travelers and Communist aggitators who would destroy us internally by deseitful and treacherous methods. The Eisenhower Agministration has showed its adeptness at weeding security risks out of the government service. The administration has worked on the basic assumption that it is not a right but a privilege to work for the United States govern- ment. Individuals are deemed security risks for any of the fel- lowing reasons - unreliable conduct; deliberate misrepresentation; eriminal, infamous or immorel conduct; uncured insanity or mental of GERALD LIBRARY FORD Page 6 disorder; being subject to coercien, attempting, conspiring, or aiding sabotage; treason, espionage or sedition; associating with anyone so doing; advocating the overthrow of the government; associating with anyone so doing; belonging to or associating with any group which shows a policy of subversion; violating security regulations, or serving the interests of another government. In 1953 the Eisenhower Agministration inherited the wreekage of a "soft" policy towards internal subversion from prior administrations. The President and the Republican Congress approached this problem with swiftness and dispatch. For proof, there is the recent case of the ecuviction of Chude Lightfest, executive secretary of the Communist Party in Tylinois. This and other convictions by the administration are examples of the tight rein our government is drawing daily over traiterous and disloyal. Reds as they still seek to operate in America. The conviction of Claude Lightfoot for violating the Smith Act represents just one more step of the administration's determined fight against disloyalty and subversion in government. This drive has resulted in jail sentences for more than 50 Communist leaders, stripped the Communist party of all legal standing, led to the deportation of more than 100 Communist aliens, many of whom had enjoyed complete freedom of movement in the United States for decades. GERALD FORD VIBRARY Page 7 Another step made by the security conscious Eisenhower Agministration concerns a man by the name of Joseph Peterson who was a code expert in the National Security Agen ey. This man was caught and deprived of his subversive activities by means of a routine check made under the new security program of the Eisenhower Administration. Mr. Peterson will be residing behind bars for the next seven years. Here was a very setous security risk who had been working for the government for years and who would still be on the payroll today, undetected and unapprehended, had this administration not acted promptly and vigorously. Before we criticize the administration's security program let's remember the cases of Claude Lightfoot and Joseph Peterson. Vice President Nixon knows a great deal about the Communist threat in this country. It was he who was mainly responsible for the conviction of Alger Hiss. Mr. Nixon has said repeatedly that Communism in government should not be a partisen issue because there is no difference in loyalty between Democrate and Republicans. But the facts are beginning to speak and as a result they reveal that the Truman Administrations were either blind or completely indifferent to the Communist threat to our Nation. The second fundamental problem in which Abraham Lincoln exercised his moral leadership involved slavery, or freedom FORD i LIBRARY GERALD Page 8 and equal rights for all American citizens. His Emancipation Proclamation was morally and eternally right, and I submit to you, ladies and gentlemen, that today the Republican Party under President Eisenhower's leadership is the party of Lincoln in extending and expending the program of civil rights. Mr. Eisenhower's record in civil rights is distinguished and is one of which ve may well be proud. The greatest advance- ments in civil rights have been within the last two years. We are all familiar with the Justice Department's splendid argment before the Supreme Court to the effect that it had ample constitutional power to outlaw racial segregation in the public schools and that it should do so. The administration has, for the first time in history appointed a Negro secretary to the White House, and also made many appointments of Negroes to high administrative posts. President Eisenhower created the Committee on Governmental Centracts to help prevent discrimination on jobs covered by federal contracts. Vice President Nixon is chairman of this group. The Defense Department's program to wipe out segregation has made great strides 80 that segregation no longer exists in Away units. In the District of Columbia 23 governmental agencies were ordered to end discrimination. And again in fulfilling his pledge to end segregation in the District of Columbia, President FORD i LIBRARY GERALD Page 9 Eisenhower ordered that in new contracts for District of Columbia services, the contractors must pledge no discrimination in employment. I could go on citing more examples but I will just mention one more. One that I regard as highly important. President Eisenhower believes segregation in our Nation's schools to be absolutely and morally wrong. st his direction discrimination shall be eliminated in education for the first time next fall when schools open up in the District of Columbia. Regardless of color shildren will go to the school nearest to their homes. It is the President's intention to make the District a model laboratory which will serve as a shining example to the rest of the nation in pioneering this field. Further, Mr. Chairman, Lincoln's greatness and his character was marked by faith in the democratic process, and faith in, concern form and love of the common man. This, I think, is the place to present a challenge to every man and woman of the Republican Party. We must, every one of us, do everything we can to dispel the idea that our opponents form the party of the people, the party of the common man. We must demonstrate that the Republican Party has more to offer the "little people" of our land than the opposition. GERALD FORD LIBRARY Page 10 This is a challenge, a serious one, but our very existence as a great political party and as a force for the preser- vation of the Nation depends on its suscess. I know that the Republican Administration stands firmly in back of the "little people." There are many areas of action in the Eisenhower Agministration which can be used to demonstrate this point. There are many examples, but I have chosen just four because, as a Republican, I am especially proud of the accomplishments in these areas. And after 20 years of "weng-way" rule by Democrats, these four areas were ripe for progressive Republican legislation. They are - housing. labor, health, and social security. The Republican Housing Act of 1954 will raise housing standars of Americans, especially in the lower income brackets. But it will not only help more people acquire homes of their own; but 10 will assist communities in getting rid of slums and in improving older neighborhoods. In turn this will help strengthen and stimulate the Nation's entire economy, perticularly the construction industry. Probably the corneratone of this act is the expanded mortgage credit facilities. This means that provisions mine It possible to buy now homes under FHA insured loans with much smaller down payments. FORD is LIBRARY GERALD Page 11 For example, on a $10,000 new home under FHA, a buyer previously had to make a down payment of $1,250. Now the required down payment is only $700. and 30 years instead of 20 years is allowed for payment. There are many other interesting and constructive facets of the Republican Housing program - much too numerous to & into here. But the main group of persons affected by this act are those who work mainly with their hands or the man who may take a lunch pail to work with him. Some groups want America to believe that the Republiczn Party doesn't stand solidly behind the working man. I think anyone who takes this view is either very ill-informed or extremely prejudiced. Let me demonstrate how the Republican record towards labor is constructive and in the best interests of the laboring man. An editorial in the New York Daily News of February 2nd untitled, "Echo From a 'Recession'," makes an interesting point from statement originating at the annual meeting of the American Federation of Labor's executive council which just met in Miami Beach. This news comes from the AFL's staff of economists, and concerns what happened to the American working man and woman in 1954. which a lot of labor leaders and Democrat politicians insisted on calling a recession year. FORD is LIBRARY 038470 IBRAR Page 12 Let me quote in part from the editorial - "Asewrding to the AFL economists, U.S. workers did better with the money they made in 1954 than in any other year since World War II. It vam't that they got huge ruises in pay. They didn't. What happened was that the money the workers made was real money - meaning its purchasing power stayed put. The dough they earned in former years since the var looked bigger and bigger, but bought less and less. Inflation was steadily eating away the dollar's buying power. Inflation has now been stopped, the APL research experts consede, and ve have stable money - about the most valuable single asset any nation can have." The APL doesn't identify who brought this great boon to the American people. This credit belongs to President Eisenhower and the Republican Aguinistration, and to no other group or individual. On March 4. 1919, the set of Congress creating the Labor Department was approved by President William Howard Taft. The purpose of the Department, as it was stated by the 62nd Congress. is "to foster, promote, and develop the welfare of the vage earners of the United States, to improve their working conditions, and to advance their opportunities for profitable employment." Ourp present Secretary of Labor James P. Mitchell, describing the importance of this purpose, said, "When the self-expression, the liberty and the properity of the working people are assured, it follows that the broader objective - the well-being, strength and greatness of FORD Page 13 of our country and all its people - is also assured." Our Department of Labor provides three services to the wage earner. It cooperates in the supervision of a nationwide system of public employment offices of which there are 1800 local employment offices throughout the country. Their services are free to workers and employers alike. The Department carries on a special employment security program for veterans in order that they may better adjust to civilian life after their discharge from the service. This program includes a special veterans employment service, unemployment service, unemployment insurance system, and re-employment rights program. Statistical studies published by the Department aid young men and women to plan for careers, provide estimates of manpower resources and demands. provide employers and workers with labor market information, and make available information on the kinds of occupations in which women are employed. their opportunities for advancement and training and other valuable information which is sueful to wage earners. In enforcing labor legislation last year alone three and one-half thousand children between the ages of 16 and 17 were removed from unlawful employment which were declared hazardous by the Secretary of Labor. FORD & LIBRARY 03RALD Page 14 But not only has the administration provided better working conditions for children, but it has taken an interest in protecting the health and safety of working men as well. The safety and health requirements of the Walsh-Healey Public Contracts Act specify that goods are to be manufactured under adequate safety and sanitary standards during the life of the contract. When poor conditions are corrected because of these provisions the improvements remain to safeguard workers after production is resumed for private industry. Last year. the Department found unsatisfactory conditions in almost 2000 of the 2563 establishments investigated for compliance under the law's safety and health provisions. President Eisenhower showed his interest in the health of the Nation in his message on that subject to Congress on Monday, January 31st. Contrast his sound recommendations with the prepaid compulsory program sponsored by his predecesser which vas govern- ment regimentation and red-tape personified. President Eisenhower believes we must move forward to raise the health standards of all our people by a constructive middle course which steers clears of the pitfalls of socialism. The Republican Social Security Amendments of 1954 are further evidence of what our party has done and will do for the constructive welfare of the people. The coverage vas expended FORD is LIBRARY GERALD Page 15 10 million, benefits were increased for the ill and physically handicapped, the retired can earn more without losing benefits and other forward looking changes were made. In fast, retired persons can now earn $1200 a year, instead of $75 a month, or $900 a year, without a loss of benefits, and there is no restriction on earning of those over 72 years. It is estimated that this alone will affest 360,000 elderly workers, The Eisenhower Agministration tackled another critical problem when plans were formulated to solve the road improvements and construction problems from a national viewpoint. The nation needs new and better roads, not only to ourb our high accident rate, but to promote the best interests of the country as to interstate commerce. And to create an efficient system of roads linking the country requires vast financial expenditures. The President is scheduled to ask Congress to double highway spending in the next ten years to untangle our national traffic jum. Although the President's highway proposal has not been efficially submitted to the Congress, the blueprints for the program are well known. A Presidential fact finding committee on highway, headed by General Lucius Clay, has reported to the White House, and undoubtedly we can count on new Republises highway legislation which will bring roadbuilding results. We all know. Mr. Chairman, that Abraham Lincoln has been immortalized ⑉8 President who had time for the *little people." FORD i LIBRARY GERALD Page 16 It was a little girl in the East who suggested he grow a board. He listened to her. The stories of his considerations to the pleas of mothers for soldier-sons is known to all of you. The consternation to which his Secretary of War, Mr. Stanton, was brought by the kindness and humanity of the President is familiar infeed. One of the last acts be performed in the White House as he left for the Ford theatre was to assure a distressed mother that she would have an audience with him the following merning. Eisenhower and the Republican Party of today also have time for the *little people." It was an Eqsenhower who could apologize to a high school girl in Michigan for a State of the Union speech much too long. So, too, MyS. Nettie Moulden who at age ten shook the hand of Linsoln, a few days ago shook the hand of Mr. Eisenhower at the White House on her 100th birthday anniversary. Her simple expression of a desire to see the President brought an immediate and Savorable response from our leader. The Republican Party is a humane party; it is concerned with human beings and their welfare. But the Republican Party does not sponsor a wasteful, inefficient, secialistic scheme of things. Ve accept the President's premise that ve are liberal in matters of human rights and conservative in the sphere of economies. We are moderate progressives with a dedication to the American philosophy of government and freedom of its citizens. FORD i LIBRARY GERALD Page 17 The gist of yair Deal thinking, which Aglai Stevenson hopes to perpetuate in action, is that the federal government should blueprint the future of the American people and the mational economy through a system of centralized planning and eontrols masterminded in Washington. Republicans believe that the American competitive system of free enterprise can be more productive and profitable for our citizens without piling up bureausratic regulations from Washington. We want to provide the individual eitimen with a climate favorable to economic activity which dnscureges private initiative. The federal government can help generate confidence in its people when it relies on a free economy with its great capacity to create jobs's incomes and increase production to raise our standard of living. We want to establish the best possible climate in which labor and management can work together prefitably. We have no desire to set class against class. We oppose more and more handouts to TVA which has never paid interest on the money it receives from the taxpayers of Michigan and other states. It is legitimate to ask why should we in Michigan subsidise the Tonnessee Valley so 1t can growand develop without paying interest charges on the money borrowed from the federal treasury. It is paradarisel that while we thus assist them financially they are urging Michigan manufacturers to move their GERALD, FORD LIBRARY Page 18 factories to the Tennessee Valley. Our tax revision of 1954 was a step in the right direction. It is not perfect by any mans. But dozens of inequities were rectified that had been legislated in the past 20 years of Democrat rule where taxes only west up and personal exemptions dom. The Republican tax reduction legislation was a real attempt to promote justice, thrift. savings and investments in order toexpand the Nation's economy. We think, too, that the men and women in state government, and those serving on the local level also have the best interests of the people at heart. All wisdom does not reside in Washington. You who know your local problems should have the opportunity to solve those problems in your own way. We trust "the people" back home. But where a real need on a national scale can be demonstrated, we will not hide behind the fenge of *state rights." In fields of health reinsurance, school construction, highway improvement, we must go forward. Idenvise. the progress in social security, health, labor and housing already discussed, would indicate the humanitarian interests of this administration. Mr. Chairman, there is one final and solemn thought. This American way of life of ours rests ultimately on a fundamental belief in God. Lincoln knew this, and, we are told, carried his Mother's old Bible around with him in Mashington. He especially liked the Pealms. I think most of you know that above all else Dwight D. GERALD tapasit FORD Page 19 Eisenhower' 8 leadership has been toward a stronger moral and spiritual emphasis in our way of life. His act of becoming a full member of a Washington church, his attention to worship on the Sabbath, his proclamation of days of prayer, his sincere interest in things of the spirit are well known to all of you. His prayer at the opening of the Inaugural Address was a statement of humble and sincere reliance on the power of God. Then there came the first informal meeting of the Eisenhower Cabinet. The President turned to his Secretary of Agriculture and asked him to deliver a prayer. This was done reverently. Ag he concluded his supplication, Mr. Benson spoke these words; "Gratefully 1/0 dedicate our lives to thee and to thy service; guide and direct us in our deliberations today, and always help us to serve with an eye single to thy glory" ... Then followed a period of silence. To break the silence, he spoke with that Eisenhower genuineness, "I want this house to be an example to all the homes of our country." That, Mr. Chairman, so our President; that is our Republican leader; that is our Lincoln of today. FORD i LIBRARY CERALD Lincoln Day Speech, 1955 By - Rep. Gerald R. Ford, Jr., Fifth District - Michigan Abraham Lincoln was a Republican; and Abraham Lincoln was the greatest President this country has produced. Now that is not the mere opinion of Jerry Ford nor of the Republican National Committee, although we all agree with it wholeheartedly. That is the reasoned judgment of a group of sixty learned American historians who were asked to rate 29 American Presidents of the United States. They rated them as great, near great, average, below average and failure. When they had finished, six men were found among that select group of the "great." And the man heading the list, the unamimous choice of all the authorities, was our own Abraham Lincoln, a Republican, the first Republican President. As the historians went about the task of selecting the great chief executives of this Republic, they of necessity set up standards of value and of judgment. A great President, they found, was not necessarily a brilliant intellectual, nor an adminis- trative genius, nor even a personality of immense magnetic charm. These non-partisan scholars concluded that a great President is one who exhibits and exercises "moral leadership" in meeting and solving wisely the most pressing problems of the day. Lincoln saw clearly the problems of his day. He used all the power of his office to face up to these problems and to do something about them. But, and this is most important, what he did was morally right and just. That is what made him great. John C. Calhoun was a brilliant political thinker, but his doctrines of nulli- fication and secession were wrong, morally wrong. Robert E. Lee was a military genius, but he fought on the wrong side for that which was not morally defensible. Lincoln was morally right - both historians and philosophers agree. And Lincdn was a Republican. I submit to you, Mr. Chairman, that today we Republicans and we Americans have another great President. Great because he is providing the country with that moral leadership which it needs to survive the day to day crucial problems which constantly beset it. When Abraham Lincoln became President, the Democrat Party had been in power for a good many years. The American people then, in 1860, turned to the new Republican Party in hopes of finding a better government through the expression of the high ideals of Mr. Lincoln and his new Party. The major crisis facing President Lincoln was the preservation of the nation, the saving of the union. Mr. Lincoln and the new Republican Party took immediate steps to meet the obligations of their sacred oath to preserve and defend this nation and its Constitution. He was morally right. And today all we need do is look around GERALD FORD Page 2 us to observe the bulwark he helped construct so "that government of the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish from the earth." I submit to you, Mr. Chairman, that the major concern of your government today is the preservation and defense of this nation. Just as Lincoln attacked the forces of destruction, a Republican President today is attacking the forces of evil threatening our way of life. Lincoln had his Fort Sumter, and Eisenhower has his Formosa. Whether to reinforce Sumter was the first major decision by the Lincoln Administration. To do so was to risk war for a righteous cause. A recent major decision of the Eisenhoer Administration and your Congress was whether to protect America by defending Formosa. I can assure you, ladies and gentlemen, that this decision was not made lightly nor in ignorance of the implications. The problems facing Formosa are intense and changing by the hour. When President Lincoln decided to fortify Sumter he did what was right. And when President Eisenhower announced our intention of securing and protecting Formosa he did what was right. In Lincoln's day the enemy attacked and a long and bitter war followed, but it is the opinion of the best informed authorities that our decisions regarding Formosa are a step away from rather than toward war. By definitely announcing our intention of securing and protecting Formosa and the Pescadores, we dispel any alse notions by the Chinese Communists that the United States will not defend these strategic islands. Our military experts contend that if Formosa falls into the hands of Red China, the free world will eventually lose the Philippines, Japan and the other Pacific allies. The loss of this valuable territory means the ruthless and dangerous enemy is thou- sands of miles closer to the shores of America. Hawaii would be our only outpost; the shores of California, Oregon and Washington would be our defense line. In these circumstances and under these conditions we are one united nation in our determination to halt the march of the Godless Communistic aggressors in the Kremlin or Peiping. Some Americans have expressed the fear that we are giving Chiang Kai-Shek a "blank check" encouraging him to attack the mainland and thus precipitate a general war. As a Representative in Washington, I am convinced that our government has a firm assurance that no such action will be taken. But I also want to assure you that this government believes in "preparedness", We do not expect to be weighed in the balance and found wanting at that crucial moment when some fanatic at Moscow or Peiping decides to strike, We do not accept the doctrine of preventive war; but we do accept the responsibility of maintaining an adequate defense of our own soil, and of helping friendly nations preserve their freedom. We will cooperate with the free nations and the established international authority in meeting hostile action throughout the world. Page 3 To do all this we must maintain a stability in our defense program. This calls for adequate reserve units, stockpiling of strategic and critical materials, mobile forces with increased firepower, and a well trained career Army, Navy and Air Force. We must be ready at every moment to halt an enemy attack and to take retaliatory measures. Let me re-emphasize that we will remain strong. On the internal, domestic front Lincoln too, had his weak and misguided souls whose loyalty lay in the direction of the enemy. There were the "copperheads" who would travel in fellowship with the enemy to weaken and destroy a nation. Today we have our fellow travelers and Communist aggitators who would destroy us internally by deceitful and treacherous methods. The Eisenhoer Administration has showed its adeptness at weeding security risks out of the government service. The administration has worked on the basic assumption that it is not a right but a privilege to work for the United States government. Individuals are deemed security risks for any of the following reasons: unreliable conduct; deliberate misrepresentation; criminal, infamous or immoral conduct; uncured insanity or mental disorder; being subject to coercion; attempting, conspiring, or aiding sabotage; treason, espionage, or sedition; associating with anyone so doing; advocating the overthrow of the government; associating with anyone so doing; belonging to or associating with any group which shows a policy of subversion; violating security regulations, or serving the interests of another government. In 1953 the Eisenhower Agministration inherited the wreckage of a "soft" policy towards internal subversion from prior administrations. The President and the Republican Congress approached this problem with swfitness and dispatch. For proof, there is the recent case of the conviction of Claude Lightfoot, executive secretary of the Communist Party in Illinois. This and other convictions by the administration are examples of the tight rein our government is drawing daily over traitorous and disloyal Reds as they still seek to operate in America. The conviction of Claude Lightfoot for violating the Smith Act represents just one more step of the administration's determined fight against disloyalty and subver- sion in government. This drive has resulted in jail sentences for more than 50 Com- munist leaders, stripped the Communist party of all legal standing, led to the depor- tation of more than 100 Communist aliens, many of whom had enjoyed complete freedom of movement in the United States for decades. Another step made by the security conscious Eisenhower Agministration 00 concerns a man by the name of Joseph Peterson who was a code expert in the National Security Agency. This man was caught and deprived of his subversive activities by means of a routine check made under the new security program of the Eisenhower Agministration. Mr. Peterson will be residing behind bars for the next seven years. GERALD FORD LIBRAR. Page 4 Here was a very serious security risk who had been working for the government for years and who would still be on the payroll today, undetected and unapprehended, had this administration not acted promptly and vigorously. Before we criticise the administration's security program let's remember the cases of Claude Lightfoot and Joseph Peterson. Vice-President Nixon knows a great deal about the Communist threat in this country. It was he who was mainly responsible for the conviction of Alger Hiss. Mr. Nixon has said repeatedly that Communism in government should not be a partisan issue because there is no difference in loyalty between Democrats and Republicans. But the facts are beginning to speak and as a result they reveal that the Truman Administrations were either blind or completely indifferent to the Communist threat to our nation. The second fundamental problem in which Abraham Lincoln exercised his moral leader- ship involved slavery, or freedom and equal rights for all American citizens. His Emancipation Proclamation was morally and eternally right, and I submit to you, ladies and gentlemen, that today the Republican Party under President Eisenhower's leadership is the party of Lincoln in extending and expanding the program of civil rights, Mr. Eisenhower's record in civil rights is distinguished and is one of which we may well be proud. The greatest advancements in civil rights have been within the last two years. We are all aware of the tremendous support the President gave to Attorney General Herbert Brownell at the time the Supreme Court considered the school segregation issue. We are all familiar with the Justice Department's splendid argument before the Supreme Court to the effect that it had ample constitutional power to outlaw racial segregation in the public schools and that it should do SO. The administration has, for the first time in history appointed a Negro secretary to the White House, and also made many appointments of Negroes to high administrative posts. President Eisenhower created the Committee on Governmental Contracts to help prevent discrimination on jobs covered by federal contracts. Vice President Nixon is chairman of this group. The Defense Department's program to wipe out segregation has made great strides so that segregation no longer exists in Army units. In the District of Columbia 23 governmental agencies were ordered to end discrimination, And again in fulfilling his pledge to end segregation in the District of Columbia President Eismhower ordered that in new contracts for District of Columbia services, the contractors must pledge no discrimination in employment. I could go on citing more examples but I will just mention one more. One that I regard as highly important. Page 5 President Eisenhower believes segregation in our nation's schools to be absolutely and morally wrong. At his direction discrimination shall be eliminated in education for the first time next fall when schools open up in the District of Columbia. Regardless of color children will go to the school nearest to their homes. It is the President's intention to make the District a model laboratory which will serve as a shining example to the rest of the nation in pioneering this field. Further, Mr. Chairman, Lincoln's greatness and his character was marked by faith in the democratic process, and faith in, concern for, and love of the common man. This, I think, is the place to present a challenge to every man and woner of the Republican Party. We must, every one of us, do everything we can to dispel the idea that our opponents form the party of the people, the party of the common man. We must demonstrate that the Republican Party has more to offer the "little people" of our land than the opposition. This is a challenge, a serious one, but our very existence as a great political party and as a force for the preservation of the Nation depends on its success. I know that the Republican Administration stands firmly in back of the "little people." There are many areas of action in the Eisenhower Administration which can be used to demonstrate this point. There are many examples, but I have chosen just four because, as a Republican, I am especially proud of the accomplishments in these areas. And after 20 years of "wrong-way" rule by Democrats, these four areas were ripe for progressive Republican legislation. They are - housing, labor, health, and social security. The Republican Housing Act of 1954 will raise housing standards of Americans, expecially in the lower income brackets. But it will not only help more people acquire homes of their own; but it will assist communities in getting rid of slums and in improving older neighborhoods. In turn this will help strengthen and stimulate the Nation's entire economy, particularly the construction industry. Probably the cornerstone of this act is the expanded mortgage credit facilities. This means that provisions make it possible to buy new homes under FHA insured loans with much smaller down payments. For example, on a $10,000 new home under FHA, a buyer previously had to make a down payment of $1,250. Now the required down payment is only $700. and 30 years instead of 20 years is allowed for payment. There are many other interesting and constructive facets of the Republican Housing program - much too numerous to go into here. But the main group of persons affected by this act are those who work mainly with their hands or the man who may take a lunch pail to work with him. Some groups want America to believe that the this Republican Party doesn't stand solidly behind the working man. I think anyone who takes this view is either veryo GERALD FORD LIBRARY Page 6 ill-informed or extremely prejudiced. Let me demonstrate how the Republican record towards labor is constructive and in the best interests of the laboring man. An editorial in the New York Daily News of February 2nd, entitled, "Echo From a Recession'," makes an interesting point from a statement originating at the annual meeting of the American Federation of Labor's executive council which just met in Miami Beach. This news comes from the AFL's staff of economists, and concerns what happened to the American working man and woman in 1954. which a lot of labor leaders and Democrat politicians insisted on calling a recession year. Let me quote in part from the editorial - "According to the AFL economists, U.S. workers did better with the money they made in 1954 than in any other year since World War II. It wasn't that they got huge raises in pay. They didn't. What happened was that the money the workers made was real money - meaning its purchasing power stayed put. The dough they earned in former years since the war looked bigger and bigger, but bought less and less. Inflation was steadily eating away the dollar's buying power. Inflation has now been stopped, the AFL research experts concede, and we have stable money - about the most valuable single asset any nation can have." The AFL doesn't identify who brought this great boon to the American people. This credit belongs to President Eisenhower and the Republican Administration, and to no other group or individual. On March 4. 1913, the Act of Congress creating the Labor Department was approved by President William Howard Taft. The purpose of the Department, as it was stated by the 62nd Congress, is "to foster, promote, and develop the welfare of the wage earners of the United States, to improve their working conditions, and to advance their oppor- tunities for profitable employment." Our present Secretary of Labor James P. Mitchell, describing the Importance of this purpose, said, "When the self-expression, the liberty and the prosperity of the working people are assured, it follows that the broader objective - the well-being, strength and greatness of our country and all its people - is also assured." Our Department of Labor provides three services to the wage earner. It cooperates in the supervision of a nationwide system of public employment offices of which there are 1800 local employment offices throughout the country. Their services are free to workers and employers alike. The Department carries on a special employment security program for veterans in order that they may better adjust to civilian life after their discharge from the service. This program includes a special veterans employment service, unemployment service, unemployment insurance system, and re-employment rights program. Page 7 Statistical studies published by the Department aid young men and women to plan for careers, provide estimates of manpower resources and demands, provide employers and workers with labor market information, and make available information on the kinds of occupations in which women are employed, their opportunities for advancement and training and other valuable information which is useful to wage earners. In enforcing labor legislation last year alone three and one-half thousand children between the ages of 16 and 17 were removed from unlawful employment which were declared hazardous by the Secretary of Labor. But not only has the administration provided better working conditions for children, but it has taken an interest in protecting the health and safety of working men as well. The safety and health requirements of the Walsh-Healey Public Contracts Act specify that goods ae to be manufactured under adequate safety and sanitary standards during the life of the contract. When poor conditions are corrected because of these provisions the improvements remain to safeguard workers after production is resumed for private industry. Last year, the Department found unsatisfactory conditions in almost 2000 of the 2563 establishments investigated for compliance under the law's safety and health provisions. President Eisenhower showed his interest in the health of the nation in his mes- sage on that subject to Congress on Monday, January 31st. Contrast his sound recommendations with the prepaid compulsory program sponsored by his predecessor which was government regimentation and red-tape personified. President Eisenhower believes we must move forward to mise the health standards of all our people by a constructive middle course which steers clear of the pitfalls of socialism. The Republican Social Security Amendments of 1954 are further evidence of what our party has done and will do for the constructive welfare of the people. The coverage was expanded by 10 million, benefits were increased for the ill and physically handi- capped, the retired can earn more without losing benefits and other forward looking changes were made. In fact, retired persons can now earn $1200 a year, instead of $75 a month, or $900 a year, without à loss of benefits; and there is no restriction on earning of those over 72 years. It is estimated that this alone will affect 360,000 elderly workers. The Eisenhower Agministration tackled another critical problem when plans were formulated to solve the road improvements and construction problems from a national viewpoint. The nation needs new and better roads, not only to curb our high accident rate, but to promote the best interests of the country as to interstate commerce GERALOR FORD LIBRARY Page 8 But to create an efficient system of roads linking the country requires vast financial expenditures. The President is scheduled to ask Congress to double highway spending in the next ten years to untangle our national traffic jam. Although the President's highway proposal has not been officially submitted to the Congress, the blueprints for the program are well known. A Presidential fact finding committee on highway, headed by General Lucius Clay, has reported to the White House, and undoubtedly we can count on new Republican highway legislation which will bring roadbuilding results. We all know, Mr. Chairman, that Abraham Lincoln has been immortalized as a President who had time for the "little people." It was a little girl in the East who suggested he grow a beard. He listened to her. The stories of his considerations to the pleas of mothers for soldier-sons is known to all of you. The consternation to which his Secretary of War, Mr. Stanton, was brought by the kindness and humanity of the President is familiar indeed. One of the last acts he performed in the White House as he left for the Ford theatre was to assure a distressed mother that she would have an audience with him the following morning. Eisenhower and the Republican Party of today also have time for the "little people." It was an Eisenhawer who could apologize to a high school girl in Michigan for a State of the Union speech much too long. So, too, Mrs. Nettie Moulden who at age ten shook the hand of Lincoln, a few days ago shook the hand of Mr. Eisenhower at the White House on her 100th birthday anniversary. Her simple expression of a desire to see the President brought an immediate and favorable response from our leader. The Republican Party is a humane party; it is concerned with human beings and their welfare, But the Republican Party does not sponsor a wasteful, inefficient, socialistic scheme of things. We accept the President's premise that we are liberal in matters of human rights and conservative in the sphere of economics. We are moderate progressives with a dedication to the American philosophy of government and freedom of its citizens. The gist of Fair Deal thinking, which Adlai Stevenson hopes to perpetuate in action, is that the federal government should blueprint the future of the American people and the national economy through a system of centralized planning and controls masterminded in Washington. Republicans believe that the American competitive system of free enterprise can be more productive and profitable for our citizens without piling up bureaucratic regulations from Washington. We want to provide the individual citizen with a climate favorable to economic activity which encourages private initiative. The federal govern- ment can help generate confidence in its people when it relies on a free economy with its great capacity to create jobs, incomes and increase production to raise our Page 9 standard of living. We want to establish the best possible climate in which labor and management can work together profitably. We have no desire to set class against class. We oppose more and more handouts to TVA which has never paid interest on the money it receives from the taxpayers of Michigan and other states. It is legitimate to ask why should we in Michigan subsidize the Tennessee ley so it can grow and develop without paying interest charges on the money borrowed from the federal treasury/ It is paradoxical that while we thus assist them financially they are urging Michigan manufacturers to move their fadories to the Tennessee Valley. Our tax revision of 1954 was a step in the right direction. It is not perfect by any means. But dozens of inequities were rectified that had been legislated in the past 20 years of Democrat rule where taxes only went up and personal exemptions down. The Republican tax reduction legislation was a real attempt to promote justice, thrift, savings and investments in order to expand the Nation's economy. We think, too, that the men and women in state government, and those serving on the local level also have the best interests of the people at heart. All wisdom does not reside in Washington. You who know your local problems should have the opportunity to solve those problems in your own way. We trust "the people" back home. But where a real need on a national scale can be demonstrated, we will not hide behind the fence of "state rights." In fields of health reinsurance, school construction highway improvement, we must go forward. Likewise, the progress in social security, health, labor and housing already discussed, would indicate the humanitarian interests of this administration, Mr. Chairman, there is one final and solemn thought. This American way of life of ours rests ultimately on a fundamental belief in God. Lincoln knew this, and, we are told, carried his Mother's old Bible around with him in Washington. He especially liked the Psalms. I think most of you know that above all else Dwight D. Eisenhower's leadership has been toward a stronger moral and spiritual emphasis in our way of life. His act of becoming a full member of a Washington church, his attention to worship on the Sabbath, his proclamation of days of prayer, his sincere interest in things of the spirit are well known to all of you. His prayer at the opening of the Inaugural Address was a statement of humble and sincere reliance on the power of God. Then there came the first informal meeting of the Eisenhower Cabinet. The President turned to his Secretary of Agriculture and asked him to deliver a prayer. This was done reverently. As he concluded his supplication, Mr. Benson spoke these words: "Gratefully we dedicate our lives to thee and to thy service; guide and direct us in our deliberations today, and always help us to serve with an eye single to thy glory" Then followed a period of silence. To break the silence, he spoke with that Eisenhower genuineness, "I want this house to be an example to all the homes of Page 10 our country." That, Mr. Chairman, is our President; that is our Republican leader; that is our Lincoln of today. FORD & LIBRAR GERALD