 George
Bush Acceptance Speech
Republican
National Convention
August
18, 1988
I have many friends to thank tonight. I thank the
voters who supported me. I thank the gallant men who entered the contest for the
presidency this year, and who have honored me with their support. And, for their
kind and stirring words, I thank Governor Tom Kean of New Jersey - Senator Phil
Gramm of Texas - President Gerald Ford - and my friend, President Ronald Reagan.
I accept your nomination for President. I mean to run
hard, to fight hard, to stand on the issues - and I mean to win.
There are a lot of great stories in politics about the
underdog winning - and this is going to be one of them.
And we're going to win with the help of Senator Dan Quayle
of Indiana - a young leader who has become a forceful voice in preparing
America's workers for the labor force of the future. Born in the middle of the
century, in the middle of America, and holding the promise of the future - I'm
proud to have Dan Quayle at my side.
Many of you have asked, "When will this campaign
really begin?" I have come to this hall to tell you, and to tell America:
Tonight is the night.
For seven and a half years I have helped a President
conduct the most difficult job on earth. Ronald Reagan asked for, and received,
my candor. He never asked for, but he did receive, my loyalty. Those of you who
saw the President's speech this week, and listened to the simple truth of his
words, will understand my loyalty all these years.
But now you must see me for what I am: The Republican
candidate for President of the United States. And now I turn to the American
people to share my hopes and intentions, and why - and where - I wish to lead.
And so tonight is for big things. But I'll try to be fair
to the other side. I'll try to hold my charisma in check. I reject the
temptation to engage in personal references. My approach this evening is, as
Sergeant Joe Friday used to say, "Just the facts, ma'm."
After all, the facts are on our side.
I seek the presidency for a single purpose, a purpose that
has motivated millions of Americans across the years and the ocean voyages. I
seek the presidency to build a better America. It is that simple - and that big.
I am a man who sees life in terms of missions - missions
defined and missions completed. When I was a torpedo bomber pilot they defined
the mission for us. Before we took off we all understood that no matter what,
you try to reach the target. There have been other missions for me - Congress,
China, the CIA. But I am here tonight - and I am your candidate - because the
most important work of my life is to complete the mission we started in 1980.
How do we complete it? We build it.
The stakes are high this year and the choice is crucial,
for the differences between the two candidates are as deep and wide as they have
ever been in our long history.
Not only two very different men, but two very different
ideas of the future will be voted on this election day.
What it all comes down to is this:
My opponent's view of the world sees a long slow decline
for our country, an inevitable fall mandated by impersonal historical forces.
But America is not a decline. America is a rising nation.
He sees America as another pleasant country on the UN roll
call, somewhere between Albania and Zimbabwe. I see America as the leader - a
unique nation with a special role in the world.
This has been called the American Century, because in it
we were the dominant force for good in the world. We saved Europe, cured polio,
we went to the moon, and lit the world with our culture. Now we are on the verge
of a new century, and what country's name will it bear? I say it will be another
American century.
Our work is not done - our force is not spent.
There are those who say there isn't much of a difference
this year.
But America, don't let 'em fool ya.
Two parties this year ask for your support. Both will
speak of growth and peace. But only one has proved it can deliver. Two parties
this year ask for your trust, but only one has earned it.
Eight years ago I stood here with Ronald Reagan and we
promised, together, to break with the past and return America to her greatness.
Eight years later look at what the American people have produced: the highest
level of economic growth in our entire history - and the lowest level of world
tensions in more than fifty years.
Some say this isn't an election about ideology, it's an
election about competence. Well, it's nice of them to want to play on our field.
But this election isn't only about competence, for competence is a narrow ideal.
Competence makes the trains run on time but doesn't know where they're going.
Competence is the creed of the technocrat who makes sure the gears mesh but
doesn't for a second understand the magic of the machine.
The truth is, this election is about the beliefs we share,
the values we honor, the principles we hold dear.
But since someone brought up competence. ...
Consider the size of our triumph: A record high percentage
of Americans with jobs, a record high rate of new businesses - a record high
rate of real personal income.
These are the facts. And one way you know our opponents
know the facts is that to attack the record they have to misrepresent it. They
call it a Swiss cheese economy. Well, that's the way it may look to the three
blind mice. But when they were in charge it was all holes and no cheese.
Inflation was 12 percent when we came in. We got it down
to four. Interest rates were more than 21. We cut them in half. Unemployment was
up and climbing, now it's the lowest in 14 years.
My friends, eight years ago this economy was flat on its
back - intensive care. We came in and gave it emergency treatment: Got the
temperature down by lowering regulation, got the blood pressure down when we
lowered taxes. Pretty soon the patient was up, back on his feet, and stronger
than ever.
And now who do we hear knocking on the door but the
doctors who made him sick. And they're telling us to put them in charge of the
case again. My friends, they're lucky we don't hit them with a malpractice suit!
We've created seventeen million new jobs in the past five
years - more than twice as many as Europe and Japan combined. And they're good
jobs. The majority of them created in the past six years paid an average of more
than $22,000 a year. Someone better take 'a message to Michael': Tell him we've
been creating good jobs at good wages. The fact is, they talk - we deliver. They
promise - we perform.
There are millions of young Americans in their 20's who
barely remember the days of gas lines and unemployment lines. Now they're
marrying and starting careers. To those young people I say " You have the
opportunity you deserve - and I'm not going to let them take it away from
you."
There are millions of older Americans who were brutalized
by inflation. We arrested it - and we're not going to let it out on furlough.
We're going to keep the social security trust fund sound, and out of reach of
the big spenders. To America's elderly I say, "Once again you have the
security that is your right - and I'm not going to let them take it away from
you."
I know the liberal democrats are worried about the
economy. They're worried it's going to remain strong. And they're right, it is.
With the right leadership.
But let's be frank. Things aren't perfect in this country.
There are people who haven't tasted the fruits of the expansion. I've talked to
farmers about the bills they can't pay. I've been to the factories that feel the
strain of change. I've seen the urban children who play amidst the shattered
glass and shattered lives. And there are the homeless. And you know, it doesn't
do any good to debate endlessly which policy mistake of the '70's is
responsible. They're there. We have to help them.
But what we must remember if we are to be responsible -
and compassionate - is that economic growth is the key to our endeavors.
I want growth that stays, that broadens, and that touches,
finally, all Americans, form the hollows of Kentucky to the sunlit streets of
Denver, from the suburbs of Chicago to the broad avenues of New York, from the
oil fields of Oklahoma to the farms of the great plains.
Can we do it? Of course we can. We know how. We've done
it. If we continue to grow at our current rate, we will be able to produce 30
million jobs in the next eight years. We will do it - by maintaining our
commitment to free and fair trade, by keeping government spending down, and by
keeping taxes down.
Our economic life is not the only test of our success,
overwhelms all the others, and that is the issue of peace.
One issue Look at the world on this bright August night.
The spirit of Democracy is sweeping the Pacific rim. China feels the winds of
change. New democracies assert themselves in South America. One by one the
unfree places fall, not to the force of arms but to the force of an idea:
freedom works.
We have a new relationship with the Soviet Union. The INF
treaty - the beginning of the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan - the beginning
of the end of the Soviet proxy war in Angola, and with it the independence of
Namibia. Iran and Iraq move toward peace.
It is a watershed.
It is no accident.
It happened when we acted on the ancient knowledge that
strength and clarity lead to peace - weakness and ambivalence lead to war.
Weakness and ambivalence lead to war. Weakness tempts aggressors. Strength stops
them. I will not allow this country to be made weak again.
The tremors in the Soviet world continue. The hard earth
there has not yet settled. Perhaps what is happening will change our world
forever. Perhaps what is happening will change our world forever. Perhaps not. A
prudent skepticism is in order. And so is hope. Either way, we're in an
unprecedented position to change the nature of our relationship. Not by
preemptive concession - but by keeping our strength. Not by yielding up defense
systems with nothing won in return - but by hard cool engagement in the tug and
pull of diplomacy.
My life has been lived in the shadow of war - I almost
lost my life in one.
I hate war.
I love peace. We have peace.
And I am not going to let anyone take it away from us.
Our economy is strong but not invulnerable, and the peace
is broad but can be broken. And now we must decide. We will surely have change
this year, but will it be change that moves us forward? Or change that risks
retreat?
In 1940, when I was barely more than a boy, Franklin
Roosevelt said we shouldn't change horses in midstream.
My friends, these days the world moves even more quickly,
and now, after two great terms, a switch will be made. But when you have to
change horses in midstream, doesn't it make sense to switch to the one who's
going the same way?
An election that is about ideas and values is also about
philosophy. And I have one.
At the bright center is the individual. And radiating out
from him or her is the family, the essential unit of closeness and of love. For
it is the family that communicates to our children - to the 21st century - our
culture, our religious faith, our traditions and history.
From the individual to the family to the community, and on
out to the town, to the church and school, and, still echoing out, to the
county, the state, the nation - each doing 'only what it does well, and no more.
And I believe that power must always be kept close to the individual - close to
the hands that raise the family and run the home.
I am guided by certain traditions. One is that there is a
God and He is good, and his love, while free, has a self imposed cost: We must
be good to one another.
I believe in another tradition that is, by now, embedded
in the national soul. It is that learning is good in and of itself. The mothers
of the Jewish ghettos of the east would pour honey on a book so the children
would learn that learning is sweet. And the parents who settled hungry Kansas
would take their children in from the fields when a teacher came. That is our
history.
And there is another tradition. And that is the idea of
community - a beautiful word with a big meaning. Though liberal democrats have
an odd view of it. They see "community" as a limited cluster of
interest groups, locked in odd conformity. In this view, the country waits
passive while Washington sets the rules.
But that's not what community means - not to me.
For we are a nation of communities, of thousands and tens
of thousands of ethnic, religious, social, business, labor union, neighborhood,
regional and other organizations, all of them varied, voluntary and unique.
This is America: the Knights of Columbus, the Grange,
Hadassah, the Disabled American Veterans, the Order of Ahepa, the Business and
Professional Women of America, the union hall, the Bible study group, LULAC,
"Holy Name" - a brilliant diversity spread like stars, like a thousand
points of light in a broad and peaceful sky.
Does government have a place? Yes. Government is part of
the nation of communities - not the whole, just a part.
I do not hate government. A government that remembers that
the people are its master is a good and needed thing.
I respect old fashioned common sense, and have no great
love for the imaginings of social planners. I like what's been tested and found
to be true.
For instance:
Should public school teachers be required to lead our
children in the pledge of allegiance? My opponent says no - but I say yes.
Should society be allowed to impose the death penalty on
those who commit crimes of extraordinary cruelty and violence? My opponent says
no - but I say yes.
Should our children have the right to say a voluntary
prayer, or even observe a moment of silence in the schools? My opponent says no
- but I say yes.
Should free men and women have the right to own a gun to
protect their home? My opponent says no - but I say yes.
Is it right to believe in the sanctity of life and protect
the lives of innocent children? My opponent says no - but I say yes. We must
change from abortion - to adoption. I have an adopted granddaughter. The day of
her christening we wept with joy. I thank God her parents chose life.
I'm the one who believes it is a scandal to give a weekend
furlough to a hardened first degree killer who hasn't even served enough time to
be eligible for parole.
I'm the one who says a drug dealer who is responsible for
the death of a policeman should be subject to capital punishment.
I'm the one who won't raise taxes. My opponent now says
he'll raise them as a last resort, or a third resort. When a politician talks
like that, you know that's one resort he'll be checking into. My opponent won't
rule out raising taxes. But I will. The Congress will push me to raise taxes,
and I'll say no, and they'll push, and I'll say no, and they'll push again, and
I'll say to them, "Read my lips: no new taxes."
Let me tell you more about the mission.
On jobs, my mission is: 30 in 8.
Thirty million jobs in the next eight years.
Every one of our children deserves a first rate school.
The liberal democrats want power in the hands of the federal government. I want
power in the hands of parents. I will increase the power of parents. I will
encourage merit schools. I will give more kids a Head Start. And I'll make it
easier to save for college.
I want a drug free America - and this will not be easy to
achieve. But I want to enlist the help of some people who are rarely included.
Tonight I challenge the young people of our country to shut down the drug
dealers around the world. Unite with us, work with us. "Zero
tolerance" isn't just a policy, it's an attitude. Tell them what you think
of people who underwrite the dealers who put poison in our society. And while
you're doing that, my administration will be telling the dealers: whatever we
have to do we'll do, but your day is over, you're history.
I am going to do whatever it takes to make sure the
disabled are included in the mainstream. For too long they've been left out. But
they're not going to be left out anymore.
I am going to stop ocean dumping. Our beaches should not
be garbage dumps and our harbors should not be cesspools. I am going to have the
FBI trace the medical wastes and we are going to punish the people who dump
those infected needles into our oceans, lakes and rivers. And we must clean the
air. We must reduce the harm done by acid rain.
I will put incentives back into the domestic energy
industry, for I know from personal experience there is no security for the
United States in further dependence on foreign oil.
In foreign affairs I will continue our policy of peace
through strength. I will move toward further cuts in the strategic and
conventional arsenals of both the United States and the Soviet Union. I will
modernize and preserve our technological edge. I will ban chemical and
biological weapons from the face of the earth. And I intend to speak for
freedom, stand for freedom, and be a patient friend to anyone, east or west, who
will fight for freedom.
It seems to me the Presidency provides an incomparable
opportunity for "gentle persuasion."
I hope to stand for a new harmony, a greater tolerance.
We've come far, but I think we need a new harmony among the races in our
country. We're on a journey to a new century, and we've got to leave the tired
old baggage of bigotry behind.
Some people who are enjoying our prosperity have forgotten
what it's for. But they diminish our triumph when they act as if wealth is an
end in itself.
There are those who have dropped their standards along the
way, as if ethics were too heavy and slowed their rise to the top. There's graft
in city hall, the greed on Wall Street; there's influence peddling in
Washington, and the small corruptions of everyday ambition.
But you see, I believe public service is honorable. And
every time I hear someone has breached the public trust it breaks my heart.
I wonder sometimes if we have forgotten who we are. But
we're the people who sundered a nation rather than allow a sin called slavery -
we're the people who rose from the ghettos and the deserts.
We weren't saints - but we lived by standards. We
celebrated the individual - but we weren't self -centered. We were practical -
but we didn't live only for material things. We believed in getting ahead - but
blind ambition wasn't our way.
The fact is prosperity has a purpose. It is to allow us to
pursue "the better angels," to give us time to think and grow.
Prosperity with a purpose means taking your idealism and making it concrete by
certain acts of goodness. It means helping a child from an unhappy home learn
how to read - and I thank my wife Barbara for all her work in literacy. It means
teaching troubled children through your presence that there's such a thing as
reliable love. Some would say it's soft and insufficiently tough to care about
these things. But where is it written that we must act as if we do not care, as
if we are not moved?
Well I am moved. I want a kinder, gentler nation.
Two men this year ask for your support. And you must know
us.
As for me, I have held high office and done the work of
democracy day by day. My parents were prosperous; their children were lucky. But
there were lessons we had to learn about life. John Kennedy discovered poverty
when he campaigned in West Virginia; there were children there who had no milk.
Young Teddy Roosevelt met the new America when he roamed the immigrant streets
of New York. And I learned a few things about life in a place called Texas.
We moved to west Texas 40 years ago. The war was over, and
we wanted to get out and make it on our own. Those were exciting days. Lived in
a little shotgun house, one room for the three of us. Worked in the oil
business, started my own.
In time we had six children. Moved from the shotgun to a
duplex apartment to a house. Lived the dream - high school football on Friday
night, Little League, neighborhood barbecue.
People don't see their experience as symbolic of an era -
but of course we were. So was everyone else who was taking a chance and pushing
into unknown territory with kids and a dog and a car. But the big thing I
learned is the satisfaction of creating jobs, which meant creating opportunity,
which meant happy families, who in turn could do more to help others and enhance
their own lives. I learned that the good done by a single good job can be felt
in ways you can't imagine.
I may not be the most eloquent, but I learned early that
eloquence won't draw oil from the ground. I may sometimes be a little awkward,
but there's nothing self-conscious in my love of country. I am a quiet man - but
I hear the quiet people others don't. The ones who raise the family, pay the
taxes, meet the mortgage. I hear them and I am moved, and their concerns are
mine.
A President must be many things.
He must be a shrewd protector of America's interests; And
he must be an idealist who leads those who move for a freer and more democratic
planet.
He must see to it that government intrudes as little as
possible in the lives of the people; and yet remember that it is the nation's
character.
And he must be able to define - and lead - a mission.
For seven and a half years I have worked with a President
- and I have seen what crosses that big desk. I have seen the unexpected crisis
that arrive in a cable in a young aide's hand. And I have seen problems that
simmer on for decades and suddenly demand resolution. I have seen modest
decisions made with anguish, and crucial decisions made with dispatch.
And so I know that what it all comes down to, this
election - what it all comes down to, after all the shouting and the cheers - is
the man at the desk.
My friends, I am that man.
I say it without boast or bravado, I've fought for my
country, I've served, I've built - and I will go from the hills to the hollows,
from the cities to the suburbs to the loneliest town on the quietest street to
take our message of hope and growth for every American to every American.
I will keep America moving forward, always forward - for a
better America, for an endless enduring dream and a thousand points of light.
That is my mission. And I will complete it.
Thank you. God bless you.
Source: George Bush
Presidential Library and Museum
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