February 28, 1963
Office of the White House Press Secretary
NOTICE: There should be no premature release of this
message, nor should its contents be paraphrased, alluded to
or hinted at in earlier stories. There is a total embargo on
this message until 12:00 noon, Thursday, February 28, 1963
which includes any and all references to any material in this
message. Pierre Salinger
White House Press Secretary
THE WHITE HOUSE
SPECIAL MESSAGE ON CIVIL RIGHTS
TO THE CONGRESS OF THE UNITED STATES:
"Our Constitution is color blind," wrote Mr. Justice Harlan
before the turn of the century, "and neither knows nor tolerates
classes among citizens." But the practices of the country do
not always conform to the principles of the Constitution. And
this Message is intended to examine how far we have come in
achieving first-class citizenship for all citizens regardless
of color, how far we have yet to go, and what further tasks
remain to be carried out -- by the Executive and Legislative
Branches of the Federal Government, as well as by state and
local governments and private citizens and organizations.
One hundred years ago the Emancipation Proclamation was signed
by a President who believed in the equal worth and opportunity
of every human being. That Proclamation was only a first step
-- a step which its author unhappily did not live to follow
up, a step which some of its critics dismissed as an action
which "frees the slave but ignores the Negro". Through these
long one hundred years, while slavery has vanished, progress
for the Negro has been too often blocked and delayed. Equality
before the law has not always meant equal treatment and opportunity.
And the harmful, wasteful and wrongful results of racial discrimination
and segregation still appear in virtually every aspect of national
life, in virtually every part of the Nation.
The Negro baby born in America today -- regardless of the
section or state in which he is born -- has about one-half
as much chance of completing high school as a white baby born
in the same place on the same day -- one-third as much chance
of completing college -- one-third as much chance of becoming
a professional man -- twice as much chance of becoming unemployed
-- about one-seventh as much chance of earning $10,000 per
year - a life expectancy which is seven years less -- and the
prospects of earning only half as much.
No American who believes in the basic truth that "all men
are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with
certain unalienable Rights", can fully excuse, explain or defend
the picture these statistics portray. Race discrimination hampers
our economic growth by preventing the maximum development and
utilization of our manpower. It hampers our world leadership
by contradicting at home the message we preach abroad. It mars
the atmosphere of a united and classless society in which this
Nation rose to greatness. It increases the costs of public
welfare, crime, delinquency and disorder. Above all, it is
wrong.
Therefore, let it be clear, in our own hearts and minds, that
it is not merely because of the Cold War, and not merely because
of the economic waste of discrimination, that we are committed
to achieving true equality of opportunity. The basic reason
is because it is right.
The cruel disease of discrimination knows no sectional or
state boundaries. The continuing attack on this problem must
be equally broad. It must be both private and public -- it
must be conducted at national, state and local levels -- and
it must include both legislative and executive action.
In the last two years, more progress has been made in securing
the civil rights of all Americans than in any comparable period
in our history. Progress has been made -- through executive
action, litigation, persuasion and private initiative -- in
achieving and protecting equality of opportunity in education,
voting, transportation, employment, housing, government, and
the enjoyment of public accommodations.
But pride in our progress must not give way to relaxation
of our effort. Nor does progress in the Executive Branch enable
the Legislative Branch to escape its own obligations. On the
contrary, it is in the light of this nationwide progress, and
in the belief that Congress will wish once again to meet its
responsibilities in this matter, that I stress in the following
agenda of existing and prospective action important legislative
as well as administrative measures.
I. THE RIGHT TO VOTE
The right to vote in a free American election is the most
powerful and precious right in the world -- and it must not
be denied on the ground of race or color. It is a potent key
to achieving other rights of citizenship. For American history
-- both recent and past -- clearly reveals that the power of
the ballot has enabled those who achieve it to win other achievements
as well, to gain a full voice in the affairs of their state
and nations and to see their interests represented in the governmental
bodies which affect their future. In a free society, those
with the power to govern are necessarily responsive to those
with the right to vote.
In enacting the 1957 and 1960 Civil Rights Acts, Congress
provided the Department of Justice with basic tools for protecting
the right to vote -- and this Administration has not hesitated
to use those tools. Legal action is brought only after voluntary
efforts fail -- and, in scores of instances, local officials,
at the request of the Department of Justice, have voluntarily
made voting records available or abandoned discriminatory registration,
discriminatory voting practices or segregated balloting. Where
voluntary local compliance has not been forthcoming, the Department
of Justice has approximately quadrupled the previous level
of its legal effort -- investigating coercion, inspecting records,
initiating lawsuits, enjoining intimidation, and taking whatever
follow-up action is necessary to forbid further interference
or discrimination. As a result, thousands of Negro citizens
are registering and voting for the first time -- many of them
in counties where no Negro had ever voted before. The Department
of Justice will continue to take whatever action is required
to secure the right to vote for all Americans.
Experience has shown, however, that these highly useful Acts
of the 85th and 86th Congresses suffer from two major defects.
One is the usual long and difficult delay which occurs between
the filing of a lawsuit and its ultimate conclusion. In one
recent case, for example, nineteen months elapsed between the
filing of the suit and the judgment of the court. In another,
an action brought in July 1961 has not yet come to trial. The
legal maxim "Justice delayed is Justice denied" is dramatically
applicable in these cases.
Too often those who attempt to assert their Constitutional
rights are intimidated. Prospective registrants are fired.
Registration workers are arrested. In some instances, churches
in which registration meetings are held have been burned. In
one case where Negro tenant farmers chose to exercise their
right to vote, it was necessary for the Justice Department
to seek injunctions to halt their eviction and for the Department
of Agriculture to help feed them from surplus stocks. Under
these circumstances, continued delay in the granting of the
franchise -- particularly in counties where there is mass racial
disfranchisement -- permits the intent of the Congress to be
openly flouted.
Federal executive action in such cases -- no matter how speedy
and how drastic -- can never fully correct such abuses of power.
It is necessary instead to free the forces of our democratic
system within these areas by promptly insuring the franchise
to all citizens, making it possible for their elected officials
to be truly responsive to all their constituents.
The second and somewhat overlapping gap in these statutes
is their failure to deal specifically with the most common
forms of abuse of discretion on the part of local election
officials who do not treat all applicants uniformly.
Objections were raised last year to the proposed literacy
test bill, which attempted to speed up the enforcement of the
right to vote by removing one important area of discretion
from registration officials who used that discretion to exclude
Negroes. Preventing that bill from coming to a vote did not
make any less real the prevalence in many counties of the use
of literacy and other voter qualification tests to discriminate
against prospective Negro voters, contrary to the requirements
of the 14th and 15th Amendments, and adding to the delays and
difficulties encountered in securing the franchise for those
denied it.
An indication of the magnitude of the overall problem, as
well as the need for speedy action, is a recent five-state
survey disclosing over 200 counties in which fewer than 15%
of the Negroes of voting age are registered to vote. This cannot
continue. I am, therefore, recommending legislation to deal
with this problem of judicial delay and administrative abuse
in four ways:
First, to provide for interim relief while voting suits
are proceeding through the courts in areas of demonstrated
need, temporary Federal voting referees should be appointed
to determine the qualifications of applicants for registration
and voting during the pendency of a lawsuit in any county
in which fewer than 15% of the eligible number of persons
of any race claimed to be discriminated against are registered
to vote. Existing Federal law provides for the appointment
of voting referees to receive and act upon applications for
voting registration upon a court finding that a pattern or
practice of discrimination exists. But to prevent a successful
case from becoming an empty victory, insofar as the particular
election is concerned, the proposed legislation would provide
that, within these prescribed limits, temporary voting referees
wou1d be appointed to serve from the inception to the conclusion
of the Federal voting suit, applying, however, only State
law and State regulations. As officers of the court, their
decisions would be subject to court scrutiny and review.
Second, voting suits brought under the Federal Civil Rights
statutes should be accorded expedited treatment in the Federal
courts, just as in many state courts election suits are
given preference on the dockets on the sensible premise that,
unless the right to vote can be exercised at a specific election,
it is, to the extent of that election, lost forever.
Third, the law should specifically prohibit the application
of different tests, standards, practices, or procedures for
different applicants seeking to register and vote in federal
election. Under present law, the courts can ultimately
deal with the various forms of racial discrimination practiced
by local registrars. But the task of litigation, and the
time consumed in preparation and proof, should be lightened
in every possible fashion. No one can rightfully contend
that any voting registrar should be permitted to deny the
vote to any qualified citizen; anywhere in this country,
through discriminatory administration of qualifying tests,
or upon the basis of minor errors in filling out a complicated
form which seeks only information. Yet the Civil Rights Commission,
and the cases brought by the Department of Justice, have
compiled one discouraging example after another of obstacles
placed in the path of Negroes seeking to register to vote
at the same time that other applicants experience no difficulty
whatsoever. Qualified Negroes, including those with college
degrees, have been denied registration for their inability
to give a "reasonable" interpretation of the Constitution.
They have been required to complete their applications with
unreasonable precision -- or to secure registered voters
to vouch for their identity -- or to defer to white persons
who want to register ahead of them -- or they are otherwise
subjected to exasperating delays. Yet uniformity of treatment
is required by the dictates of both the Constitution and
fair play -- and this proposed statute, therefore, seeks
to spell out that principle to ease the difficulties and
delays of litigation. Limiting the proposal to voting qualifications
in elections for Federal offices alone will clearly eliminate
any Constitutional conflict.
Fourth, completion of the sixth grade should, with respect
to Federal elections, constitute a presumption that the applicant
is literate. Literacy tests pose especially difficult
problems in determining voter qualification. The essentially
subjective judgment involved in each individual case, and
the difficulty of challenging that judgment, have made literacy
tests one of the cruelest and most abused of all voter qualification
tests. The incidence of such abuse can be eliminated, or
at least drastically curtailed, by the proposed legislation
providing that proof of completion of the sixth grade constitutes
a presumption that the applicant is literate.
Finally, the 87th Congress -- after 20 years of effort --
passed and referred to the states for ratification a Constitutional
Amendment to prohibit the levying of poll taxes as a condition
to voting. Already thirteen states have ratified the proposed
Amendment and in three more one body of the Legislature has
acted. I urge every state legislature to take prompt action
on this matter and to outlaw the poll tax -- which has too
long been an outmoded and arbitrary bar to voting participation
by minority groups and others -- as the 24th Amendment to the
Constitution. This measure received bi-partisan sponsorship
and endorsement in the Congress -- and I shall continue
to work with governors and legislative leaders of both parties
in securing adoption of the anti-poll tax amendment.
II. EDUCATION
Nearly nine years have elapsed since the Supreme Court ruled
that State laws requiring or permitting segregated schools
violate the Constitution. That decision represented both good
law and good judgment -- it was both legally and morally right.
Since that time it has become increasingly clear that neither
violence nor legalistic evasions will be tolerated as a means
of thwarting court-ordered desegregation, that closed schools
are not an answer, and that responsible communities are able
to handle the desegregation process in a calm and sensible
manner. This is as it should be -- for, as I stated to the
Nation at the time of the Mississippi violence last September:
". . . Our Nation is founded on the principle that observance
of the law is the eternal safeguard of liberty, and defiance
of the law is the surest road to tyranny. The law which we
obey includes the final rulings of the courts, as well as the
enactments of our legislative bodies. Even among law-abiding
men, few laws are universally loved -- but they are uniformly
respected and not resisted."
"Americans are free to disagree with the law but not to disobey
it. For in a government of laws and not of men, no man, however
prominent or powerful, and no mob, however unruly or boisterous,
is entitled to defy a court of law. If this country should
ever reach the point where any man or group of men, by force
or threat of force, could long defy the commands of our court
and our Constitution, then no law would stand free from doubt,
no judge would be sure of his writ, and no citizen would be
safe from his neighbors."
The shameful violence which accompanied but did not prevent
the end of segregation at the University of Mississippi was
an exception. State supported universities in Georgia and South
Carolina met this test in recent years with calm and maturity,
as did the state supported universities of Virginia, North
Carolina, Florida, Texas, Louisiana, Tennessee, Arkansas and
Kentucky in earlier years. In addition, progress toward the
desegregation of education at all levels has made other notable
and peaceful strides, including the following forward moves
in the last two years alone:
-- Desegregation plans have been put into effect peacefully
in the public schools of Atlanta, Dallas, New Orleans, Memphis
and elsewhere, with over 60 school districts desegregated last
year - frequently with the help of Federal persuasion and consultation,
and in every case without incident or disorder.
-- Teacher training institutes financed under the National
Defense Education Act are no longer held in colleges which
refuse to accept students without regard to race, and this
has resulted in a number of institutions opening their doors
to Negro applicants voluntarily.
-- The same is now true of Institutes conducted by the National
Science Foundation;
-- Beginning in September of this year, under the Aid to Impacted
Area School Program, the Department of Health, Education, and
Welfare will initiate a program of providing on-base facilities
so that children living on military installations will no longer
be required to attend segregated schools at Federal expense.
These children should not be victimized by segregation merely
because their fathers chose to serve in the armed forces and
were assigned to an area where schools are operated on a segregated
basis.
-- In addition, the Department of Justice and the Department
of Health, Education, and Welfare have succeeded in obtaining
voluntary desegregation in many other districts receiving "impacted
area" school assistance; and, representing the Federal interest,
have filed lawsuits to end segregation in a number of other
districts.
-- The Department of Justice has also intervened to seek the
opening of public schools in the case of Prince Edward County,
Virginia, the only county in the Nation where there are no
public schools, and where a bitter effort to thwart court decrees
requiring desegregation has caused nearly 1500 out of 1800
school age Negro children to go without any education for more
than 3 years.
In these and other areas within its jurisdiction, the Executive
Branch will continue its efforts to fulfill the Constitutional
objective of an equal, non-segregated, educational opportunity
for all children.
Despite these efforts, however, progress toward primary and
secondary school desegregation has still been too slow, often
painfully so. Those children who are being denied their constitutional
rights are suffering a loss which can never be regained, and
which will leave scars which can never be fully healed. I have
in the past expressed my belief that the full authority of
the Federal government should be placed behind the achievement
of school desegregation, in accordance with the command of
the Constitution. One obvious area of Federal action is to
help facilitate the transition to desegregation in those areas
which are conforming or wish to conform their practices to
the law.
Many of these communities lack the resources necessary to
eliminate segregation in their public schools while at the
same time assuring that educational standards will be maintained
and improved. The problem has been compounded by the fact that
the climate of mistrust in many communities has left many school
officials with no qualified source to turn to for information
and advice.
There is a need for technical assistance by the Office of
Education to assist local communities in preparing and carrying
out desegregation plans, including the supplying of information
on means which have been employed to desegregate other schools
successfully. There is also need for financial assistance to
enable those communities which desire and need such assistance
to employ specialized personnel to cope with problems occasioned
by desegregation and to train school personnel to facilitate
the transition to desegregation. While some facilities for
providing this kind of assistance are presently available in
the Office of Education, they are not adequate to the task.
I recommend, therefore, a program of Federal technical
and financial assistance to aid school districts in the process
of desegregation in compliance with the Constitution.
Finally, it is obvious that the unconstitutional and outmoded
concept of "separate but equal" does not belong in the Federal
statute books. This is particularly true with respect to higher
education, where peaceful desegregation has been underway in
practically every state for some time. I repeat, therefore,
this Administration's recommendation of last year that this
phrase be eliminated from the Morrill Land Grant College Act.
III. EXTENSION AND EXPANSION OF THE
COMMISSION ON CIVIL RIGHTS
The Commission on Civil Rights, established by the Civil Rights
Act of 1957, has been in operation for more than five years
and is scheduled to expire on November 30, 1963. During this
time it has fulfilled its statutory mandate by investigating
deprivations of the right to vote and denials of equal protection
of the laws in education, employment, housing and the administration
of justice. The Commission's reports and recommendations have
provided the basis for remedial action both by Congress and
the Executive Branch.
There are, of course, many areas of denials of rights yet
to be fully investigated. But the Commission is now in a position
to provide even more useful service to the Nation. As more
communities evidence a willingness to face frankly their problems
of racial discrimination, there is an increasing need for expert
guidance and assistance in devising workable programs for civil
rights progress. Agencies of State and local government, industry,
labor and community organizations, when faced with problems
of segregation and racial tensions, all can benefit from information
about how these problems have been solved in the past. The
opportunity to seek an experienced and sympathetic forum on
a voluntary basis can often open channels of communication
between contending parties and help bring about the conditions
necessary for orderly progress. And the use of public hearings
-- to contribute to public knowledge of the requirements of
the Constitution and national policy -- can create in these
communities the atmosphere of understanding which is indispensable
to peaceful and permanent solutions to racial problems.
The Federal Civil Rights Commission has the experience and
capability to make a significant contribution toward achieving
these objectives. It has advised the Executive branch not only
about desirable policy changes but about the administrative
techniques needed to make these changes effective. If, however,
the Commission is to perform these additional services effectively,
changes in its authorizing statute are necessary and it should
be placed on a more stable and more permanent basis. A proposal
that the Commission be made a permanent body would be a pessimistic
prediction that our problems will never be solved. On the other
hand, to let the experience and knowledge gathered by the Commission
go to waste, by allowing it to expire, or by extending its
life only for another two years with no change in responsibility,
would ignore the very real contribution this agency can make
toward meeting our racial problems. I recommend, therefore,
that the Congress authorize the Civil Rights Commission to
serve as a national civil rights clearing house providing information,
advice, and technical assistance to any requesting agency,
private or public; that in order to fulfill these new responsibilities,
the Commission be authorized to concentrate its activities
upon those problems within the scope of its statute which most
need attention; and that the life of the Commission be extended
for a term of at least four more years.
IV. EMPLOYMENT
Racial discrimination in employment is especially injurious
both to its victims and to the national economy. It results
in a great waste of human resources and creates serious community
problems. It is, moreover, inconsistent with the democratic
principle that no man should be denied employment commensurate
with his abilities because of his race or creed or ancestry.
The President's Committee on Equal Employment Opportunity
reconstituted by Executive Order in early 1961, has, under
the leadership of the Vice President, taken significant steps
to eliminate racial discrimination by those who do business
with the Government. Hundreds of companies -- covering 17 million
jobs -- have agreed to stringent non-discriminatory provisions
now standard in all Government contracts. One hundred four
industrial concerns -- including most of the Nation's major
employers -- have in addition signed agreements calling for
an affirmative attack on discrimination in employment; and
117 labor unions, representing about 85% of the membership
of the AFL-CIO, have signed similar agreements with the Committee.
Comprehensive compliance machinery has been instituted to enforce
these agreements. The Committee has received over 1,300 complaints
in two years -- more than in the entire 7 1/2 years of the
Committee's prior existence -- and has achieved corrective
action on 72% of the cases handled -- a heartening and unprecedented
record. Significant results have been achieved in placing Negroes
with contractors who previously employed whites only -- and
in the elevation of Negroes to a far higher proportion of professional,
technical and supervisory jobs. Let me repeat my assurances
that these provisions in Government contracts and the voluntary
non-discrimination agreements will be carefully monitored and
strictly enforced.
In addition, the Federal Government, as an employer, has continued
to pursue a policy of non-discrimination in its employment
and promotion programs. Negro high-school and college graduates
are now being intensively sought out and recruited. A policy
of not distinguishing on grounds of race is not limited to
the appointment of distinguished Negroes -- although they have
in fact been appointed to a record number of high policy-making,
judicial and administrative posts. There has also been a significant
increase in the number of Negroes employed in the middle and
upper grades of the career Federal service. In jobs paying
$4,500 to $10,000 annually, for example, there was an increase
of 20% in the number of Negroes during the year ending June
30, 1962 -- over three times the rate of increase for all employees
in those grades during the year. Career civil servants will
continue to be employed and promoted on the basis of merit,
and not color, in every agency of the Federal Government, including
all regional and local offices.
This Government has also adopted a new Executive policy with
respect to the organization of its employees. As part of this
policy, only those Federal employee labor organizations
that do not discriminate on grounds of race or color will be
recognized.
Outside of Government employment, the National Labor Relations
Board is now considering cases involving charges of discrimination
against a number of union locals. I have directed the Department
of Justice to participate in these cases and to urge the National
Labor Relations Board to take appropriate action against racial
discrimination in unions. It is my hope that administrative
action and litigation will make unnecessary the enactment of
legislation with respect to Union discrimination.
V. PUBLIC ACCOMMODATIONS
No act is more contrary to the spirit of our democracy and
Constitution -- or more rightfully resented by a Negro citizen
who seeks only equal treatment -- than the barring of that
citizen from restaurants, hotels, theatres, recreational areas
and other public accommodations and facilities.
Wherever possible, this Administration has dealt sternly with
such acts. In 1961, the Justice Department and the Interstate
Commerce Commission successfully took action to bring an end
to discrimination in rail and bus facilities. In 1962, the
fifteen airports still maintaining segregated facilities were
persuaded to change their practices, thirteen voluntarily and
two others after the Department of Justice brought legal action.
As a result of these steps, systematic segregation in interstate
transportation has virtually ceased to exist. No doubt isolated
instances of discrimination in transportation terminals, restaurants,
rest rooms and other facilities will continue to crop up, but any
such discrimination will be dealt with promptly.
In addition, restaurants and public facilities in buildings
leased by the Federal Government have been opened up to all
Federal employees in areas where previously they had been segregated.
The General Services Administration no longer contracts for
the lease of space in office buildings unless such facilities
are available to all Federal employees without regard to race.
This move has taken place without fanfare and practically without
incident; and full equality of facilities will continue
to be made available to all Federal employees in every state.
National parks, forests and other recreation areas -- and
the District of Columbia Stadium -- are open to all without
regard to race. Meetings sponsored by the Federal Government
or addressed by Federal appointees are held in hotels and halls
which do not practice discrimination or segregation. The Department
of Justice has asked the Supreme Court to reverse the convictions
of Negroes arrested for seeking to use public accommodations;
and took action both through the Courts and the use of Federal
marshals to protect those who were testing the desegregation
of transportation facilities.
In these and other ways, the Federal Government will continue
to encourage and support action by state and local communities,
and by private entrepreneurs, to assure all members of the
public equal access to all public accommodations. A country
with a "color blind" Constitution, and with no castes or classes
among its citizens, cannot afford to do less.
Vl. OTHER USES OF FEDERAL FUNDS
The basic standard of non-discrimination -- which I earlier
stated has now been applied by the Executive Branch to every
area of its activity -- affects other programs not listed above:
-- Although President Truman ordered the armed services of
this country desegregated in 1948, it was necessary in 1962
to bar segregation formally and specifically in the Army and
Air Force Reserves and in the training of all civil defense
workers.
-- A new Executive Order on housing, as unanimously recommended
by the Civil Rights Commission in 1959, prohibits discrimination
in the sale, lease or use of housing owned or constructed in
the future by the Federal Government or guaranteed under the
FHA, VA and Farmers Home Administration program. With regard
to existing property owned or financed through the Federal
Government, the departments and agencies are directed to take
every appropriate action to promote the termination of discriminatory
practices that may exist. A President's Committee on Equal
Housing Opportunity was created by the Order to implement its
provisions.
-- A Committee on Equal Opportunity in the Armed Forces has
been established to investigate and make recommendations regarding
the treatment of minority groups, with special emphasis on
off-base problems.
-- The U. S. Coast Guard Academy now has Negro students for
the first time in its 87 years of existence.
-- The Department of Justice has increased its prosecution
of police brutality cases, many of them in Northern states
-- and is assisting state and local police departments in meeting
this problem.
-- State employee merit systems operating programs financed
with Federal funds are now prohibited from discriminating on
the basis of race or color.
-- The Justice Department is challenging the constitutionality
of the "separate but equal" provisions which permit hospitals
constructed with Federal funds to discriminate racially in
the location of patients and the acceptance of doctors.
In short, the Executive Branch of the Federal Government,
under this Administration and in all of its activities, now
stands squarely behind the principle of equal opportunity,
without segregation or discrimination, in the employment of
Federal funds, facilities and personnel. All officials at every
level are charged with the responsibility of implementing this
principle -- and a formal inter-departmental action group,
under White House chairmanship, oversees this effort and follows
through on each directive. For the first time, the full force
of Federal executive authority is being exerted in the battle
against race discrimination.
CONCLUSION
The various steps which have been undertaken or which are
proposed in this Message do not constitute a final answer to
the problems of race discrimination in this country. They do
constitute a list of priorities -- steps which can be taken
by the Executive Branch and measures which can be enacted by
the 88th Congress. Other measures directed toward these same
goals will be favorably commented on and supported, as they
have in the past -- and they will be signed, if enacted into
law.
In addition, it is my hope that this message will lend encouragement
to those state and local governments -- and to private organizations,
corporations and individuals -- who share my concern over the
gap between our precepts and our practices. This is an effort
in which every individual who asks what he can do for his country
should be able and willing to take part. It is important, for
example, for private citizens and local governments to support
the State Department's effort to end the discriminatory treatment
suffered by too many foreign diplomats, students and visitors
to this country. But it is not enough to treat those from other
lands with equality and dignity -- the same treatment must
be afforded to every American citizen.
The program outlined in this message should not provide the
occasion for sectional bitterness. No state or section of this
Nation can pretend a self-righteous role, for every area has
its own civil rights problems.
Nor should the basic elements of this program be imperiled
by partisanship. The proposals put forth are consistent with
the platforms of both parties and with the positions of their
leaders. Inevitably there will be disagreement about means
and strategy. But I would hope that on issues of constitutional
rights and freedom, as in matters affecting our national security,
there is a fundamental unity among us that will survive partisan
debate over particular issues.
The centennial of the issuance of the Emancipation Proclamation
is an occasion for celebration, for a sober assessment of our
failures, and for rededication to the goals of freedom. Surely
there could be no more meaningful observance of the centennial
than the enactment of effective civil rights legislation and
the continuation of effective executive action.
JOHN F. KENNEDY
THE WHITE HOUSE,
February 28, 1963.
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