MITT ROMNEY
DELIVERS REMARKS
TO THE
REPUBLICAN
NATIONAL
CONVENTION
Boston, MA –
Mitt Romney
today delivered
remarks to the
Republican
National
Convention in
Tampa, Florida.
The following
remarks were
prepared for
delivery:
Mr. Chairman,
delegates. I
accept your
nomination for
President of the
United States of
America.
I do so with
humility, deeply
moved by the
trust you have
placed in me. It
is a great
honor. It is an
even greater
responsibility.
Tonight I am
asking you to
join me to walk
together to a
better future.
By my side, I
have chosen a
man with a big
heart from a
small town. He
represents the
best of America,
a man who will
always make us
proud – my
friend and
America’s next
Vice President,
Paul Ryan.
In the days
ahead, you will
get to know Paul
and Janna
better. But last
night America
got to see what
I saw in Paul
Ryan – a strong
and caring
leader who is
down to earth
and confident in
the challenge
this moment
demands.
I love the way
he lights up
around his kids
and how he's not
embarrassed to
show the world
how much he
loves his mom.
But Paul, I
still like the
playlist on my
iPod better than
yours.
Four years ago,
I know that many
Americans felt a
fresh excitement
about the
possibilities of
a new president.
That president
was not the
choice of our
party but
Americans always
come together
after elections.
We are a good
and generous
people who are
united by so
much more than
what divides us.
When that hard
fought election
was over, when
the yard signs
came down and
the television
commercials
finally came off
the air,
Americans were
eager to go back
to work, to live
our lives the
way Americans
always have –
optimistic and
positive and
confident in the
future.
That very
optimism is
uniquely
American.
It is what
brought us to
America. We are
a nation of
immigrants. We
are the children
and
grandchildren
and
great-grandchildren
of the ones who
wanted a better
life, the driven
ones, the ones
who woke up at
night hearing
that voice
telling them
that life in
that place
called America
could be better.
They came not
just in pursuit
of the riches of
this world but
for the richness
of this life.
Freedom.
Freedom of
religion.
Freedom to speak
their mind.
Freedom to build
a life.
And yes, freedom
to build a
business. With
their own hands.
This is the
essence of the
American
experience.
We Americans
have always felt
a special
kinship with the
future.
When every new
wave of
immigrants
looked up and
saw the Statue
of Liberty, or
knelt down and
kissed the
shores of
freedom just
ninety miles
from Castro’s
tyranny, these
new Americans
surely had many
questions. But
none doubted
that here in
America they
could build a
better life,
that in America
their children
would be more
blessed than
they.
But today, four
years from the
excitement of
the last
election, for
the first time,
the majority of
Americans now
doubt that our
children will
have a better
future.
It is not what
we were
promised.
Every family in
America wanted
this to be a
time when they
could get ahead
a little more,
put aside a
little more for
college, do more
for their
elderly mom
who’s living
alone now or
give a little
more to their
church or
charity.
Every small
business wanted
these to be
their best years
ever, when they
could hire more,
do more for
those who had
stuck with them
through the hard
times, open a
new store or
sponsor that
Little League
team.
Every new
college graduate
thought they'd
have a good job
by now, a place
of their own,
and that they
could start
paying back some
of their loans
and build for
the future.
This is when our
nation was
supposed to
start paying
down the
national debt
and rolling back
those massive
deficits.
This was the
hope and change
America voted
for.
It’s not just
what we wanted.
It’s not just
what we
expected.
It’s what
Americans
deserved.
You deserved it
because during
these years, you
worked harder
than ever
before. You
deserved it
because when it
cost more to
fill up your
car, you cut out
movie nights and
put in longer
hours. Or when
you lost that
job that paid
$22.50 an hour
with benefits,
you took two
jobs at 9 bucks
an hour and
fewer benefits.
You did it
because your
family depended
on you. You did
it because
you’re an
American and you
don’t quit. You
did it because
it was what you
had to do.
But driving home
late from that
second job, or
standing there
watching the gas
pump hit 50
dollars and
still going,
when the realtor
told you that to
sell your house
you’d have to
take a big loss,
in those moments
you knew that
this just wasn’t
right.
But what could
you do? Except
work harder, do
with less, try
to stay
optimistic. Hug
your kids a
little longer;
maybe spend a
little more time
praying that
tomorrow would
be a better day.
I wish President
Obama had
succeeded
because I want
America to
succeed. But his
promises gave
way to
disappointment
and division.
This isn't
something we
have to accept.
Now is the
moment when we
CAN do
something. With
your help we
will do
something.
Now is the
moment when we
can stand up and
say, “I’m an
American. I make
my destiny. And
we deserve
better! My
children deserve
better! My
family deserves
better. My
country deserves
better!”
So here we
stand. Americans
have a choice. A
decision.
To make that
choice, you need
to know more
about me and
about where I
will lead our
country.
I was born in
the middle of
the century in
the middle of
the country, a
classic baby
boomer. It was a
time when
Americans were
returning from
war and eager to
work. To be an
American was to
assume that all
things were
possible. When
President
Kennedy
challenged
Americans to go
to the moon, the
question wasn’t
whether we'd get
there, it was
only when we'd
get there.
The soles of
Neil Armstrong's
boots on the
moon made
permanent
impressions on
OUR souls and in
our national
psyche. Ann and
I watched those
steps together
on her parent's
sofa. Like all
Americans we
went to bed that
night knowing we
lived in the
greatest country
in the history
of the world.
God bless Neil
Armstrong.
Tonight that
American flag is
still there on
the moon. And I
don't doubt for
a second that
Neil Armstrong's
spirit is still
with us: that
unique blend of
optimism,
humility and the
utter confidence
that when the
world needs
someone to do
the really big
stuff, you need
an American.
That's how I was
brought up.
My dad had been
born in Mexico
and his family
had to leave
during the
Mexican
revolution. I
grew up with
stories of his
family being fed
by the US
Government as
war refugees. My
dad never made
it through
college and
apprenticed as a
lath and plaster
carpenter. And
he had big
dreams. He
convinced my
mom, a beautiful
young actress,
to give up
Hollywood to
marry him. He
moved to
Detroit, led a
great automobile
company and
became Governor
of the Great
State of
Michigan.
We were Mormons
and growing up
in Michigan;
that might have
seemed unusual
or out of place
but I really
don’t remember
it that way. My
friends cared
more about what
sports teams we
followed than
what church we
went to.
My mom and dad
gave their kids
the greatest
gift of all –
the gift of
unconditional
love. They cared
deeply about who
we would BE, and
much less about
what we would
DO.
Unconditional
love is a gift
that Ann and I
have tried to
pass on to our
sons and now to
our
grandchildren.
All the laws and
legislation in
the world will
never heal this
world like the
loving hearts
and arms of
mothers and
fathers. If
every child
could drift to
sleep feeling
wrapped in the
love of their
family – and
God’s love --
this world would
be a far more
gentle and
better place.
Mom and Dad were
married 64
years. And if
you wondered
what their
secret was, you
could have asked
the local
florist –
because every
day Dad gave Mom
a rose, which he
put on her
bedside table.
That's how she
found out what
happened on the
day my father
died – she went
looking for him
because that
morning, there
was no rose.
My mom and dad
were true
partners, a life
lesson that
shaped me by
everyday
example. When my
mom ran for the
Senate, my dad
was there for
her every step
of the way. I
can still hear
her saying in
her beautiful
voice, “Why
should women
have any less
say than men,
about the great
decisions facing
our nation?”
I wish she could
have been here
at the
convention and
heard leaders
like Governor
Mary Fallin,
Governor Nikki
Haley, Governor
Susana Martinez,
Senator Kelly
Ayotte and
Secretary of
State
Condoleezza
Rice.
As Governor of
Massachusetts, I
chose a woman
Lt. Governor, a
woman chief of
staff, half of
my cabinet and
senior officials
were women, and
in business, I
mentored and
supported great
women leaders
who went on to
run great
companies.
I grew up in
Detroit in love
with cars and
wanted to be a
car guy, like my
dad. But by the
time I was out
of school, I
realized that I
had to go out on
my own, that if
I stayed around
Michigan in the
same business,
I’d never really
know if I was
getting a break
because of my
dad. I wanted to
go someplace new
and prove
myself.
Those weren’t
the easiest of
days – too many
long hours and
weekends
working, five
young sons who
seemed to have
this need to
re-enact a
different world
war every night.
But if you ask
Ann and I what
we’d give, to
break up just
one more fight
between the
boys, or wake up
in the morning
and discover a
pile of kids
asleep in our
room. Well,
every mom and
dad knows the
answer to that.
Those days were
toughest on Ann,
of course. She
was heroic. Five
boys, with our
families a long
way away. I had
to travel a lot
for my job then
and I’d call and
try to offer
support. But
every mom knows
that doesn't
help get the
homework done or
the kids out the
door to school.
I knew that her
job as a mom was
harder than
mine. And I knew
without
question, that
her job as a mom
was a lot more
important than
mine. And as
America saw
Tuesday night,
Ann would have
succeeded at
anything she
wanted to.
Like a lot of
families in a
new place with
no family, we
found kinship
with a wide
circle of
friends through
our church. When
we were new to
the community it
was welcoming
and as the years
went by, it was
a joy to help
others who had
just moved to
town or just
joined our
church. We had
remarkably
vibrant and
diverse
congregants from
all walks of
life and many
who were new to
America. We
prayed together,
our kids played
together and we
always stood
ready to help
each other out
in different
ways.
And that’s how
it is in
America. We look
to our
communities, our
faiths, our
families for our
joy, our
support, in good
times and bad.
It is both how
we live our
lives and why we
live our lives.
The strength and
power and
goodness of
America has
always been
based on the
strength and
power and
goodness of our
communities, our
families, our
faiths.
That is the
bedrock of what
makes America,
America. In our
best days, we
can feel the
vibrancy of
America’s
communities,
large and small.
It’s when we see
that new
business opening
up downtown.
It’s when we go
to work in the
morning and see
everybody else
on our block
doing the same.
It’s when our
son or daughter
calls from
college to talk
about which job
offer they
should take….and
you try not to
choke up when
you hear that
the one they
like is not far
from home.
It’s that good
feeling when you
have more time
to volunteer to
coach your kid’s
soccer team, or
help out on
school trips.
But for too many
Americans, these
good days are
harder to come
by. How many
days have you
woken up feeling
that something
really special
was happening in
America?
Many of you felt
that way on
Election Day
four years ago.
Hope and Change
had a powerful
appeal. But
tonight I'd ask
a simple
question: If you
felt that
excitement when
you voted for
Barack Obama,
shouldn’t you
feel that way
now that he’s
President Obama?
You know there’s
something wrong
with the kind of
job he’s done as
president when
the best feeling
you had was the
day you voted
for him.
The President
hasn’t
disappointed you
because he
wanted to. The
President has
disappointed
America because
he hasn’t led
America in the
right direction.
He took office
without the
basic
qualification
that most
Americans have
and one that was
essential to his
task. He had
almost no
experience
working in a
business. Jobs
to him are about
government.
I learned the
real lessons
about how
America works
from experience.
When I was 37, I
helped start a
small company.
My partners and
I had been
working for a
company that was
in the business
of helping other
businesses.
So some of us
had this idea
that if we
really believed
our advice was
helping
companies, we
should invest in
companies. We
should bet on
ourselves and on
our advice.
So we started a
new business
called Bain
Capital. The
only problem
was, while WE
believed in
ourselves,
nobody else did.
We were young
and had never
done this before
and we almost
didn’t get off
the ground. In
those days,
sometimes I
wondered if I
had made a
really big
mistake. I had
thought about
asking my
church’s pension
fund to invest,
but I didn't. I
figured it was
bad enough that
I might lose my
investors’
money, but I
didn’t want to
go to hell too.
Shows what I
know. Another of
my partners got
the Episcopal
Church pension
fund to invest.
Today there are
a lot of happy
retired priests
who should thank
him.
That business we
started with 10
people has now
grown into a
great American
success story.
Some of the
companies we
helped start are
names you know.
An office supply
company called
Staples – where
I'm pleased to
see the Obama
campaign has
been shopping;
The Sports
Authority, which
became a
favorite of my
sons. We started
an early
childhood
learning center
called Bright
Horizons that
First Lady
Michelle Obama
rightly praised.
At a time when
nobody thought
we'd ever see a
new steel mill
built in
America, we took
a chance and
built one in a
corn field in
Indiana. Today
Steel Dynamics
is one of the
largest steel
producers in the
United States.
These are
American success
stories. And yet
the centerpiece
of the
President’s
entire
re-election
campaign is
attacking
success. Is it
any wonder that
someone who
attacks success
has led the
worst economic
recovery since
the Great
Depression? In
America, we
celebrate
success, we
don't apologize
for it.
We weren’t
always
successful at
Bain. But no one
ever is in the
real world of
business.
That’s what this
President
doesn’t seem to
understand.
Business and
growing jobs is
about taking
risk, sometimes
failing,
sometimes
succeeding, but
always striving.
It is about
dreams. Usually,
it doesn't work
out exactly as
you might have
imagined. Steve
Jobs was fired
at Apple. He
came back and
changed the
world.
It’s the genius
of the American
free enterprise
system – to
harness the
extraordinary
creativity and
talent and
industry of the
American people
with a system
that is
dedicated to
creating
tomorrow’s
prosperity
rather than
trying to
redistribute
today's.
That is why
every president
since the Great
Depression who
came before the
American people
asking for a
second term
could look back
at the last four
years and say
with
satisfaction:
"you are better
off today than
you were four
years ago."
Except Jimmy
Carter. And
except this
president.
This president
can ask us to be
patient.
This president
can tell us it
was someone
else’s fault.
This president
can tell us that
the next four
years he’ll get
it right.
But this
president cannot
tell us that YOU
are better off
today than when
he took office.
America has been
patient.
Americans have
supported this
president in
good faith.
But today, the
time has come to
turn the page.
Today the time
has come for us
to put the
disappointments
of the last four
years behind us.
To put aside the
divisiveness and
the
recriminations.
To forget about
what might have
been and to look
ahead to what
can be.
Now is the time
to restore the
Promise of
America. Many
Americans have
given up on this
president but
they haven’t
ever thought
about giving up.
Not on
themselves. Not
on each other.
And not on
America.
What is needed
in our country
today is not
complicated or
profound. It
doesn't take a
special
government
commission to
tell us what
America needs.
What America
needs is jobs.
Lots of jobs.
In the richest
country in the
history of the
world, this
Obama economy
has crushed the
middle class.
Family income
has fallen by
$4,000, but
health insurance
premiums are
higher, food
prices are
higher, utility
bills are
higher, and
gasoline prices
have doubled.
Today more
Americans wake
up in poverty
than ever
before. Nearly
one out of six
Americans is
living in
poverty. Look
around you.
These are not
strangers. These
are our brothers
and sisters, our
fellow
Americans.
His policies
have not helped
create jobs,
they have
depressed them.
And this I can
tell you about
where President
Obama would take
America:
His plan to
raise taxes on
small business
won't add jobs,
it will
eliminate them;
His assault on
coal and gas and
oil will send
energy and
manufacturing
jobs to China;
His trillion
dollar cuts to
our military
will eliminate
hundreds of
thousands of
jobs, and also
put our security
at greater risk;
His $716 billion
cut to Medicare
to finance
Obamacare will
both hurt
today's seniors,
and depress
innovation – and
jobs – in
medicine.
And his
trillion-dollar
deficits will
slow our
economy,
restrain
employment, and
cause wages to
stall.
To the majority
of Americans who
now believe that
the future will
not be better
than the past, I
can guarantee
you this: if
Barack Obama is
re-elected, you
will be right.
I am running for
president to
help create a
better future. A
future where
everyone who
wants a job can
find one. Where
no senior fears
for the security
of their
retirement. An
America where
every parent
knows that their
child will get
an education
that leads them
to a good job
and a bright
horizon.
And unlike the
President, I
have a plan to
create 12
million new
jobs. It has 5
steps.
First, by 2020,
North America
will be energy
independent by
taking full
advantage of our
oil and coal and
gas and nuclear
and renewables.
Second, we will
give our fellow
citizens the
skills they need
for the jobs of
today and the
careers of
tomorrow. When
it comes to the
school your
child will
attend, every
parent should
have a choice,
and every child
should have a
chance.
Third, we will
make trade work
for America by
forging new
trade
agreements. And
when nations
cheat in trade,
there will be
unmistakable
consequences.
Fourth, to
assure every
entrepreneur and
every job
creator that
their
investments in
America will not
vanish as have
those in Greece,
we will cut the
deficit and put
America on track
to a balanced
budget.
And fifth, we
will champion
SMALL
businesses,
America’s engine
of job growth.
That means
reducing taxes
on business, not
raising them. It
means
simplifying and
modernizing the
regulations that
hurt small
business the
most. And it
means that we
must rein in the
skyrocketing
cost of
healthcare by
repealing and
replacing
Obamacare.
Today, women are
more likely than
men to start a
business. They
need a president
who respects and
understands what
they do.
And let me make
this very clear
– unlike
President Obama,
I will not raise
taxes on the
middle class.
As president, I
will protect the
sanctity of
life. I will
honor the
institution of
marriage. And I
will guarantee
America's first
liberty: the
freedom of
religion.
President Obama
promised to
begin to slow
the rise of the
oceans and heal
the planet. MY
promise...is to
help you and
your family.
I will begin my
presidency with
a jobs tour.
President Obama
began with an
apology tour.
America, he
said, had
dictated to
other nations.
No Mr.
President,
America has
freed other
nations from
dictators.
Every American
was relieved the
day President
Obama gave the
order, and Seal
Team Six took
out Osama bin
Laden. But on
another front,
every American
is less secure
today because he
has failed to
slow Iran's
nuclear threat.
In his first TV
interview as
president, he
said we should
talk to Iran.
We're still
talking, and
Iran’s
centrifuges are
still spinning.
President Obama
has thrown
allies like
Israel under the
bus, even as he
has relaxed
sanctions on
Castro's Cuba.
He abandoned our
friends in
Poland by
walking away
from our missile
defense
commitments, but
is eager to give
Russia's
President Putin
the flexibility
he desires,
after the
election. Under
my
administration,
our friends will
see more
loyalty, and Mr.
Putin will see a
little less
flexibility and
more backbone.
We will honor
America’s
democratic
ideals because a
free world is a
more peaceful
world. This is
the bipartisan
foreign policy
legacy of Truman
and Reagan. And
under my
presidency we
will return to
it once again.
You might have
asked yourself
if these last
years are really
the America we
want, the
America won for
us by the
greatest
generation.
Does the America
we want borrow a
trillion dollars
from China? No.
Does it fail to
find the jobs
that are needed
for 23 million
people and for
half the kids
graduating from
college? No.
Are its schools
lagging behind
the rest of the
developed world?
No.
And does the
America we want
succumb to
resentment and
division? We
know the answer.
The America we
all know has
been a story of
the many
becoming one,
uniting to
preserve
liberty, uniting
to build the
greatest economy
in the world,
uniting to save
the world from
unspeakable
darkness.
Everywhere I go
in America,
there are
monuments that
list those who
have given their
lives for
America. There
is no mention of
their race,
their party
affiliation, or
what they did
for a living.
They lived and
died under a
single flag,
fighting for a
single purpose.
They pledged
allegiance to
the UNITED
States of
America.
That America,
that united
America, can
unleash an
economy that
will put
Americans back
to work, that
will once again
lead the world
with innovation
and
productivity,
and that will
restore every
father and
mother's
confidence that
their children's
future is
brighter even
than the past.
That America,
that united
America, will
preserve a
military that is
so strong, no
nation would
ever dare to
test it.
That America,
that united
America, will
uphold the
constellation of
rights that were
endowed by our
Creator, and
codified in our
Constitution.
That united
America will
care for the
poor and the
sick, will honor
and respect the
elderly, and
will give a
helping hand to
those in need.
That America is
the best within
each of us. That
America we want
for our
children.
If I am elected
President of
these United
States, I will
work with all my
energy and soul
to restore that
America, to lift
our eyes to a
better future.
That future is
our destiny.
That future is
out there. It is
waiting for us.
Our children
deserve it, our
nation depends
upon it, the
peace and
freedom of the
world require
it. And with
your help we
will deliver it.
Let us begin
that future
together
tonight.
PAUL RYAN
DELIVERS REMARKS
TO THE
REPUBLICAN
NATIONAL
CONVENTION
Source:
Mitt Romney 2012
Presidential
Campaign
Committee
Website
Boston, MA –
Paul Ryan today
delivered
remarks to the
Republican
National
Convention in
Tampa, Florida.
The following
remarks were
prepared for
delivery:
Mr. Chairman,
delegates, and
fellow citizens:
I am honored by
the support of
this convention
for vice
president of the
United States.
I accept the
duty to help
lead our nation
out of a jobs
crisis and back
to prosperity –
and I know we
can do this.
I accept the
calling of my
generation to
give our
children the
America that was
given to us,
with opportunity
for the young
and security for
the old – and I
know that we are
ready.
Our nominee is
sure ready. His
whole life has
prepared him for
this moment – to
meet serious
challenges in a
serious way,
without excuses
and idle words.
After four years
of getting the
run-around,
America needs a
turnaround, and
the man for the
job is Governor
Mitt Romney.
I’m the newcomer
to the campaign,
so let me share
a first
impression. I
have never seen
opponents so
silent about
their record,
and so desperate
to keep their
power.
They’ve run out
of ideas. Their
moment came and
went. Fear and
division are all
they’ve got
left.
With all their
attack ads, the
president is
just throwing
away money – and
he’s pretty
experienced at
that. You see,
some people
can’t be dragged
down by the
usual cheap
tactics, because
their ability,
character, and
plain decency
are so obvious –
and ladies and
gentlemen, that
is Mitt Romney.
For my part,
your nomination
is an unexpected
turn. It
certainly came
as news to my
family, and I’d
like you to meet
them: My wife
Janna, our
daughter Liza,
and our boys
Charlie and Sam.
The kids are
happy to see
their grandma,
who lives in
Florida. There
she is – my Mom,
Betty.
My Dad, a
small-town
lawyer, was also
named Paul.
Until we lost
him when I was
16, he was a
gentle presence
in my life. I
like to think
he’d be proud of
me and my sister
and brothers,
because I’m sure
proud of him and
of where I come
from,
Janesville,
Wisconsin.
I live on the
same block where
I grew up. We
belong to the
same parish
where I was
baptized.
Janesville is
that kind of
place.
The people of
Wisconsin have
been good to me.
I’ve tried to
live up to their
trust. And now I
ask those
hardworking men
and women, and
millions like
them across
America, to join
our cause and
get this country
working again.
When Governor
Romney asked me
to join the
ticket, I said,
“Let’s get this
done” – and that
is exactly, what
we’re going to
do.
President Barack
Obama came to
office during an
economic crisis,
as he has
reminded us a
time or two.
Those were very
tough days, and
any fair measure
of his record
has to take that
into account. My
home state voted
for President
Obama. When he
talked about
change, many
people liked the
sound of it,
especially in
Janesville,
where we were
about to lose a
major factory.
A lot of guys I
went to high
school with
worked at that
GM plant. Right
there at that
plant, candidate
Obama said: “I
believe that if
our government
is there to
support you …
this plant will
be here for
another hundred
years.” That’s
what he said in
2008.
Well, as it
turned out, that
plant didn’t
last another
year. It is
locked up and
empty to this
day. And that’s
how it is in so
many towns
today, where the
recovery that
was promised is
nowhere in
sight.
Right now, 23
million men and
women are
struggling to
find work.
Twenty-three
million people,
unemployed or
underemployed.
Nearly one in
six Americans is
living in
poverty.
Millions of
young Americans
have graduated
from college
during the Obama
presidency,
ready to use
their gifts and
get moving in
life. Half of
them can’t find
the work they
studied for, or
any work at all.
So here’s the
question:
Without a change
in leadership,
why would the
next four years
be any different
from the last
four years?
The first
troubling sign
came with the
stimulus. It was
President
Obama’s first
and best shot at
fixing the
economy, at a
time when he got
everything he
wanted under
one-party rule.
It cost $831
billion – the
largest one-time
expenditure ever
by our federal
government.
It went to
companies like
Solyndra, with
their
gold-plated
connections,
subsidized jobs,
and make-believe
markets. The
stimulus was a
case of
political
patronage,
corporate
welfare, and
cronyism at
their worst.
You, the working
men and women of
this country,
were cut out of
the deal.
What did the
taxpayers get
out of the Obama
stimulus? More
debt. That money
wasn’t just
spent and wasted
– it was
borrowed, spent,
and wasted.
Maybe the
greatest waste
of all was time.
Here we were,
faced with a
massive job
crisis – so deep
that if everyone
out of work
stood in single
file, that
unemployment
line would
stretch the
length of the
entire American
continent. You
would think that
any president,
whatever his
party, would
make job
creation, and
nothing else,
his first order
of economic
business.
But this
president didn’t
do that.
Instead, we got
a long,
divisive,
all-or-nothing
attempt to put
the federal
government in
charge of health
care.
Obamacare comes
to more than two
thousand pages
of rules,
mandates, taxes,
fees, and fines
that have no
place in a free
country.
The president
has declared
that the debate
over
government-controlled
health care is
over. That will
come as news to
the millions of
Americans who
will elect Mitt
Romney so we can
repeal Obamacare.
And the biggest,
coldest power
play of all in
Obamacare came
at the expense
of the elderly.
You see, even
with all the
hidden taxes to
pay for the
health care
takeover, even
with new taxes
on nearly a
million small
businesses, the
planners in
Washington still
didn’t have
enough money.
They needed
more. They
needed hundreds
of billions
more. So, they
just took it all
away from
Medicare. Seven
hundred and
sixteen billion
dollars,
funneled out of
Medicare by
President Obama.
An obligation we
have to our
parents and
grandparents is
being
sacrificed, all
to pay for a new
entitlement we
didn’t even ask
for. The
greatest threat
to Medicare is
Obamacare, and
we’re going to
stop it.
In Congress,
when they take
out the heavy
books and wall
charts about
Medicare, my
thoughts go back
to a house on
Garfield Street
in Janesville.
My wonderful
grandma, Janet,
had Alzheimer’s
and moved in
with Mom and me.
Though she felt
lost at times,
we did all the
little things
that made her
feel loved.
We had help from
Medicare, and it
was there, just
like it’s there
for my Mom
today. Medicare
is a promise,
and we will
honor it. A
Romney-Ryan
administration
will protect and
strengthen
Medicare, for my
Mom’s
generation, for
my generation,
and for my kids
and yours.
So our opponents
can consider
themselves on
notice. In this
election, on
this issue, the
usual posturing
on the Left
isn’t going to
work. Mitt
Romney and I
know the
difference
between
protecting a
program, and
raiding it.
Ladies and
gentlemen, our
nation needs
this debate. We
want this
debate. We will
win this debate.
Obamacare, as
much as anything
else, explains
why a presidency
that began with
such
anticipation now
comes to such a
disappointing
close.
It began with a
financial
crisis; it ends
with a job
crisis.
It began with a
housing crisis
they alone
didn’t cause; it
ends with a
housing crisis
they didn’t
correct.
It began with a
perfect Triple-A
credit rating
for the United
States; it ends
with a
downgraded
America.
It all started
off with
stirring
speeches, Greek
columns, the
thrill of
something new.
Now all that’s
left is a
presidency
adrift,
surviving on
slogans that
already seem
tired, grasping
at a moment that
has already
passed, like a
ship trying to
sail on
yesterday’s
wind.
President Obama
was asked not
long ago to
reflect on any
mistakes he
might have made.
He said, well,
“I haven’t
communicated
enough.” He said
his job is to
“tell a story to
the American
people” – as if
that’s the whole
problem here? He
needs to talk
more, and we
need to be
better
listeners?
Ladies and
gentlemen, these
past four years
we have suffered
no shortage of
words in the
White House.
What’s missing
is leadership in
the White House.
And the story
that Barack
Obama does tell,
forever shifting
blame to the
last
administration,
is getting old.
The man assumed
office almost
four years ago –
isn’t it about
time he assumed
responsibility?
In this
generation, a
defining
responsibility
of government is
to steer our
nation clear of
a debt crisis
while there is
still time. Back
in 2008,
candidate Obama
called a $10
trillion
national debt
“unpatriotic” –
serious talk
from what looked
to be a serious
reformer.
Yet by his own
decisions,
President Obama
has added more
debt than any
other president
before him, and
more than all
the troubled
governments of
Europe combined.
One president,
one term, $5
trillion in new
debt.
He created a
bipartisan debt
commission. They
came back with
an urgent
report. He
thanked them,
sent them on
their way, and
then did exactly
nothing.
Republicans
stepped up with
good-faith
reforms and
solutions equal
to the problems.
How did the
president
respond? By
doing nothing –
nothing except
to dodge and
demagogue the
issue.
So here we are,
$16 trillion in
debt and still
he does nothing.
In Europe,
massive debts
have put entire
governments at
risk of
collapse, and
still he does
nothing. And all
we have heard
from this
president and
his team are
attacks on
anyone who dares
to point out the
obvious.
They have no
answer to this
simple reality:
We need to stop
spending money
we don’t have.
My Dad used to
say to me: “Son.
You have a
choice: You can
be part of the
problem, or you
can be part of
the solution.”
The present
administration
has made its
choices. And
Mitt Romney and
I have made
ours: Before the
math and the
momentum
overwhelm us
all, we are
going to solve
this nation’s
economic
problems.
And I’m going to
level with you:
We don’t have
that much time.
But if we are
serious, and
smart, and we
lead, we can do
this.
After four years
of government
trying to divide
up the wealth,
we will get
America creating
wealth again.
With tax
fairness and
regulatory
reform, we’ll
put government
back on the side
of the men and
women who create
jobs, and the
men and women
who need jobs.
My Mom started a
small business,
and I’ve seen
what it takes.
Mom was 50 when
my Dad died. She
got on a bus
every weekday
for years, and
rode 40 miles
each morning to
Madison. She
earned a new
degree and
learned new
skills to start
her small
business. It
wasn’t just a
new livelihood.
It was a new
life. And it
transformed my
Mom from a widow
in grief to a
small
businesswoman
whose happiness
wasn’t just in
the past. Her
work gave her
hope. It made
our family
proud. And to
this day, my Mom
is my role
model.
Behind every
small business,
there’s a story
worth knowing.
All the corner
shops in our
towns and
cities, the
restaurants,
cleaners, gyms,
hair salons,
hardware stores
– these didn’t
come out of
nowhere. A lot
of heart goes
into each one.
And if small
businesspeople
say they made it
on their own,
all they are
saying is that
nobody else
worked seven
days a week in
their place.
Nobody showed up
in their place
to open the door
at five in the
morning. Nobody
did their
thinking, and
worrying, and
sweating for
them. After all
that work, and
in a bad
economy, it sure
doesn’t help to
hear from their
president that
government gets
the credit. What
they deserve to
hear is the
truth: Yes, you
did build that.
We have a plan
for a stronger
middle class,
with the goal of
generating 12
million new jobs
over the next
four years.
In a clean break
from the Obama
years, and
frankly from the
years before
this president,
we will keep
federal spending
at 20 percent of
GDP, or less.
That is enough.
The choice is
whether to put
hard limits on
economic growth,
or hard limits
on the size of
government, and
we choose to
limit
government.
I learned a good
deal about
economics, and
about America,
from the author
of the Reagan
tax reforms –
the great Jack
Kemp. What gave
Jack that
incredible
enthusiasm was
his belief in
the
possibilities of
free people, in
the power of
free enterprise
and strong
communities to
overcome poverty
and despair. We
need that same
optimism right
now.
And in our
dealings with
other nations, a
Romney-Ryan
administration
will speak with
confidence and
clarity.
Wherever men and
women rise up
for their own
freedom, they
will know that
the American
president is on
their side.
Instead of
managing
American
decline, leaving
allies to doubt
us and
adversaries to
test us, we will
act in the
conviction that
the United
States is still
the greatest
force for peace
and liberty that
this world has
ever known.
President Obama
is the kind of
politician who
puts promises on
the record, and
then calls that
the record. But
we are four
years into this
presidency. The
issue is not the
economy as
Barack Obama
inherited it,
not the economy
as he envisions
it, but this
economy as we
are living it.
College
graduates should
not have to live
out their 20s in
their childhood
bedrooms,
staring up at
fading Obama
posters and
wondering when
they can move
out and get
going with life.
Everyone who
feels stuck in
the Obama
economy is right
to focus on the
here and now.
And I hope you
understand this
too, if you’re
feeling left out
or passed by:
You have not
failed, your
leaders have
failed you.
None of us have
to settle for
the best this
administration
offers – a dull,
adventureless
journey from one
entitlement to
the next, a
government-planned
life, a country
where everything
is free but us.
Listen to the
way we’re spoken
to already, as
if everyone is
stuck in some
class or station
in life, victims
of circumstances
beyond our
control, with
government there
to help us cope
with our fate.
It’s the exact
opposite of
everything I
learned growing
up in Wisconsin,
or at college in
Ohio. When I was
waiting tables,
washing dishes,
or mowing lawns
for money, I
never thought of
myself as stuck
in some station
in life. I was
on my own path,
my own journey,
an American
journey where I
could think for
myself, decide
for myself,
define happiness
for myself.
That’s what we
do in this
country. That’s
the American
Dream. That’s
freedom, and
I’ll take it any
day over the
supervision and
sanctimony of
the central
planners.
By themselves,
the failures of
one
administration
are not a
mandate for a
new
administration.
A challenger
must stand on
his own merits.
He must be ready
and worthy to
serve in the
office of
president.
We’re a full
generation
apart, Governor
Romney and I.
And, in some
ways, we’re a
little
different. There
are the songs on
his iPod, which
I’ve heard on
the campaign bus
and on many
hotel elevators.
He actually
urged me to play
some of these
songs at
campaign
rallies. I said,
I hope it’s not
a deal-breaker
Mitt, but my
playlist starts
with AC/DC, and
ends with
Zeppelin.
A generation
apart. That
makes us
different, but
not in any of
the things that
matter. Mitt
Romney and I
both grew up in
the heartland,
and we know what
places like
Wisconsin and
Michigan look
like when times
are good, when
people are
working, when
families are
doing more than
just getting by.
And we both know
it can be that
way again.
We’ve had very
different
careers – mine
mainly in public
service, his
mostly in the
private sector.
He helped start
businesses and
turn around
failing ones. By
the way, being
successful in
business –
that’s a good
thing.
Mitt has not
only succeeded,
but succeeded
where others
could not. He
turned around
the Olympics at
a time when a
great
institution was
collapsing under
the weight of
bad management,
overspending,
and corruption –
sounds familiar,
doesn’t it?
He was the
Republican
governor of a
state where
almost nine in
ten legislators
are Democrats,
and yet he
balanced the
budget without
raising taxes.
Unemployment
went down,
household
incomes went up,
and
Massachusetts,
under Mitt
Romney, saw its
credit rating
upgraded.
Mitt and I also
go to different
churches. But in
any church, the
best kind of
preaching is
done by example.
And I’ve been
watching that
example. The man
who will accept
your nomination
tomorrow is
prayerful and
faithful and
honorable. Not
only a defender
of marriage, he
offers an
example of
marriage at its
best. Not only a
fine
businessman,
he’s a fine man,
worthy of
leading this
optimistic and
good-hearted
country.
Our different
faiths come
together in the
same moral
creed. We
believe that in
every life there
is goodness; for
every person,
there is hope.
Each one of us
was made for a
reason, bearing
the image and
likeness of the
Lord of Life.
We have
responsibilities,
one to another –
we do not each
face the world
alone. And the
greatest of all
responsibilities,
is that of the
strong to
protect the
weak. The truest
measure of any
society is how
it treats those
who cannot
defend or care
for themselves.
Each of these
great moral
ideas is
essential to
democratic
government – to
the rule of law,
to life in a
humane and
decent society.
They are the
moral creed of
our country, as
powerful in our
time, as on the
day of America’s
founding. They
are self-evident
and unchanging,
and sometimes,
even presidents
need reminding,
that our rights
come from nature
and God, not
from government.
The founding
generation
secured those
rights for us,
and in every
generation
since, the best
among us have
defended our
freedoms. They
are protecting
us right now. We
honor them and
all our
veterans, and we
thank them.
The right that
makes all the
difference now,
is the right to
choose our own
leaders. And you
are entitled to
the clearest
possible choice,
because the time
for choosing is
drawing near. So
here is our
pledge.
We will not duck
the tough
issues, we will
lead.
We will not
spend four years
blaming others,
we will take
responsibility.
We will not try
to replace our
founding
principles, we
will reapply our
founding
principles.
The work ahead
will be hard.
These times
demand the best
of us – all of
us, but we can
do this.
Together, we can
do this.
We can get this
country working
again. We can
get this economy
growing again.
We can make the
safety net safe
again. We can do
this.
Whatever your
political party,
let’s come
together for the
sake of our
country. Join
Mitt Romney and
me. Let’s give
this effort
everything we
have. Let’s see
this through all
the way. Let’s
get this done.
Thank you, and
God bless.