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This file contains material relating to George McGovern.

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4526449
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Gilman for Congress Dinner, Newburgh, NY, September 24, 1972
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id
4526449
contentType
document
title
Gilman for Congress Dinner, Newburgh, NY, September 24, 1972
description
This file contains material relating to George McGovern.
collections
Gerald R. Ford Congressional Papers
Speeches
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Presidential campaigns
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4526449
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1972-09-30
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9
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1972
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1972-09-01
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9
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1972
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The original documents are located in Box D33, folder "Gilman for Congress Dinner, Newburgh, NY, September 24, 1972" 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 The Council donated to the United States of America his copyrights in all of his unpublished writings in National Archives collections.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 Copy to Inlman for Congress only M Office Copy CONGRESSMAN NEWS GERALD R. FORD HOUSE REPUBLICAN LEADER RELEASE --FOR RELEASE AT 6 P.M.-- Sunday, September 24, 1972 Excerpts from a Speech by Rep. Gerald R. Ford at a Gilman-for-Congress Dinner at Newburgh, N.Y. New York State voters and other Americans should have no trouble making "Decision 1972." The choice is clear. The choice is between widely differing political philosophies. The choice is between the progressive policies of a clear-eyed statesman, Richard M. Nixon, and the wild ideas of a fuzzy-thinking extremist, George McGovern. What do Americans want as they stand on the threshold of this election? I feel sure they want the steady progress of the Nixon Administration, not the on-again, off-again schemes of his opponent. I don't think we need the polls to tell us the American people don't like McGovernment. They want peace through strength, not a dangerous excursion into isolationism. They want an honorable peace in Vietnam, not a peace we beg for -- peace on the enemy's terms. They want prosperity based on sound economic policies, not a phony prosperity tied to make-work projects bought with tax dollars. They want genuine reform of the scandalous welfare system, not a new escalation of welfare tied to redistribution of income. They want a President who will hold down Federal spending and keep the lid on Federal levies, not one who would wildly expand the Federal government and double the average citizen's taxes. They want a President they can be proud of, not one who preaches retreat abroad and radicalism at home. I think, too, they want this President they're proud of to have enough troops in Congress to carry out his policies. That's why the people of New York's 26th district are going to send Ben Gilman to the U.S. House of Representatives. (more) FORD LIBRARY "y BERALD Digitized from Box D33 of The Ford Congressional Papers: Press Secretary and Speech File at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library -2- I don't think the people of the 26th district want a McGovernite representing them in Congress. They don't want a man who stands for the policies and views George McGovern stands for. They want a man of Ben Gilman's stature and ability -- a man who represents their point of view and will get things done, as Ben has in the State Assembly. But we won't put Ben Gilman in a congressional seat just by wishing for it. We've got to work for it. Let's roll up our sleves. Let's pitch in and see that Ben Gilman gets the majority he needs to take his place in Congress. Let's all help elect a Congress that will work with President Nixon. Let's get rolling on our victory drive. Ben Gilman's chance of winning will be improved by a heavy voter turnout. So get your organization in high gear. Get Republican voters registered. Persuade clear-thinking Democrats to vote our way this year -- to cast their votes for sound government and against McGovernment. Ben's election depends on it. And so does the future of your country. # # # Limited 3097 - Distribution Office Copy CONGRESSMAN NEWS GERALD R. FORD HOUSE REPUBLICAN LEADER RELEASE --FOR RELEASE AT 6 P.M.-- Sunday, September 24, 1972 Excerpts from a Speech by Rep. Gerald R. Ford at a Gilman-for-Congress Dinner at Newburgh, N.Y. New York State voters and other Americans should have no trouble making "Decision 1972." The choice is clear. The choice is between widely differing political philosophies. The choice is between the progressive policies of a clear-eyed statesman, Richard M. Nixon, and the wild ideas of a fuzzy-thinking extremist, George McGovern. What do Americans want as they stand on the threshold of this election? I feel sure they want the steady progress of the Nixon Administration, not the on-again, off-again schemes of his opponent. I don't think we need the polls to tell us the American people don't like McGovernment. They want peace through strength, not a dangerous excursion into isolationism. They want an honorable peace in Vietnam, not a peace we beg for -- peace on the enemy's terms. They want prosperity based on sound economic policies, not a phony prosperity tied to make-work projects bought with tax dollars. They want genuine reform of the scandalous welfare system, not a new escalation of welfare tied to redistribution of income. They want a President who will hold down Federal spending and keep the lid on Federal levies, not one who would wildly expand the Federal government and double the average citizen's taxes. They want a President they can be proud of, not one who preaches retreat abroad and radicalism at home. I think, too, they want this President they're proud of to have enough troops in Congress to carry out his policies. That's why the people of New York's 26th district are going to send Ben Gilman to the U.S. House of Representatives. (more) FORD LIBRARY GERALD Limited Distribution Office Copy CONGRESSMAN NEWS GERALD R. FORD HOUSE REPUBLICAN LEADER RELEASE --FOR RELEASE AT 6 P.M.-- Sunday, September 24, 1972 Excerpts from a Speech by Rep. Gerald R. Ford at a Gilman-for-Congress Dinner at Newburgh, N.Y. New York State voters and other Americans should have no trouble making "Decision 1972.' The choice is clear. The choice is between widely differing political philosophies. The choice is between the progressive policies of a clear-eyed statesman, Richard M. Nixon, and the wild ideas of a fuzzy-thinking extremist, George McGovern. What do Americans want as they stand on the threshold of this election? I feel sure they want the steady progress of the Nixon Administration, not the on-again, off-again schemes of his opponent. I don't think we need the polls to tell us the American people don't like McGovernment. They want peace through strength, not a dangerous excursion into isolationism. They want an honorable peace in Vietnam, not a peace we beg for -- peace on the enemy's terms. They want prosperity based on sound economic policies, not a phony prosperity tied to make-work projects bought with tax dollars. They want genuine reform of the scandalous welfare system, not a new escalation of welfare tied to redistribution of income. They want a President who will hold down Federal spending and keep the lid on Federal levies, not one who would wildly expand the Federal government and double the average citizen's taxes. They want a President they can be proud of, not one who preaches retreat abroad and radicalism at home. I think, too, they want this President they're proud of to have enough troops in Congress to carry out his policies. That's why the people of New York's 26th district are going to send Ben Gilman to the U.S. House of Representatives. (more) GERALD FORD LIBRARY -2- I don't think the people of the 26th district want a McGovernite representing them in Congress. They don't want a man who stands for the policies and views George McGovern stands for. They want a man of Ben Gilman's stature and ability -- a man who represents their point of view and will get things done, as Ben has in the State Assembly. But we won't put Ben Gilman in a congressional seat just by wishing for it. We've got to work for it. Let's roll up our sleves. Let's pitch in and see that Ben Gilman gets the majority he needs to take his place in Congress. Let's all help elect a Congress that will work with President Nixon. Let's get rolling on our victory drive. Ben Gilman's chance of winning will be improved by a heavy voter turnout. So get your organization in high gear. Get Republican voters registered. Persuade clear-thinking Democrats to vote our way this year -- to cast their votes for sound government and against McGovernment. Ben's election depends on it. And so does the future of your country. ###