In Philadelphia, Hillary Clinton Accepts the Democratic Nomination
Democratic
National
Convention
Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania
Thursday, July
28, 2016
At the
Democratic
Convention in
Philadelphia on
Thursday,
Hillary Clinton
accepted her
party's
nomination. She
told the
audience that,
despite the
challenges of a
changing world,
we must not
resort to Donald
Trump's
dangerous
proposals.
Clinton also
paid tribute to
the Americans
who have
inspired her
lifetime in
public service
and who continue
to sustain her
belief that we
are stronger
together: her
mother Dorothy;
the survivors
and first
responders on
9/11 and our men
and women in
uniform.
"We have the
most dynamic and
diverse people
in the world. We
have the most
tolerant and
generous young
people we've
ever had. We
have the most
powerful
military. The
most innovative
entrepreneurs.The
most enduring
values. Freedom
and equality,
justice and
opportunity,"
Clinton said.
"We should
be so proud that
these words are
associated with
us. That when
people hear them
– they hear…
America. So
don't let anyone
tell you that
our country is
weak We're not.
Don't let anyone
tell you we
don't have what
it takes. We do.
And most of all,
don't believe
anyone who says:
'I alone can fix
it.' [...]
Americans don't
say: 'I alone
can fix it.' We
say: 'We'll fix
it together.
[...] It is with
humility,
determination
and boundless
confidence in
America's
promise that I
accept your
nomination for
President of the
United States!"
Clinton's
remarks, as
transcribed, are
below:
“Thank you.
Thank you so
much. Thank you.
Thank you all so
much. Thank you.
Thank you. Thank
you all very,
very much. Thank
you for that
amazing welcome.
Thank you all
for the great
convention that
we’ve had.
And,
Chelsea, thank
you. I am so
proud to be your
mother and so
proud of the
woman you’ve
become. Thank
you for bringing
Marc into our
family and
Charlotte and
Aidan into the
world.
And, Bill, that
conversation we
started in the
law library 45
years ago, it is
still going
strong. That
conversation has
lasted through
good times that
filled us with
joy and hard
times that
tested us. And
I’ve even gotten
a few words in
along the way.
On Tuesday
night, I was so
happy to see
that my
explainer-in-chief
is still on the
job. I’m also
grateful to the
rest of my
family and to
the friends of a
lifetime.
For all of
you whose hard
work brought us
here tonight and
to those of you
who joined this
campaign this
week, thank you.
What a
remarkable week
it’s been. We
heard the man
from Hope, Bill
Clinton; and the
man of hope,
Barack Obama.
America is
stronger because
of President
Obama’s
leadership, and
I am better
because of his
friendship.
We heard
from our
terrific Vice
President, the
one and only Joe
Biden. He spoke
from his big
heart about our
party’s
commitment to
working people
as only he can
do.
And
First Lady
Michelle Obama
reminded us –
that our
children are
watching and the
president we
elect is going
to be their
president, too.
And for
those of you out
there who are
just getting to
know Tim Kaine,
you – you will
soon understand
why the people
of Virginia keep
promoting him –
from city
council and
mayor, to
governor, and
now Senator. And
he will make our
whole country
proud as our
vice president.
And I want
to thank Bernie
Sanders. Bernie
– Bernie, your
campaign
inspired
millions of
Americans,
particularly the
young people who
threw their
hearts and souls
into our
primary. You put
economic and
social justice
issues front and
center, where
they belong.
And to all
of your
supporters here
and around the
country, I want
you to know I
have heard you.
Your cause is
our cause. Our
country needs
your ideas,
energy, and
passion. That is
the only way we
can turn our
progressive
platform into
real change for
America. We
wrote it
together. Now
let’s go out and
make it happen
together.
My friends,
we’ve come to
Philadelphia,
the birthplace
of our nation,
because what
happened in this
city 240 years
ago still has
something to
teach us today.
We all know the
story, but we
usually focus on
how it turned
out, and not
enough on how
close that story
came to never
being written at
all. When
representatives
from 13 unruly
colonies met
just down the
road from here,
some wanted to
stick with the
king, and some
wanted to stick
it to the king.
The
revolution hung
in the balance.
Then somehow
they began
listening to
each other,
compromising,
finding common
purpose. And by
the time they
left
Philadelphia,
they had begun
to see
themselves as
one nation.
That’s what made
it possible to
stand up to a
king. That took
courage. They
had courage. Our
founders
embraced the
enduring truth
that we are
stronger
together.
Now America
is once again at
a moment of
reckoning.
Powerful forces
are threatening
to pull us
apart. Bonds of
trust and
respect are
fraying. And
just as with our
founders, there
are no
guarantees. It
truly is up to
us. We have to
decide whether
we will all work
together so we
can all rise
together. Our
country’s motto
is e pluribus
unum: out of
many, we are
one. Will we
stay true to
that motto?
Well, we
heard Donald
Trump’s answer
last week at his
convention. He
wants to divide
us from the rest
of the world and
from each other.
He’s betting
that the perils
of today’s world
will blind us to
its unlimited
promise. He’s
taken the
Republican Party
a long way from
‘Morning in
America’ to
‘Midnight in
America.’ He
wants us to fear
the future and
fear each other.
Well, a
great Democratic
President,
Franklin Delano
Roosevelt, came
up with the
perfect rebuke
to Trump more
than 80 years
ago, during a
much more
perilous time:
‘The only thing
we have to fear
is fear itself.’
Now we are
clear-eyed about
what our country
is up against,
but we are not
afraid. We will
rise to the
challenge, just
as we always
have. We will
not build a
wall. Instead,
we will build an
economy where
everyone who
wants a good job
can get one. And
we’ll build a
path to
citizenship for
millions of
immigrants who
are already
contributing to
our economy. We
will not ban a
religion. We
will work with
all Americans
and our allies
to fight and
defeat
terrorism.
Yet, we know
there is a lot
to do. Too many
people haven’t
had a pay raise
since the crash.
There’s too much
inequality, too
little social
mobility, too
much paralysis
in Washington,
too many threats
at home and
abroad.
But just look
for a minute at
the strengths we
bring as
Americans to
meet these
challenges. We
have the most
dynamic and
diverse people
in the world. We
have the most
tolerant and
generous young
people we’ve
ever had. We
have the most
powerful
military, the
most innovative
entrepreneurs,
the most
enduring values
– freedom and
equality,
justice and
opportunity. We
should be so
proud that those
words are
associated with
us. I have to
tell you, as
your Secretary
of State, I went
to 112
countries. When
people hear
those words,
they hear
America.
So don’t let
anyone tell you
that our country
is weak. We’re
not. Don’t let
anyone tell you
we don’t have
what it takes.
We do. And most
of all, don’t
believe anyone
who says, ‘I
alone can fix
it.’ Yes. Those
were actually
Donald Trump’s
words in
Cleveland. And
they should set
off alarm bells
for all of us.
Really? ‘I alone
can fix it?
Isn’t he
forgetting
troops on the
front lines,
police officers
and firefighters
who run toward
danger, doctors
and nurses who
care for us?
Teachers who
change lives,
entrepreneurs
who see
possibilities in
every problem,
mothers who lost
children to
violence and are
building a
movement to keep
other kids safe?
He’s forgetting
every last one
of us. Americans
don’t say, ‘I
alone fix can
it.’ We say,
‘We’ll fix it
together.’
And
remember.
Remember. Our
founders fought
a revolution and
wrote a
Constitution so
America would
never be a
nation where one
person had all
the power. 240
years later, we
still put our
faith in each
other. Look at
what happened in
Dallas. After
the
assassinations
of five brave
police officers,
Police Chief
David Brown
asked the
community to
support his
force, maybe
even join them.
And do you know
how the
community
responded?
Nearly 500
people applied
in just 12 days.
That’s how
Americans answer
when the call
for help goes
out. 20 years
ago, I wrote a
book called It
Takes a Village.
And a lot of
people looked at
the title and
asked, what the
heck do you mean
by that? This is
what I mean.
None of us can
raise a family,
build a
business, heal a
community, or
lift a country
totally alone.
America needs
every one of us
to lend our
energy, our
talents, our
ambition to
making our
nation better
and stronger. I
believe that
with all my
heart. That’s
why ‘Stronger
Together’ is not
just a lesson
from our
history, it’s
not just a
slogan for our
campaign, it’s a
guiding
principle for
the country
we’ve always
been, and the
future we’re
going to build.
A country
where the
economy works
for everyone,
not just those
at the top.
Where you can
get a good job
and send your
kids to a good
school no matter
what ZIP Code
you live in. A
country where
all our children
can dream, and
those dreams are
within reach.
Where families
are strong,
communities are
safe, and, yes,
where love
trumps hate.
That’s the
country we’re
fighting for.
That’s the
future we’re
working toward.
And so, my
friends, it is
with humility,
determination,
and boundless
confidence in
America’s
promise that I
accept your
nomination for
president of the
United States.
Now,
sometimes the
people at this
podium are new
to the national
stage. As you
know, I’m not
one of those
people. I’ve
been your first
lady, served
eight years as a
senator from the
great state of
New York. Then I
represented all
of you as
Secretary of
State. But my
job titles only
tell you what
I’ve done. They
don’t tell you
why. The truth
is, through all
these years of
public service,
the service part
has always come
easier to me
than the public
part. I get it
that some people
just don’t know
what to make of
me. So let me
tell you.
The family
I’m from, well,
no one had their
name on big
buildings. My
families were
builders of a
different kind,
builders in the
way most
American
families are.
They used
whatever tools
they had,
whatever God
gave them, and
whatever life in
America
provided, and
built better
lives and better
futures for
their kids.
My
grandfather
worked in the
same Scranton
lace mill for 50
years – because
he believed that
if he gave
everything he
had, his
children would
have a better
life than he
did. And he was
right. My dad,
Hugh, made it to
college. He
played football
at Penn State –
and enlisted in
the Navy after
Pearl Harbor.
When the war was
over he started
his own small
business,
printing fabric
for draperies. I
remember
watching him
stand for hours
over
silkscreens. He
wanted to give
my brothers and
me opportunities
he never had,
and he did.
My mother,
Dorothy, was
abandoned by her
parents as a
young girl. She
ended up on her
own at 14,
working as a
housemaid. She
was saved by the
kindness of
others. Her
first grade
teacher saw she
had nothing to
eat at lunch,
and brought
extra food to
share the entire
year. The lesson
she passed on to
me years later
stuck with me:
No one gets
through life
alone. We have
to look out for
each other and
lift each other
up. And she made
sure I learned
the words from
our Methodist
faith: ‘Do all
the good you
can, for all the
people you can,
in all the ways
you can, as long
as ever you
can.’
So
I went to work
for the
Children’s
Defense Fund,
going door to
door in New
Bedford,
Massachusetts –
on behalf of
children with
disabilities who
were denied the
chance to go to
school. Remember
meeting a young
girl in a
wheelchair on
the small back
porch of her
house. She told
me how badly she
wanted to go to
school. It just
didn’t seem
possible in
those days. And
I couldn’t stop
thinking of my
mother and what
she’d gone
through as a
child. It became
clear to me that
simply caring is
not enough. To
drive real
progress, you
have to change
both hearts and
laws. You need
both
understanding
and action.
So we
gathered facts.
We build a
coalition. And
our work helped
convince
Congress to
ensure access to
education for
all students
with
disabilities.
It’s a big idea,
isn’t it? Every
kid with a
disability has
the right to go
to school. But
how do you make
an idea like
that real? You
do it step by
step, year by
year, sometimes
even door by
door. My heart
just swelled
when I saw
Anastasia Somoza
representing
millions of
young people on
this stage –
because we
changed our law
to make sure she
got an
education.
So it’s
true. I sweat
the details of
policy, whether
we’re talking
about the exact
level of lead in
the drinking
water in Flint,
Michigan – the
number of mental
health
facilities in
Iowa, or the
cost of your
prescription
drugs. Because
it’s not just a
detail if it’s
your kid, if
it’s your
family. It’s a
big deal. And it
should be a big
deal to your
president, too.
After the
four days of
this convention,
you’ve seen some
of the people
who’ve inspired
me, people who
let me into
their lives and
became a part of
mine, people
like Ryan Moore
and Lauren
Manning. They
told their
stories Tuesday
night. I first
met Ryan as a
7-year-old. He
was wearing a
full body brace
that must have
weighed 40
pounds because I
leaned over to
lift him up.
Children like
Ryan kept me
going when our
plan for
universal health
care failed, and
kept me working
with leaders of
both parties to
help create the
Children’s
Health Insurance
Program that
covers eight
million kids in
our country.
Lauren Manning,
who stood here
with such grace
and power, was
gravely injured
on 9/11.
It was the
thought of her,
and Debbie
Stage. John who
you saw in the
movie, and John
Dolan and Joe
Sweeney and all
the victims and
survivors, that
kept me working
as hard as I
could in the
Senate on behalf
of 9/11 families
and our first
responders who
got sick from
their time at
Ground Zero. I
was thinking of
Lauren, Debbie,
and all the
others ten years
later in the
White House
Situation Room,
when President
Obama made the
courageous
decision that
finally brought
Osama bin Laden
to justice.
And in this
campaign I’ve
met many more
people who
motivate me to
keep fighting
for change, and
with your help,
I will carry all
of your voices
and stories with
me to the White
House. And you
heard from
Republicans and
Independents who
are supporting
our campaign.
Well, I will be
a president for
Democrats,
Republicans,
Independents,
for the
struggling, the
striving, the
successful, for
all those who
vote for me and
for those who
don’t. For all
Americans
together.
Tonight,
we’ve reached a
milestone in our
nation’s march
toward a more
perfect union:
the first time
that a major
party has
nominated a
woman for
president.
Standing here as
my mother’s
daughter, and my
daughter’s
mother, I’m so
happy this day
has come. I’m
happy for
grandmothers and
little girls and
everyone in
between. I’m
happy for boys
and men –
because when any
barrier falls in
America, it
clears the way
for everyone.
After all, when
there are no
ceilings, the
sky’s the limit.
So let’s
keep going until
every one of the
161 million
women and girls
across America
has the
opportunity she
deserves to
have. But even
more important
than the history
we make tonight
is the history
we will write
together in the
years ahead.
Let’s begin with
what we’re going
to do to help
working people
in our country
get ahead and
stay ahead.
Now, I don’t
think President
Obama and Vice
President Biden
get the credit
they deserve for
saving us from
the worst
economic crisis
of our
lifetimes. Our
economy is so
much stronger
than when they
took office.
Nearly 15
million new
private sector
jobs. 20 million
more Americans
with health
insurance. And
an auto industry
that just had
its best year
ever.
Now, that’s real
progress. But
none of us can
be satisfied
with the status
quo. Not by a
long shot. We’re
still facing
deep-seated
problems that
developed long
before the
recession and
have stayed with
us through the
recovery. I’ve
gone around the
country talking
to working
families. And
I’ve heard from
many who feel
like the economy
sure isn’t
working for
them. Some of
you are
frustrated –
even furious.
And you know
what? You’re
right. It’s not
yet working the
way it should.
Americans
are willing to
work – and work
hard. But right
now, an awful
lot of people
feel there is
less and less
respect for the
work they do.
And less respect
for them,
period.
Democrats, we
are the party of
working people.
But we haven’t
done a good
enough job
showing we get
what you’re
going through,
and we’re going
to do something
to help.
So tonight I
want to tell you
how we will
empower
Americans to
live better
lives. My
primary mission
as president
will be to
create more
opportunity and
more good jobs
with rising
wages right here
in the United
States. From my
first day in
office to my
last. Especially
in places that
for too long
have been left
out and left
behind. From our
inner cities to
our small towns,
from Indian
country to coal
country. From
communities
ravaged by
addiction to
regions hollowed
out by plant
closures.
And here’s
what I believe.
I believe
America thrives
when the middle
class thrives. I
believe our
economy isn’t
working the way
it should
because our
democracy isn’t
working the way
it should.
That’s why we
need to appoint
Supreme Court
justices who
will get money
out of politics
and expand
voting rights,
not restrict
them. And if
necessary, we
will pass a
constitutional
amendment to
overturn
Citizens United.
I believe
American
corporations
that have gotten
so much from our
country should
be just as
patriotic in
return. Many of
them are, but
too many aren’t.
It’s wrong to
take tax breaks
with one hand
and give out
pink slips with
the other. And I
believe Wall
Street can
never, ever be
allowed to wreck
Main Street
again.
And I believe in
science. I
believe that
climate change
is real and that
we can save our
planet while
creating
millions of
good-paying
clean energy
jobs.
I
believe that
when we have
millions of
hardworking
immigrants
contributing to
our economy, it
would be
self-defeating
and inhumane to
try to kick them
out.
Comprehensive
immigration
reform will grow
our economy and
keep families
together – and
it’s the right
thing to do.
So whatever
party you belong
to, or if you
belong to no
party at all, if
you share these
beliefs, this is
your campaign.
If you believe
that companies
should share
profits, not pad
executive
bonuses, join
us. If you
believe the
minimum wage
should be a
living wage, and
no one working
full-time should
have to raise
their children
in poverty, join
us. If you
believe that
every man,
woman, and child
in America has
the right to
affordable
health care,
join us! If you
believe that we
should say no to
unfair trade
deals; that we
should stand up
to China; that
we should
support our
steelworkers and
autoworkers and
homegrown
manufacturers,
then join us. If
you believe we
should expand
Social Security
and protect a
woman’s right to
make her own
heath care
decisions, then
join us. And
yes, yes, if you
believe that
your working
mother, wife,
sister, or
daughter
deserves equal
pay join us.
That’s how we’re
going to make
sure this
economy works
for everyone,
not just those
at the top.
Now, you
didn’t hear any
of this, did
you, from Donald
Trump at his
convention. He
spoke for 70-odd
minutes – and I
do mean odd. And
he offered zero
solutions. But
we already know
he doesn’t
believe these
things. No
wonder he
doesn’t like
talking about
his plans. You
might have
noticed, I love
talking about
mine.
In
my first 100
days, we will
work with both
parties to pass
the biggest
investment in
new, good-paying
jobs since World
War II. Jobs in
manufacturing,
clean energy,
technology and
innovation,
small business,
and
infrastructure.
If we invest in
infrastructure
now, we’ll not
only create jobs
today, but lay
the foundation
for the jobs of
the future.
And we will
also transform
the way we
prepare our
young people for
those jobs.
Bernie Sanders
and I will work
together to make
college
tuition-free for
the middle class
and debt-free
for all. We will
also – we will
also liberate
millions of
people who
already have
student debt.
It’s just not
right that
Donald Trump can
ignore his
debts, and
students and
families can’t
refinance their
debts.
And something we
don’t say often
enough: Sure,
college is
crucial, but a
four-year degree
should not be
the only path to
a good job. We
will help more
people learn a
skill or
practice a trade
and make a good
living doing it.
We will give
small
businesses, like
my dad’s, a
boost, make it
easier to get
credit. Way too
many dreams die
in the parking
lots of banks.
In America, if
you can dream
it, you should
be able to build
it.
And
we will help you
balance family
and work. And
you know what,
if fighting for
affordable child
care and paid
family leave is
playing the
‘woman card,’
then deal me in.
Now – now,
here’s the other
thing. Now,
we’re not only
going to make
all of these
investments.
We’re going to
pay for every
single one of
them. And here’s
how. Wall
Street,
corporations,
and the
super-rich are
going to start
paying their
fair share of
taxes. This is –
this is not
because we
resent success,
but when more
than 90 percent
of the gains
have gone to the
top 1 percent,
that’s where the
money is. And we
are going to
follow the
money. And if
companies take
tax breaks and
then ship jobs
overseas, we’ll
make them pay us
back. And we’ll
put that money
to work where it
belongs:
creating jobs
here at home.
Now, I
imagine that
some of you are
sitting at home
thinking, well,
that all sounds
pretty good, but
how are you
going to get it
done? How are
you going to
break through
the gridlock in
Washington?
Well, look at my
record. I’ve
worked across
the aisle to
pass laws and
treaties and to
launch new
programs that
help millions of
people. And if
you give me the
chance, that’s
exactly what
I’ll do as
President.
But then –
but then I also
imagine people
are thinking out
there, but
Trump, he’s a
businessman. He
must know
something about
the economy.
Well, let’s take
a closer look,
shall we? In
Atlantic City,
60 miles from
here, you will
find contractors
and small
businesses who
lost everything
because Donald
Trump refused to
pay his bills.
Now, remember
what the
President said
last night.
Don’t boo. Vote.
But think of
this. People who
did the work and
needed the
money, not
because he
couldn’t pay
them, but
because he
wouldn’t pay
them, he just
stiffed them.
And you know
that sales pitch
he’s making to
be president:
put your faith
in him, and
you’ll win big?
That’s the same
sales pitch he
made to all
those small
businesses. Then
Trump walked
away and left
working people
holding the bag.
He also
talks a big game
about putting
America first.
Well, please
explain what
part of America
First leads him
to make Trump
ties in China,
not Colorado;
Trump suits in
Mexico, not
Michigan; Trump
furniture in
Turkey, not
Ohio; Trump
picture frames
in India, not
Wisconsin.
Donald Trump
says he wants to
make America
great again.
Well, he could
start by
actually making
things in
America again.
Now, the
choice we face
in this election
is just as stark
when it comes to
our national
security. Anyone
– anyone reading
the news can see
the threats and
turbulence we
face. From
Baghdad and
Kabul, to Nice
and Paris and
Brussels, from
San Bernardino
to Orlando,
we’re dealing
with determined
enemies that
must be
defeated. So
it’s no wonder
that people are
anxious and
looking for
reassurance,
looking for
steady
leadership,
wanting a leader
who understands
we are stronger
when we work
with our allies
around the world
and care for our
veterans here at
home. Keeping
our nation safe
and honoring the
people who do
that work will
be my highest
priority.
I’m proud
that we put a
lid on Iran’s
nuclear program
without firing a
single shot. Now
we have to
enforce it, and
we must keep
supporting
Israel’s
security. I’m
proud that we
shaped a global
climate
agreement. Now
we have to hold
every country
accountable to
their
commitments,
including
ourselves. And
I’m proud to
stand by our
allies in NATO
against any
threat they
face, including
from Russia.
I’ve laid
out my strategy
for defeating
ISIS. We will
strike their
sanctuaries from
the air and
support local
forces taking
them out on the
ground. We will
surge our
intelligence so
we detect and
prevent attacks
before they
happen. We will
disrupt their
efforts online
to reach and
radicalize young
people in our
country. It
won’t be easy or
quick, but make
no mistake we
will prevail.
Now Donald
Trump – Donald
Trump says, and
this is a quote,
‘I know more
about ISIS than
the generals
do.’ No, Donald,
you don’t.
He thinks –
he thinks he
knows more than
our military
because he
claimed our
armed forces are
‘a disaster.’
Well, I’ve had
the privilege to
work closely
with our troops
and our veterans
for many years,
including as a
Senator on the
Armed Services
Committee. And I
know how wrong
he is. Our
military is a
national
treasure. We
entrust our
commander-in-chief
to make the
hardest
decisions our
nation faces:
decisions about
war and peace,
life and death.
A president
should respect
the men and
women who risk
their lives to
serve our
country,
including –
including
Captain Khan and
the sons of Tim
Kaine and Mike
Pence, both
Marines. So just
ask yourself: Do
you really think
Donald Trump has
the temperament
to be
commander-in-chief?
Donald Trump
can’t even
handle the
rough-and-tumble
of a
presidential
campaign. He
loses his cool
at the slightest
provocation –
when he’s gotten
a tough question
from a reporter,
when he’s
challenged in a
debate, when he
sees a protestor
at a rally.
Imagine, if you
dare imagine,
imagine him in
the Oval Office
facing a real
crisis. A man
you can bait
with a tweet is
not a man we can
trust with
nuclear weapons.
I can’t put
it any better
than Jackie
Kennedy did
after the Cuban
Missile Crisis.
She said that
what worried
President
Kennedy during
that very
dangerous time
was that a war
might be started
– not by big men
with
self-control and
restraint, but
by little men,
the ones moved
by fear and
pride. America’s
strength doesn’t
come from
lashing out. It
relies on
smarts,
judgment, cool
resolve, and the
precise and
strategic
application of
power. And
that’s the kind
of
commander-in-chief
I pledge to be.
And if we’re
serious about
keeping our
country safe, we
also can’t
afford to have a
president who’s
in the pocket of
the gun lobby.
I’m not here to
repeal the
Second
Amendment. I’m
not here to take
away your guns.
I just don’t
want you to be
shot by someone
who shouldn’t
have a gun in
the first place.
We will work
tirelessly with
responsible gun
owners to pass
common-sense
reforms and keep
guns out of the
hands of
criminals,
terrorists, and
all others who
would do us
harm.
For
decades, people
have said this
issue was too
hard to solve
and the politics
too hot to
touch. But I ask
you: How can we
just stand by
and do nothing?
You heard, you
saw, family
members of
people killed by
gun violence on
this stage. You
heard, you saw
family members
of police
officers killed
in the line of
duty because
they were
outgunned by
criminals. I
refuse to
believe we can’t
find common
ground here. We
have to heal the
divides in our
country, not
just on guns but
on race,
immigration, and
more.
And that starts
with listening,
listening to
each other,
trying as best
we can to walk
in each other’s
shoes. So let’s
put ourselves in
the shoes of
young black and
Latino men and
women who face
the effects of
systemic racism
and are made to
feel like their
lives are
disposable.
Let’s put
ourselves in the
shoes of police
officers,
kissing their
kids and spouses
goodbye every
day and heading
off to do a
dangerous and
necessary job.
We will reform
our criminal
justice system
from end to end,
and rebuild
trust between
law enforcement
and the
communities they
serve. And we
will defend – we
will defend all
our rights:
civil rights,
human rights,
and voting
rights; women’s
rights and
workers’ rights;
LGBT rights and
the rights of
people with
disabilities.
And we will
stand up against
mean and
divisive
rhetoric
wherever it
comes from.
For the past
year, many
people made the
mistake of
laughing off
Donald Trump’s
comments,
excusing him as
an entertainer
just putting on
a show. They
thought he
couldn’t
possibly mean
all the horrible
things he says,
like when he
called women
‘pigs’ or said
that an American
judge couldn’t
be fair because
of his Mexican
heritage, or
when he mocks
and mimics a
reporter with a
disability, or
insults
prisoners of war
– like John
McCain, a hero
and a patriot
who deserves our
respect.
Now, at first, I
admit, I
couldn’t believe
he meant it,
either. It was
just too hard to
fathom, that
someone who
wants to lead
our nation could
say those
things, could be
like that. But
here’s the sad
truth: There is
no other Donald
Trump. This is
it. And in the
end, it comes
down to what
Donald Trump
doesn’t get:
America is great
because America
is good.
So enough with
the bigotry and
the bombast.
Donald Trump’s
not offering
real change.
He’s offering
empty promises.
And what are we
offering? A bold
agenda to
improve the
lives of people
across our
country – to
keep you safe,
to get you good
jobs, to give
your kids the
opportunities
they deserve.
The choice
is clear, my
friends. Every
generation of
Americans has
come together to
make our country
freer, fairer,
and stronger.
None of us ever
have or can do
it alone. I know
that at a time
when so much
seems to be
pulling us
apart, it can be
hard to imagine
how we’ll ever
pull together.
But I’m here to
tell you tonight
– progress is
possible. I
know. I know
because I’ve
seen it in the
lives of people
across America
who get knocked
down and get
right back up.
And I know
it from my own
life. More than
a few times,
I’ve had to pick
myself up and
get back in the
game. Like so
much else in my
life, I got this
from my mother
too. She never
let me back down
from any
challenge. When
I tried to hide
from a
neighborhood
bully, she
literally
blocked the
door. ‘Go back
out there,’ she
said. And she
was right. You
have to stand up
to bullies. You
have to keep
working to make
things better,
even when the
odds are long
and the
opposition is
fierce.
We lost our
mother a few
years ago, but I
miss her every
day. And I still
hear her voice
urging me to
keep working,
keep fighting
for right, no
matter what.
That’s what we
need to do
together as a
nation. And
though ‘we may
not live to see
the glory,’ as
the song from
the musical
Hamilton goes,
‘let us gladly
join the fight.’
Let our legacy
be about
‘planting seeds
in a garden you
never get to
see.’
That’s why we’re
here, not just
in this hall,
but on this
Earth. The
Founders showed
us that, and so
have many others
since. They were
drawn together
by love of
country, and the
selfless passion
to build
something better
for all who
follow. That is
the story of
America. And we
begin a new
chapter tonight.
Yes, the
world is
watching what we
do. Yes,
America’s
destiny is ours
to choose. So
let’s be
stronger
together, my
fellow
Americans. Let’s
look to the
future with
courage and
confidence.
Let’s build a
better tomorrow
for our beloved
children and our
beloved country.
And when we do,
America will be
greater than
ever.
Thank you and
may God bless
you and the
United States of
America.”
Source: Hillary for America