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I am behind
Senator Harding and Governor Coolidge
for President and Vice-President
of the United States for two reasons.
First, because they are the nominees
of the Republican party, and secondly
because I believe them to be 100%
American, of true patriotism, who
have not failed to show marked efficiency
and ability in public office.
I am one
who believes that the Republican
party and the Democratic party have
different ideas. And I believe that
the issues of the two parties are
not as blurred and as indistinguishable
as is sometimes said to be the case.
The Republican party is the party
of concrete nationalism, as opposed
to the hazy internationalism of
the Democratic party. The Republican
party preached preparedness. [And]
the Democratic party, influenced
by its President, mind you I say
the President of the Democratic
party and not of the whole United
States, was keeping us out of war.
Keeping us out of war until he was
re-elected President.
We need the
Republican party in office during
the hard days to come, when there
must be the [up-building] and rebuilding
of our nation. We need preparedness
for days of peace and against the
always possible dangers of war.
Shall we choose again the party
which blindly turns from the right,
and in so doing, dragged down the
prestige of America and brought
on our nation unbearable criticism
and deplorable confusion?
Fellow citizens,
we are at the turning of the ways.
Theodore Roosevelt said in October,
1916, "I demand at this election
that each citizen shall think of
America first." Who now does
not regret that the country did
not respond to that demand? Let
us, the Republican party, again
make this demand.
Senator Harding
stood for a League of Nations with
strong, Americanizing reservations,
as Theodore Roosevelt did. He also
stood with the Senate in passing
the resolution which would have
enabled Theodore Roosevelt to lead
a division into France when the
morale of France and of America
was at a low ebb. And Senator Harding,
in making the memorial address on
Theodore Roosevelt before the Ohio
Joint Legislative Assembly in January,
1919, said, "Colonel Roosevelt
was the great patriotic sentinel,
pacing the parapets of the republic,
alert to danger and every menace,
and in love with duty and service,
and always unafraid."
Those words
of our presidential nominee, in
admiration of my great brother,
are almost a promise of what his
own attitude will be. Let us stand
behind him, looking forward and
onward as Theodore Roosevelt would
have done. And let us try with might
and main to put our beloved country
in the safe keeping of Warren Harding
and Calvin Coolidge.
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