I have consistently and outspokenly classified myself as an 'economic conservative.'
I am a Democrat, without prefix or suffix.
Mr. Nixon can call it practical progressivism or economic conservatism, but the label does not hide the package.
In the public works bill last year, the Democratic Congress added 67 new starts.
I ask you to join us in moving this country ahead, in giving this country new leadership.
Mr. Nixon's new definition of himself as a practical progressive" enunciated in Los Angeles yesterday further adds to the confusion of just ...
I am a Democrat, east, west, north, south, a Democrat who stands in the tradition of Franklin Roosevelt, in Pennsylvania, in California in G...
If there was ever a formula for inaction, for standing still, for those Americans who don't want anything done, that is the solution.
I am delighted to be here with my friend and colleague in the Senate, who has fought for Pennsylvania and this country, with your distinguis...
Republican policies have done nothing for you.
Mr. Nixon can apply any label he wants to this record, but the record speaks far more eloquently than his changing definitions.
I say as the standard bearer for the Democratic Party, as a member of a party which has produced Franklin Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson, and ...
I think they want a Democrat.
I think in 1960, if we choose progress, it can be a rising sun for this country and the beginning of a great new day.
I think Mr. Nixon and the Republican Party will be rejected on November 8, 1960.
Mr. Khrushchev says, 'Your children will be Communists.'
Our slogans have meaning.
The Democratic Party stands for one program and one platform, North and South, East and West.