Jim Webb
Announces
Candidacy for
President
Let's work
together to make
America an even
better place.
Dear friends:
After many
months of
thought,
deliberation and
discussion, I
have decided to
seek the office
of the
Presidency of
the United
States.
I
understand the
odds,
particularly in
today’s
political
climate where
fair debate is
so often drowned
out by huge sums
of money. I know
that more than
one candidate in
this process
intends to raise
at least a
billion dollars
– some estimates
run as high as
two billion
dollars – in
direct and
indirect
financial
support. Highly
paid political
consultants are
working to shape
the “messaging”
of every major
candidate.
But our
country needs a
fresh approach
to solving the
problems that
confront us and
too often
unnecessarily
divide us. We
need to shake
the hold of
these shadow
elites on our
political
process. Our
elected
officials need
to get back to
the basics of
good governance
and to remember
that their
principal
obligations are
to protect our
national
interests abroad
and to ensure a
level playing
field here at
home, especially
for those who
otherwise have
no voice in the
corridors of
power. And at
the same time
our fellow
Americans need
proven,
experienced
leadership that
can be trusted
to move us
forward from a
new President’s
first days in
office.
I
believe I can
offer both.
We all want
the American
dream – unending
opportunity at
the top if you
put things
together and you
make it,
absolute
fairness along
the way, and a
safety net
underneath you
if you fall on
hard times or
suffer
disability or as
you reach your
retirement
years. That’s
the American
Trifecta --
opportunity,
fairness, and
security. It’s
why people from
all over the
world do
whatever they
can to come
here. And it’s
why the rest of
us love this
country and our
way of life.
More than
anything else,
Americans want
their leaders to
preserve that
dream, for all
of us and not
for just a few.
We need a
President who
understands
leadership, who
has a proven
record of actual
accomplishments,
who can bring
about bipartisan
solutions, who
can bring people
from both sides
to the table to
get things done.
And that leader
needs to gather
the great minds
of our society
and bring them
into a new
Administration
and give them
direction and
ask them to help
us solve the
monumental
challenges that
face us.
What should you
ask for in your
next President?
First, there
is no greater
responsibility
for our
President than
the vital role
of Commander in
Chief.
I
have spent my
entire life in
and around the
American
military. I grew
up in a military
family. I fought
as a Marine
rifle platoon
and company
commander on the
battlefields of
Vietnam. I spent
five years in
the Pentagon,
four of them as
an assistant
secretary of
defense and
secretary of the
navy. I covered
our military on
many
journalistic
assignments,
including the
Marine Corps
deployment to
Beirut in 1983
and as an
“embed” reporter
in Afghanistan
in 2004. And
while in the
Senate I spent
six years on
both the Armed
Services
Committee and
the Foreign
Relations
Committee.
Let me
assure you, as
President I
would not have
urged an
invasion of
Iraq, nor as a
Senator would I
have voted to
authorize it. I
warned in
writing five
months before
that invasion
that we do not
belong as an
occupying power
in that part of
the world, and
that this
invasion would
be a strategic
blunder of
historic
proportions,
empowering Iran
and in the long
run China,
unleashing
sectarian
violence inside
Iraq and turning
our troops into
terrorist
targets.
I would not have
been the
President who
used military
force in Libya
during the Arab
Spring. I warned
repeatedly that
this use of our
military did not
meet the test of
a grave national
security
interest, that
it would have
negative
implications for
the entire
region, and that
no such action
should take
place without
the approval of
the Congress.
The leadership
in the Congress
at that time not
only failed to
give us a vote;
they did not
even allow a
formal debate,
and the
President acted
unilaterally.
The attack in
Benghazi was
inevitable in
some form or
another, as was
the continuing
chaos and the
dissemination of
large numbers of
weapons from
Qaddafi’s
armories to
terrorist units
throughout the
region.
And today I
would not be the
President to
sign an
executive order
establishing a
long-tem
relationship
with Iran if it
accepts Iran’s
acquisition of
nuclear weapons.
This
Administration
and those in
Congress should
be looking very
hard at the
actual terms of
this agreement,
which we on the
outside cannot
yet see or
evaluate. They
should also be
questioning
whether it is
appropriate for
such an
important
agreement to be
signed without
the specific,
prior approval
of the Congress.
On the other
hand, I would
make it clear to
our friends and
our potential
adversaries that
we will retain
vigorous
relationships
with our treaty
partners and our
allies, and that
we will meet and
defeat any
international
terrorist
movement that
threatens our
national
security. We
will work with
our NATO allies
to restore
stability in
Europe, and with
our friends in
the Middle East,
particularly
Israel, our most
stable partner
and friend in
the region, to
reduce the cycle
of violence and
turmoil in that
part of the
world.
I
have been
warning for many
years that the
United States is
the essential
guarantor of
stability in
East and
Southeast Asia,
and that China’s
increasingly
aggressive
military posture
in that region
threatens our
own national
security. If I
am elected as
your President I
can promise you
that we will not
accept China’s
continuing
military
expansion and
intimidation in
such areas as
the South China
Sea. Nor will we
be so fearful of
our economic
reliance on
trade with China
that we fail to
protect our
citizens in such
matters as
cybersecurity,
where it is
becoming
increasingly
apparent that
the personal
information of
millions of
Americans have
been penetrated
and breached,
apparently by
Chinese
intelligence
agencies.
Second, on
domestic issues
I would ask you
to look at the
results we were
able to obtain
during my time
in the Senate,
when many were
throwing their
hands up in the
air and
lamenting that
little could be
done when the
government had
become so
paralyzed.
I spoke
loudly and
consistently on
the issue of
economic
fairness, and
made this issue
the principal
focus when I was
asked to deliver
the Democratic
response to
President Bush’s
State of the
Union Address in
2007.
Despite the
warnings of
political
advisers that
being portrayed
as soft on crime
was political
suicide in
American
politics, from
the beginning of
my campaign for
the US Senate
and throughout
my tenure, I
spoke long and
loud about the
need to fix our
broken criminal
justice system.
We pushed this
issue directly
from my Senate
office, meeting
with more than
100 stake
holders from
across the
political
spectrum, taking
the hits and the
criticism along
the way and
eventually
bringing the
need for
criminal justice
reform out of
the shadows and
into the
mainstream of
political
debate.
I
wrote and
introduced the
Post-911 GI Bill
on my first day
in office. Some
said I hadn’t
earned the right
to introduce
such broad
legislation as a
brand-new
freshman
Senator. The
Bush
Administration
opposed the bill
until the day it
was signed. But
we built a
bipartisan
coalition – a
prototype for
how things can
indeed be
accomplished in
Washington – and
within 16 months
we passed the
finest, most
comprehensive GI
Bill in history,
which now has
allowed more
than a million
of our Post-911
veterans a first
class shot at
the future.
Third, once
we have brought
together many of
the great minds
and leaders of
America, what
else should we
be asking them
to do?
Let’s work to
restore true
economic
fairness in this
great country,
starting with
finding the
right formula
for growing our
national economy
while making our
tax laws more
balanced and
increasing the
negotiating
leverage of our
working people.
Our doors will
be open to
everyone who
wants to work
with us to find
real, lasting
solutions, from
either party and
from all
segments of the
American
economy. But our
goal will be to
increase the
financial
stability of the
American work
force.
Let’s work to
rebuild the
infrastructure
of this country
vigorously and
thoroughly,
including roads,
bridges, water
systems,
schools,
alternate energy
systems, and,
vitally, the
electrical grid
through which
all of our
energy sources
flow. A better
infrastructure
guarantees the
increase of our
inherent
national wealth
– it’s a
“capital”
investment in
all of us – and
it brings jobs
that cannot be
exported.
Let’s put a
priority on
fixing our
educational
system, and in
the process
giving our young
people the
priorities in
our society and
the future that
they deserve.
Not long ago a
high school
senior made a
comment that
still gives me
pause every time
I think of it.
She said, “I’m
not afraid of
fighting for a
cause. I’m
afraid I won’t
find a cause
worth fighting
for.”
Let’s give our
younger people a
cause worth
fighting for.
Let’s clean out
the
manure-filled
stables of a
political system
that has become
characterized by
greed. Let’s
rebuild an
educational
system that
gives everyone a
fair chance. A
democracy is
only as strong
as the promise
it offers its
young citizens
through the
public education
system.
When it comes to
education in
America we are
looking at three
challenges,
which could
actually
intersect and
become
opportunities.
The first is the
benefit we can
get through
Pre-K programs
that would allow
less-privileged
children to
begin
socialization
and education at
an earlier age.
The second is
the huge student
loan debt that
is hanging over
the heads of so
many of our
talented young
people who must
mortgage their
futures in order
to have one. And
the third is the
reality that
about 25 percent
of the young
people in this
country do not
even finish high
school.
During my time
in the Senate we
worked hard to
create
second-chance
programs for
those who had
not finished
high school,
financed in part
by employer tax
credits combined
with programs in
local community
colleges. If I
am elected
President we can
make these
programs happen.
We could also
find a way for
those who have
finished their
education to
complete a
period of public
service, with
loan forgiveness
as an incentive
for that
service.
Let’s work
together to fix
our broken
criminal justice
system. This
isn’t a
political issue,
it’s a
leadership
issue. It’s
costing us
billions of
dollars. It’s
wasting lives,
often beginning
at a very early
age, creating
career criminals
rather than
curing them.
It’s not making
our
neighborhoods
safer. We can
fix this,
strengthen our
country, and
make our people
safer in their
own homes and
communities. It
won’t happen
overnight, but
it won’t ever
happen if we
don’t start.
And let’s
work toward
bringing the
complex issue of
immigration
reform to a
solution that
respects the
integrity of our
legal traditions
while also
recognizing the
practical
realities of a
system that has
been paralyzed
by partisan
debate. The
holistic
leadership
approach I
instituted nine
years ago
regarding
criminal justice
reform offers a
prototype that
can be used on
the multifaceted
challenges of
immigration
reform.
With every one
of these
recommendations
I can make you
two promises.
The first is
that every
endeavor will be
based on the
premise that has
been the
foundation of
our society from
the day the
United States
Constitution was
signed: that we
are a nation of
laws, not of
specially
privileged
people, and that
our greatest
strength comes
from the power
of our
multicultural
heritage. And
the second is
that I mean what
I say, that if I
make a promise I
will keep it,
and that outside
my faith and my
family, my
greatest love
will always be
for this amazing
country that for
more than 200
years has given
so many people
the opportunity
to have a good
life, raise a
family, live in
freedom, and
achieve their
dreams.
Let’s work
together to make
America an even
better place.
I am ready
to fight on
behalf of every
one of these
issues. Will you
help me do that?
Source: Jim Webb for President