Presidential Campaign and Candidates

 

 

John Delaney 2020 AnnouncementJohn Delaney: I’m Running for President

July 28, 2017

WASHINGTON – Congressman John K. Delaney announced today that he is running for President, the first Democrat to formally enter the race. The son of a union electrician, an entrepreneur and Congressman with a record of innovative thinking, Delaney will speak about this announcement Saturday in a Facebook Live broadcast in New Jersey in the working-class neighborhood where he grew up.

“The current Administration is making us less prosperous and less secure, the healthcare debacle being the most recent example of their brand of destructive partisanship,” Delaney said. “I’m running to bring a new approach to governing and economic policy that addresses our nation’s opportunities and challenges and builds a future where the middle class can grow and succeed. My candidacy is about putting our future first, which involves responding to the rapid changes occurring in the world, strengthening our economy, and building a new social contract that widens the doors of opportunity, makes people more secure, and ensures no one is left behind.”

Delaney brings to the campaign a unique, progressive perspective that combines a belief in the power of the free market economy and the necessary role for government to set the rules of the road and help those left behind. “In the end, we won’t win by just attacking Trump, we’ll win as a party – and as a nation – when we focus on the facts and take on the tough issues that confront us, beginning with mastering the challenge of continued and accelerated innovation,” Delaney said. “If we fail to put partisanship aside and address the significant economic opportunities and challenges we face, we will lose a generation to market forces and change, just like we did when our leaders failed to respond to the dislocation caused by globalization.” Delaney continued, “Building a secure future means taking on these challenges, which are bigger than any one party, and delivering on the core American promise – building an economy where success is not a birthright, but something open to all, with a helping hand and a shared commitment to help those in danger of being left behind.”

Delaney continued: “Our government is hamstrung by excessive partisanship and the politics of small thinking. There’s no better proof of that than the dysfunction over health care – a cynical, political, deeply flawed and cruel approach to policymaking that we as a nation can no longer afford. We are letting critical opportunities to improve the country pass us by. And we are not even talking about the most important thing: the future. The victims of this leadership failure are the good people we are sworn to serve, and we are leaving our country ill-prepared for dramatic changes ahead.”

Delaney grew up in a blue-collar union household and his parents did not attend college. Before the age of 40, he founded and led two publicly-traded companies. Since 2013, Delaney has represented Maryland’s Sixth District in the House of Representatives, a competitive battleground district, and he has received national recognition for his breakthrough bipartisan infrastructure bill, which uses revenues from international tax reform to rebuild America’s roads and bridges. Delaney was named one of the World’s 50 Greatest Leaders by Fortune earlier this year. Delaney will be in Iowa this August and will build out his campaign team and national infrastructure over the next year. “This is the beginning of a long process of traveling the country, sharing my thoughts on moving the country forward, hearing from folks and building a campaign built on new ideas and problem solving, from the grass roots up,” Delaney said. “It didn’t feel right to run for re-election and then run for President. That’s standard politics, but I don’t intend to offer a standard campaign,” Delaney concluded. “I’m in for the long haul, one voter at a time. I’m excited to listen, learn and make my case for a future that works for everyone, a future that delivers on the promise of the American Dream.”

John Delaney Speaks on Facebook Live From Hometown in New Jersey

Saturday, July 29, 2017

WOOD-RIDGE, NJ – Democratic candidate for President, Congressman John K. Delaney, spoke today on his blue-collar roots, business career, and core values during a Facebook Live broadcast from his hometown in Wood-Ridge, New Jersey. Delaney’s parents didn’t attend college and scholarships from his father’s union helped him attend Columbia University.

Below are Congressman Delaney’s remarks:

Hello, everyone, this is Congressman John Delaney. You’ve probably heard the big news, which is that I’m running for President, and that’s what I’m here to talk about. I’m in my hometown of Wood-Ridge N.J., the place where I grew up. I’m here with my family, my sister and my mom. Like so many of you, my hometown made me the person I am today. And like so many of you, I never forget where I’m from.

Wood-Ridge is a small town full of hardworking people many of which work in solid blue-collar jobs. These are good people who care about their family, their kids, their faith, and their country.

When my sister and I grew up in our small house on North Avenue, life was simple, but it was really good. My dad was an electrician. He passed away last year and this is his truck – his last of his many pickup trucks he had across his life. I spent my summers working with my dad on construction sites. He taught me some very valuable lessons – he taught me to work hard, to never back down, to stand up for your friends, and most importantly to take care, protect, and love your family. He called it “being a man.” For me, the goal was to be a responsible adult. And it’s worked.

Even though neither of my parents went to college, my mom pushed me hard to get a great education. I ended up going to college across the river at Columbia University paid for, in part, by scholarships from my dad’s electrical union, the IBEW. Every year I would go to Jersey City and thank the members of that union for giving me that scholarship, an opportunity that they were giving me that none of them had ever had for themselves. Stepping on the campus of Columbia University changed my life–like an education does for so many. After that, I went to Georgetown for law school where the best thing imaginable happened to me – I met April my wonderful wife of almost 28 years and we have been blessed with 4 daughters.

Because of my education, I was able to become an entrepreneur. I started two businesses from scratch, both of which became public companies, and I created thousands of jobs in the great state of Maryland, which is where we now call home. One of the best memories I have was ringing the bell on the New York Stock Exchange with my first company; I was in my early thirties at the time. I could look across the river at Jersey City and imagine all those wonderful electricians I used to thank for helping pay my way through college. You see, none of us do it alone. I also could also see Ellis island, where one of my grandfathers came through. He came from England as a boy but was detained because he only had one arm. You see back then we discriminated against people with disabilities. After holding him for a while, he was let into the United States by a judge – a judge that had one arm. Who knows what would have happened otherwise. He ended up working in a pencil factory in Jersey City not far from where my other grandfather, an Irishman named John Delaney as well, worked as a dockworker. As you can tell, hard work runs in our family.

What also runs in our family is an appreciation for the American dream. Within two generations of the one-armed boy being detained at Ellis Island, his grandson goes on to become the CEO of two New York Stock Exchange listed companies and has the privilege of serving in the Congress of the United States, representing the great state of Maryland and some of the finest people in the country – the citizens of Maryland’s 6th. That’s the American dream.

But is the American dream still alive? That’s the question we have to ask ourselves. Or do you have to be born into the right family, or the right town, to have a shot? We need to make sure we stay the land of opportunity and the best way to do that is to focus on the future. And that’s the work I want to do, which is why I’m running for president. I want to work to advance an exciting and original approach to governing, which is all about the future, about getting things done to grow our economy, create jobs, and – importantly – ensure a better future for all Americans.

The American people are so much greater than the sum of our political parties. As a country, we have accomplished amazing things, and if we come together and rise above our broken politics, we can a do it again. Today, our goal should be to have higher economic growth and a more inclusive economy, lead the world through some very difficult times and very difficult threats, and take action to leave our country and the world better off for generations to come. All of this is certainly possible if we focus on the future and work together.

I envision a future far better than the world today. A future where responsible businesses and the power of our economic model work with a smarter government to not only lead the world in innovation and growth, but also drive positive changes in society, including higher wages for our workers and better health, educational, and environmental outcomes. A future where America’s standing in the world is reasserted with real leadership to stronger global alliances that work for peace and security to keep Americans safe.

To achieve this goal, we have to be honest about what is actually happening in the world. Technology, automation, and globalization are the most powerful forces in the world today. Across our country and the world, these forces have been enormously positive, but they have not been positive for everyone. They will continue to make life better, enhance productivity, solve some of the world’s most difficult problems in society, and open societies. Sadly, these forces will also eliminate certain jobs and require workers to learn new skills much more quickly. They will create security risks, and strain our resources. As a nation, we need to respond to these opportunities and challenges by investing in infrastructure, innovation and promoting start-ups. We need to improve education and make it easier for our workers to acquire new skills and switch jobs as needed. We need to encourage a more just and inclusive form of capitalism, take steps to help our businesses compete and grow, strengthen our safety net and benefit programs and think about fiscal, climate and security risks differently. To me, these are not vague promises; I have specific plans for each.

These goals can only be accomplished by focusing on the facts, making government work better, reinventing the basic social contract, and coming together as a nation to pursue big ideas. We can no longer allow petty and pointless political debates to get in the way of real progress for the American people. Much more unites us than divides us, and it’s time to stop fighting and time to get things done. In truth, the real enemy of progress is hyper-partisan politics that tries to convince the American people that half the country is entirely wrong about what they believe and prioritizes political victories over the common good of our citizens.

No country is better positioned to capitalize on this change than the United States of America. We are the undisputed center of technology. Our workers are the most talented in the world. Our business community leads the world. Our universities are beacons to talent and our multi-ethnic, multi-religious free society is the envy of people around the world. Our armed services are the finest in the world and we have free markets, free press and the rule of law.

Unfortunately, however, we are in a tough spot right now as a country. We have a President who has an unhealthy disregard for the truth and the administration of justice. He has shown himself to be an unsteady, self-absorbed leader, and much of his agenda will hurt working families, exacerbate our challenges and cause us to miss significant opportunities. Fortunately, we stopped his latest assault on something that should be a right for every American – healthcare. And we did it in a bipartisan way by getting a few brave Republicans to look at the facts and understand that this would actually hurt so many people. President Trump is not showing the business skills he promised. In truth, Trump isn’t, and never was, a successful business leader. He was a successful business promoter, which is an entirely different thing. Successful business leaders innovate, create jobs, pay their bills, and don’t file for bankruptcy and hire the most talented not those best connected. This is what I did in building two companies from scratch. Trump does the exact opposite. He’s betraying and hurting the good people he claims to support and he has deepened our divisions.

And Trump has used his success to bully and intimidate people to get his way. I think about success from a different perspective and I try to be a steward of the blessings I’ve had and use them to help people, to give back. When I came to Congress I said I would use my experience as a business leader to come up with new bipartisan ideas to improve the economy and create jobs. That is exactly what I did when I put forth the most significant infrastructure and tax reform proposal in the Congress, which would invest over $1 trillion in infrastructure and create a pathway for trillions of dollars of trapped overseas cash to come back to the United States. This proposal has had over 40 Democrats and 40 Republicans supporting it. That’s the kind of approach real business leaders take in government; that’s the real “art of the deal” in politics.

These are my genuine thoughts, none of which are poll-tested nor developed by consultants. They come from my experience, my work, and my values and my heart and I have the skills to make them happen. April and I will spend the next year preparing for the 2020 election by talking to people all across the country and discussing our plan for an alternative economic vision rooted in a more dynamic economy and a renewed social contract and an overall respectful, bipartisan, get things done approach to governing.

Resistance to the Trump agenda is critical, but what will really matter in the long term is rebuilding our country, renewing our spirit of generosity towards each other, and repositioning our time tested economic model towards broadly shared success. That’s what I want to do. God bless you.

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Source: Friends of John Delaney

 

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