
ANNOUNCEMENT SPEECH
ADDRESS BY JIMMY CARTER ANNOUNCING HIS CANDIDACY
FOR THE 1976
DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENTIAL NOMINATION
TO THE NATIONAL PRESS CLUB
December 12, 1974
We Americans are a great and diverse people. We take full
advantage of our right to develop wide-ranging interests and responsibilities.
For instance, I am a farmer, an engineer, a businessman, a planner, a scientist,
a governor and a Christian. Each of you is an individual and different from all
the others.
Yet we Americans have shared one thing in common: a belief
in the greatness of our Country.
We have dared to dream great dreams for our Nation. We have
taken quite literally the promises of decency, equality, and freedom - of an
honest and responsible government.
What has now become of these great dreams? That all
Americans stand equal before the law? That we enjoy a right to pursue health,
happiness and prosperity in privacy and safety? That government be controlled by
its citizens and not the other way around ? That this Country set a standard
within the community of nations of courage, compassion, integrity, and
dedication to basic human rights and freedoms?
Our commitment to these dreams has been sapped by
debilitating compromise, acceptance of mediocrity, subservience to special
interests, and an absence of executive vision and direction.
Having worked during the last twenty years in local, state
and national affairs, I have learned a great deal about our people.
I tell you that their great dreams still live within the
collective heart of this Nation.
Recently we have discovered that our trust has been
betrayed. The veils of secrecy have seemed to thicken around Washington. The
purposes and goals of our country are uncertain and sometimes even suspect.
Our people are understandably concerned about this lack of
competence and integrity. The root of the problem is not so much that our people
have lost confidence in government, but that government has demonstrated time
and again its lack of confidence in the people.
Our political leaders have simply underestimated the innate
quality of our people.
With the shame of Watergate still with us and our 200th
birthday just ahead, it is time for us to reaffirm and to strengthen our ethical
and spiritual and political beliefs.
There must be no lowering of these standards, no acceptance
of mediocrity in any aspect of our private or public lives.
In Our homes or at worship we are ever reminded of what we
ought to do and what we ought to be. Our government can and must represent the
best and the highest ideals of those of us who voluntarily submit to its
authority.
Politicians who seek to further their political careers
through appeals to our doubts, fears and prejudices will be exposed and
rejected.
For too long political leaders have been isolated from the
people. They have made decisions from an ivory tower. Few have ever seen
personally the direct impact of government programs involving welfare, prisons,
mental institutions, unemployment, school busing or public housing. Our people
feel that hey have little access to the core of government and little influence
with elected officials.
Now it is time for this chasm between people and government
to be bridged, and for American citizens to join in shaping our Nation's future.
Now is the time for new leadership and new ideas to make a
reality of these dreams, still held by our people.
To begin with, the confidence of people in our own
government must be restored. But too many officials do not deserve that
confidence.
There is a simple and effective way for public officials to
regain public trust - be trustworthy!
But there are also specific steps that must be taken.
We need an all-inclusive sunshine law in Washington so that
special interests will not retain their exclusive access behind closed doors.
Except in a few rare cases, there is no reason for secret meetings of regulatory
agencies, other executive departments or congressional committees. Such meetings
must be opened to the public, all votes recorded, and complete news media
coverage authorized and encouraged.
Absolutely no gifts of value should ever again be permitted
to a public official.
Complete revelation of all business and financial
involvements of major officials should be required, and none should be continued
which constitute a possible conflict with the public interest.
Regulatory agencies must not be managed by representatives
of the industry being regulated, and no personnel transfers between agency and
the industry should be made within a period of four full years.
Public financing of campaigns should be extended to members
of Congress.
The activities of lobbyists must be more thoroughly
revealed and controlled.
Minimum secrecy within government should be matched with
maximum personal privacy for private citizens.
All federal judges, diplomats and other major officials
should be selected on a strict basis of merit.
For many years in the State Department we have chosen from
among almost 16,000 applicants about 110 of our Nation's finest young leaders to
represent us in the international world. But we top this off with the
disgraceful and counterproductive policy of appointing unqualified persons to
major diplomatic posts as political payoffs. This must be stopped immediately.
Every effort should be extended to encourage full
participation by our people in their own governments' processes, including
universal voter registration for elections.
We must insure better public understanding of executive
policy, and better exchange of ideas between Congress and the White House. To do
this, Cabinet members representing the President should meet in scheduled public
interrogation sessions with the full bodies of Congress.
All our citizens must know that they will be treated
fairly.
To quote from my own inauguration speech of four years ago:
"The time for racial discrimination is over. Our people have already made this
major and difficult decision, but we cannot underestimate the challenge of
hundreds of minor decisions yet to be made. No poor, rural, weak or black person
should ever have to bear the additional burden of being deprived of the
opportunity of an education, a job or simple justice."
We must meet this firm national commitment without
equivocation or timidity in every aspect of private and public life.
As important as honesty and openness are -they are not
enough. There must also be substance and logical direction in government.
The mechanism of our government should be understandable,
efficient and economical...and it can be.
We must give top priority to a drastic and thorough
revision of the federal bureaucracy, to its budgeting system and to the
procedures for analyzing the effectiveness of its many varied services. Tight
businesslike management and planning techniques must be instituted and
maintained, utilizing the full authority and personal involvement of the
President himself.
This is no job for the fainthearted. It will be met with
violent opposition from those who now enjoy a special privilege, those who
prefer to work in the dark, or those whose private fiefdoms are threatened.
In Georgia we met that opposition head on -and we won! We
abolished 278 of our 300 agencies. We evolved clearly defined goals and policies
in every part of government. We developed and implemented a remarkably effective
system of zero base budgeting. We instituted tough performance auditing to
insure proper conduct and efficient delivery of services.
Steps like these can insure a full return on our
hard-earned tax dollars. These procedures are working in state capitols around
the Nation and in our successful businesses, both large and small. They can and
they will work in Washington.
Our Nation now has no understandable national purpose, no
clearly defined goals, and no organizational mechanism to develop or achieve
such purposes or goals. We move from one crisis to the next as if they were
fads, even though the previous one hasn't been solved.
The Bible says: "If the trumpet give an uncertain sound,
who shall prepare himself to the battle." As a planner and a businessman, and a
chief executive, I know from experience that uncertainty is also a devastating
affliction in private life and in government. Coordination of different programs
is impossible. There is no clear vision of what is to be accomplished, everyone
struggles for temporary advantage, and there is no way to monitor how
effectively services are delivered.
What is our national policy for the production,
acquisition, distribution or consumption of energy in times of shortage or
doubtful supply? There is no policy! What are our long-range goals in health
care, transportation, land use, economic development, waste disposal or housing?
There are no goals!
The tremendous resources of our people and of our chosen
leaders can be harnessed to devise effective, understandable and practical goals
and policies in every realm of public life.
A government that is honest and competent, with clear
purpose and strong leadership can work with the American people to meet the
challenges of the present and the future.
We can then face together the tough long-range solutions to
our economic woes. Our people are ready to make personal sacrifices when clear
national economic policies are devised and understood.
We are grossly wasting our energy resources and other
precious raw materials as though their supply was infinite. We must even face
the prospect of changing our basic ways of living. This change will either be
made on our own initiative in a planned and rational way, or forced on us with
chaos and suffering by the inexorable laws of nature.
Energy imports and consumption must be reduced, free
competition enhanced by rigid enforcement of antitrust laws, and general
monetary growth restrained. Pinpointed federal programs can ease the more acute
pains of recession, such as now exist in the construction industry. We should
consider extension of unemployment compensation, the stimulation of investments,
public subsidizing of employment, and surtaxes on excess profits.
We are still floundering and equivocating about protection
of our environment. Neither designers of automobiles, mayors of cities, power
companies, farmers, nor those of us who simply have to breathe the air, love
beauty, and would like to fish or swim in pure water have the slightest idea in
God's world what is coming out of Washington next! What does come next must be a
firm commitment to pure air, clean water and unspoiled land.
Almost twenty years after its conception we have not
finished the basic interstate highway system. To many lobbyists who haunt the
capitol buildings of the Nation, ground transportation still means only more
highways and more automobiles - the bigger, the better. We must have a national
commitment to transportation capabilities which will encourage the most
efficient movement of American people and cargo.
Gross tax inequities are being perpetuated. The most surely
taxed income is that which is derived from the sweat of manual labor. Carefully
contrived loopholes let the total tax burden shift more and more toward the
average wage earner. The largest corporations pay the lowest tax rates and some
with very high profits pay no tax at all.
When a business executive can charge off a $50 luncheon on
a tax return and a truck driver cannot deduct his $1.50 sandwich - when oil
companies pay less than 5% on their earnings while employees of the company pay
at least three times this rate - when many pay no taxes on incomes of more than
$100,000 - then we need basic tax reform!
Every American has a right to expect that laws will be
administered in an evenhanded manner, but it seems that something is wrong even
with our system of justice. Defendants who are repeatedly out on bail commit
more crimes. Aggravating trial delays and endless litigation are common.
Citizens without influence often bear the brunt of
prosecution while violators of antitrust laws and other white collar criminals
are ignored and go unpunished. .
Following recent presidential elections, our U.S. Attorney
General has replaced the Postmaster General as the chief political appointee;
and we have recently witnessed the prostitution of this most important law
enforcement office. Special prosecutors had to be appointed simply to insure
enforcement of the law! The Attorney General should be removed from politics.
The vast bureaucracy of government often fails to deliver
needed social services to our people. High ideals and good intentions are not
matched with rational, businesslike administration. The predictable result is
frustration and discouragement among dedicated employees, recipients of
services, and the American taxpayers.
There are about 25 million Americans who are classified as
poor, two-thirds of whom happen to be white and half of whom receive welfare
benefits. At least 10% of these are able to work. A massive bureaucracy of 2
million employees at all levels of government is attempting to administer more
than 100 different programs of bewildering complexity. Case workers shuffle
papers in a morass of red tape. Often it is financially profitable not to work
and even to have a family disrupted by forcing the father to leave home. Some
combined welfare payments exceed the average working family's income, while
other needy families have difficulty obtaining a bare subsistence.
The word "welfare" no longer signifies how much we care,
but often arouses feelings of contempt and even hatred.
Is a simplified, fair and compassionate welfare program
beyond the capacity of our American government? I think not.
The quality of health care in this Nation depends largely
on economic status. It is often unavailable or costs too much. There is little
commonality of effort between private and public health agencies or between
physicians and other trained medical personnel. I expect the next Congress to
pass a national health insurance law. But present government interest seems to
be in merely shifting the costs of existing services to the federal taxpayer or
to the employers. There is little interest in preventing the cripplers and
killers of our people and providing improved health care for those who still
need it most.
Is a practical and comprehensive national health program
beyond the capacity of our American government? I think not.
Federal education laws must be simplified to substitute
education for paper-shuffling grantsmanship. Local systems need federal funds to
supplement their programs for students where wealth and tax base are inadequate.
Is a comprehensive education program beyond the capacity of
the American people? I think not.
As a farmer, I have been appalled at the maladministration
of our Nation's agricultural economy. We have seen the elimination of our
valuable food reserves, which has contributed to wild fluctuations in commodity
prices and wiped out dependable trade and export capabilities. Grain speculators
and monopolistic processors have profited, while farmers are going bankrupt
trying to produce food that consumers are going broke trying to buy.
I know this Nation can develop an agricultural policy which
will insure a fair profit to our farmers and a fair price to consumers.
It is obvious that domestic and foreign affairs are
directly interrelated. A necessary base for effective implementation of any
foreign policy is to get our domestic house in order.
Coordination of effort among the leaders of our Nation
should be established so that our farm production, industrial development,
foreign trade, defense, energy and diplomatic policies are mutually supportive
and not in conflict.
The time for American intervention in all the problems of
the world is over. But we cannot retreat into isolationism. Ties of friendship
and cooperation with our friends and neighbors must be strengthened. Our common
interests must be understood and pursued. The integrity of Israel must be
preserved. Highly personalized and narrowly focused diplomatic efforts, although
sometimes successful, should be balanced with a more wide-ranging implementation
of foreign policy by competent foreign service officers.
Our Nation's security is obviously of paramount importance,
and everything must be done to insure adequate military preparedness. But there
is no reason why our national defense establishment cannot also be efficient.
Waste and inefficiency are both costly to taxpayers and a
danger to our own national existence. Strict management and budgetary control
over the Pentagon should reduce the ratio of officers to men and of support
forces to combat troops. I see no reason why the Chief of Naval Operations needs
more Navy captains on his staff than we have serving on ships!
Misdirected efforts such as the construction of unnecessary
pork-barrel projects by the Corps of Engineers must be terminated.
The biggest waste and danger of all is the unnecessary
proliferation of atomic weapons throughout the world. Our ultimate goal should
be the elimination of nuclear weapon capability among all nations. In the
meantime, simple, careful and fim1 proposals to implement this mutual arms
reduction should be pursued as a prime national purpose in all our negotiations
with nuclear powers -present or potential.
Is the achievement of these and other goals beyond the
capacity of our American government? I think not.
Our people are hungry for integrity and competence in
government. In this confused and fast-changing, technological world we still
have within us the capability for national greatness.
About three months ago I met with the governors of the
other twelve original states in Philadelphia. Exactly 200 years after the
convening of the First Continental Congress we walked down the same streets,
then turned left and entered a small building named Carpenter's Hall. There we
heard exactly the same prayer and sat in the same chairs occupied in September
of 1774 by Samuel Adams, John Jay, John Adams, Patrick Henry, George Washington,
and about forty-five other strong and opinionated leaders.
They held widely divergent views and they debated for
weeks. They and others who joined them for the Second Continental Congress
avoided the production of timid compromise resolutions. They were somehow
inspired, and they reached for greatness. Their written premises formed the
basis on which our Nation was begun.
I don't know whose chair I occupied, but sitting there I
thought soberly about their times and ours. Their people were also discouraged,
disillusioned and confused. But these early leaders acted with purpose and
conviction.
I wondered to myself: Were they more competent, more
intelligent or better educated than we? Were they more courageous? Did they have
more compassion or love for their neighbors? Did they have deeper religious
convictions? Were they more concerned about the future of their children than
we? I think not.
We are equally capable of correcting our faults, overcoming
difficulties, managing our own affairs and facing the future with justifiable
confidence.
I am convinced that among us 200 million Americans there is
a willingness - even eagerness - to restore in our Country what has been lost -
if we have understandable purposes and goals and a modicum of bold and inspired
leadership.
Our government can express the highest common ideals of
human .beings - if we demand of it standards of excellence.
It is now time to stop and to ask ourselves the question
which my last commanding officer, Admiral Hyman Rickover, asked me and every
other young naval officer who serves or has served in an atomic submarine.
For our Nation - for all of us - that question is: "Why not
the best?"
Source:
Jimmy Carter Presidential Campaign Announcement Speech Flyer
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