1960 Kennedy VS. Nixon

"Best Qualified"

Transcript

Museum of the Moving Image
The Living Room Candidate
"Best Qualified," Nixon, 1960

MALE NARRATOR: Here is President Eisenhower's decision on who is best qualified to follow him in the White House.

EISENHOWER: Dick Nixon is superbly experienced, maturely conditioned in the critical affairs of the world. For eight years he has been a full participant in the deliberations that have produced the great decisions affecting our nation's security and have kept us at peace. He has shared more intimately in the great affairs of government than any Vice President in all our history. He has traveled the world, studying at firsthand the hopes and the needs of more than fifty nations. He knows in person the leaders of those nations, knowledge of immeasurable value to a future president. By all odds, Richard Nixon is the best qualified man to be the next President of the United States.

MALE NARRATOR: Along with the President, All America is going for Nixon and Lodge. Vote for them November 8th. They understand what peace demands.

[TEXT: Sponsored by Independent Television Committee in Support of NIXON-LODGE.]

Credits

"Best Qualified," Independent Television Committee, 1960

Maker: Campaign Associates

From Museum of the Moving Image, The Living Room Candidate: Presidential Campaign Commercials 1952-2012.
www.livingroomcandidate.org/commercials/1960/best-qualified (accessed May 29, 2025).

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1960 Kennedy Nixon Results

In 1960, America was enjoying a period of relative prosperity. With the exception of the stirrings of the modern civil rights movement, domestic turbulence was low, and the primary foreign threat seemed to be the intensifying Cold War. Fidel Castro came to power in Cuba in 1959, and installed a Communist regime just ninety miles off the coast of Florida. In May 1960, an American U-2 spy plane was shot down inside the Soviet Union, further intensifying tensions between the superpowers. The Republican nominee, Vice President Richard Nixon, was enjoying a growing reputation for his foreign policy skills after his televised "kitchen debate" with Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev in 1959. The Democratic nominee, charismatic Massachusetts Senator John F. Kennedy, was attempting to become the first Catholic president and, at age 43, the youngest man ever elected to the office. Nixon argued that he had the maturity and experience to deal with the Communists, while Kennedy attempted to turn his youth into an advantage, proclaiming in his acceptance speech at the Democratic convention, "We stand today on the edge of a new frontier."

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