| Al Gore's Nomination Acceptance Speech |
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For
almost eight years now, I've been the partner of a leader who moved us
out of the valley of recession and into the longest period of prosperity
in American history. I say to you tonight, millions of Americans will
live better lives for a long time to come because of the job that's been
done by President Bill Clinton. Instead
of the biggest deficits in history, we now have the biggest surpluses,
the highest home ownership ever, the lowest inflation in a generation,
and instead of losing jobs, we now have 22 million good new jobs, higher
family incomes. Instead
of the biggest deficits in history, we now have the biggest surpluses,
the highest home ownership ever, the lowest inflation in a generation
and, instead of losing jobs, we now have 22 million good new jobs,
higher family incomes. Above
all, our success comes from you, the people who have worked hard for
your families. But let's not forget that a few years ago you were also
working hard, but your hard work then was undone by a government that
didn't work, didn't put people first, and wasn't on your side. Together,
we changed things to help unleash your potential and unleash innovation
and investment in the private sector -- the engine that drives our
economic growth -- and our progress on the economy is a good chapter in
our history. But
now we turn the page and write a new chapter, and that's what I want to
speak about tonight. This election is not an award for past performance.
I'm not asking you to vote for me on the basis of the economy we have.
Tonight I ask for your support on the basis of the better, fairer, more
prosperous America we can build together. Together,
let's make sure that our prosperity enriches not just a few, but all
working families. Let's invest in health care, education, a secure
retirement and middle class tax cuts. I'm happy that the stock market
has boomed and so many businesses and new enterprises have done well.
This country is richer and stronger, but my focus is on working
families, people trying to make house payments and car payments working
overtime to save for college and do right by their kids! Whether
you're in a suburb or an inner city, whether you raise crops or drive
hogs and cattle on a farm, drive a big rig on the Interstate or drive
e-commerce on the Internet, whether you're starting out to raise your
own family or getting ready to retire after a lifetime of hard work, so
often powerful forces and powerful interests stand in your way and the
odds seem stacked against you, even as you do what's right for you and
your family. How
and what we do for all of you, the people who pay the taxes, bear the
burdens and live the American Dream, that is the standard by which we
should be judged. And for all of our good times, I am not satisfied. To
all the families in America. To all the families in America who have to
struggle to afford the right education and the skyrocketing costs of
prescription drugs, I want you to know this: I've taken on the powerful
forces, and as president, I'll stand up to them and I'll stand up for
you! To
all the families -- to all the families who are struggling with things
that money can't measure, like trying to find a little more time to
spend with your children, or protecting your children from entertainment
that you think glorifies violence and indecency, I want you to know I
believe we must challenge a culture with too much meanness and not
enough meaning. And as president, I will stand with you for a goal we
all share, to give more power back to parents to choose what your own
children are exposed to so you can pass on your family's basic lessons
of responsibility and decency. The
power should be in your hands. The future should belong to everyone in
this land. Everyone. All families. We could squander this moment, but
our country would be the poorer for it. Instead, let's lift our eyes and
see how wide the American horizon has become. We're
entering a new time. We're electing a new president. And I stand here
tonight as my own man. And I want you to know me for who I truly am. I
grew up in a wonderful family. I have a lot to be thankful for. And the
greatest gift my parents gave me was love. When I was a child, it never
once occurred to me that the foundation upon which my security depended
would ever shake. And of all the lessons my parents taught me, the most
powerful one was unspoken: the way they loved one another. My father
respected my mother as an equal, if not more. She was his best friend
and, in many ways, his conscience. And I learned from them the value of
a true, loving partnership that lasts for life. They simply couldn't
imagine being without each other. And for 61 years, they were by each
other's side. My
parents taught me that the real values in life aren't material, but
spiritual. They
include faith and family duty and honor, and trying to make the world a
better place. I
finished college at a time when all that seemed to be in doubt and our
nation's spirit was being depleted. We saw the assassination of our best
leaders, appeals to racial backlash and the first warning signs of
Watergate. I remember the conversations I had with Tipper back then and
the doubts we had about the Vietnam War. But I enlisted in the Army
because I knew if I didn't go, someone else in the small town of
Carthage, Tennessee, would have to go in my place. I
was an Army reporter in Vietnam. When I was there, I didn't do the most
or run the gravest danger. But I was proud to wear my country's uniform. Let
me tell you, when I came home running for office was the very last thing
I ever thought I would do. I studied religion at Vanderbilt and worked
nights as a police reporter at the Nashville Tennessean. And I saw more
of what could go wrong in America, not only on the police beat but as an
investigative reporter covering local government. I
also saw so much of what could go right -- citizens lifting up local
communities, family by family, block by block, neighborhood by
neighborhood; in churches and charities, on school boards and city
councils. And then, Tipper and I started our own family, and when our
first daughter, Karenna, was born, I began to see the future through a
fresh set of eyes. I know a lot of you have had that feeling, too. And I
decided I couldn't turn away from service at home any more than I could
have turned away from service in Vietnam. That's
why I ran for Congress. In my first term, a family n Hardeman County,
Tennessee, wrote a letter and told how worried they were that toxic
waste, a lot of it, had been dumped near their home. I held some of the
first hearings on the issue and, ever since, I've been there in the
fight against the big polluters. Our children should not have to draw
the breath of life in cities awash in pollution. When they come in from
playing on a hot summer afternoon, every child in America, anywhere in
America, ought to be able to turn on the faucet and get a glass of safe,
clean drinking water. On the issue of the environment, I've never given
up, I've never backed down, and I never will. And
I say it again tonight, we must reverse the silent rising tide of global
warming, and we can. In
the Senate, and as vice president, I fought for welfare reform. Over and
over again, I talked to folks who told me how they were trapped in the
old welfare system. I saw what it did to families. So I fought to end
welfare as we then knew it, to help those in trouble, but to insist on
work and responsibility. Others talked about welfare reform. We actually
reformed welfare and set time limits. Instead of handouts, we gave
people training to go from welfare to work, and we have cut the welfare
rolls in half and moved millions into good jobs. And it's helped lift
them up. For
almost 25 years now, I've been fighting for people, and for all that
time I've been listening to people, holding open meetings in the places
where they live and work. And you know what? I've learned a lot. And if
I'm your president, I'm going to keep on having open meetings all over
this country. I'm
going to go out to you, the people, because I want to stay in touch with
your hopes, with the quiet, everyday heroism of working families. And
because I've learned that the issues before us, the problems and the
policies all have names. And I don't mean the big, fancy names that we
put on programs and legislation. I'm talking about family names, like
Nistle, Johnson, Gutierrez and Malone, people and families I've met in
the last year all across this country, and here's what they've told me: I
met Mildred Nistle in Waterloo, Iowa. Because of our welfare reform, she
has left welfare and found a good job training electricians. And she's
become a proud member of IBEW Local 288. Now -- now, she dreams of
sending her daughter, Irene, to college. Mildred Nistle is here with us,
and I say to her, I will fight for a targeted affordable tax cut to help
working families save and pay for college. They need help, and we'll
give it to them. It's the key to our future. I
met Jacquelyn Johnson in St. Louis, Missouri. She worked for 45 years as
a medical assistant caring for others. Now she's 72-years-old and needs
prescription medicines to care for herself. She spends over half of her
Social Security check, her only source of income, on her pills. So she
either skips meals or shops for bargains at a wholesale food store and
buys macaroni-and-cheese dinners in bulk and then has them at every
meal. I invited her here tonight. And Mrs. Johnson, I promise you once
again, I will fight for a prescription drug benefit for all seniors
under Medicare. It's
just wrong for seniors to have to choose between food and medicine while
the big drug companies run up record profits. That is wrong! I
met George and Juanita Guitterez in San Antonio, Texas. Their daughter,
Katarina has just started the fourth grade at Davy Crockett Elementary
School. The school building is crumbling and overcrowded with cracked
walls and peeling plaster. Trailers cover the playground where the kids
used to spend recess. The Guitterez family is here tonight, and I tell
them again, I will fight to rebuild and modernize crumbling schools and
reduce class size. We need to put safety, discipline and character first
in every classroom! Are you with me? You
know, education -- education may be a local responsibility, but I
believe it also has to be our number one national priority. We can't
stop until every school in America is a good place to get a good
education. And
I will never forget a little boy named Ian Malone, who suffered from a
medical mistake during childbirth and needs full-time nursing care for
several years. I met him and his parents in Seattle, never Everett,
Washington, their home. And their HMO had told the Malones that it would
no longer pay for the nurse they needed, and then actually told them
they should consider giving Ian up for adoption. That's
when his mom and dad got really mad. They told their story in public,
and the HMO was embarrassed. Because they fought for their baby, today
Ian has the care he needs to stay alive. But
no family in America should have to go on national television to save
their child's life! You know what we need to do! You know! Dylan
and Christine Malone are here with us tonight. Ian's here, too. And I
say to them and to all the families of America, I will fight for a real,
enforceable Patients Bill of Rights. It's just wrong to have
life-and-death medical decisions made by bean-counters at HMOs who don't
have a license to practice medicine and don't have a right to play God.
It's time to take the medical decisions away from the HMOs and insurance
companies and give them back to the doctors and the nurses and the
health care professionals. Let's make that a bipartisan issue. So,
this is not just an election between my opponent and me. It's about our
people, our families and our future, and whether forces standing in your
way will keep you from living a better life. To me, this election is
about Mildred Nystel, Jacqueline Johnson, Katerina Gutierrez, Ian
Malone. It's about millions of Americans whose names we may never know,
but whose needs and dreams must always be our calling. And
so, here tonight, in the name of all the working families who are the
strength and soul of America, I accept your nomination for president of
the United States of America. I'm
here to talk seriously about the issues. I believe people deserve to
know specifically what a candidate proposes to do. I intend to tell you
tonight. You ought to be able to know and then judge for yourself. If
you entrust me with the presidency, I will put our democracy back in
your hands and get all the special interest money, all of it, out of our
democracy by enacting campaign finance reform. I feel so strongly about
this, I promise you that campaign finance reform will be the very first
bill that Joe Leiberman and I send to the United States Congress. Let
others try to restore the old guard. We come to this convention as the
change we wish to see in America. And what are those changes? At a time
when most Americans will live to know even their great-grandchildren, we
will save and strengthen Social Security and Medicare, not only for this
generation but for generations to come. At
a time of almost unimaginable medical breakthroughs, we will fight for
affordable health care for all, so patients and ordinary people are not
left powerless and broke. We will move toward universal health coverage,
step by step, starting with all children. Let's get all children covered
by 2004. And
let's move to the day when we at long last end the stigma of mental
illness and treat it like every other illness everywhere in this nation. And
I thank you, Tipper, for leading the way. Within
the next few years, scientists will identify the genes that cause every
type of cancer. We need a national commitment equal to the promise of
this unequaled moment. So we will double the federal investment in
medical research. We will find new medicines and new cures, not just for
cancer but for everything from diabetes to HIV/AIDS. At
a time when there is more computer power in a Palm Pilot than in the
spaceship that took Neil Armstrong to the Moon, we will offer all our
people lifelong learning and new skills for the higher-paying jobs of
the future. At a time when the amount of human knowledge is doubling
every five years, and science and technology are advancing so rapidly,
we will do bold things to make our schools the best in the world. I
will fight for the greatest single commitment to education since the GI
bill for revolutionary improvements in our schools, for higher standards
and more accountability; to put fully qualified teachers in every
classroom, test all new teachers, and give teachers the training and
professional development they deserve. It's time to treat and reward
teachers like the professionals that they are!
It's not just about more money, it's about higher standards,
accountability, new ideas. But we can't do it without new resources, and
that's why I will invest far more in our schools. In the long run, a
second-class education always costs more than a first-class education.
And I will not go along with any plan that would drain taxpayer money
away from our public schools and give it to private schools in the form
of vouchers! This
nation was a pioneer of universal education. Now let's set a specific
new goal for the first decade of the 21st century: high quality,
universal preschool available to every child in every family all across
this nation! And let's give middle- class families help in paying for
college with tax-free college savings, and by making most college
tuition tax deductible. Open the doors of learning to all! All
of this -- all of this is the change we wish to see in America. Not
so long ago, a balanced budget seemed impossible. Now, our budget
surpluses make it possible to give a full range of targeted tax cuts to
working families, not just to help you save for college, but to pay for
health insurance and child care, to reform the estate tax so people can
pass on a small business or a family farm, and to end the marriage
penalty the right way, the fair way, because we should not force couples
to pay more in income taxes just because they're married. But
let me say it plainly: I will not go along with a huge tax cut for the
wealthy at the expense of everyone else and wreck our good economy in
the process. Let
me tell you, under the tax plan the other side has proposed, for every
$10 that goes to the wealthiest 1 percent, middle class families would
get one dime and lower-income families would get one penny. In
fact, if you add it up, the average family would get about enough money
to buy one extra diet Coke a week about -- That's not nothing! About 62
cents in change. But let me tell you, that's not the kind of change I'm
working for. I'll fight for tax cuts that go to the right people, to the
working families who have the toughest time paying taxes and saving for
the future. I'll
fight for a new, tax-free way to help you save and build a bigger nest
egg for your retirement. I'm talking about something extra that you can
save and invest for yourself -- something that will supplement Social
Security, not be subtracted from it. But I will not go along with any
proposal to strip one out of every six dollars from the Social Security
Trust Fund and privatize the Social Security that you're counting on.
That's Social Security "minus." Our plan is Social Security
Plus! We
will balance the budget every year and dedicate the budget surplus first
to saving Social Security. In the next four years, we will pay off all
the national debt this nation accumulated in our first 200 years. This
will put us on the path to completely eliminating the debt by 2012,
keeping America prosperous far into the future. But
there's something else at stake in this election that's even more
important than economic progress. Simply
put, it's our values. It's our responsibility to our loved ones, to our
families. And to me, family values means honoring our fathers and
mothers. Teaching our children well. Caring for the sick. Respecting one
another. Giving people the power to achieve what they want for their
families. Putting both Social Security and Medicare in an ironclad lock
box where the politicians can't touch them. To me, that kind of common
sense is a family value. Hands off Medicare and Social Security trust
fund money! I'll veto anything that spends it for anything other than
Social Security and Medicare. Getting
cigarettes out of the hands of kids before they get hooked is a family
value. I will crack down on the marketing of tobacco to our children, no
matter how hard the tobacco companies lobby and no matter how much they
spend. A
new prescription drug benefit under Medicare for all our seniors --
that's a family value. And let me tell you, I'll fight for it, and the
other side will not. They give in to the big drug companies. Their plan
tells seniors to beg the HMOs and insurance companies for prescription
drug coverage. And that's the difference in this election: They're for
the powerful, we're for the people! Judge
for yourself. Look at the agendas. Look at the facts. Big tobacco, big
oil, the big polluters, the pharmaceutical companies, the HMOs. Sometimes
you have to be willing to stand up and say no so families can have a
better life. I
know one thing about the job of the president: It is the only job in the
Constitution that is charged with the responsibility of fighting for all
the people, not just the people of one state or one district, not just
the wealthy or powerful -- all the people, especially those who need a
voice, those who need a champion, those who need to be lifted up so they
are never left behind. So
I say to you tonight, if you entrust me with the presidency, I will
fight for you. I mean that with all my heart. There's
one other word that we've heard a lot of in this campaign, and that word
is honor. To me, honor is not just a word, but an obligation. And you
have my word, we will honor hard work by raising the minimum wage so
that work always pays more than welfare. We
will honor families by expanding child care and after-school care and
family and medical leave so working families have the help they need to
care for their children. Because one of the most important jobs of all
is raising our children. And we'll support the right of parents to
decide that one of them will stay home longer with their babies if
that's what they believe is best for their families. We
will honor the ideal of equality by standing up for civil rights and
defending affirmative action. We
will honor -- we will honor equal rights and we will fight for an equal
day's pay for an equal day's work. And
let there be no doubt: I will protect and defend a woman's right to
choose. The last thing this country needs is a Supreme Court that
overturns Roe v. Wade. We
will remove all the old barriers so that those who are called disabled
can develop all their abilities. And
we will also widen the circle of opportunity for all Americans, and we
will vigorously enforce all our civil rights laws, with the budgets and
personnel that are necessary. And hear me well: We will pass the
Employment Nondiscrimination Act. And
we will honor the memory of Matthew Shepard and Joseph Ileto and James
Byrd, whose families all joined us this week, by passing a law against
hate crimes. They are different. We need to embody our values in that
new law. It's time. We
will honor the hard work of raising a family by doing all we can to help
parents protect their children. Parents deserve the simple security of
knowing that their children are safe, whether they're walking down the
street, surfing the World Wide Web, or sitting behind a desk in school.
To make families safer, we passed the toughest crime bill in history,
and we're putting 100,000 new community police on our streets. Crime has
fallen in every major category for seven years in a row. But
there's still too much danger and there's still too much fear. So
tonight I want to set another new specific goal to cut the crime rate
every year, year after year, all the way till the end of this decade --
every single year. That's why I'll fight to add another 50,000 new
police. Community police. Prevention. Community police who help prevent
crime by establishing real relationships between law enforcement and
neighborhood residents. Which, incidentally, is the opposite of racial
profiling, which must be brought to an end throughout the criminal
justice system! And community policing -- policing and prevention is one
of the keys. I
will fight for a crime victims' bill of rights, including a
constitutional amendment to make sure that victims and not just
criminals are guaranteed rights in our justice system. I'll
fight to toughen penalties on those who misuse the Internet to prey on
our children and violate our privacy. And
I'll fight to make every school in this nation drug-free and gun-free. I
believe in the right of sportsmen and hunters and law-abiding citizens
to own firearms. But I want mandatory background checks to keep guns
away from criminals and mandatory child safety locks to protect our
children. Tipper
and I went out to Columbine High School after the tragedy there, and we
embraced the families of the children who were lost. And I will never
forget the words of the father who whispered into my ear, "Promise
me that these children will not have died in vain." All of us must
join together to make that promise come true. Laws and programs by
themselves will never be enough. All of us, especially all parents, need
to take more responsibility. We need to change our hearts and make a
commitment to our children and to one another. We need to lift up the
meaning in their lives. You
know, I am excited about America's prospects, and full of hope for
America's future. Our country has come a long way. And I've come a long
way since that long ago time when I went to Vietnam. I've never
forgotten what I saw there and the bravery of so many young Americans. The
price of freedom is sometimes high. But I've never believed that America
should turn inward. As
a senator, I broke with many in our party and voted to support the Gulf
War when Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait, because I believed America's
vital interests were at stake. Early in my public service, I took up the
issue of nuclear arms control and nuclear weapons, because nothing is
more fundamental than protecting our national security. Now,
I want to lead America because I love America. I will keep America's
defenses strong. I will make sure our armed forces continue to be the
best-equipped, best-trained, and best-led in the entire world. They are
now, and they will be. In
the last century, this nation, more than any other, freed the world from
fascism and communism, but a newly free world still has dangers and
challenges, both old and new. We must always have the will to defend our
enduring interests, from Europe to the Middle East, to Japan and Korea.
We must strengthen our partnerships with Africa, Latin America, and the
rest of the developing world. We
must confront the new challenges of terrorism, new kinds of weapons of
mass destruction, global environmental problems and new diseases that
know no national boundaries and can threaten national security. We must
welcome and promote truly free trade. But I say to you, it must be fair
trade. We must get standards -- we must set standards to end child
labor, to prevent the exploitation of workers, and the poisoning of the
environment. Free trade can and must be and, if I'm president, will be a
way to lift everyone up, not bring anyone down to the lowest common
denominator. So
those are the issues. And that's where I stand. But
-- but I also want to tell you just a little more about two of my
greatest heroes, my father and my mother. They did give me a good life,
but like so many in America, they started out with almost nothing. My
father grew up in a small community named Possum Hollow in middle
Tennessee. When he was just 18, he went to work as a teacher in a
one-room school. Then the Great Depression came along and taught him a
lesson that couldn't be found in any classroom. He told me and my sister
often how he watched grown men with wives and children they could
neither feed nor clothe, on farms they could no longer pay for. My
father didn't know whether he could help those families, but he believed
he had to try. And never in the years to come, in Congress and in the
United States Senate, did he lose sight of the reason he entered public
service: to fight for the people, not the powerful. My
mother grew up in a poor farming community in northwest Tennessee. Her
family ran a small country store in Cold Corner, a store that went bust
during the Great Depression. She worked her way through college. Then
she got a room in Nashville at the YWCA and waited tables at an
all-night coffee shop for 25-cent tips. She then went on to become one
of the first women in history to graduate from Vanderbilt Law School. As
Tipper told you, we lost my dad a year and a half ago, but we're so
lucky that my mother, Pauline, continues to be part of our lives every
single day. She is here tonight. She
is here tonight. Sometimes
-- sometimes in this campaign, when I visit a school and see a
hard-working teacher trying to change the world one child at a time, I
see the face of my father. And I know that teaching our children well is
not just the teacher's job, it's everyone's job. And it has to be our
national mission. I've
shaken hands in diners and coffee shops all across this country. And
sometimes, when I see a waitress working hard and thanking someone for a
tip, I see the face of my mother. And I know for that waitress carrying
trays or a construction worker in the winter cold, I will never agree to
raise the retirement age to 70 or threaten the promise of Social
Security. It's just not fair to them, and I won't do it. I
say to you tonight, we've got to win this election, because every
hard-working American family deserves to open the door to their dreams. In
our democracy, the future is not something that just happens to us. It's
something that we make for ourselves together. So to the young people
watching tonight, I say this is your time to make new the life of our
world. We need your help to rekindle the spirit of America. Believe in
our country. We believe in you. And
I ask all of you, my fellow citizen from this city that marked both the
end of America's journey westward and the beginning of the New Frontier,
let us set out on a new journey to the best America, a new journey on
which we advance not by the turning of wheels, but by the turning of our
minds, the reach of our vision, the daring grace of the human spirit. Yes,
we have our problems, but the United States of America is the best
country ever created and still, as ever, the hope of humankind! Yes,
we're all imperfect, but as Americans, we share in the privilege and
challenge of building a more perfect union. I
know my own imperfections. For example, I know that sometimes people say
I'm too serious, that I talk too much substance and policy. Maybe I've
done that tonight, but the presidency is more than a popularity contest
it's a day-by-day fight for people. Sometimes you have to choose to do
what's difficult or unpopular! Sometimes you have to be willing to spend
your popularity in order to pick the hard right over the easy wrong! There
are big choices ahead, and our whole future is at stake, and I do have
strong beliefs about it. If you entrust me with the presidency, I know I
won't always be the most exciting politician. But
I pledge to you tonight, I will work for you every day and I will never
let you down! If
we allow ourselves to believe without reservation that we can do what's
right and be the better for it, then the best America will be our
America. In this City of Angels, we can summon the better angels of our
nature. Do not rest where we are or retreat -- do all we can to make
America all it can become. |
|
Kimberly A. Neuendorf |