Text of Marco Rubio's
Announcement
Speech
As Prepared for Delivery
Thank you.
After months of deliberation and prayer about the future of our
country, I have come here
tonight to make an announcement
on how I believe I can best
serve her.
I chose to make this announcement at the Freedom Tower because it
is a symbol of our nation’s
identity as the land of
opportunity. And I am more
confident than ever that despite
our troubles, we have it within
our power to make our time
another American Century.
In this very room five decades ago, tens of thousands of Cuban
exiles began their new lives in
America. Their story is part of
the larger story of the American
miracle. How, united by a common
faith in their God given right
to go as far as their talent and
work would take them, a
collection of immigrants and
exiles, former slaves and
refugees, became one people, and
together built the freest and
most prosperous nation ever.
For almost all of human history, power and wealth belonged only
to a select few. Most people who
have ever lived were trapped by
the circumstances of their
birth, destined to live the life
their parents had. But America
is different. Here, we are the
children and grandchildren of
people who refused to accept
this.
Both of my parents were born to poor families in Cuba. After his
mother died when he was nine, my
father left school to go work.
My mother was one of seven girls
raised by a disabled father who
struggled to provide for his
family.
When they were young, my parents had big dreams for themselves.
But because they were not born
into wealth or power, their
future was destined to be
defined by their past. So in
1956 they came here, to the one
place on earth where the
aspirations of people like them
could be more than just dreams.
My father became a bartender. My mother a cashier, a maid and a
Kmart stock clerk. They never
made it big. But they were
successful. Two immigrants with
little money or education found
stable jobs, owned a home,
retired with security and gave
all four of their children a
life far better than their own.
My parents achieved what came to be known as the American Dream.
But now, too many Americans are
starting to doubt whether
achieving that dream is still
possible:
Hard working families living paycheck to paycheck, one unexpected
expense away from disaster…
Young Americans, unable to start a career, a business or a
family, because they owe
thousands in student loans for
degrees that did not lead to
jobs…
And small business owners, left to struggle under the weight of
more taxes, more regulations and
more government.
Why is this happening in a country that for over two centuries
has been defined by equality of
opportunity?
Because while our people and economy are pushing the boundaries
of the 21st century, too many of
our leaders and their ideas are
stuck in the twentieth century.
They are busy looking backward, so they do not see how jobs and
prosperity today depend on our
ability to compete in a global
economy. So our leaders put us
at a disadvantage by taxing,
borrowing and regulating like
it’s 1999.
They look for solutions in yesterday, so they don’t see that
good-paying modern jobs require
different skills and more
education than the past. They
blindly support an outdated
higher education system that is
too expensive and inaccessible
to those who need it most.
And they have forgotten that
when America fails to lead,
global chaos inevitably follows,
so they appease our enemies,
betray our allies and weaken our
military.
At the turn of
the 19th century, a generation
of Americans harnessed the power
of the Industrial Age and
transformed this country into
the leading economy in the
world. And the 20th century
became the American Century.
Now, the time has come for our generation to lead the way toward
a new American Century.
If we reform our tax code, reduce regulations, control spending,
modernize our immigration laws
and repeal and replace
ObamaCare, the American people
will create millions of
better-paying modern jobs.
If we create a 21st century system of higher education that
provides working Americans the
chance to acquire the skills
they need, that no longer
graduates students with
mountains of debt and degrees
that do not lead to jobs, and
that graduates more students
from high school ready to work,
then our people will be prepared
to seize their opportunities in
the new economy.
If we remember that family – not government – is the most
important institution in
society, that all life deserves
protection, and that all parents
deserve to choose the education
that’s right for their children,
then we will have a strong
people and a strong nation.
And if America accepts the mantle of global leadership, by
abandoning this administration’s
dangerous concessions to Iran,
and its hostility to Israel; by
reversing the hollowing out of
our military; by giving our men
and women in uniform the
resources, care and gratitude
they deserve; by no longer being
passive in the face of Chinese
and Russian aggression; and by
ending the near total disregard
for the erosion of democracy and
human rights around the world;
then our nation will be safer,
the world more stable, and our
people more prosperous.
This election is not just about what laws we will pass. It is a
generational choice about what
kind of country we will be.
Just yesterday, a leader from yesterday began a campaign for
President by promising to take
us back to yesterday.
But yesterday is over, and we are never going back. We Americans
are proud of our history, but
our country has always been
about the future. Before us now
is the opportunity to author the
greatest chapter yet in the
amazing story of America.
We can’t do that by going back to the leaders and ideas of the
past. We must change the
decisions we are making by
changing the people who are
making them.
That is why today, grounded by the lessons of our history, and
inspired by the promise of our
future, I announce my candidacy
for President of the United
States of America.
My candidacy might seem improbable to some watching from abroad.
In many countries, the highest
office in the land is reserved
for the rich and powerful. But I
live in an exceptional country
where even the son of a
bartender and a maid can have
the same dreams and the same
future as those who come from
power and privilege.
I recognize the challenges of this campaign, and the demands of
the office I seek. But in this
endeavor as in all things, I
find comfort in the ancient
command to, “Be strong and
courageous! Do not tremble or be
dismayed, for the LORD your God
is with you wherever you go.”
I have heard some suggest that I should step aside and wait my
turn. But I cannot.
Because I believe our very
identity as an exceptional
nation is at stake, and I can
make a difference as President.
I am humbled by the realization that America doesn't owe me
anything; but I have a debt to
America I must try to repay.
This isn't just the country
where I was born; America is the
place that changed my family’s
history.
I regret my father did not live to see this day in person. He
used to tell me all the time: En
este pais, ustedes van a poder
lograr todas las cosas que
nosotros no pudimos.
“In this country, you will achieve all the things we never
could.”
On days when I am tired or discouraged, I remember the sound of
his keys jingling at the front
door of our home, often well
past midnight, as he returned
from another long day at work.
When I was younger, I didn't
fully appreciate all he did for
us, but now as my own children
grow older, I fully understand.
My father was grateful for the work he had, but that was not the
life he wanted for his children.
He wanted all the dreams he once
had for himself to come true for
us. He wanted all the doors that
closed for him to be open for
me.
My father stood behind a small portable bar in the back of a room
for all those years, so that
tonight I could stand behind
this podium in the front of this
room.
That journey, from behind that bar to behind this podium, is the
essence of the American Dream.
Whether or not we remain a special country will depend on whether
that journey is still possible
for those trying to make it now:
The single mother who works long hours for little pay so her
children don’t have to struggle
the way she has…
The student who takes two buses before dawn to attend a better
school halfway across town…
The workers in our hotel kitchens, the landscaping crews in our
neighborhoods, the late-night
janitorial staff that clean our
offices … and the bartenders who
tonight are standing in the back
of a room somewhere…
If their American Dreams become impossible, we will have become
just another country. But if
they succeed, the 21st Century
will be another American
Century. This will be the
message of my campaign and the
purpose of my presidency.
To succeed on this journey, I will need your prayers, your
support, and ultimately, your
vote. Tonight I am asking you to
take that first step with me, by
joining us at
marcorubio.com.
My wife Jeanette and my four children are here tonight. The next
19 months will take me far from
home. I will miss watching
Amanda run track, Daniella play
volleyball, Anthony play
football and Dominick play
soccer.
But I have chosen this course because this election is about
them. Theirs is the most
important generation in American
history. If we can capture the
promise of this new century they
will be the freest and most
prosperous Americans ever. But
if we fail, they will be the
first generation of Americans to
inherit a country worse off than
the one left for their parents.
The final verdict on our generation will be written by Americans
not yet born. Let us make sure
they record that we made the
right choice. That in the early
years of this century, faced
with a rapidly changing and
uncertain world, our generation
rose to face the great
challenges of our time.
And because we did, there was still one place in the world where
who you come from does not
determine how far you can go.
Because we did, the American miracle lived on.
And because we did, our children and theirs lived in a new
American Century.
Thank you, God bless you, and God bless the United States of
America.
Source: Marco Rubio for President