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Annual Dinner, Hatboro Republican Club, Hatboro, PA, April 18, 1970
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Annual Dinner, Hatboro Republican Club, Hatboro, PA, April 18, 1970
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The original documents are located in Box D27, folder "Annual Dinner, Hatboro
Republican Club, Hatboro, PA, April 18, 1970" of the Ford Congressional Papers: Press
Secretary and Speech File at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library.
Copyright Notice
The copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of
photocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted material. The Council donated to the United
States of America his copyrights in all of his unpublished writings in National Archives collections.
Works prepared by U.S. Government employees as part of their official duties are in the public
domain. The copyrights to materials written by other individuals or organizations are presumed to
remain with them. If you think any of the information displayed in the PDF is subject to a valid
copyright claim, please contact the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library.
Distribution: 10 Copies Buster's office
20 copies Mr. Ford
maffice Copy
CONGRESSMAN
NEWS
GERALD R. FORD
HOUSE REPUBLICAN LEADER
RELEASE
--FOR RELEASE AT 6:30 P.M. SATURDAY--
April 18, 1970
Excerpts from a Speech by Rep. Gerald R. Ford, R-Mich., Republican Leader, U.S.
House of Representatives, at the annual dinner of the Hatboro Republican Club,
April 18, 1970, at Hatboro, Pa.
With the help of Republicans in Congress, President Nixon is cleaning up
the mess the Democrats left behind.
That is the thrust behind the President's Vietnamization program, his
reversal of the policies of his Democratic predecessor in Vietnam, his determination
to end the war in Vietnam while achieving a sound peace there.
That is the reason for the outcries of pain as the President holds Federal
spending to reasonable and responsible limits, fights the inflation he inherited
from the Democrats, and looks to a further reduction of the high interest rates
that are an inevitable product of the fight against Democratic inflation.
I do not envy the Democrats as the congressional campaign of 1970 gets
under way.
What can their propaganda cry be? Only that it is taking some time to clean
up the mess they made -- to end the war a Democratic President plunged us into, to
curb the inflation brought on by the irresponsible spending policies of the previous
Administration, to reorder priorities that were knocked askew by the war we got into
under the Democrats, to end air and water pollution that grew steadily worse during
the eight years that Democrats controlled both the Congress and the White House, to
reduce a crime rate that rose 10 times faster than our population during the eight
Democratic years of the Sixties.
It's tough to clean up the Democratic mess, but we are making progress.
We have reduced our commitment in Vietnam from 549,500 men to 434,000, and
we can expect to lower that manpower ceiling to about 200,000 in another year or SO.
We are curbing inflation.
We have reduced the rate of the crime rise, and we will be doubling our
Federal aid to State and local communities for the fight against crime in the
streets while smashing at organized crime throughout the Nation.
We have acted to reorder our priorities, reducing defense spending in the
President's fiscal 1971 budget to 36.7 per cent of the budget while raising human
resource outlays to 41 per cent. And as the President noted in his budget message,
(more)
Digitized from Box D29 of The Ford Congressional Papers: Press Secretary and Speech File at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library
-2-
this is the first time in 20 years that a Federal Budget has provided more funds
for human resources than for defense.
We need the cooperation of the Democrats in the battles we now are waging
to clean up the mess of the Sixties.
We need help in fighting inflation, not an assault from Democrats employing
the same kind of spend-more tactics they used in piling up $57 billion in Federal
deficits in the last decade.
We need all the assistance we can get in fighting crime, not the
heel-dragging we are getting from some Democrats who attack nearly every new
anti-crime tool as unconstitutional.
We need support in ending the Vietnam War, not the sneers of some Democrats
who undermine President Nixon's policy of Vietnamizing the war and urge a settlement
on Northvietnamese terms.
We need a bipartisan effort to reorder our priorities and launch a nation-
wide crusade against air and water pollution, not an attempt by some Democrats to
grab the credit by calling for twice as much Federal anti-pollution spending as the
President has recommended.
Republicans can approach the 1970 congressional campaign with confidence.
The reason -- we are offering the American people sound responsible policies,
forward-looking programs that represent the greatest reform of our political and
social system since the first term of Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
We have rejected the rhetoric that overpromises and underdelivers. We offer
instead programs based on realism and reason. And that is why we deserve the
support of the American people.
The Republican Party stands before the Nation as the party of reform.
We have instituted a lottery system in a major overhaul of the draft. An
all-volunteer Army is our next objective.
We have accomplished major tax reforms along with tax relief.
We have reformed the anti-poverty program to make it truly innovative,
giving the successful operating programs to the old-line departments.
The President's program of Workfare instead of welfare is moving toward
congressional passage.
A whole host of reforms still awaits congressional action -- a strengthened
and broadened anti-crime program; a postal service authority with broad
modernization powers; a consolidation of manpower training programs, to be turned
over to the states as they are equipped to handle them; revenue sharing giving the
States and cities a percentage slice of Federal income tax receipts; consolidation
of Federal grant programs; a re-examination of Federal aid to schools to achieve
quality education; revamping of our labor laws for improved handling of national
emergency labor disputes in transportation; a crusade to rid ourselves of air and
water pollution.
The American people want these reforms. Republicans will deliver on them.
# # #
Used
CONGRESSMAN
NEWS
GERALD R. FORD
HOUSE REPUBLICAN LEADER
RELEASE
-FOR RELEASE AT 6:30 P.M.
PDAY--
1970
April18,
Excerpts from a Speech by Rep. Gerald R. Ford, R-Mich. Republican Leader, U.S. House
of Representatives, at a dinner honoring Rep.
Edward Biester.,Jr., R-Pa, at
We are in an election year--a crucial election year.
Hatboro, Pa.
Control of the Congress is at stake. To say it another way, what is at stake
is the direction the country will travel in the years ahead.
Finger-pointing has begun. This is the way of politics. It is important for
the people to get the facts. Tonight I intend to help them.
There are many major issues in this election--the fight against pollution; the
war on crime; inflation; and national emergency strikes.
No greater challenge faces us than cleaning up our environment-- making our skies
blue again, our waters clear again, and our land a better place in which to live
and grow.
This should not be a partisan issue, yet already the other major party has
gone in for credit-grabbing by calling for spending programs 2½ times as large as
those of the President. This is the old formula of the Democrats--spend more so
it will look like you're doing more.
We now have a President--a Republican President-who is vigorously on the
side of clean air, clean water and abundant recreation land, and that is what
makes the difference as we move now to pay for years of neglect.
For the first time in recent history we have a President who has called for
a national commitment to restore our environment and return to the day when our
air was pure, our water was clean, and our land was uncluttered.
Look
at
the
eight
Democratic
years
of
the
Sixties
and
see
years
of
minimal by the mon Bresident Nivonk the White Houses Look HOW at Richard Nistony and you
see
the
Look at his 37-point program for cleaning up America, and you
see real the hope for That difference fightagarmst pollutions It is now up to
Congress to give the Chief Executive the tools he needs to put his grand cleanup
plan into practice.
Let us hope we will not see the kind of delay that has hampered the fight
against crime.
The entire first session of the 91st Congress slipped by without
Democratic-controlled Congress enacting a single Nixon anti-crime bill into law.
That is absolutely inexcusable.
LIBRARY
-2-
The Congre SS has before it a major program aimed at making our streets safe
from the criminal, speeding the work of the criminal courts, and improving the
correctional systems that too often are only breeding grounds for further lawlessness
by released prisoners.
The President's program would beef up the fight against organized crime,
double the Federal assistance to states and local communities in the war against
crime, and cut down the shocking crime rate in the Nation's capital. Yet the
Democratic-controlled Congress has not yet approved this legislation--delay which
I think should give every American cause for concern.
The American public should not have to live in fear, and Republicans are
determined to see that they don't.
As urgent as the war against crime is, there is no problem greater today than
inflation. The inflation plaguing us today began to take hold early in 1965. It
was triggered and fueled by the Vietnam War, that war we were taken into by the
previous Democratic Administration. And instead of dealing adequately with the
problem of inflation when it was more manageable, the previous Democratic Administration
accelerated the inflation and let the problem grow larger and larger.
It is tough now to bring inflation under control, but President Nixon is
it. He knows that a major cause of our current inflation traces
back to an irresponsible Democratic Congress and a Democratic President who spent a
staggering $57 billion more during the Sixties than the Federal Government took in.
And so Republicans are balancing the budget, holding down on Government spending
despite the efforts of Democrats to continue overspending on old programs, to preserve
the status quo, and to deny the Nixon Administration the fiscal elbow room needed to
move forward with the great reforms the President has recommended. Well, we are
licking
inflation in spite of the Democrats in Congress.
One of the great Nixon reforms I have in mind tonight is labor law reform new
legislation to deal with national emergency labor disputes.
The Democrats to date have shirked the responsibility for helping enact major
new laws to improve the handling of national emergency labor disputes.
with
of
nationwide
strikery
all
the
did
the
deadline
for
37
By contrast, the President the railroad
has
laid before the Congress an excellent program of three options for
handling
national transportation emergencies
For my own part,
I think the President deserves the support of every American who is concerned about
the public interest. We must reach a consensus on labor law reform--reform aimed at
protecting the national health and safety while promoting collective bargaining as free
as possible from government interference.
#######
20 copies to Mr. Food
+ 10 copies Biester's office
Q Office Copy
CONGRESSMAN
NEWS
GERALD R. FORD
HOUSE REPUBLICAN LEADER
RELEASE
-FOR RELEASE AT 6:30 P.M. SATURDAY--
April 18, 1970
Excerpts from a Speech by Rep. Gerald R. Ford, R-Mich., Republican Leader, U.S.
House of Representatives, at the annual dinner of the Hatboro Republican Club,
April 18, 1970, at Hatboro, Pa.
With the help of Republicans in Congress, President Nixon is cleaning up
the mess the Democrats left behind.
That is the thrust behind the President's Vietnamization program, his
reversal of the policies of his Democratic predecessor in Vietnam, his determination
to end the war in Vietnam while achieving a sound peace there.
That is the reason for the outcries of pain as the President holds Federal
spending to reasonable and responsible limits, fights the inflation he inherited
from the Democrats, and looks to a further reduction of the high interest rates
that are an inevitable product of the fight against Democratic inflation.
I do not envy the Democrats as the congressional campaign of 1970 gets
under way.
What can their propaganda cry be? Only that it is taking some time to clean
up the mess they made -- to end the war a Democratic President plunged us into, to
curb the inflation brought on by the irresponsible spending policies of the previous
Administration, to reorder priorities that were knocked askew by the war we got into
under the Democrats, to end air and water pollution that grew steadily worse during
the eight years that Democrats controlled both the Congress and the White House, to
reduce a crime rate that rose 10 times faster than our population during the eight
Democratic years of the Sixties.
It's tough to clean up the Democratic mess, but we are making progress.
We have reduced our commitment in Vietnam from 549,500 men to 434,000, and
we can expect to lower that manpower ceiling to about 200,000 in another year or SO.
We are curbing inflation.
We have reduced the rate of the crime rise, and we will be doubling our
Federal aid to State and local communities for the fight against crime in the
streets while smashing at organized crime throughout the Nation.
We have acted to reorder our priorities, reducing defense spending in the
President's fiscal 1971 budget to 36.7 per cent of the budget while raising human
resource outlays to 41 per cent. And as the President noted in his budget message,
(more)
-2-
this is the first time in 20 years that a Federal Budget has provided more funds
for human resources than for defense.
We need the cooperation of the Democrats in the battles we now are waging
to clean up the mess of the Sixties.
We need help in fighting inflation, not an assault from Democrats employing
the same kind of spend-more tactics they used in piling up $57 billion in Federal
deficits in the last decade.
We need all the assistance we can get in fighting crime, not the
heel-dragging we are getting from some Democrats who attack nearly every new
anti-crime tool as unconstitutional.
We need support in ending the Vietnam War, not the sneers of some Democrats
who undermine President Nixon's policy of Vietnamizing the war and urge a settlement
on Northvietnamese terms.
We need a bipartisan effort to reorder our priorities and launch a nation-
wide crusade against air and water pollution, not an attempt by some Democrats to
grab the credit by calling for twice as much Federal anti-pollution spending as the
President has recommended.
Republicans can approach the 1970 congressional campaign with confidence.
The reason -- we are offering the American people sound responsible policies,
forward-looking programs that represent the greatest reform of our political and
social system since the first term of Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
We have rejected the rhetoric that overpromises and underdelivers. We offer
instead programs based on realism and reason. And that is why we deserve the
support of the American people.
The Republican Party stands before the Nation as the party of reform.
We have instituted a lottery system in a major overhaul of the draft. An
all-volunteer Army is our next objective.
We have accomplished major tax reforms along with tax relief.
We have reformed the anti-poverty program to make it truly innovative,
giving the successful operating programs to the old-line departments.
The President's program of Workfare instead of welfare is moving toward
congressional passage.
A whole host of reforms still awaits congressional action -- a strengthened
and broadened anti-crime program; a postal service authority with broad
modernization powers; a consolidation of manpower training programs, to be turned
over to the states as they are equipped to handle them; revenue sharing giving the
States and cities a percentage slice of Federal income tax receipts; consolidation
of Federal grant programs; a re-examination of Federal aid to schools to achieve
quality education; revamping of our labor laws for improved handling of national
emergency labor disputes in transportation; a crusade to rid ourselves of air and
water pollution.
The American people want these reforms. Republicans will deliver on them.
# # #