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OCR Page 1 of 8SPEECH OF HONORABLE JOSEPH W. MARTIN, JR.
CHIVES AMD
RECORDA
SERVICE"S
FEBRUARY 12, 1951
MR. VORYS. Mr. Speaker, under leave granted to extend
my remarks in the Record, I include the following address of
Honorable Joseph W. Martin, Jr., Republican leader of the House
of Representatives, at the Lincoln Day dinner of the Kings County
Republican Committee at Brooklyn, N. Y., on Monday evening,
February 12, 1951:
It is a privilege to join tonight in this tribute to
the great and noble spirit of Abraham Lincoln. It is an especial
privilege to do so here in Brooklyn, a community of good will,
good people, good homes, good churches--and the Dodgers. In this
great Borough of Brooklyn lies a great cross section of families
and homes that in themselves are a monument to the freedom and
individual dignity for which Lincoln fought and died.
In Lincoln breathed the hopes and prayers of ordinary
people like ourselves in all parts of the world. His uncom-
promising opposition to human slavery gave birth to a new political
party which has served this Nation well through generations of
constant development and progress:
Today, after 90 years of political service, the Republican
Party still is the only party of freedom in these United States.
It is still the only party which steadfastly has refused to accept
the alien doctrines of socialism and communism, either in part or
in whole.
Across this land of ours, the American people, weary of
the trend toward a total state, have come to realize more and
more that the lone champion of the basic freedoms that have made
America great is the Republican Party. And they are going to
translate that belief into action and elect a Republican Congress
and a Republican President in 1952?
And why shouldn't they? Is there a person within the
range of my voice who does not realize deep inside him that some-
thing is fundamentally wrong with the Denocratic leadership in
Washington? Is there anybody within the range of my voice who
does not fervently hope that out of the election in 1952 will
come an administration possessing the basic characteristics that
made Abraham Lincoln great -- intelligence of purpose, unflinch-
ing devotion to ideals, and, above all else, the courage to carry
out what the brain and heart and soul dictate?
It is the great tragedy of our day that in a period
of crisis we have an administration in Washington which is so
bankrupt in leadership that its first measurement of every under-
taking is whether it will help perpetuate those in power. Votes
have become the yardstick of their policies.
This is not the true spirit nor the wisdom of our fine
American heritage. And I am proud to stand here and tell you
tonight that there are patriotic Democrats in and out of Congress,
in and out of government, who tell me with the deepest sincerity
that the only way to save America, the only way to achieve the
leadership we so desperately need, is by a landslide Republican
victory next year.
We welcome Democrats and independents everywhere to this
crusade: Our task far transcends party lines.
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