REMARKS BY JOHN
MCCAIN TO THE
REPUBLICAN NATIONAL
CONVENTION
ARLINGTON, VA --
U.S. Senator John
McCain will deliver
the following
remarks as prepared
for delivery to the
Republican National
Convention in St.
Paul, Minnesota,
today at 10:00 p.m.
ET (9:00 p.m. CT):
Thank you all very
much. Tonight, I
have a privilege
given few Americans
-- the privilege of
accepting our
party's nomination
for President of the
United States. And I
accept it with
gratitude, humility
and confidence.
In my life, no
success has come
without a good
fight, and this
nomination wasn't
any different.
That's a tribute to
the candidates who
opposed me and their
supporters. They're
leaders of great
ability, who love
our country, and
wished to lead it to
better days. Their
support is an honor
I won't forget.
I'm grateful to the
President for
leading us in those
dark days following
the worst attack on
American soil in our
history, and keeping
us safe from another
attack many thought
was inevitable; and
to the First Lady,
Laura Bush, a model
of grace and
kindness in public
and in private. And
I'm grateful to the
41st President and
his bride of 63
years, and for their
outstanding example
of honorable service
to our country.
As always, I'm
indebted to my wife,
Cindy, and my seven
children. The
pleasures of family
life can seem like a
brief holiday from
the crowded calendar
of our nation's
business. But I have
treasured them all
the more, and can't
imagine a life
without the
happiness you give
me. Cindy said a lot
of nice things about
me tonight. But, in
truth, she's more my
inspiration than I
am hers. Her concern
for those less
blessed than we are
-- victims of land
mines, children born
in poverty and with
birth defects --
shows the measure of
her humanity. I know
she will make a
great First Lady.
When I was growing
up, my father was
often at sea, and
the job of raising
my brother, sister
and me would fall to
my mother alone.
Roberta McCain gave
us her love of life,
her deep interest in
the world, her
strength, and her
belief we are all
meant to use our
opportunities to
make ourselves
useful to our
country. I wouldn't
be here tonight but
for the strength of
her character.
My heartfelt thanks
to all of you, who
helped me win this
nomination, and
stood by me when the
odds were long. I
won't let you down.
To Americans who
have yet to decide
who to vote for,
thank you for your
consideration and
the opportunity to
win your trust. I
intend to earn it.
Finally, a word to
Senator Obama and
his supporters.
We'll go at it over
the next two months.
That's the nature of
these contests, and
there are big
differences between
us. But you have my
respect and
admiration. Despite
our differences,
much more unites us
than divides us. We
are fellow
Americans, an
association that
means more to me
than any other.
We're dedicated to
the proposition that
all people are
created equal and
endowed by our
Creator with
inalienable rights.
No country ever had
a greater cause than
that. And I wouldn't
be an American
worthy of the name
if I didn't honor
Senator Obama and
his supporters for
their achievement.
But let there be no
doubt, my friends,
we're going to win
this election. And
after we've won,
we're going to reach
out our hand to any
willing patriot,
make this government
start working for
you again, and get
this country back on
the road to
prosperity and
peace.
These are tough
times for many of
you. You're worried
about keeping your
job or finding a new
one, and are
struggling to put
food on the table
and stay in your
home. All you ever
asked of government
is to stand on your
side, not in your
way. And that's just
what I intend to do:
stand on your side
and fight for your
future.
And I've found just
the right partner to
help me shake up
Washington, Governor
Sarah Palin of
Alaska. She has
executive experience
and a real record of
accomplishment.
She's tackled tough
problems like energy
independence and
corruption. She's
balanced a budget,
cut taxes, and taken
on the special
interests. She's
reached across the
aisle and asked
Republicans,
Democrats and
Independents to
serve in her
administration.
She's the mother of
five children. She's
helped run a small
business, worked
with her hands and
knows what it's like
to worry about
mortgage payments
and health care and
the cost of gasoline
and groceries.
She knows where she
comes from and she
knows who she works
for. She stands up
for what's right,
and she doesn't let
anyone tell her to
sit down. I'm very
proud to have
introduced our next
Vice President to
the country. But I
can't wait until I
introduce her to
Washington. And let
me offer an advance
warning to the old,
big spending, do
nothing, me first,
country second
Washington crowd:
change is coming.
I'm not in the habit
of breaking promises
to my country and
neither is Governor
Palin. And when we
tell you we're going
to change
Washington, and stop
leaving our
country's problems
for some unluckier
generation to fix,
you can count on it.
We've got a record
of doing just that,
and the strength,
experience, judgment
and backbone to keep
our word to you.
You know, I've been
called a maverick;
someone who marches
to the beat of his
own drum. Sometimes
it's meant as a
compliment and
sometimes it's not.
What it really means
is I understand who
I work for. I don't
work for a party. I
don't work for a
special interest. I
don't work for
myself. I work for
you.
I've fought
corruption, and it
didn't matter if the
culprits were
Democrats or
Republicans. They
violated their
public trust, and
had to be held
accountable. I've
fought big spenders
in both parties, who
waste your money on
things you neither
need nor want, while
you struggle to buy
groceries, fill your
gas tank and make
your mortgage
payment. I've fought
to get million
dollar checks out of
our elections. I've
fought lobbyists who
stole from Indian
tribes. I fought
crooked deals in the
Pentagon. I fought
tobacco companies
and trial lawyers,
drug companies and
union bosses.
I fought for the
right strategy and
more troops in Iraq,
when it wasn't a
popular thing to do.
And when the pundits
said my campaign was
finished, I said I'd
rather lose an
election than see my
country lose a war.
Thanks to the
leadership of a
brilliant general,
David Petreaus, and
the brave men and
women he has the
honor to command,
that strategy
succeeded and
rescued us from a
defeat that would
have demoralized our
military, risked a
wider war and
threatened the
security of all
Americans.
I don't mind a good
fight. For reasons
known only to God,
I've had quite a few
tough ones in my
life. But I learned
an important lesson
along the way. In
the end, it matters
less that you can
fight. What you
fight for is the
real test.
I fight for
Americans. I fight
for you. I fight for
Bill and Sue Nebe
from Farmington
Hills, Michigan, who
lost their real
estate investments
in the bad housing
market. Bill got a
temporary job after
he was out of work
for seven months.
Sue works three jobs
to help pay the
bills.
I fight for Jake and
Toni Wimmer of
Franklin County,
Pennsylvania. Jake
works on a loading
dock; coaches Little
League, and raises
money for the
mentally and
physically disabled.
Toni is a
schoolteacher,
working toward her
Master's Degree.
They have two sons,
the youngest, Luke,
has been diagnosed
with autism. Their
lives should matter
to the people they
elect to office.
They matter to me.
I fight for the
family of Matthew
Stanley of Wolfboro,
New Hampshire, who
died serving our
country in Iraq. I
wear his bracelet
and think of him
every day. I intend
to honor their
sacrifice by making
sure the country
their son loved so
well and never
returned to, remains
safe from its
enemies.
I fight to restore
the pride and
principles of our
party. We were
elected to change
Washington, and we
let Washington
change us. We lost
the trust of the
American people when
some Republicans
gave in to the
temptations of
corruption. We lost
their trust when
rather than reform
government, both
parties made it
bigger. We lost
their trust when
instead of freeing
ourselves from a
dangerous dependence
on foreign oil, both
parties and Senator
Obama passed another
corporate welfare
bill for oil
companies. We lost
their trust, when we
valued our power
over our principles.
We're going to
change that. We're
going to recover the
people's trust by
standing up again
for the values
Americans admire.
The party of
Lincoln, Roosevelt
and Reagan is going
to get back to
basics.
We believe everyone
has something to
contribute and
deserves the
opportunity to reach
their God-given
potential from the
boy whose
descendents arrived
on the Mayflower to
the Latina daughter
of migrant workers.
We're all God's
children and we're
all Americans.
We believe in low
taxes; spending
discipline, and open
markets. We believe
in rewarding hard
work and risk takers
and letting people
keep the fruits of
their labor.
We believe in a
strong defense,
work, faith,
service, a culture
of life, personal
responsibility, the
rule of law, and
judges who dispense
justice impartially
and don't legislate
from the bench. We
believe in the
values of families,
neighborhoods and
communities.
We believe in a
government that
unleashes the
creativity and
initiative of
Americans.
Government that
doesn't make your
choices for you, but
works to make sure
you have more
choices to make for
yourself.
I will keep taxes
low and cut them
where I can. My
opponent will raise
them. I will open
new markets to our
goods and services.
My opponent will
close them. I will
cut government
spending. He will
increase it.
My tax cuts will
create jobs. His tax
increases will
eliminate them. My
health care plan
will make it easier
for more Americans
to find and keep
good health care
insurance. His plan
will force small
businesses to cut
jobs, reduce wages,
and force families
into a government
run health care
system where a
bureaucrat stands
between you and your
doctor.
Keeping taxes low
helps small
businesses grow and
create new jobs.
Cutting the second
highest business tax
rate in the world
will help American
companies compete
and keep jobs from
moving overseas.
Doubling the child
tax exemption from
$3500 to $7000 will
improve the lives of
millions of American
families. Reducing
government spending
and getting rid of
failed programs will
let you keep more of
your own money to
save, spend and
invest as you see
fit. Opening new
markets and
preparing workers to
compete in the world
economy is essential
to our future
prosperity.
I know some of you
have been left
behind in the
changing economy and
it often seems your
government hasn't
even noticed.
Government
assistance for
unemployed workers
was designed for the
economy of the
1950s. That's going
to change on my
watch. My opponent
promises to bring
back old jobs by
wishing away the
global economy.
We're going to help
workers who've lost
a job that won't
come back, find a
new one that won't
go away.
We will prepare them
for the jobs of
today. We will use
our community
colleges to help
train people for new
opportunities in
their communities.
For workers in
industries that have
been hard hit, we'll
help make up part of
the difference in
wages between their
old job and a
temporary, lower
paid one while they
receive retraining
that will help them
find secure new
employment at a
decent wage.
Education is the
civil rights issue
of this century.
Equal access to
public education has
been gained. But
what is the value of
access to a failing
school? We need to
shake up failed
school bureaucracies
with competition,
empower parents with
choice, remove
barriers to
qualified
instructors, attract
and reward good
teachers, and help
bad teachers find
another line of
work.
When a public school
fails to meet its
obligations to
students, parents
deserve a choice in
the education of
their children. And
I intend to give it
to them. Some may
choose a better
public school. Some
may choose a private
one. Many will
choose a charter
school. But they
will have that
choice and their
children will have
that opportunity.
Senator Obama wants
our schools to
answer to unions and
entrenched
bureaucracies. I
want schools to
answer to parents
and students. And
when I'm President,
they will.
My fellow Americans,
when I'm President,
we're going to
embark on the most
ambitious national
project in decades.
We are going to stop
sending $700 billion
a year to countries
that don't like us
very much. We will
attack the problem
on every front. We
will produce more
energy at home. We
will drill new wells
offshore, and we'll
drill them now. We
will build more
nuclear power
plants. We will
develop clean coal
technology. We will
increase the use of
wind, tide, solar
and natural gas. We
will encourage the
development and use
of flex fuel, hybrid
and electric
automobiles.
Senator Obama thinks
we can achieve
energy independence
without more
drilling and without
more nuclear power.
But Americans know
better than that. We
must use all
resources and
develop all
technologies
necessary to rescue
our economy from the
damage caused by
rising oil prices
and to restore the
health of our
planet. It's an
ambitious plan, but
Americans are
ambitious by nature,
and we have faced
greater challenges.
It's time for us to
show the world again
how Americans lead.
This great national
cause will create
millions of new
jobs, many in
industries that will
be the engine of our
future prosperity;
jobs that will be
there when your
children enter the
workforce.
Today, the prospect
of a better world
remains within our
reach. But we must
see the threats to
peace and liberty in
our time clearly and
face them, as
Americans before us
did, with
confidence, wisdom
and resolve.
We have dealt a
serious blow to al
Qaeda in recent
years. But they are
not defeated, and
they'll strike us
again if they can.
Iran remains the
chief state sponsor
of terrorism and on
the path to
acquiring nuclear
weapons. Russia's
leaders, rich with
oil wealth and
corrupt with power,
have rejected
democratic ideals
and the obligations
of a responsible
power. They invaded
a small, democratic
neighbor to gain
more control over
the world's oil
supply, intimidate
other neighbors, and
further their
ambitions of
reassembling the
Russian empire. And
the brave people of
Georgia need our
solidarity and
prayers. As
President I will
work to establish
good relations with
Russia so we need
not fear a return of
the Cold War. But we
can't turn a blind
eye to aggression
and international
lawlessness that
threatens the peace
and stability of the
world and the
security of the
American people.
We face many threats
in this dangerous
world, but I'm not
afraid of them. I'm
prepared for them. I
know how the
military works, what
it can do, what it
can do better, and
what it should not
do. I know how the
world works. I know
the good and the
evil in it. I know
how to work with
leaders who share
our dreams of a
freer, safer and
more prosperous
world, and how to
stand up to those
who don't. I know
how to secure the
peace.
When I was five
years old, a car
pulled up in front
of our house. A Navy
officer rolled down
the window, and
shouted at my father
that the Japanese
had bombed Pearl
Harbor. I rarely saw
my father again for
four years. My
grandfather came
home from that same
war exhausted from
the burdens he had
borne, and died the
next day. In
Vietnam, where I
formed the closest
friendships of my
life, some of those
friends never came
home with me. I hate
war. It is terrible
beyond imagination.
I'm running for
President to keep
the country I love
safe, and prevent
other families from
risking their loved
ones in war as my
family has. I will
draw on all my
experience with the
world and its
leaders, and all the
tools at our
disposal --
diplomatic,
economic, military
and the power of our
ideals -- to build
the foundations for
a stable and
enduring peace.
In America, we
change things that
need to be changed.
Each generation
makes its
contribution to our
greatness. The work
that is ours to do
is plainly before
us. We don't need to
search for it.
We need to change
the way government
does almost
everything: from the
way we protect our
security to the way
we compete in the
world economy; from
the way we respond
to disasters to the
way we fuel our
transportation
network; from the
way we train our
workers to the way
we educate our
children. All these
functions of
government were
designed before the
rise of the global
economy, the
information
technology
revolution and the
end of the Cold War.
We have to catch up
to history, and we
have to change the
way we do business
in Washington.
The constant
partisan rancor that
stops us from
solving these
problems isn't a
cause, it's a
symptom. It's what
happens when people
go to Washington to
work for themselves
and not you.
Again and again,
I've worked with
members of both
parties to fix
problems that need
to be fixed. That's
how I will govern as
President. I will
reach out my hand to
anyone to help me
get this country
moving again. I have
that record and the
scars to prove it.
Senator Obama does
not.
Instead of rejecting
good ideas because
we didn't think of
them first, let's
use the best ideas
from both sides.
Instead of fighting
over who gets the
credit, let's try
sharing it. This
amazing country can
do anything we put
our minds to. I will
ask Democrats and
Independents to
serve with me. And
my administration
will set a new
standard for
transparency and
accountability.
We're going to
finally start
getting things done
for the people who
are counting on us,
and I won't care who
gets the credit.
I've been an
imperfect servant of
my country for many
years. But I have
been her servant
first, last and
always. And I've
never lived a day,
in good times or
bad, that I didn't
thank God for the
privilege.
Long ago, something
unusual happened to
me that taught me
the most valuable
lesson of my life. I
was blessed by
misfortune. I mean
that sincerely. I
was blessed because
I served in the
company of heroes,
and I witnessed a
thousand acts of
courage, compassion
and love.
On an October
morning, in the Gulf
of Tonkin, I
prepared for my 23rd
mission over North
Vietnam. I hadn't
any worry I wouldn't
come back safe and
sound. I thought I
was tougher than
anyone. I was pretty
independent then,
too. I liked to bend
a few rules, and
pick a few fights
for the fun of it.
But I did it for my
own pleasure; my own
pride. I didn't
think there was a
cause more important
than me.
Then I found myself
falling toward the
middle of a small
lake in the city of
Hanoi, with two
broken arms, a
broken leg, and an
angry crowd waiting
to greet me. I was
dumped in a dark
cell, and left to
die. I didn't feel
so tough anymore.
When they discovered
my father was an
admiral, they took
me to a hospital.
They couldn't set my
bones properly, so
they just slapped a
cast on me. When I
didn't get better,
and was down to
about a hundred
pounds, they put me
in a cell with two
other Americans. I
couldn't do
anything. I couldn't
even feed myself.
They did it for me.
I was beginning to
learn the limits of
my selfish
independence. Those
men saved my life.
I was in solitary
confinement when my
captors offered to
release me. I knew
why. If I went home,
they would use it as
propaganda to
demoralize my fellow
prisoners. Our Code
said we could only
go home in the order
of our capture, and
there were men who
had been shot down
before me. I thought
about it, though. I
wasn't in great
shape, and I missed
everything about
America. But I
turned it down.
A lot of prisoners
had it worse than I
did. I'd been
mistreated before,
but not as badly as
others. I always
liked to strut a
little after I'd
been roughed up to
show the other guys
I was tough enough
to take it. But
after I turned down
their offer, they
worked me over
harder than they
ever had before. For
a long time. And
they broke me.
When they brought me
back to my cell, I
was hurt and
ashamed, and I
didn't know how I
could face my fellow
prisoners. The good
man in the cell next
door, my friend, Bob
Craner, saved me.
Through taps on a
wall he told me I
had fought as hard
as I could. No man
can always stand
alone. And then he
told me to get back
up and fight again
for our country and
for the men I had
the honor to serve
with. Because every
day they fought for
me.
I fell in love with
my country when I
was a prisoner in
someone else's. I
loved it not just
for the many
comforts of life
here. I loved it for
its decency; for its
faith in the wisdom,
justice and goodness
of its people. I
loved it because it
was not just a
place, but an idea,
a cause worth
fighting for. I was
never the same
again. I wasn't my
own man anymore. I
was my country's.
I'm not running for
president because I
think I'm blessed
with such personal
greatness that
history has anointed
me to save our
country in its hour
of need. My country
saved me. My country
saved me, and I
cannot forget it.
And I will fight for
her for as long as I
draw breath, so help
me God.
If you find faults
with our country,
make it a better
one. If you're
disappointed with
the mistakes of
government, join its
ranks and work to
correct them. Enlist
in our Armed Forces.
Become a teacher.
Enter the ministry.
Run for public
office. Feed a
hungry child. Teach
an illiterate adult
to read. Comfort the
afflicted. Defend
the rights of the
oppressed. Our
country will be the
better, and you will
be the happier.
Because nothing
brings greater
happiness in life
than to serve a
cause greater than
yourself.
I'm going to fight
for my cause every
day as your
President. I'm going
to fight to make
sure every American
has every reason to
thank God, as I
thank Him: that I'm
an American, a proud
citizen of the
greatest country on
earth, and with hard
work, strong faith
and a little
courage, great
things are always
within our reach.
Fight with me. Fight
with me.
Fight for what's
right for our
country.
Fight for the ideals
and character of a
free people.
Fight for our
children's future.
Fight for justice
and opportunity for
all.
Stand up to defend
our country from its
enemies.
Stand up for each
other; for
beautiful, blessed,
bountiful America.
Stand up, stand up,
stand up and fight.
Nothing is
inevitable here.
We're Americans, and
we never give up. We
never quit. We never
hide from history.
We make history.
Thank you, and God
Bless you.
Remarks by Alaska
Governor Sarah Palin
Vice Presidential
Nominee To Address
the 2008 Republican
National Convention
SAINT PAUL,
Minn. - This evening
Alaska Gov. Sarah
Palin, the
Republican Party's
vice presidential
nominee, will
address the 2008
Republican National
Convention. The
governor's remarks,
as prepared for
delivery, are below.
Alaska Gov. Sarah
Palin
Mr. Chairman,
delegates, and
fellow citizens: I
am honored to be
considered for the
nomination for Vice
President of the
United States...
I accept the call to
help our nominee for
president to serve
and defend America.
I accept the
challenge of a tough
fight in this
election... against
confident opponents
... at a crucial
hour for our
country.
And I accept the
privilege of serving
with a man who has
come through much
harder missions ...
and met far graver
challenges ... and
knows how tough
fights are won - the
next president of
the United States,
John S. McCain.
It was just a year
ago when all the
experts in
Washington counted
out our nominee
because he refused
to hedge his
commitment to the
security of the
country he loves.
With their usual
certitude, they told
us that all was lost
- there was no hope
for this candidate
who said that he
would rather lose an
election than see
his country lose a
war.
But the pollsters
and pundits
overlooked just one
thing when they
wrote him off.
They overlooked the
caliber of the man
himself - the
determination,
resolve, and sheer
guts of Senator John
McCain. The voters
knew better.
And maybe that's
because they realize
there is a time for
politics and a time
for leadership ... a
time to campaign and
a time to put our
country first.
Our nominee for
president is a true
profile in courage,
and people like that
are hard to come by.
He's a man who wore
the uniform of this
country for 22
years, and refused
to break faith with
those troops in Iraq
who have now brought
victory within
sight.
And as the mother of
one of those troops,
that is exactly the
kind of man I want
as commander in
chief. I'm just one
of many moms who'll
say an extra prayer
each night for our
sons and daughters
going into harm's
way.
Our son Track is 19.
And one week from
tomorrow - September
11th - he'll deploy
to Iraq with the
Army infantry in the
service of his
country.
My nephew Kasey also
enlisted, and serves
on a carrier in the
Persian Gulf.
My family is proud
of both of them and
of all the fine men
and women serving
the country in
uniform. Track is
the eldest of our
five children.
In our family, it's
two boys and three
girls in between -
my strong and
kind-hearted
daughters Bristol,
Willow, and Piper.
And in April, my
husband Todd and I
welcomed our
littlest one into
the world, a
perfectly beautiful
baby boy named Trig.
From the inside, no
family ever seems
typical.
That's how it is
with us.
Our family has the
same ups and downs
as any other ... the
same challenges and
the same joys.
Sometimes even the
greatest joys bring
challenge.
And children with
special needs
inspire a special
love.
To the families of
special-needs
children all across
this country, I have
a message: For
years, you sought to
make America a more
welcoming place for
your sons and
daughters.
I pledge to you that
if we are elected,
you will have a
friend and advocate
in the White House.
Todd is a story all
by himself.
He's a lifelong
commercial fisherman
... a production
operator in the oil
fields of Alaska's
North Slope ... a
proud member of the
United Steel
Workers' Union ...
and world champion
snow machine racer.
Throw in his Yup'ik
Eskimo ancestry, and
it all makes for
quite a package.
We met in high
school, and two
decades and five
children later he's
still my guy. My Mom
and Dad both worked
at the elementary
school in our small
town.
And among the many
things I owe them is
one simple lesson:
that this is
America, and every
woman can walk
through every door
of opportunity.
My parents are here
tonight, and I am so
proud to be the
daughter of Chuck
and Sally Heath.
Long ago, a young
farmer and habber-dasher
from Missouri
followed an unlikely
path to the vice
presidency.
A writer observed:
"We grow good people
in our small towns,
with honesty,
sincerity, and
dignity." I know
just the kind of
people that writer
had in mind when he
praised Harry
Truman.
I grew up with those
people.
They are the ones
who do some of the
hardest work in
America ... who grow
our food, run our
factories, and fight
our wars.
They love their
country, in good
times and bad, and
they're always proud
of America. I had
the privilege of
living most of my
life in a small
town.
I was just your
average hockey mom,
and signed up for
the PTA because I
wanted to make my
kids' public
education better.
When I ran for city
council, I didn't
need focus groups
and voter profiles
because I knew those
voters, and knew
their families, too.
Before I became
governor of the
great state of
Alaska, I was mayor
of my hometown.
And since our
opponents in this
presidential
election seem to
look down on that
experience, let me
explain to them what
the job involves.
I guess a small-town
mayor is sort of
like a "community
organizer," except
that you have actual
responsibilities. I
might add that in
small towns, we
don't quite know
what to make of a
candidate who
lavishes praise on
working people when
they are listening,
and then talks about
how bitterly they
cling to their
religion and guns
when those people
aren't listening.
We tend to prefer
candidates who don't
talk about us one
way in Scranton and
another way in San
Francisco.
As for my running
mate, you can be
certain that
wherever he goes,
and whoever is
listening, John
McCain is the same
man. I'm not a
member of the
permanent political
establishment.< br>
And I've learned
quickly, these past
few days, that if
you're not a member
in good standing of
the Washington
elite, then some in
the media consider a
candidate
unqualified for that
reason alone.
But here's a little
news flash for all
those reporters and
commentators: I'm
not going to
Washington to seek
their good opinion -
I'm going to
Washington to serve
the people of this
country. Americans
expect us to go to
Washington for the
right reasons, and
not just to mingle
with the right
people.
Politics isn't just
a game of clashing
parties and
competing interests.
The right reason is
to challenge the
status quo, to serve
the common good, and
to leave this nation
better than we found
it.
No one expects us to
agree on everything.
But we are expected
to govern with
integrity, good
will, clear
convictions, and ...
a servant's heart.
I pledge to all
Americans that I
will carry myself in
this spirit as vice
president of the
United States. This
was the spirit that
brought me to the
governor's office,
when I took on the
old politics as
usual in Juneau ...
when I stood up to
the special
interests, the
lobbyists, big oil
companies, and the
good-ol' boys
network.
Sudden and
relentless reform
never sits well with
entrenched interests
and power brokers.
That's why true
reform is so hard to
achieve.
But with the support
of the citizens of
Alaska, we shook
things up.
And in short order
we put the
government of our
state back on the
side of the people.
I came to office
promising major
ethics reform, to
end the culture of
self-dealing. And
today, that ethics
reform is the law.
While I was at it, I
got rid of a few
things in the
governor's office
that I didn't
believe our citizens
should have to pay
for.
That luxury jet was
over the top. I put
it on eBay.
I also drive myself
to work.
And I thought we
could muddle through
without the
governor's personal
chef - although I've
got to admit that
sometimes my kids
sure miss her. I
came to office
promising to control
spending - by
request if possible
and by veto if
necessary.
Senator McCain also
promises to use the
power of veto in
defense of the
public interest -
and as a chief
executive, I can
assure you it works.
Our state budget is
under control.
We have a surplus.
And I have protected
the taxpayers by
vetoing wasteful
spending: nearly
half a billion
dollars in vetoes.
I suspended the
state fuel tax, and
championed reform to
end the abuses of
earmark spending by
Congress.
I told the Congress
"thanks, but no
thanks," for that
Bridge to Nowhere.
If our state wanted
a bridge, we'd build
it ourselves. When
oil and gas prices
went up
dramatically, and
filled up the state
treasury, I sent a
large share of that
revenue back where
it belonged -
directly to the
people of Alaska.
And despite fierce
opposition from oil
company lobbyists,
who kind of liked
things the way they
were, we broke their
monopoly on power
and resources.
As governor, I
insisted on
competition and
basic fairness to
end their control of
our state and return
it to the people.
I fought to bring
about the largest
private-sector
infrastructure
project in North
American history.
And when that deal
was struck, we began
a nearly forty
billion dollar
natural gas pipeline
to help lead America
to energy
independence.
That pipeline, when
the last section is
laid and its valves
are opened, will
lead America one
step farther away
from dependence on
dangerous foreign
powers that do not
have our interests
at heart.
The stakes for our
nation could not be
higher.
When a hurricane
strikes in the Gulf
of Mexico, this
country should not
be so dependent on
imported oil that we
are forced to draw
from our Strategic
Petroleum Reserve.
And families cannot
throw away more and
more of their
paychecks on gas and
heating oil.
With Russia wanting
to control a vital
pipeline in the
Caucasus, and to
divide and
intimidate our
European allies by
using energy as a
weapon, we cannot
leave ourselves at
the mercy of foreign
suppliers.
To confront the
threat that Iran
might seek to cut
off nearly a fifth
of world energy
supplies ... or that
terrorists might
strike again at the
Abqaiq facility in
Saudi Arabia ... or
that Venezuela might
shut off its oil
deliveries ... we
Americans need to
produce more of our
own oil and gas.
And take it from a
gal who knows the
North Slope of
Alaska: we've got
lots of both.
Our opponents say,
again and again,
that drilling will
not solve all of
America's energy
problems - as if we
all didn't know that
already.
But the fact that
drilling won't solve
every problem is no
excuse to do nothing
at all.
Starting in January,
in a McCain-Palin
administration,
we're going to lay
more pipelines ...
build more new-clear
plants ... create
jobs with clean coal
... and move forward
on solar, wind,
geothermal, and
other alternative
sources.
We need American
energy resources,
brought to you by
American ingenuity,
and produced by
American workers.
I've noticed a
pattern with our
opponent.
Maybe you have, too.
We've all heard his
dramatic speeches
before devoted
followers.
And there is much to
like and admire
about our opponent.
But listening to him
speak, it's easy to
forget that this is
a man who has
authored two memoirs
but not a single
major law or reform
- not even in the
state senate.
This is a man who
can give an entire
speech about the
wars America is
fighting, and never
use the word
"victory" except
when he's talking
about his own
campaign. But when
the cloud of
rhetoric has passed
... when the roar of
the crowd fades away
... when the stadium
lights go out, and
those Styrofoam
Greek columns are
hauled back to some
studio lot - what
exactly is our
opponent's plan?
What does he
actually seek to
accomplish, after
he's done turning
back the waters and
healing the planet?
The answer is to
make government
bigger ... take more
of your money ...
give you more orders
from Washington ...
and to reduce the
strength of America
in a dangerous
world. America needs
more energy ... our
opponent is against
producing it.
Victory in Iraq is
finally in sight ...
he wants to forfeit.
Terrorist states are
seeking new-clear
weapons without
delay ... he wants
to meet them without
preconditions.
Al Qaeda terrorists
still plot to
inflict catastrophic
harm on America ...
he's worried that
someone won't read
them their rights?
Government is too
big ... he wants to
grow it.
Congress spends too
much ... he promises
more.
Taxes are too high
... he wants to
raise them. His tax
increases are the
fine print in his
economic plan, and
let me be specific.
The Democratic
nominee for
president supports
plans to raise
income taxes ...
raise payroll taxes
... raise investment
income taxes ...
raise the death tax
... raise business
taxes ... and
increase the tax
burden on the
American people by
hundreds of billions
of dollars. My
sister Heather and
her husband have
just built a service
station that's now
opened for business
- like millions of
others who run small
businesses.
How are they going
to be any better off
if taxes go up? Or
maybe you're trying
to keep your job at
a plant in Michigan
or Ohio ... or
create jobs with
clean coal from
Pennsylvania or West
Virginia ... or keep
a small farm in the
family right here in
Minnesota.
How are you going to
be better off if our
opponent adds a
massive tax burden
to the American
economy? Here's how
I look at the choice
Americans face in
this election.
In politics, there
are some candidates
who use change to
promote their
careers.
And then there are
those, like John
McCain, who use
their careers to
promote change.
They're the ones
whose names appear
on laws and landmark
reforms, not just on
buttons and banners,
or on self-designed
presidential seals.
Among politicians,
there is the
idealism of
high-flown
speechmaking, in
which crowds are
stirringly summoned
to support great
things.
And then there is
the idealism of
those leaders, like
John McCain, who
actually do great
things. They're the
ones who are good
for more than talk
... the ones we have
always been able to
count on to serve
and defend America.
Senator McCain's
record of actual
achievement and
reform helps explain
why so many special
interests,
lobbyists, and
comfortable
committee chairmen
in Congress have
fought the prospect
of a McCain
presidency - from
the primary election
of 2000 to this very
day.
Our nominee doesn't
run with the
Washington herd.
He's a man who's
there to serve his
country, and not
just his party.
A leader who's not
looking for a fight,
but is not afraid of
one either. Harry
Reid, the Majority
Leader of the
current do-nothing
Senate, not long ago
summed up his
feelings about our
nominee.
He said, quote, "I
can't stand John
McCain." Ladies and
gentlemen, perhaps
no accolade we hear
this week is better
proof that we've
chosen the right
man. Clearly what
the Majority Leader
was driving at is
that he can't stand
up to John McCain.
That is only one
more reason to take
the maverick of the
Senate and put him
in the White House.
My fellow citizens,
the American
presidency is not
supposed to be a
journey of "personal
discovery." This
world of threats and
dangers is not just
a community, and it
doesn't just need an
organizer.
And though both
Senator Obama and
Senator Biden have
been going on lately
about how they are
always, quote,
"fighting for you,"
let us face the
matter squarely.
There is only one
man in this election
who has ever really
fought for you ...
in places where
winning means
survival and defeat
means death ... and
that man is John
McCain. In our day,
politicians have
readily shared much
lesser tales of
adversity than the
nightmare world in
which this man, and
others equally
brave, served and
suffered for their
country.
It's a long way from
the fear and pain
and squalor of a
six-by-four cell in
Hanoi to the Oval
Office.
But if Senator
McCain is elected
president, that is
the journey he will
have made.
It's the journey of
an upright and
honorable man - the
kind of fellow whose
name you will find
on war memorials in
small towns across
this country, only
he was among those
who came home.
To the most powerful
office on earth, he
would bring the
compassion that
comes from having
once been powerless
... the wisdom that
comes even to the
captives, by the
grace of God ... the
special confidence
of those who have
seen evil, and seen
how evil is
overcome. A fellow
prisoner of war, a
man named Tom Moe of
Lancaster, Ohio,
recalls looking
through a pin-hole
in his cell door as
Lieutenant Commander
John McCain was led
down the hallway, by
the guards, day
after day.
As the story is
told, "When McCain
shuffled back from
torturous
interrogations, he
would turn toward
Moe's door and flash
a grin and thumbs
up" - as if to say,
"We're going to pull
through this." My
fellow Americans,
that is the kind of
man America needs to
see us through these
next four years.
For a season, a
gifted speaker can
inspire with his
words.
For a lifetime, John
McCain has inspired
with his deeds.
If character is the
measure in this
election ... and
hope the theme ...
and change the goal
we share, then I ask
you to join our
cause. Join our
cause and help
America elect a
great man as the
next president of
the United States.
Thank you all, and
may God bless
America.
Source: John
McCain 2008 |
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