Remarks
by Sen. Bernie
Sanders
Waterfront Park,
Burlington,
Vermont
“Thank you
all very much
for being here
and for all the
support that you
have given me
over the years:
as the mayor of
this great city,
as Vermont’s
only congressman
and now as a
U.S. senator.
Thanks also to
my longtime
friends and
fellow
Vermonters Bill
McKibben, Brenda
Torpey, Donna
Bailey, Mike
O’Day and Ben
and Jerry for
all that you do
– and for your
very generous
remarks. Thanks
also to Jenny
Nelson for
moderating this
event and for
your leadership
in Vermont
agriculture.
I also want
to thank my
family: My wife
Jane, my brother
Larry, my
children Levi,
Heather, Carina
and Dave for
their love and
support, and my
seven beautiful
grandchildren –
Sonny, Cole,
Ryleigh,
Grayson, Ella,
Tess and Dylan
who provide so
much joy in my
life.
Today, here in
our small state
– a state that
has led the
nation in so
many ways – I am
proud to
announce my
candidacy for
president of the
United States of
America.
Today, with your
support and the
support of
millions of
people
throughout this
country, we
begin a
political
revolution to
transform our
country
economically,
politically,
socially and
environmentally.
Today,
we stand here
and say loudly
and clearly
that; “Enough is
enough. This
great nation and
its government
belong to all of
the people, and
not to a handful
of billionaires,
their Super-PACs
and their
lobbyists.”
Brothers and
sisters: Now is
not the time for
thinking small.
Now is not the
time for the
same old – same
old
establishment
politics and
stale
inside-the-beltway
ideas.
Now is the time
for millions of
working families
to come
together, to
revitalize
American
democracy, to
end the collapse
of the American
middle class and
to make certain
that our
children and
grandchildren
are able to
enjoy a quality
of life that
brings them
health,
prosperity,
security and joy
– and that once
again makes the
United States
the leader in
the world in the
fight for
economic and
social justice,
for
environmental
sanity and for a
world of peace.
My fellow
Americans: This
country faces
more serious
problems today
than at any time
since the Great
Depression and,
if you include
the planetary
crisis of
climate change,
it may well be
that the
challenges we
face now are
direr than any
time in our
modern history.
Here is my
promise to you
for this
campaign. Not
only will I
fight to protect
the working
families of this
country, but
we’re going to
build a movement
of millions of
Americans who
are prepared to
stand up and
fight back.
We’re going to
take this
campaign
directly to the
people – in town
meetings, door
to door
conversations,
on street
corners and in
social media –
and that’s
BernieSanders.com
by the way. This
week we will be
in New
Hampshire, Iowa
and Minnesota –
and that’s just
the start of a
vigorous
grassroots
campaign.
Let’s be
clear. This
campaign is not
about Bernie
Sanders. It is
not about
Hillary Clinton.
It is not about
Jeb Bush or
anyone else.
This campaign is
about the needs
of the American
people, and the
ideas and
proposals that
effectively
address those
needs. As
someone who has
never run a
negative
political ad in
his life, my
campaign will be
driven by issues
and serious
debate; not
political
gossip, not
reckless
personal attacks
or character
assassination.
This is what I
believe the
American people
want and
deserve. I hope
other candidates
agree, and I
hope the media
allows that to
happen. Politics
in a democratic
society should
not be treated
like a baseball
game, a game
show or a soap
opera. The times
are too serious
for that.
Let me take
a minute to
touch on some of
the issues that
I will be
focusing on in
the coming
months, and then
give you an
outline of an
Agenda for
America which
will, in fact,
deal with these
problems and
lead us to a
better future.
Income
and Wealth
Inequality:
Today, we live
in the
wealthiest
nation in the
history of the
world but that
reality means
very little for
most of us
because almost
all of that
wealth is owned
and controlled
by a tiny
handful of
individuals. In
America we now
have more income
and wealth
inequality than
any other major
country on
earth, and the
gap between the
very rich and
everyone is
wider than at
any time since
the 1920s. The
issue of wealth
and income
inequality is
the great moral
issue of our
time, it is the
great economic
issue of our
time and it is
the great
political issue
of our time. And
we will address
it.
Let
me be very
clear. There is
something
profoundly wrong
when the top
one-tenth of 1
percent owns
almost as much
wealth as the
bottom 90
percent, and
when 99 percent
of all new
income goes to
the top 1
percent. There
is something
profoundly wrong
when, in recent
years, we have
seen a
proliferation of
millionaires and
billionaires at
the same time as
millions of
Americans work
longer hours for
lower wages and
we have the
highest rate of
childhood
poverty of any
major country on
earth. There is
something
profoundly wrong
when one family
owns more wealth
than the bottom
130 million
Americans. This
grotesque level
of inequality is
immoral. It is
bad economics.
It is
unsustainable.
This type of
rigged economy
is not what
America is
supposed to be
about. This has
got to change
and, as your
president,
together we will
change it.
Economics:
But it is not
just income and
wealth
inequality. It
is the tragic
reality that for
the last 40
years the great
middle class of
our country –
once the envy of
the world – has
been
disappearing.
Despite
exploding
technology and
increased worker
productivity,
median family
income is almost
$5,000 less than
it was in 1999.
In Vermont and
throughout this
country it is
not uncommon for
people to be
working two or
three jobs just
to cobble
together enough
income to
survive on and
some health care
benefits.
The truth is
that real
unemployment is
not the 5.4
percent you read
in newspapers.
It is close to
11 percent if
you include
those workers
who have given
up looking for
jobs or who are
working part
time when they
want to work
full time. Youth
unemployment is
over 17 percent
and
African-American
youth
unemployment is
much higher than
that. Today,
shamefully, we
have 45 million
people living in
poverty, many of
whom are working
at low-wage
jobs. These are
the people who
struggle every
day to find the
money to feed
their kids, to
pay their
electric bills
and to put gas
in the car to
get to work.
This campaign is
about those
people and our
struggling
middle class. It
is about
creating an
economy that
works for all,
and not just the
one percent.
Citizens
United: My
fellow
Americans: Let
me be as blunt
as I can and
tell you what
you already
know. As a
result of the
disastrous
Supreme Court
decision on
Citizens United,
the American
political system
has been totally
corrupted, and
the foundations
of American
democracy are
being
undermined. What
the Supreme
Court
essentially said
was that it was
not good enough
for the
billionaire
class to own
much of our
economy. They
could now own
the U.S.
government as
well. And that
is precisely
what they are
trying to do.
American
democracy is not
about
billionaires
being able to
buy candidates
and elections.
It is not about
the Koch
brothers,
Sheldon Adelson
and other
incredibly
wealthy
individuals
spending
billions of
dollars to elect
candidates who
will make the
rich richer and
everyone else
poorer.
According to
media reports
the Koch
brothers alone,
one family, will
spend more money
in this election
cycle than
either the
Democratic or
Republican
parties. This is
not democracy.
This is
oligarchy. In
Vermont and at
our town
meetings we know
what American
democracy is
supposed to be
about. It is one
person, one vote
– with every
citizen having
an equal say –
and no voter
suppression. And
that’s the kind
of American
political system
we have to fight
for and will
fight for in
this campaign.
Climate
Change: When we
talk about our
responsibilities
as human beings
and as parents,
there is nothing
more important
than leaving
this country and
the entire
planet in a way
that is
habitable for
our kids and
grandchildren.
The debate is
over. The
scientific
community has
spoken in a
virtually
unanimous voice.
Climate change
is real. It is
caused by human
activity and it
is already
causing
devastating
problems in the
United States
and around the
world.
The scientists
are telling us
that if we do
not boldly
transform our
energy system
away from fossil
fuels and into
energy
efficiency and
sustainable
energies, this
planet could be
five to ten
degrees
Fahrenheit
warmer by the
end of this
century. This is
catastrophic. It
will mean more
drought, more
famine, more
rising sea
level, more
floods, more
ocean
acidification,
more extreme
weather
disturbances,
more disease and
more human
suffering. We
must not, we
cannot, and we
will not allow
that to happen.
It is no
secret that
there is massive
discontent with
politics in
America today.
In the mid-term
election in
November, 63
percent of
Americans did
not vote,
including 80
percent of young
people. Poll
after poll tells
us that our
citizens no
longer have
confidence in
our political
institutions
and, given the
power of Big
Money in the
political
process, they
have serious
doubts about how
much their vote
actually matters
and whether
politicians have
any clue as to
what is going on
in their lives.
Combatting
this political
alienation, this
cynicism and
this legitimate
anger will not
be easy. That’s
for sure. But
that is exactly
what, together,
we have to do if
we are going to
turn this
country around –
and that is what
this campaign is
all about.
And to bring
people together
we need a simple
and
straight-forward
progressive
agenda which
speaks to the
needs of our
people, and
which provides
us with a vision
of a very
different
America. And
what is that
agenda?
Jobs, Jobs,
Jobs: It begins
with jobs. If we
are truly
serious about
reversing the
decline of the
middle class we
need a major
federal jobs
program which
puts millions of
Americans back
to work at
decent paying
jobs. At a time
when our roads,
bridges, water
systems, rail
and airports are
decaying, the
most effective
way to rapidly
create
meaningful jobs
is to rebuild
our crumbling
infrastructure.
That’s why I’ve
introduced
legislation
which would
invest $1
trillion over 5
years to
modernize our
country’s
physical
infrastructure.
This legislation
would create and
maintain at
least 13 million
good-paying
jobs, while
making our
country more
productive,
efficient and
safe. And I
promise you as
president I will
lead that
legislation into
law.
I
will also
continue to
oppose our
current trade
policies. For
decades,
presidents from
both parties
have supported
trade agreements
which have cost
us millions of
decent paying
jobs as
corporate
America shuts
down plants here
and moves to
low-wage
countries. As
president, my
trade policies
will break that
cycle of
agreements which
enrich at the
expense of the
working people
of this country.
Raising
Wages: Let us be
honest and
acknowledge that
millions of
Americans are
now working for
totally
inadequate
wages. The
current federal
minimum wage of
$7.25 an hour is
a starvation
wage and must be
raised. The
minimum wage
must become a
living wage –
which means
raising it to
$15 an hour over
the next few
years – which is
exactly what Los
Angeles recently
did – and I
applaud them for
doing that. Our
goal as a nation
must be to
ensure that no
full-time worker
lives in
poverty.
Further, we must
establish pay
equity for women
workers. It’s
unconscionable
that women earn
78 cents on the
dollar compared
to men who
perform the same
work. We must
also end the
scandal in which
millions of
American
employees, often
earning less
than $30,000 a
year, work 50 or
60 hours a week
– and earn no
overtime. And we
need paid sick
leave and
guaranteed
vacation time
for all.
Addressing
Wealth and
Income
Inequality: This
campaign is
going to send a
message to the
billionaire
class. And that
is: you can’t
have it all. You
can’t get huge
tax breaks while
children in this
country go
hungry. You
can’t continue
sending our jobs
to China while
millions are
looking for
work. You can’t
hide your
profits in the
Cayman Islands
and other tax
havens, while
there are
massive unmet
needs on every
corner of this
nation. Your
greed has got to
end. You cannot
take advantage
of all the
benefits of
America, if you
refuse to accept
your
responsibilities.
That is
why we need a
tax system which
is fair and
progressive,
which makes
wealthy
individuals and
profitable
corporations
begin to pay
their fair share
of taxes.
Reforming
Wall Street: It
is time to break
up the largest
financial
institutions in
the country.
Wall Street
cannot continue
to be an island
unto itself,
gambling
trillions in
risky financial
instruments
while expecting
the public to
bail it out. If
a bank is too
big to fail it
is too big to
exist. We need a
banking system
which is part of
the job creating
productive
economy, not a
handful of huge
banks on Wall
Street which
engage in
reckless and
illegal
activities.
Campaign
Finance Reform:
If we are
serious about
creating jobs,
about climate
change and the
needs of our
children and the
elderly, we must
be deadly
serious about
campaign finance
reform and the
need for a
constitutional
amendment to
overturn
Citizens United.
I have said it
before and I’ll
say it again. I
will not
nominate any
justice to the
Supreme Court
who has not made
it clear that he
or she will move
to overturn that
disastrous
decision which
is undermining
our democracy.
Long term, we
need to go
further and
establish public
funding of
elections.
Reversing
Climate Change:
The United
States must lead
the world in
reversing
climate change.
We can do that
if we transform
our energy
system away from
fossil fuels,
toward energy
efficiency and
such sustainable
energies such as
wind, solar,
geo-thermal and
bio-mass.
Millions of
homes and
buildings need
to be
weatherized, our
transportation
system needs to
be energy
efficient, and
we need a tax on
carbon to
accelerate the
transition away
from fossil
fuel.
Health Care for
All: The United
States remains
the only major
country on earth
that does not
guarantee health
care for all as
a right. Despite
the modest gains
of the
Affordable Care
Act, 35 million
Americans
continue to lack
health insurance
and many more
are
under-insured.
Yet, we continue
paying far more
per capita for
health care than
any other
nation. The
United States
must join the
rest of the
industrialized
world and
guarantee health
care to all as a
right by moving
toward a
Medicare-for-All
single-payer
system.
Protecting Our
Most Vulnerable:
At a time when
millions of
Americans are
struggling to
keep their heads
above water
economically, at
a time when
senior poverty
is increasing,
at a time when
millions of kids
are living in
dire poverty, my
Republican
colleagues, as
part of their
recently-passed
budget, are
trying to make a
terrible
situation even
worse. If you
can believe it,
the Republican
budget throws 27
million
Americans off
health
insurance, makes
drastic cuts in
Medicare, throws
millions of
low-income
Americans,
including
pregnant women
off of nutrition
programs, and
makes it harder
for
working-class
families to
afford college
or put their
kids in the Head
Start program.
And then, to add
insult to
injury, they
provide huge tax
breaks for the
very wealthiest
families in this
country while
they raise taxes
on working
families.
Well, let me
tell my
Republican
colleagues that
I respectfully
disagree with
their approach.
Instead of
cutting Social
Security, we’re
going to expand
Social Security
benefits.
Instead of
cutting Head
Start and child
care, we are
going to move to
a universal
pre-K system for
all the children
of this country.
As Franklin
Delano Roosevelt
reminded us, a
nation’s
greatness is
judged not by
what it provides
to the most
well-off, but
how it treats
the people most
in need. And
that’s the kind
of nation we
must become.
College for
All: And when we
talk about
education, let
me be very
clear. In a
highly
competitive
global economy,
we need the best
educated
workforce we can
create. It is
insane and
counter-productive
to the best
interests of our
country, that
hundreds of
thousands of
bright young
people cannot
afford to go to
college, and
that millions of
others leave
school with a
mountain of debt
that burdens
them for
decades. That
must end. That
is why, as
president, I
will fight to
make tuition in
public colleges
and universities
free, as well as
substantially
lower interest
rates on student
loans.
War and Peace:
As everybody
knows, we live
in a difficult
and dangerous
world, and there
are people out
there who want
to do us harm.
As president, I
will defend this
nation – but I
will do it
responsibly. As
a member of
Congress I voted
against the war
in Iraq, and
that was the
right vote. I am
vigorously
opposed to an
endless war in
the Middle East
– a war which is
unwise and
unnecessary. We
must be vigorous
in combatting
terrorism and
defeating ISIS,
but we should
not have to bear
that burden
alone. We must
be part of an
international
coalition, led
by Muslim
nations, that
can not only
defeat ISIS but
begin the
process of
creating
conditions for a
lasting peace.
As some
of you know, I
was born in a
far-away land
called Brooklyn,
New York. My
father came to
this country
from Poland
without a penny
in his pocket
and without much
of an education.
My mother
graduated high
school in New
York City. My
father worked
for almost his
entire life as a
paint salesman
and we were
solidly
lower-middle
class. My
parents, brother
and I lived in a
small
rent-controlled
apartment. My
mother’s dream
was to move out
of that small
apartment into a
home of our own.
She died young
and her dream
was never
fulfilled. As a
kid I learned,
in many, many
ways, what lack
of money means
to a family.
That’s a lesson
I have never
forgotten.
I have seen
the promise of
America in my
own life. My
parents would
have never
dreamed that
their son would
be a U.S.
Senator, let
alone run for
president. But
for too many of
our fellow
Americans, the
dream of
progress and
opportunity is
being denied by
the grind of an
economy that
funnels all the
wealth to the
top.
And
to those who say
we cannot
restore the
dream, I say
just look where
we are standing.
This beautiful
place was once
an unsightly
rail yard that
served no public
purpose and was
an eyesore. As
mayor, I worked
with the people
of Burlington to
help turn this
waterfront into
the beautiful
people-oriented
public space it
is today. We
took the fight
to the courts,
to the
legislature and
to the people.
And we won.
The lesson
to be learned is
that when people
stand together,
and are prepared
to fight back,
there is nothing
that can’t be
accomplished.
We can
live in a
country:
Where every
person has
health care as a
right, not a
privilege;
Where every
parent can have
quality and
affordable
childcare and
where all of our
qualified young
people,
regardless of
income, can go
to college;
Where every
senior can live
in dignity and
security, and
not be forced to
choose between
their medicine
or their food;
Where every
veteran who
defends this
nation gets the
quality health
care and
benefits they
have earned and
receives the
respect they
deserve;
Where every
person, no
matter their
race, their
religion, their
disability or
their sexual
orientation
realizes the
full promise of
equality that is
our birthright
as Americans.
That is the
nation we can
build together,
and I ask you to
join me in this
campaign to
build a future
that works for
all of us, and
not just the few
on top.
Thank you, and
on this
beautiful day on
the shore of
Lake Champlain,
I welcome you
aboard.”
Source: Bernie for President 2016