Presidential Speeches

State of the Union 1973




State of the Union 1973

President Richard Nixon
State of the Union 1973-02-02

Speech Transcript:

 To the Congress of the United States:

The traditional form of the President's annual report giving "to the
Congress Information of the State of the Union" is a single message
or address. As the affairs and concerns of our Union have multiplied
over the years, however, so too have the subjects that require
discussion in State of the Union Messages.

This year in particular, with so many changes in Government programs
under consideration--and with our very philosophy about the
relationship between the individual and the State at an historic
crossroads--a single, all-embracing State of the Union Message would
not appear to be adequate.

I have therefore decided to present my 1973 State of the Union report
in the form of a series of messages during these early weeks of the
93rd Congress. The purpose of this first message in the series is to
give a concise overview of where we stand as a people today, and to
outline some of the general goals that I believe we should pursue
over the next year and beyond. In coming weeks, I will send to the
Congress further State of the Union reports on specific areas of
policy including economic affairs, natural resources, human
resources, community development and foreign and defense policy.

The new course these messages will outline represents a fresh
approach to Government: an approach that addresses the realities of
the 1970s, not those of the 1930s or of the 1960s. The role of the
Federal Government as we approach our third century of independence
should not be to dominate any facet of American life, but rather to
aid and encourage people, communities and institutions to deal with
as many of the difficulties and challenges facing them as possible,
and to help see to it that every American has a full and equal
opportunity to realize his or her potential.

If we were to continue to expand the Federal Government at the rate
of the past several decades, it soon would consume us entirely. The
time has come when we must make clear choices--choices between old
programs that set worthy goals but failed to reach them and new
programs that provide a better way to realize those goals; and
choices, too, between competing programs--all of which may be
desirable in themselves but only some of which we can afford with the
finite resources at our command.

Because our resources are not infinite, we also face a critical
choice in 1973 between holding the line in Government spending and
adopting expensive programs which will surely force up taxes and
refuel inflation.

Finally, it is vital at this time that we restore a greater sense of
responsibility at the State and local level, and among individual
Americans.

WHERE WE STAND

The basic state of our Union today is sound, and full of promise.

We enter 1973 economically strong, militarily secure and, most
important of all, at peace after a long and trying war.

America continues to provide a better and more abundant life for more
of its people than any other nation in the world. We have passed
through one of the most difficult periods in our history without
surrendering to despair and without dishonoring our ideals as a
people.

Looking back, there is a lesson in all this for all of us. The lesson
is one that we sometimes had to learn the hard way over the past few
years. But we did learn it. That lesson is that even potentially
destructive forces can be converted into positive forces when we know
how to channel them, and when we use common sense and common decency
to create a climate of mutual respect and goodwill.

By working together and harnessing the forces of nature, Americans
have unlocked some of the great mysteries of the universe.

Men have walked the surface of the moon and soared to new heights of
discovery.

This same spirit of discovery is helping us to conquer disease and
suffering that have plagued our own planet since the dawn of time.

By working together with the leaders of other nations, we have been
able to build a new hope for lasting peace--for a structure of world
order in which common interest outweighs old animosities, and in
which a new generation of the human family can grow up at peace in a
changing world.

At home, we have learned that by working together we can create
prosperity without fanning inflation; we can restore order without
weakening freedom.

THE CHALLENGES WE FACE

These first years of the 1970s have been good years for America.

Our job--all of us together--is to make 1973 and the years to come
even better ones. I believe that we can. I believe that we can make
the years leading to our Bicentennial the best four years in American
history.

But we must never forget that nothing worthwhile can be achieved
without the will to succeed and the strength to sacrifice.

Hard decisions must be made, and we must stick by them.

In the field of foreign policy, we must remember that a strong
America--an America whose word is believed and whose strength is
respected--is essential to continued peace and understanding in the
world. The peace with honor we have achieved in Vietnam has
strengthened this basic American credibility. We must act in such a
way in coming years that this credibility will remain intact, and
with it, the world stability of which it is so indispensable a part.

At home, we must reject the mistaken notion--a notion that has
dominated too much of the public dialogue for too long--that ever
bigger Government is the answer to every problem.

We have learned only too well that heavy taxation and excessive
Government spending are not a cure-all. In too many cases, instead of
solving the problems they were aimed at, they have merely placed an
ever heavier burden On the shoulders of the American taxpayer, in the
form of higher taxes and a higher cost of living. At the same time
they have deceived our people because many of the intended
beneficiaries received far less than was promised, thus undermining
public faith in the effectiveness of Government as a whole.

The time has come for us to draw the line. The time has come for the
responsible leaders of both political parties to take a stand against
overgrown Government and for the American taxpayer. We are not
spending the Federal Government's money, we are spending the
taxpayer's money, and it must be spent in a way which guarantees his
money's worth and yields the fullest possible benefit to the people
being helped.

The answer to many of the domestic problems we face is not higher
taxes and more spending. It is less waste, more results and greater
freedom for the individual American to earn a rightful place in his
own community--and for States and localities to address their own
needs in their own ways, in the light of their own priorities.

By giving the people and their locally elected leaders a greater
voice through changes such as revenue sharing, and by saying "no" to
excessive Federal spending and higher taxes, we can help achieve this
goal.

COMING MESSAGES

The policies which I will outline to the Congress in the weeks ahead
represent a reaffirmation, not an abdication, of Federal
responsibility. They represent a pragmatic rededication to social
compassion and national excellence, in place of the combination of
good intentions and fuzzy follow-through which too often in the past
was thought sufficient.

In the field of economic affairs, our objectives will be to hold down
taxes, to continue controlling inflation, to promote economic growth,
to increase productivity, to encourage foreign trade, to keep farm
income high, to bolster small business, and to promote better
labor-management relations:

In the area of natural resources, my recommendations will include
programs to preserve and enhance the environment, to advance science
and technology, and to assure balanced use of our irreplaceable
natural resources.

In developing human resources, I will have recommendations to advance
the Nation's health and education, to improve conditions of people in
need, to carry forward our increasingly successful attacks on crime,
drug abuse and injustice, and to deal with such important areas of
special concern as consumer affairs. We will continue and improve our
Nation's efforts to assist those who have served in the Armed Services
in Vietnam through better job and training opportunities.

We must do a better job in community development--in creating more
livable communities, in which all of our children can grow up with
fuller access to opportunity and greater immunity to the social evils
and blights which now plague so many of our towns and cities. I shall
have proposals to help us achieve this.

I shall also deal with our defense and foreign policies, and with our
new approaches to the role and structure of Government itself.

Considered as a whole, this series of messages will be a blueprint
for modernizing the concept and the functions of American Government
to meet the needs of our people.

Converting it into reality will require a spirit of cooperation and
shared commitment on the part of all branches of the Government, for
the goals we seek are not those of any single party or faction, they
are goals for the betterment of all Americans. As President, I
recognize that I cannot do this job alone. The Congress must help,
and I pledge to do my part to achieve a constructive working
relationship with the Congress. My sincere hope is that the executive
and legislative branches can work together in this ,great undertaking
in a positive spirit of mutual respect and cooperation.

Working together--the Congress, the President and the people--I am
confident that we can translate these proposals into an action
program that can reform and revitalize American Government and, even
more important, build a better life for all Americans.

Richard Nixon

The White House,
February 2, 1973. 





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