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PROCEEDINGS AND DEBATES OF THE 88th CONGRESS, SECOND SESSION
Vol. 110 WASHINGTON, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 17,
1964 No. 27
Senate
(Legislative day of Monday, February 10, 1964)
Civil Rights: H.R. 7152, proposed Civil Rights
Act
Mr. DIRKSEN. Mr. President, I trust that the
time will never come in my public career when
the waters of partisanship will flow so swift
and so deep as to obscure my estimate of the
national interest. If and when that time comes,
then perhaps I shall have lost whatever talent
and justification I have for public service
and should make an exit and make way for others
to carry on the responsibility I presently
hold.
Last week we observed the anniversary of a
wise and prescient man who probably was confronted
with the greatest crisis that ever confronted
the country. He observed that the occasion
is piled high with difficulties, and that we
must rise with the occasion. As our cause is
new, so we must think and act anew. We must
first disenthrall ourselves, and then we shall
save the Union.
I have pondered those words of Lincoln for
some time. In an hour of crisis, if this challenge
can be called a crisis, I trust I can disenthrall
myself from all bias, from all prejudice, from
all irrelevancies, from all immaterial matters,
and see clearly and cleanly what the issue
is, and then render an independent judgment.
When I reached my desk this morning, after
a week in the hospital and another week of
convalescence, I found a number of clippings,
some of which indicated that my native State,
my office, and any other place where I may
hang my hat will probably be picketed by an
organization known as CORE.
Mr. President, I have been picketed before.
On one occasion last year, I was picketed at
O'Hare Airport. My office was picketed by those
who marched with banners, and when I reached
the hotel where I was to deliver a dinner address,
I was picketed on the other side of Michigan
Avenue; while inside, in the lobby, the place
was fairly packed with people, because I had
agreed to see 10 civil rights leaders and give
them 15 minutes and very freely make a statement
and answer questions.
Never have I been reluctant or hesitant with
regard to the right to petition and assemble
of any person or a group of persons who have
a grievance they believe should be redressed.
I am delighted to see them; but always I must
clutch unto myself the responsibility as a
U.S. Senator, which requires that I give to
the people of the country, and to the State
I represent, the greatest service I have to
offer, and that is always to render an independent
judgment.
If the day ever comes when, under pressure,
or as a result of picketing or other devices,
I shall be pushed from the rock where I must
stand to render an independent judgment, my
justification in public life will have come
to an end.
So I assure the distinguished Senator from
Montana [Mr. MANSFIELD], with whom it is such
a pleasure to work, that I shall cooperate
in every possible way, consonant always with
the duty to render an independent judgment,
and consonant with my constitutional duty not
merely to one segment of our people, but to
all the people of the United States.
Sometimes we set apart a group, a tenth of
the population, and because of the noise and
the demonstrations that take place, their interest
moves out of perspective and out of focus.
Sometimes we are likely to forget that there
are millions of other people in the country
who also have an interest in the whole question
of civil rights and who wish to see those rights
maintained.
I trust the time will never come when my perspective
is so narrow or becomes so diminished in scope
that I cannot see the problem which is now
on the doorstep of the country in the larger
perspective of all the people of the United
States.
It is fortunate indeed, as the bill comes
today from the House and takes its place for
a moment on the desk, that by virtue of the
wisdom of the Founding Fathers we have a balanced
government that has been responsible for our
survival. In the framing and structuring of
the Constitution of the United States, we sometimes
forget how wisely the framers really wrought.
One needs only to look at the interesting balance
in our Government to realize it. We are a part
of a coordinated branch of government, invested
with the exclusive lawmaking functions within
the framework of government, and we divide
that responsibility with the House of Representatives.
Members of the House are selected on the basis
of population. They serve a 2-year term. Under
the Constitution, they are entrusted with the
power to originate all revenue-producing bills
and, by custom, all appropriation bills. That
is a wise balance. The Constitution-makers
knew that if, perchance, the authority to impose
onerous and burdensome taxes upon the people
should be unwisely used, with a 2-year term
Representatives could be quickly turned out
of office.
Senators are entrusted with a 6-year term.
They are given the power to confirm the nominations
of ambassadors and other appointees, and to
advise and consent in the treatymaking process.
But no legislation can reach the books unless
it has the concurrence of both Houses in the
coordinate branch of Government. When we have
impressed our will upon a piece of legislation,
it is engrossed, and finally on parchment it
finds its way to the President of the United
States, to sign or not to sign, as he sees
fit. That still is a part of the balance. But
if the President undertakes to veto a bill,
it is still given to this branch of the Government,
by a two-thirds vote, to override the veto.
All this is a part of the astonishing balance
in Government.
It might well be that Congress and the Executive
could conjoin, in an unhappy moment, to place
upon the statute books a law that was not in
the national interest, but the Constitution
has also provided for a judicial branch, with
authority to strike down, as in contravention
of the Constitution, that which the President
and both branches of Congress may have so unwisely
wrought.
So we have a balanced government; and today,
from one branch in the coordinate part of the
Government, comes a bill for further consideration.
It can never reach the statute books unless
it first has the approval of the Senate, and
the differences are ironed out in the third
body, known as the conference committee; it
then goes to the White House for signature.
I have never ...... time in any..... when
the Senate has not sagaciously worked its will
and reason to its responsibilities as a part
of the deliberative branch of government. That
has been true in every generation. To be sure,
there have been times when it has failed. There
may have been times when it has been frivolous,
but always when, in the language of the day "the
chips were down," the Congress--and particularly
the Senate--has been equal to every challenge
that has thus far confronted the country, and
I apprehend that the situation will be no different
on this occasion.
I expect to give this measure considerate
attention. I expect ultimately to render an
independent judgment. To do otherwise would
be to betray the confidence of the people who
sent me, first to the other end of the Capitol,
and then to this end of the Capitol to serve
them, within the limits of my talents and energy.
Therefore, I assure my distinguished friend
the majority leader, the proposal will have
considered attention; it will have earnest
attention. One of the things which occupied
a part of my time in the hospital was taking
the bill as submitted and the bill as finally
enacted by the House, and spelling out every
word, every phrase, every line. Already, some
amendments have occurred to me. I shall try
to shape them. I shall try to put them in form.
If I think they have merit, I shall offer them.
All the picketing that may be done in my home
State, and all the picketing that may be done
here with respect to the minority leader, I
shall consider as nothing more than a form
of unjustified duress, in order to obtain a
judgment that is a departure from the convictions
I hold.
When the day comes that picketing, distress,
duress, and coercion can push me from the rock
of conviction, that is the day, Mr. President,
that I shall gather up my togs and walk out
of here and say that my usefulness in the Senate
has come to an end.
So I make an appeal to my fellow Senators
to consider this issue in the light of the
national interest. It is a phrase that came
close to the late President Kennedy. It is
a phrase that comes close to our former majority
leader, who now occupies his exalted position.
I want to do what I think is in the interest
of the present and future well-being of probably
the only real, true free republic that still
remains on God's foot-stool.
I shall cooperate. I shall do my best. When
the time comes, when the deliberations are
at an end, and all facets of the matter have
been carefully considered and discussed, I
shall be prepared to render judgment, and I
shall have no apology to make to any man or
any group anywhere, any time, for the course
that I shall ultimately pursue.
I am grateful to my distinguished friend the
majority leader, a man of grace and humility,
who has wrestled with this problem, and who
is confronted with it now by virtue of his
exalted and dignified position in this body.
I shall cooperate as best I can within the
limitations of the convictions that I hold. |