The Hope Is There:
LOOKING TOWARD THE NEXT HORIZON
by
John F. Kerry
United States Senator - Massachusetts
Democratic Presidential Candidate
Delivered at the 2004 Democratic National Convention, Boston,
Massachusetts
July 29, 2004
My fellow Americans: we are here tonight united in
one simple purpose: to make America stronger at home and respected
in the world.
A great American novelist wrote that you can’t go
home again. He could not have imagined this evening. Tonight, I am
home. Home where my public life began and those who made it possible
live. Home where our nation’s history was written in blood,
idealism, and hope. Home where my parents showed me the values of
family, faith, and country.
Thank you, all of you, for a welcome home I will never forget.
I wish my parents could share this moment. They went to their rest
in the last few years, but their example, their inspiration, their
gift of open eyes, open mind, and endless world are bigger and more
lasting than any words. I was born in Colorado, in Fitzsimmons
Army Hospital, when my dad was a pilot in World War II. Now, I’m not
one to read into things, but guess which wing of the hospital
the maternity ward was in? I’m not making this up. I was born in the
West Wing!
My mother was the rock of our family as so many mothers are. She
stayed up late to help me do my homework. She sat by my bed
when I was sick, and she answered the questions of a child who, like
all children, found the world full of wonders and mysteries.
She was my den mother when I was a Cub Scout and she was so proud of
her fifty year pin as a Girl Scout leader. She gave me her passion
for the environment. She taught me to see trees as the cathedrals of
nature. And by the power of her example, she showed me that we can
and must finish the march toward full equality for all women in our
country.
My dad did the things that a boy remembers. He gave me my first
model airplane, my first baseball mitt and my first bicycle. He also
taught me that we are here for something bigger than ourselves; he
lived out the responsibilities and sacrifices of the greatest
generation to whom we owe so much.
When I was a young man, he was in the State Department, stationed in
Berlin when it and the world were divided between democracy and
communism. I have unforgettable memories of being a kid mesmerized
by the British, French, and American troops, each of them guarding
their own part of the city, and Russians standing guard on the stark
line separating East from West. On one occasion, I rode my bike into
Soviet East Berlin. And when I proudly told my dad, he promptly
grounded me.
But what I learned has stayed with me for a
lifetime. I saw how different life was on different sides of the
same city. I saw the fear in the eyes of people who were not free. I
saw the gratitude of people toward the United States for all that we
had done. I felt goose bumps as I got off a military train and heard
the Army band strike up “Stars and Stripes Forever.” I learned what
it meant to be
America at our best. I learned the pride of our freedom. And I
am determined now to restore that pride to all who look to America.
Mine were greatest generation parents. And as I
thank them, we all join together to thank that whole generation for
making America strong, for winning World War II, winning the Cold
War, and for the great gift of service which brought America fifty
years of peace and prosperity.
My parents inspired me to serve, and when I was a junior in high
school, John Kennedy called my generation to service. It was the
beginning of a great journey - a time to march for civil rights, for
voting rights, for the environment, for women, and for peace. We
believed we could change the world. And you know what? We did.
But we’re not finished. The journey isn’t complete. The march isn’t
over. The promise isn’t perfected. Tonight, we’re setting out again.
And together, we’re going to write the next great chapter of
America’s story.
We have it in our power to change the world again. But only if
we’re true to our ideals - and that starts by telling the truth to
the American people. That is my first pledge to you tonight. As
President, I will restore trust and credibility to the White House.
I ask you to judge me by my record: As a young prosecutor, I fought
for victim’s rights and made prosecuting violence against women a
priority. When I came to the Senate, I broke with many in my own
party to vote for a balanced budget, because I thought it was the
right thing to do. I fought to put a 100,000 cops on the street.
And then I reached across the aisle to work with John McCain, to
find the truth about our POW’s and missing in action, and to finally
make peace with Vietnam.
I will be a commander in chief who will never mislead us into war. I
will have a Vice President who will not conduct secret meetings with
polluters to rewrite our environmental laws. I will have a Secretary
of Defense who will listen to the best advice of our military
leaders. And I will appoint an Attorney General who actually upholds
the Constitution of the United States.
My fellow Americans, this is the most important election of our
lifetime. The stakes are high. We are a nation at war - a global war
on terror against an enemy unlike any we have ever known before. And
here at home, wages are falling, health care costs are rising, and
our great middle class is shrinking. People are working weekends;
they’re working two jobs, three jobs, and they’re still not getting
ahead.
We’re told that outsourcing jobs is good for America. We’re
told that new jobs that pay $9,000 less than the jobs that
have been lost is the best we can do. They say this is the best
economy we’ve ever had. And they say that anyone who thinks
otherwise is a pessimist. Well, here is our answer: There is nothing
more pessimistic than saying America can’t do better.
We can do better and we will. We’re the optimists. For us, this is a
country of the future. We’re the can do people. And let’s not
forget what we did in the 1990s. We balanced the budget. We paid
down the debt. We created 3 million new jobs. We lifted millions out
of poverty and we lifted the standard of living for the middle
class. We just need to believe in ourselves - and we can do it
again.
So tonight, in the city where America’s freedom began, only a few
blocks from where the sons and daughters of liberty gave birth to
our nation - here tonight, on behalf of a new birth of freedom - on
behalf of the middle class who deserve a champion, and those
struggling to join it who deserve a fair shot - for the brave men
and women in uniform who risk their lives every day and the families
who pray for their return - for all those who believe our best days
are ahead of us - for all of you - with great faith in the American
people, I accept your nomination for President of the United States.
I am proud that at my side will be a running mate whose life is the
story of the American dream and who’s worked every day to make that
dream real for all Americans - Senator John Edwards of North
Carolina. And his wonderful wife Elizabeth and their family. This
son of a mill worker is ready to lead - and next January, Americans
will be proud to have a fighter for the middle class to succeed Dick
Cheney as Vice President of the United States.
And what can I say about Teresa? She has the strongest moral compass
of anyone I know. She’s down to earth, nurturing, courageous, wise
and smart. She speaks her mind and she speaks the truth, and I love
her for that, too. And that’s why America will embrace her as
the next First Lady of the United States.
For Teresa and me, no matter what the future holds or the past has
given us, nothing will ever mean as much as our children. We love
them not just for who they are and what they’ve become, but for
being themselves, making us laugh, holding our feet to the fire, and
never letting me get away with anything. Thank you, Andre, Alex,
Chris, Vanessa, and John.
And in this journey, I am accompanied by an extraordinary band of
brothers led by that American hero, a patriot named Max Cleland. Our
band of brothers doesn’t march together because of who we are as
veterans, but because of what we learned as soldiers. We fought for
this nation because we loved it and we came back with the deep
belief that every day is extra. We may be a little older
now, we may be a little grayer, but we still know how to fight for
our country.
And standing with us in that fight are those who shared with me the
long season of the primary campaign: Carol Moseley Braun, General
Wesley Clark, Howard Dean, Dick Gephardt, Bob Graham, Dennis
Kucinich, Joe Lieberman and Al Sharpton.
To all of you, I say thank you for teaching me and testing me - but
mostly, we say thank you for standing up for our country and giving
us the unity to move America forward.
My fellow Americans, the world tonight is very different from the
world of four years ago. But I believe the American people are more
than equal to the challenge. Remember the hours after
September 11th, when we came together as one to answer the attack
against our homeland. We drew strength when our firefighters ran up
the stairs and risked their lives, so that others might live.
When rescuers rushed into smoke and fire at the Pentagon. When
the men and women of Flight 93 sacrificed themselves to save our
nation’s Capitol. When flags were hanging from front porches all
across America, and strangers became friends. It was the worst day
we have ever seen, but it brought out the best in all of us.
I am proud that after September 11th all our people rallied to
President Bush’s call for unity to meet the danger. There were
no Democrats. There were no Republicans. There were only
Americans. How we wish it had stayed that way.
Now I know there are those who criticize me for seeing complexities
- and I do - because some issues just aren’t all that simple. Saying
there are weapons of mass destruction in Iraq doesn’t make it so.
Saying we can fight a war on the cheap doesn’t make it so. And
proclaiming mission accomplished certainly doesn’t make it so.
As President, I will ask hard questions and demand hard evidence. I
will immediately reform the intelligence system - so policy is
guided by facts, and facts are never distorted by politics. And as
President, I will bring back this nation’s time-honored tradition:
the United States of America never goes to war because we want to,
we only go to war because we have to.
I know what kids go through when they are carrying an M-16 in a
dangerous place and they can’t tell friend from foe. I know what
they go through when they’re out on patrol at night and they don’t
know what’s coming around the next bend. I know what it’s like to
write letters home telling your family that everything’s all right
when you’re not sure that’s true.
As President, I will wage this war with the lessons I learned in
war. Before you go to battle, you have to be able to look a parent
in the eye and truthfully say: “I tried everything possible to avoid
sending your son or daughter into harm’s way. But we had no choice.
We had to protect the American people, fundamental American values
from a threat that was real and imminent.” So lesson one, this is
the only justification for going to war.
And on my first day in office, I will send a message to every man
and woman in our armed forces: You will never be asked to fight a
war without a plan to win the peace.
I know what we have to do in Iraq. We need a President who has the
credibility to bring our allies to our side and share the burden,
reduce the cost to American taxpayers, and reduce the risk to
American soldiers. That’s the right way to get the job done and
bring our troops home.
Here is the reality: that won’t happen until we have a president who
restores America’s respect and leadership — so we don’t have to go
it alone in the world.
And we need to rebuild our alliances, so we can get the terrorists
before they get us.
I defended this country as a young man and I will defend it as
President. Let there be no mistake: I will never hesitate to use
force when it is required. Any attack will be met with a swift and
certain response. I will never give any nation or international
institution a veto over our national security. And I will build a
stronger American military.
We will add 40,000 active duty troops - not in Iraq, but to
strengthen American forces that are now overstretched, overextended,
and under pressure. We will double our special forces to conduct
anti-terrorist operations. We will provide our troops with the
newest weapons and technology to save their lives - and win the
battle. And we will end the backdoor draft of National Guard and
reservists.
To all who serve in our armed forces today, I say, help is on the
way.
As President, I will fight a smarter, more effective war on terror.
We will deploy every tool in our arsenal: our economic as well as
our military might; our principles as well as our firepower.
In these dangerous days there is a right way and a wrong way to be
strong. Strength is more than tough words. After decades of
experience in national security, I know the reach of our power and I
know the power of our ideals.
We need to make America once again a beacon in the world. We need to
be looked up to and not just feared.
We need to lead a global effort against nuclear proliferation - to
keep the most dangerous weapons in the world out of the most
dangerous hands in the world.
We need a strong military and we need to lead strong alliances. And
then, with confidence and determination, we will be able to tell the
terrorists: You will lose and we will win. The future doesn’t belong
to fear; it belongs to freedom.
And the front lines of this battle are not just far away - they’re
right here on our shores, at our airports, and potentially in any
town or city. Today, our national security begins with homeland
security. The 9-11 Commission has given us a path to follow,
endorsed by Democrats, Republicans, and the 9-11 families. As
President, I will not evade or equivocate; I will immediately
implement the recommendations of that commission. We shouldn’t be
letting ninety-five percent of container ships come into our ports
without ever being physically inspected. We shouldn’t be leaving our
nuclear and chemical plants without enough protection. And we
shouldn’t be opening firehouses in Baghdad and closing them down in
the United States of America.
And tonight, we have an important message for those who question the
patriotism of Americans who offer a better direction for our
country. Before wrapping themselves in the flag and shutting their
eyes and ears to the truth, they should remember what America is
really all about. They should remember the great idea of freedom
for which so many have given their lives. Our purpose now is to
reclaim democracy itself. We are here to affirm that when Americans
stand up and speak their minds and say America can do better, that
is not a challenge to patriotism; it is the heart and soul of
patriotism.
You see that flag up there. We call her Old Glory. The stars and
stripes forever. I fought under that flag, as did so many of you
here and all across our country. That flag flew from the gun turret
right behind my head. It was shot through and through and tattered,
but it never ceased to wave in the wind. It draped the caskets of
men I served with and friends I grew up with. For us, that flag is
the
most powerful symbol of who we are and what we believe in. Our
strength. Our diversity. Our love of country. All that makes America
both great and good.
That flag doesn’t belong to any president. It doesn’t belong to any
ideology and it doesn’t belong to any political party. It belongs to
all the American people.
My fellow citizens, elections are about choices. And choices are
about values. In the end, it’s not just policies and programs that
matter; the president who sits at that desk must be guided by
principle.
For four years, we’ve heard a lot of talk about values. But
values spoken without actions taken are just slogans. Values
are not just words. They’re what we live by. They’re about the
causes we champion and the people we fight for. And it is time for
those who talk about family values to start valuing families.
You don’t value families by kicking kids out of after school
programs and taking cops off our streets, so that Enron can get
another tax break.
We believe in the family value of caring for our children and
protecting the neighborhoods where they walk and play.
And that is the choice in this election.
You don’t value families by denying real prescription drug coverage
to seniors, so big drug companies can get another windfall.
We believe in the family value expressed in one of the oldest
Commandments: “Honor thy father and thy mother.”
As President, I will not privatize Social Security. I will not cut
benefits. And together, we will make sure that senior citizens never
have to cut their pills in half because they can’t afford
life-saving medicine.
And that is the choice in this election.
You don’t value families if you force them to take up a collection
to buy body armor for a son or daughter in the service, if you deny
veterans health care, or if you tell middle class families to wait
for a tax cut, so that the wealthiest among us can get even more.
We believe in the value of doing what’s right for everyone in the
American family.
And that is the choice in this election.
We believe that what matters most is not narrow appeals masquerading
as values, but the shared values that show the true face of America.
Not narrow appeals that divide us, but shared values that unite us.
Family and faith. Hard work and responsibility. Opportunity for all
- so that every child, every parent, every worker has an equal shot
at living up to their God-given potential.
What does it mean in America today when Dave McCune, a steel worker
I met in Canton, Ohio, saw his job sent overseas and the equipment
in his factory literally unbolted, crated up, and shipped thousands
of miles away along with that job? What does it mean when workers
I’ve met had to train their foreign replacements?
America can do better. So tonight we say: help is on the way.
What does it mean when Mary Ann Knowles, a woman with breast cancer
I met in New Hampshire, had to keep working day after day right
through her chemotherapy, no matter how sick she felt, because she
was terrified of losing her family’s health insurance.
America can do better. And help is on the way.
What does it mean when Deborah Kromins from Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania works and saves all her life only to find out that her
pension has disappeared into thin air - and the executive who looted
it has bailed out on a golden parachute?
America can do better. And help is on the way.
What does it mean when twenty five percent of the children in Harlem
have asthma because of air pollution?
America can do better. And help is on the way.
What does it mean when people are huddled in blankets in the cold,
sleeping in Lafayette Park on the doorstep of the White House itself
- and the number of families living in poverty has risen by three
million in the last four years?
America can do better. And help is on the way.
And so we come here tonight to ask: Where is the conscience
of our country?
I’ll tell you where it is: it’s in rural and small town America;
it’s in urban neighborhoods and suburban main streets; it’s alive in
the people I’ve met in every part of this land. It’s bursting in the
hearts of Americans who are determined to give our country back its
values and its truth.
We value jobs that pay you more not less than you earned before. We
value jobs where, when you put in a week’s work, you can actually
pay your bills, provide for your children, and lift up the quality
of your life. We value an America where the middle class is not
being squeezed, but doing better.
So here is our economic plan to build a stronger
America:
First, new incentives to revitalize manufacturing.
Second, investment in technology and innovation that will create the
good- paying jobs of the future.
Third, close the tax loopholes that reward companies for shipping
our jobs overseas. Instead, we will reward companies that create and
keep good paying jobs where they belong - in the good old U.S.A.
We value an America that exports products, not jobs - and we believe
American workers should never have to subsidize the loss of their
own job.
Next, we will trade and compete in the world. But our plan calls for
a fair playing field - because if you give the American worker a
fair playing field, there’s nobody in the world the American worker
can’t compete against.
And we’re going to return to fiscal responsibility because it is the
foundation of our economic strength. Our plan will cut the deficit
in half in four years by ending tax giveaways that are nothing more
than corporate welfare - and will make government live by the rule
that every family has to follow: pay as you go.
And let me tell you what we won’t do: we won’t raise
taxes on the middle class. You’ve heard a lot of false charges about
this in recent months. So let me say straight out what I will do as
President: I will cut middle class taxes. I will reduce the tax
burden on small business. And I will roll back the tax cuts for the
wealthiest individuals who make over $200,000 a year, so we can
invest in job creation, health care and education.
Our education plan for a stronger America sets high standards and
demands accountability from parents, teachers, and schools. It
provides for smaller class sizes and treats teachers like the
professionals they are. And it gives a tax credit to families for
each and every year of college.
When I was a prosecutor, I met young kids who were in trouble,
abandoned by adults. And as President, I am determined that we stop
being a nation content to spend $50,000 a year to keep a young
person in prison for the rest of their life - when we could invest
$10,000 to give them Head Start, Early Start, Smart Start, the best
possible start in life.
And we value health care that’s affordable and accessible for all
Americans.
Since 2000, four million people have lost their
health insurance. Millions more are struggling to afford it.
You know what’s happening. Your premiums, your co-payments, your
deductibles have all gone through the roof. Our health care
plan for a stronger America cracks down on the waste, greed, and
abuse in our health care system and will save families up to $1,000
a year on their
premiums. You’ll get to pick your own doctor - and patients and
doctors, not insurance company bureaucrats, will make medical
decisions. Under our plan, Medicare will negotiate lower drug prices
for seniors. And all Americans will be able to buy less expensive
prescription drugs from countries like Canada.
The story of people struggling for health care is the story of so
many Americans. But you know what, it’s not the story of senators
and members of Congress. Because we give ourselves great health care
and you get the bill. Well, I’m here to say, your family’s
health care is just as important as any politician’s in Washington,
D.C.
And when I’m President, America will stop being the only advanced
nation in the world which fails to understand that health care is
not a privilege for the wealthy, the connected, and the elected - it
is a right for all Americans. We value an America that
controls its own destiny because it’s finally and forever
independent of Mideast oil.
What does it mean for our economy and our national security when we
only have three percent of the world’s oil reserves, yet we rely on
foreign countries for fifty-three percent of what we consume?
I want an America that relies on its own ingenuity and innovation -
not the Saudi royal family.
And our energy plan for a stronger America will invest in new
technologies and alternative fuels and the cars of the future — so
that no young American in uniform will ever be held hostage to our
dependence on oil from the Middle East.
I’ve told you about our plans for the economy, for education, for
health care, for energy independence. I want you to know more about
them. So now I’m going to say something that Franklin Roosevelt
could never have said in his acceptance speech: go to johnkerry.com.
I want to address these next words directly to President George W.
Bush: In the weeks ahead, let’s be optimists, not just opponents.
Let’s build unity in the American family, not angry division. Let’s
honor this nation’s diversity; let’s respect one another; and let’s
never misuse for political purposes the most precious document in
American history, the Constitution of the United States.
My friends, the high road may be harder, but it leads to a better
place. And that’s why Republicans and Democrats must make this
election a contest of big ideas, not small-minded attacks. This is
our time to reject the kind of politics calculated to divide race
from race, group from group, region from region. Maybe some just see
us divided into red states and blue states, but I see us as one
America - red, white, and blue. And when I am President, the
government I lead will enlist people of talent, Republicans as well
as Democrats, to find the common ground - so that no one who has
something to contribute will be left on the sidelines.
And let me say it plainly: in that cause, and in this campaign, we
welcome people of faith. America is not us and them. I think of what
Ron Reagan said of his father a few weeks ago, and I want to say
this to you tonight: I don’t wear my own faith on my sleeve. But
faith has given me values and hope to live by, from Vietnam to this
day, from Sunday to Sunday. I don’t want to claim that God is on our
side. As Abraham Lincoln told us, I want to pray humbly
that we are on God’s side. And whatever our faith, one belief should
bind us all: The measure of our character is our willingness to give
of ourselves for others and for our country.
These aren’t Democratic values. These aren’t Republican values.
They’re American values. We believe in them. They’re who we are. And
if we honor them, if we believe in ourselves, we can build an
America that’s stronger at home and respected in the world.
So much promise stretches before us. Americans have always reached
for the impossible, looked to the next horizon, and asked: What if?
Two young bicycle mechanics from Dayton asked what if this airplane
could take off at Kitty Hawk? It did that and changed the world
forever. A young president asked what if we could go to the moon in
ten years? And now we’re exploring the solar system and the stars
themselves. A young generation of entrepreneurs asked, what if
we could take all the information in a library and put it on a
little chip the size of a fingernail? We did and that too changed
the world forever.
And now it’s our time to ask: What if?
What if we find a breakthrough to cure Parkinson’s, diabetes,
Alzheimer’s and AIDs? What if we have a president who believes in
science, so we can unleash the wonders of discovery like stem cell
research to treat illness and save millions of lives? What if we do
what adults should do - and make sure all our children are safe in
the afternoons after school?
And what if we have a leadership that’s as good as the American
dream - so that bigotry and hatred never again steal the hope and
future of any American? I learned a lot about these values on that
gunboat patrolling the Mekong Delta with young Americans who came
from places as different as Iowa and Oregon, Arkansas,
Florida and California. No one cared where we went to school. No one
cared about our race or our backgrounds. We were literally all
in the same boat. We looked out, one for the other - and we still
do.
That is the kind of America I will lead as President - an America
where we are all in the same boat. Never has there been a more
urgent moment for Americans to step up and define ourselves. I will
work my heart out. But, my fellow citizens, the outcome is in your
hands more than mine.
It is time to reach for the next dream. It is time
to look to the next horizon. For America, the hope is there. The sun
is rising. Our best days are still to come.
Goodnight, God bless you, and God bless America. |