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Dinner for Representative Garner Shriver, Wichita, KS, October 6, 1971
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4526376
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Dinner for Representative Garner Shriver, Wichita, KS, October 6, 1971
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The original documents are located in Box D31, folder "Dinner for Representative Garner
Shriver, Wichita, KS, October 6, 1971" of the Ford Congressional Papers: Press Secretary
and Speech File at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library.
Copyright Notice
The copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of
photocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted material. The Council donated to the United
States of America his copyrights in all of his unpublished writings in National Archives collections.
Works prepared by U.S. Government employees as part of their official duties are in the public
domain. The copyrights to materials written by other individuals or organizations are presumed to
remain with them. If you think any of the information displayed in the PDF is subject to a valid
copyright claim, please contact the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library.
Distribution: Full
Galleries ail a.m. 1:30pm 10/13/71 10/12/71 affice Copy
NEWS
CONGRESSMAN
GERALD R. FORD
HOUSE REPUBLICAN LEADER
RELEASE
--FOR RELEASE AT 6:30 p.m. TUESDAY--
October 12, 1971
Excerpts from a speech at a dinner for Rep. Garner Shriver at Wichita, Kansas.
In all of the oratory and flowery rhetoric that mark the political scene,
there are times when we encounter moments of truth.
Such a moment occurred Oct. 6 in New York City, when Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of
Maine, the leading candidate for the 1972 Democratic presidential nomination,
addressed a Liberal Party dinner attended by confessed-Democrat Mayor John Lindsay
and that perennial presidential candidate Sen. George McGovern of South Dakota.
I might say that John Lindsay is not a member of any organized political
party now-now that he is a Democrat.
But to get to the moment of truth. That came when Sen. Muskie told the
adherents of the Liberal Party: "The blunt truth is: that liberals have achieved
virtually no fundamental change in our society since the end of the New Deal."
Sen. Muskie was, of course, speaking the truth--and for that I congratulate
him. He was saying what I and other Republicans have asserted for years to vast
audiences of disbelievers who are descendants of the New Deal and disciples of its
liberal philosophy: American liberals have failed to solve this Nation's major
problems.
As a matter of fact, American liberals have not only failed to solve our
major problems, they have contributed to them. The liberals have not had a sound
new idea in four decades.
The Democratic Party has therefore become the party of the status quo--of
stand-pattism--of the same old tired solutions to the same old problems.
FORD & LIBRARY GERALD
(more)
Digitized from Box D31 of the Ford Congressional Papers: Press Secretary and Speech File at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library
-2-
The Republican Party has become the party of change. Change has swept
through the Republican Party, ripping away the cobwebs of reaction and the
resistance to reform.
The Republican Party has become the party of daring and imagination--the
party of welfare reform, the party of revenue sharing, the party of Federal
Government overhaul, the party of a New Health Care Program for all of the American
people, the party of Environmental Cleanup, the party with a New Economic Policy
that will put us on the path to new high growth in the economy and peacetime
prosperity with stable prices.
The Republican Party is alive with new ideas and programs for meeting the
needs of the people, for improving the quality of life in America.
Despite Democratic roadblocks to change, the Republican Party has brought
great progress to the American people since taking control of the White House
in January 1969.
Despite the fact that Richard Nixon was the first President since Zachary
Taylor to enter office with Congress firmly in control of the opposition party,
the wheels of progress have been turning steadily and the record is there to prove
it.
It was the Nixon Administration that reversed the course of the war in
Vietnam; that developed a new strategy for peace in the world centered around the
Nixon Doctrine; that brought about ratification of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty; that entered into serious negotiations with the Soviet Union on the
limitation of strategic arms (the SALT talks); that renounced biological weapons
and the first use of chemical warfare; that achieved a treaty prohibiting the
emplacement of nuclear weapons in the seabed; that reformed our draft laws to make
them more equitable and began moving toward an all-volunteer Army; that reordered
our national priorities by devoting a greater part of the Federal budget to human
needs than to defense spending; that pushed through major reforms in the postal
system, in the executive office of the President, and in many other areas of the
Federal bureaucracy; that achieved the most significant improvements in the history
of unemployment insurance; that acted to protect the environment by creating a new
(more)
-3-
Council on Environmental Quality and a new Environmental Protection Agency, that
brought about more school desegregation in two years and eight months than in the
entire period between 1954 and 1969; that won passage of legislation to improve
on-the-job safety for America's working men and women; that got a reluctant Congress
to adopt legislation for a stepped-up fight against organized crime and the drug
menace.
Now we look to the future. We look for more progress--progress toward peace,
and progress toward prosperity in peacetime.
We know that the President's New Economic Policy is working--that the
price-wage freeze is working. Wholesale prices dropped in September for the first
time in 10 months. The drop was the biggest in seven years. And the price of
industrial commodities dropped for the first time in five years.
The President is proving that his New Economic Policy can work-that
Government can work.
Republicans want to reform government itself--so that instead of sliding
further into muscle-bound ineffectiveness it at last can bridge the gap between
promise and performance.
There is congressional opposition to the President's key reform programs--
welfare reform, revenue sharing, and reorganization of Federal Government cabinet
departments.
But the American people want these reforms--and the people will be heard.
The American people have found a voice--in the Republican Party. The
American people are finding solutions to their problems--and the Republican Party
is providing those solutions. Through the Republican Party, the American people
will find their way to new greatness as we move through the decade of the Seventies.
# # #
CONGRESSMAN
NEWS
GERALD R. FORD
HOUSE REPUBLICAN LEADER
RELEASE
--FOR RELEASE AT 6:30 p.m. TUESDAY--
October 12, 1971
Excerpts from a speech at a dinner for Rep. Garner Shriver at Wichita, Kansas.
In all of the oratory and flowery rhetoric that mark the political scene,
there are times when we encounter moments of truth.
Such a moment occurred Oct. 6 in New York City, when Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of
Maine, the leading candidate for the 1972 Democratic presidential nomination,
addressed a Liberal Party dinner attended by confessed-Democrat Mayor John Lindsay
and that perennial presidential candidate Sen. George McGovern of South Dakota.
I might say that John Lindsay is not a member of any organized political
party now-now that he is a Democrat.
But to get to the moment of truth. That came when Sen. Muskie told the
adherents of the Liberal Party: "The blunt truth is: that liberals have achieved
virtually no fundamental change in our society since the end of the New Deal."
Sen. Muskie was, of course, speaking the truth--and for that I congratulate
him. He was saying what I and other Republicans have asserted for years to vast
audiences of disbelievers who are descendants of the New Deal and disciples of its
liberal philosophy: American liberals have failed to solve this Nation's major
problems.
As a matter of fact, American liberals have not only failed to solve our
major problems, they have contributed to them. The liberals have not had a sound
new idea in four decades.
The Democratic Party has therefore become the party of the status quo--of
stand-pattism--of the same old tired solutions to the same old problems.
(more)
FORD & LIBRARY GERALD
-2-
The Republican Party has become the party of change. Change has swept
through the Republican Party, ripping away the cobwebs of reaction and the
resistance to reform.
The Republican Party has become the party of daring and imagination--the
party of welfare reform, the party of revenue sharing, the party of Federal
Government overhaul, the party of a New Health Care Program for all of the American
people, the party of Environmental Cleanup, the party with a New Economic Policy
that will put us on the path to new high growth in the economy and peacetime
prosperity with stable prices.
The Republican Party is alive with new ideas and programs for meeting the
needs of the people, for improving the quality of life in America.
Despite Democratic roadblocks to change, the Republican Party has brought
great progress to the American people since taking control of the White House
in January 1969.
Despite the fact that Richard Nixon was the first President since Zachary
Taylor to enter office with Congress firmly in control of the opposition party,
the wheels of progress have been turning steadily and the record is there to prove
it.
It was the Nixon Administration that reversed the course of the war in
Vietnam; that developed a new strategy for peace in the world centered around the
Nixon Doctrine; that brought about ratification of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty; that entered into serious negotiations with the Soviet Union on the
limitation of strategic arms (the SALT talks); that renounced biological weapons
and the first use of chemical warfare; that achieved a treaty prohibiting the
emplacement of nuclear weapons in the seabed; that reformed our draft laws to make
them more equitable and began moving toward an all-volunteer Army; that reordered
our national priorities by devoting a greater part of the Federal budget to human
needs than to defense spending; that pushed through major reforms in the postal
system, in the executive office of the President, and in many other areas of the
Federal bureaucracy; that achieved the most significant improvements in the history
of unemployment insurance; that acted to protect the environment by creating a new
(more)
-3-
Council on Environmental Quality and a new Environmental Protection Agency, that
brought about more school desegregation in two years and eight months than in the
entire period between 1954 and 1969; that won passage of legislation to improve
on-the-job safety for America's working men and women; that got a reluctant Congress
to adopt legislation for a stepped-up fight against organized crime and the drug
menace.
Now we look to the future. We look for more progress--progress toward peace,
and progress toward prosperity in peacetime.
We know that the President's New Economic Policy is working--that the
price-wage freeze is working. Wholesale prices dropped in September for the first
time in 10 months. The drop was the biggest in seven years. And the price of
industrial commodities dropped for the first time in five years.
The President is proving that his New Economic Policy can work-that
Government can work.
Republicans want to reform government itself--so that instead of sliding
further into muscle-bound ineffectiveness it at last can bridge the gap between
promise and performance.
There is congressional opposition to the President's key reform programs--
welfare reform, revenue sharing, and reorganization of Federal Government cabinet
departments.
But the American people want these reforms--and the people will be heard.
The American people have found a voice--in the Republican Party. The
American people are finding solutions to their problems--and the Republican Party
is providing those solutions. Through the Republican Party, the American people
will find their way to new greatness as we move through the decade of the Seventies.
# # #