
Ronald Reagan
Nomination Acceptance Speech
Republican
National Convention
Detroit, Michigan
July 17, 1980
Mr. Chairman, Mr. Vice President to be, this convention,
my fellow citizens of this great nation:
With a deep awareness of the responsibility conferred by
your trust, I accept your nomination for the presidency of the United States. I
do so with deep gratitude, and I think also I might interject on behalf of all
of us, our thanks to Detroit and the people of Michigan and to this city for the
warm hospitality they have shown. And I thank you for your wholehearted response
to my recommendation in regard to George Bush as a candidate for vice president.
I am very proud of our party tonight. This convention has
shown to all America a party united, with positive programs for solving the
nation's problems; a party ready to build a new consensus with all those across
the land who share a community of values embodied in these words: family, work,
neighborhood, peace and freedom.
I know we have had a quarrel or two, but only as to the
method of attaining a goal. There was no argument about the goal. As president,
I will establish a liaison with the 50 governors to encourage them to eliminate,
where it exists, discrimination against women. I will monitor federal laws to
insure their implementation and to add statutes if they are needed.
More than anything else, I want my candidacy to unify our
country; to renew the American spirit and sense of purpose. I want to carry our
message to every American, regardless of party affiliation, who is a member of
this community of shared values.
Never before in our history have Americans been called
upon to face three grave threats to our very existence, any one of which could
destroy us. We face a disintegrating economy, a weakened defense and an energy
policy based on the sharing of scarcity.
The major issue of this campaign is the direct political,
personal and moral responsibility of Democratic Party leadership--in the White
House and in Congress--for this unprecedented calamity which has befallen us.
They tell us they have done the most that humanly could be done. They say that
the United States has had its day in the sun; that our nation has passed its
zenith. They expect you to tell your children that the American people no longer
have the will to cope with their problems; that the future will be one of
sacrifice and few opportunities.
My fellow citizens, I utterly reject that view. The
American people, the most generous on earth, who created the highest standard of
living, are not going to accept the notion that we can only make a better world
for others by moving backwards ourselves. Those who believe we can have no
business leading the nation.
I will not stand by and watch this great country destroy
itself under mediocre leadership that drifts from one crisis to the next,
eroding our national will and purpose. We have come together here because the
American people deserve better from those to whom they entrust our nation's
highest offices, and we stand united in our resolve to do something about it.
We need rebirth of the American tradition of leadership at
every level of government and in private life as well. The United States of
America is unique in world history because it has a genius for leaders--many
leaders--on many levels. But, back in 1976, Mr. Carter said, "Trust
me." And a lot of people did. Now, many of those people are out of work.
Many have seen their savings eaten away by inflation. Many others on fixed
incomes, especially the elderly, have watched helplessly as the cruel tax of
inflation wasted away their purchasing power. And, today, a great many who
trusted Mr. Carter wonder if we can survive the Carter policies of national
defense.
"Trust me" government asks that we concentrate
our hopes and dreams on one man; that we trust him to do what's best for us. My
view of government places trust not in one person or one party, but in those
values that transcend persons and parties. The trust is where it belongs--in the
people. The responsibility to live up to that trust is where it belongs, in
their elected leaders. That kind of relationship, between the people and their
elected leaders, is a special kind of compact.
Three hundred and sixty years ago, in 1620, a group of
families dared to cross a mighty ocean to build a future for themselves in a new
world. When they arrived at Plymouth, Massachusetts, they formed what they
called a "compact"; an agreement among themselves to build a community
and abide by its laws.
The single act--the voluntary binding together of free
people to live under the law--set the pattern for what was to come.
A century and a half later, the descendants of those
people pledged their lives, their fortunes and their sacred honor to found this
nation. Some forfeited their fortunes and their lives; none sacrificed honor.
Four score and seven years later, Abraham Lincoln called
upon the people of all America to renew their dedication and their commitment to
a government of, for and by the people.
Isn't it once again time to renew our compact of freedom;
to pledge to each other all that is best in our lives; all that gives meaning to
them--for the sake of this, our beloved and blessed land?
Together, let us make this a new beginning. Let us make a
commitment to care for the needy; to teach our children the values and the
virtues handed down to us by our families; to have the courage to defend those
values and the willingness to sacrifice for them.
Let us pledge to restore, in our time, the American spirit
of voluntary service, of cooperation, of private and community initiative; a
spirit that flows like a deep and mighty river through the history of our
nation.
As your nominee, I pledge to restore to the federal
government the capacity to do the people's work without dominating their lives.
I pledge to you a government that will not only work well, but wisely; its
ability to act tempered by prudence and its willingness to do good balanced by
the knowledge that government is never more dangerous than when our desire to
have it help us blinds us to its great power to harm us.
The first Republican president once said, "While the
people retain their virtue and their vigilance, no administration by any extreme
of wickedness or folly can seriously injure the government in the short space of
four years."
If Mr. Lincoln could see what's happened in these last
three-and-a-half years, he might hedge a little on that statement. But, with the
virtues that our legacy as a free people and with the vigilance that sustains
liberty, we still have time to use our renewed compact to overcome the injuries
that have been done to America these past three-and-a-half years.
First, we must overcome something the present
administration has cooked up: a new and altogether indigestible economic stew,
one part inflation, one part high unemployment, one part recession, one part
runaway taxes, one party deficit spending and seasoned by an energy crisis. It's
an economic stew that has turned the national stomach.
Ours are not problems of abstract economic theory. Those
are problems of flesh and blood; problems that cause pain and destroy the moral
fiber of real people who should not suffer the further indignity of being told
by the government that it is all somehow their fault. We do not have inflation
because--as Mr. Carter says--we have lived too well.
The head of a government which has utterly refused to live
within its means and which has, in the last few days, told us that this year's
deficit will be $60 billion, dares to point the finger of blame at business and
labor, both of which have been engaged in a losing struggle just trying to stay
even.
High taxes, we are told, are somehow good for us, as if,
when government spends our money it isn't inflationary, but when we spend it, it
is.
Those who preside over the worst energy shortage in our
history tell us to use less, so that we will run out of oil, gasoline, and
natural gas a little more slowly. Conservation is desirable, of course, for we
must not waste energy. But conservation is not the sole answer to our energy
needs.
America must get to work producing more energy. The
Republican program for solving economic problems is based on growth and
productivity.
Large amounts of oil and natural gas lay beneath our land
and off our shores, untouched because the present administration seems to
believe the American people would rather see more regulation, taxes and controls
than more energy.
Coal offers great potential. So does nuclear energy
produced under rigorous safety standards. It could supply electricity for
thousands of industries and millions of jobs and homes. It must not be thwarted
by a tiny minority opposed to economic growth which often finds friendly ears in
regulatory agencies for its obstructionist campaigns.
Make no mistake. We will not permit the safety of our
people or our environment heritage to be jeopardized, but we are going to
reaffirm that the economic prosperity of our people is a fundamental part of our
environment.
Our problems are both acute and chronic, yet all we hear
from those in positions of leadership are the same tired proposals for more
government tinkering, more meddling and more control--all of which led us to
this state in the first place.
Can anyone look at the record of this administration and
say, "Well done?" Can anyone compare the state of our economy when the
Carter Administration took office with where we are today and say, "Keep up
the good work?" Can anyone look at our reduced standing in the world today
and say, "Let's have four more years of this?"
I believe the American people are going to answer these
questions the first week of November and their answer will be, "No--we've
had enough." And, then it will be up to us--beginning next January 20th--to
offer an administration and congressional leadership of competence and more than
a little courage.
We must have the clarity of vision to see the difference
between what is essential and what is merely desirable, and then the courage to
bring our government back under control and make it acceptable to the people.
It is essential that we maintain both the forward momentum
of economic growth and the strength of the safety net beneath those in society
who need help. We also believe it is essential that the integrity of all aspects
of Social Security are preserved.
Beyond these essentials, I believe it is clear our federal
government is overgrown and overweight. Indeed, it is time for our government to
go on a diet. Therefore, my first act as chief executive will be to impose an
immediate and thorough freeze on federal hiring. Then, we are going to enlist
the very best minds from business, labor and whatever quarter to conduct a
detailed review of every department, bureau and agency that lives by federal
appropriations. We are also going to enlist the help and ideas of many dedicated
and hard working government employees at all levels who want a more efficient
government as much as the rest of us do. I know that many are demoralized by the
confusion and waste they confront in their work as a result of failed and
failing policies.
Our instructions to the groups we enlist will be simple
and direct. We will remind them that government programs exist at the sufferance
of the American taxpayer and are paid for with money earned by working men and
women. Any program that represents a waste of their money--a theft from their
pocketbooks--must have that waste eliminated or the program must go--by
executive order where possible; by congressional action where necessary.
Everything that can be run more effectively by state and local government we
shall turn over to state and local government, along with the funding sources to
pay for it. We are going to put an end to the money merry-go-round where our
money becomes Washington's money, to be spent by the states and cities exactly
the way the federal bureaucrats tell them to.
I will not accept the excuse that the federal government
has grown so big and powerful that it is beyond the control of any president,
any administration or Congress. We are going to put an end to the notion that
the American taxpayer exists to fund the federal government. The federal
government exists to serve the American people. On January 20th, we are going to
re-establish that truth.
Also on that date we are going to initiate action to get
substantial relief for our taxpaying citizens and action to put people back to
work. None of this will be based on any new form of monetary tinkering or fiscal
sleight-of-hand. We will simply apply to government the common sense we all use
in our daily lives.
Work and family are at the center of our lives; the
foundation of our dignity as a free people. When we deprive people of what they
have earned, or take away their jobs, we destroy their dignity and undermine
their families. We cannot support our families unless there are jobs; and we
cannot have jobs unless people have both money to invest and the faith to invest
it.
There are concepts that stem from an economic system that
for more than 200 years has helped us master a continent, create a previously
undreamed of prosperity for our people and has fed millions of others around the
globe. That system will continue to serve us in the future if our government
will stop ignoring the basic values on which it was built and stop betraying the
trust and good will of the American workers who keep it going.
The American people are carrying the heaviest peacetime
tax burden in our nation's history--and it will grow even heavier, under present
law, next January. We are taxing ourselves into economic exhaustion and
stagnation, crushing our ability and incentive to save, invest and produce.
This must stop. We must halt this fiscal self-destruction
and restore sanity to our economic system.
I have long advocated a 30 percent reduction in income tax
rates over a period of three years. This phased tax reduction would begin with a
10 percent "down payment" tax cut in 1981, which the Republicans and
Congress and I have already proposed.
A phased reduction of tax rates would go a long way toward
easing the heavy burden on the American people. But, we should not stop here.
Within the context of economic conditions and appropriate
budget priorities during each fiscal year of my presidency, I would strive to go
further. This would include improvement in business depreciation taxes so we can
stimulate investment in order to get plants and equipment replaced, put more
Americans back to work and put our nation back on the road to being competitive
in world commerce. We will also work to reduce the cost of government as a
percentage of our gross national product.
The first task of national leadership is to set honest and
realistic priorities in our policies and our budget and I pledge that my
administration will do that.
When I talk of tax cuts, I am reminded that every major
tax cut in this century has strengthened the economy, generated renewed
productivity and ended up yielding new revenues for the government by creating
new investment, new jobs and more commerce among our people.
The present administration has been forced by us
Republicans to play follow-the-leader with regard to a tax cut. But, in this
election year we must take with the proverbial "grain of salt" any tax
cut proposed by those who have given us the greatest tax increase in our
history. When those in leadership give us tax increases and tell us we must also
do with less, have they thought about those who have always had less--especially
the minorities? This is like telling them that just as they step on the first
rung of the ladder of opportunity, the ladder is being pulled out from under
them. That may be the Democratic leadership's message to the minorities, but it
won't be ours. Our message will be: we have to move ahead, but we're not going
to leave anyone behind. Thanks to the economic policies of the Democratic Party,
millions of Americans find themselves out of work. Millions more have never even
had a fair chance to learn new skills, hold a decent job, or secure for
themselves and their families a share in the prosperity of this nation.
It is time to put America back to work; to make our cities
and towns resound with the confident voices of men and women of all races,
nationalities and faiths bringing home to their families a decent paycheck they
can cash for honest money.
For those without skills, we'll find a way to help them
get skills.
For those without job opportunities, we'll stimulate new
opportunities, particularly in the inner cities where they live.
For those who have abandoned hope, we'll restore hope and
we'll welcome them into a great national crusade to make America great again!
When we move from domestic affairs and cast our eyes
abroad, we see an equally sorry chapter on the record of the present
administration.
- As Soviet combat brigade trains in Cuba, just 90 miles
from our shores.
- A Soviet army of invasion occupies Afghanistan, further
threatening our vital interests in the Middle East.
- America's defense strength is at its lowest ebb in a
generation, while the Soviet Union is vastly outspending us in both strategic
and conventional arms.
- Our European allies, looking nervously at the growing
menace from the East, turn to us for leadership and fail to find it.
- And, incredibly more than 50 of our fellow Americans
have been held captive for over eight months by a dictatorial foreign power that
holds us up to ridicule before the world.
Adversaries large and small test our will and seek to
confound our resolve, but we are given weakness when we need strength;
vacillation when the times demand firmness.
The Carter Administration lives in the world of
make-believe. Every day, drawing up a response to that day's problems, troubles,
regardless of what happened yesterday and what will happen tomorrow.
The rest of us, however, live in the real world. It is
here that disasters are overtaking our nation without any real response from
Washington.
This is make-believe, self-deceit and--above
all--transparent hypocrisy.
For example, Mr. Carter says he supports the volunteer
army, but he lets military pay and benefits slip so low that many of our
enlisted personnel are actually eligible for food stamps. Re-enlistment rates
drop and, just recently, after he fought all week against a proposal to increase
the pay of our men and women in uniform, he helicoptered to our carrier, the
U.S.S. Nimitz, which was returning from long months of duty. He told the crew
that he advocated better pay for them and their comrades! Where does he really
stand, now that he's back on shore?
I'll tell you where I stand. I do not favor a peacetime
draft or registration, but I do favor pay and benefit levels that will attract
and keep highly motivated men and women in our volunteer forces and an active
reserve trained and ready for an instant call in case of an emergency.
There may be a sailor at the helm of the ship of state,
but the ship has no rudder. Critical decisions are made at times almost in comic
fashion, but who can laugh? Who was not embarrassed when the administration
handed a major propaganda victory in the United Nations to the enemies of
Israel, our staunch Middle East ally for three decades, and them claim that the
American vote was a "mistake," the result of a "failure of
communication" between the president, his secretary of state, and his U.N.
ambassador?
Who does not feel a growing sense of unease as our allies,
facing repeated instances of an amateurish and confused administration,
reluctantly conclude that America is unwilling or unable to fulfill its
obligations as the leader of the free world?
Who does not feel rising alarm when the question in any
discussion of foreign policy is no longer, "Should we do something?",
but "Do we have the capacity to do anything?"
The administration which has brought us to this state is
seeking your endorsement for four more years of weakness, indecision, mediocrity
and incompetence. No American should vote until he or she has asked, is the
United States stronger and more respected now than it was three-and-a-half years
ago? Is the world today a safer place in which to live?
It is the responsibility of the president of the United
States, in working for peace, to insure that the safety of our people cannot
successfully be threatened by a hostile foreign power. As president, fulfilling
that responsibility will be my number one priority.
We are not a warlike people. Quite the opposite. We always
seek to live in peace. We resort to force infrequently and with great
reluctance--and only after we have determined that it is absolutely necessary.
We are awed--and rightly so--by the forces of destruction at loose in the world
in this nuclear era. But neither can we be naive or foolish. Four times in my
lifetime America has gone to war, bleeding the lives of its young men into the
sands of beachheads, the fields of Europe and the jungles and rice paddies of
Asia. We know only too well that war comes not when the forces of freedom are
strong, but when they are weak. It is then that tyrants are tempted.
We simply cannot learn these lessons the hard way again
without risking our destruction.
Of all the objectives we seek, first and foremost is the
establishment of lasting world peace. We must always stand ready to negotiate in
good faith, ready to pursue any reasonable avenue that holds forth the promise
of lessening tensions and furthering the prospects of peace. But let our friends
and those who may wish us ill take note: the United States has an obligation to
its citizens and to the people of the world never to let those who would destroy
freedom dictate the future course of human life on this planet. I would regard
my election as proof that we have renewed our resolve to preserve world peace
and freedom. This nation will once again be strong enough to do that.
This evening marks the last step--save one--of a campaign
that has taken Nancy and me from one end of this great land to the other, over
many months and thousands of miles. There are those who question the way we
choose a president; who say that our process imposes difficult and exhausting
burdens on those who seek the office. I have not found it so.
It is impossible to capture in words the splendor of this
vast continent which God has granted as our portion of this creation. There are
no words to express the extraordinary strength and character of this breed of
people we call Americans.
Everywhere we have met thousands of Democrats,
Independents, and Republicans from all economic conditions and walks of life
bound together in that community of shared values of family, work, neighborhood,
peace and freedom. They are concerned, yes, but they are not frightened. They
are disturbed, but not dismayed. They are the kind of men and women Tom Paine
had in mind when he wrote--during the darkest days of the American
Revolution--"We have it in our power to begin the world over again."
Nearly 150 years after Tom Paine wrote those words, an
American president told the generation of the Great Depression that it had a
"rendezvous with destiny." I believe that this generation of Americans
today has a rendezvous with destiny.
Tonight, let us dedicate ourselves to renewing the
American compact. I ask you not simply to "Trust me," but to trust
your values--our values--and to hold me responsible for living up to them. I ask
you to trust that American spirit which knows no ethnic, religious, social,
political, regional, or economic boundaries; the spirit that burned with zeal in
the hearts of millions of immigrants from every corner of the Earth who came
here in search of freedom.
Some say that spirit no longer exists. But I have seen
it--I have felt it--all across the land; in the big cities, the small towns and
in rural America. The American spirit is still there, ready to blaze into life
if you and I are willing to do what has to be done; the practical, down-to-earth
things that will stimulate our economy, increase productivity and put America
back to work. The time is now to resolve that the basis of a firm and principled
foreign policy is one that takes the world as it is and seeks to change it by
leadership and example; not by harangue, harassment or wishful thinking.
The time is now to say that while we shall seek new
friendships and expand and improve others, we shall not do so by breaking our
word or casting aside old friends and allies.
And, the time is now to redeem promises once made to the
American people by another candidate, in another time and another place. He
said, "For three long years I have been going up and down this country
preaching that government--federal, state, and local--costs too much. I shall
not stop that preaching. As an immediate program of action, we must abolish
useless offices. We must eliminate unnecessary functions of government...we must
consolidate subdivisions of government and, like the private citizen, give up
luxuries which we can no longer afford."
"I propose to you, my friends, and through you that
government of all kinds, big and little be made solvent and that the example be
set by the president of the United State and his Cabinet."
So said Franklin Delano Roosevelt in his acceptance speech
to the Democratic National Convention in July 1932.
The time is now, my fellow Americans, to recapture our
destiny, to take it into our own hands. But, to do this will take many of us,
working together. I ask you tonight to volunteer your help in this cause so we
can carry our message throughout the land.
Yes, isn't now the time that we, the people, carried out
these unkempt promises? Let us pledge to each other and to all America on this
July day 48 years later, we intend to do just that.
I have thought of something that is not part of my speech
and I'm worried over whether I should do it.
Can we doubt that only a Divine Providence placed this
land, this island of freedom, here as a refuge for all those people in the world
who yearn to breathe freely: Jews and Christians enduring persecution behind the
Iron Curtain, the boat people of Southeast Asia, of Cuba and Haiti, the victims
of drought and famine in Africa, the freedom fighters of Afghanistan and our own
countrymen held in savage captivity.
I'll confess that I've been a little afraid to suggest
what I'm going to suggest--I'm more afraid not to--that we begin our crusade
joined together in a moment of silent prayer. God bless America.
Source: Ronald
Reagan Presidential Library and Museum
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