Candidate Speech Series: Martin O'Malley
[This is a continuing series of candidate speech transcripts from all the Democratic presidential campaigns, which will be running all week long. Please see the introduction to this series for more information.]
Martin O'Malley
Governor O'Malley Announces For President
Baltimore, Maryland
5/30/15
My fellow Americans:
I want to talk with you today about The American Dream we share -- its powerful history, its current condition, and most importantly, its urgent need for rebuilding.
Our nation was founded on two self-evident truths: That all of us are created equal. And that we are endowed by our Creator with the rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
With these words, the American dream began. No fine print. No expiration date. All of us are included. Women and men. Black and white people. Irish Americans, Asian Americans, Latino Americans, Native Americans. Jewish, Christian, and Muslim Americans. Young and old. Rich and poor. Workers and business owners. Gay, lesbian, transgender and straight Americans. Every person is important, each of us is needed.
In our idea of country, there is no such thing as a spare American. There is, however, a growing injustice in our country today. It is the gap between the strong and just country our children need for us to be -- and the country we are in danger of becoming.
For today in America, seventy percent of us are earning the same or less than they were 12 years ago. This is the first time that has happened this side of World War II. Today in America, family owned businesses and farms are struggling to compete with ever larger concentrations of corporate power. Fifty years ago, the nation's largest employer was GM. An average GM employee could pay for a year's tuition at a state university with two weeks' wages. Today in America, with dreams of college, a decent paying job, and a secure retirement slipping beyond the reach of so very many -- the American Dream seems to be hanging by a thread.
And yet... for America there is always a yet.
The final thread that holds us just might be the strongest. It is the thread of the generosity, the compassion, and the love of one another that brings us together as One American People. For over 200 years we've been the architects of our own future. And now we must build anew today.
My father and mother, Tom and Barbara O'Malley, were born to the Great Depression and grew up as part of that great generation that won the Second World War. My dad flew 33 missions over Japan in a B-24 Liberator, and went on to college only because of the G.I. Bill.
My mom, herself, flew in the Civil Air Patrol at the age of seventeen. They raised their children -- the six of us -- to a middle class future secured largely by the sacrifices and better choices of their generation.
But they would never accept the notion that somehow theirs was the "greatest generation." For they believed and they taught us that every generation of Americans has the ability -- and the sacred responsibility -- to become great.
And so we must. No matter how long the odds, no matter how large the challenge, and no matter how tough the fight.
This is the urgent work calling us forward today: to rebuild the truth of the American Dream for ALL Americans. And to begin right now!
Last month, television sets around the world were filled with the anger and the rage, and the flames of some of the humblest and hardest hit neighborhoods of Baltimore. For all of us who have given so much of our energies to making our city a safer, fairer, more just and more prosperous place, it was a heartbreaking night in the life of our city. But there is something to be learned from that night, and there is something to be offered to our country from those flames.
For what took place here was not only about race -- not only about policing in America. It's about everything it is supposed to mean to be an American.
The scourge of hopelessness that happened to ignite here that evening, transcends race or geography. Witness the record numbers of young white kids killing themselves with heroin in suburbs and small towns across America. The hard truth of our shared reality is this: Unemployment in many American cities and in many small towns across the United States is higher now than it was eight years ago. Conditions of extreme and growing poverty, create conditions for extreme violence. We have work to do.
Our economic and political system is upside down and backwards and it is time to turn it around.
What happened to our economy -- what happened to the American Dream -- did not happen by chance. Nor was it merely the result of global forces somehow beyond our control. Powerful, wealthy special interests here at home have used our government to create -- in our own country -- an economy that is leaving a majority of our people behind.
An economy that has so concentrated wealth in the hands of the very few that it has taken opportunity from the homes of the many. An economy where a majority of our people are unheard, unseen, un-needed, and left to conclude that their lives and labors are literally worth less today than they were yesterday -- and will be worth less still tomorrow.
We are allowing our land of opportunity to be turned into a land of inequality. Main Street struggles, while Wall Street soars. Tell me how it is, that not a single Wall Street CEO was convicted of a crime related to the 2008 economic meltdown. Not. A. Single. One. Tell me how it is, that you can get pulled over for a broken tail light in our country, but if you wreck the nation's economy you are untouchable.
This is not how our economy is supposed to work!
This is not how our country is supposed to work!
This is not the American Dream!
And it does not have to be this way!
This generation still has time to become great. We have saved the world before and we must save our country now -- and we will do that by rebuilding the American Dream!
As I look out here this morning over the original "land of the free and the home of the brave," I see the faces of people who have done so much for so many in our city and our state.
Together, we made our city a safer, healthier and better place for kids.
Together, we made our city believe again. We invented a new and better way of governing called CitiStat, and we got things done.
Together, we made our state's public schools the best in the United States. We made college more affordable for more families.
We led our people forward through a devastating national recession. We took greater care to protect our land, our air, and the waters of the Chesapeake Bay.
We passed marriage equality and we passed the DREAM Act.
Together, we raised the minimum wage and we sustained the highest median income in America. We achieved top rankings for innovation, entrepreneurship, and minority and women's business development.
Yes, understanding precedes action. And it took new leadership. New perspectives. And new approaches. But we believed in the dream -- together we took action to make it real -- and that is exactly what we must do as a nation today.
Our economy isn't money, our economy is people -- all of our people.
We measure success by the growing prosperity and security of our people -- all of our people. A stronger middle class is not the consequence of economic growth -- a stronger middle class is the cause of economic growth.
Together, as one nation we must build an American economy that works again for all of us.
That means good jobs and wage policies that allow hardworking families to actually get ahead. That means a higher minimum wage, overtime pay for overtime work, and respect for the rights of all workers to organize and collectively bargain for better wages. If we take these actions -- the dream will live again.
Climate change is real. We must create an American jobs agenda to build a new renewable energy future. We must launch a new agenda to rebuild America's cities as places of justice and opportunity for all. And if we take these actions -- the dream will live again.
For the sake of our country's security, and our country's well-being, and our country's economic growth, we must also bring 11 million of our neighbors out of the shadows by passing comprehensive immigration reform. Because the enduring symbol of our nation is not the barbed wire fence... it is the Statue of Liberty. We are a nation of immigrants. We are a compassionate and generous people. And if we act according to our principles -- and the better angels of our nature -- if we return to our true selves -- the dream will live again.
Make no mistake about it -- our ability to lead the world and be safe in this world depends on the strength of the American Dream here at home. The challenges we face in the world today are different from the challenges we faced in the 1990s.
Together, we must construct a New National Security Strategy and build new alliances that are forward-seeing and forward-acting. The center of this new strategy must be the reduction of threats. Fast-evolving threats -- from violent extremism, pandemic, cyber attacks, nuclear proliferation, nation-state failures, to the drought, famine, and floods of climate change.
Together, we must craft a New Foreign Policy of Engagement and Collaboration. We must join with like-minded people around the world -- especially with nations here in our own hemisphere -- for the cause we share of a rising global middle class.
We must put our national interest first, we must put America first.
But we cannot rebuild the American Dream here at home by catering to the voices of the privileged and the powerful. Let's be honest. They were the ones who turned our economy upside-down in the first place. And they are the only ones who are benefiting from it.
We need to prosecute cheats, we need to reinstate Glass-Steagall, and if a bank is too big to fail without wrecking our nation's economy -- then it needs to be broken up before it breaks us... again.
Goldman Sachs is one of the biggest repeat-offending investment banks in America. Recently, the CEO of Goldman Sachs let his employees know that he'd be just fine with either Bush or Clinton. I bet he would. Well, I've got news for the bullies of Wall Street -- the presidency is not a crown to be passed back and forth by you between two royal families. It is a sacred trust to be earned from the people of the United States, and exercised on behalf of the people of the United States. The only way we are going to rebuild the American Dream is if we re-take control of our own American government!
The poet laureate of the American Dream, Bruce Springsteen, once asked:
Is a dream a lie, if it don't come true?
Or is it something worse?
Whether the American Dream becomes a lie, or becomes an ongoing truth that our children can enjoy, can build upon, can live, is really up to you and me.
It is up to all of us.
It's not about Wall Street, not about the big five banks, it's not even about big money trying to buy our elections. It's about US. It is about whether, together, We the People still have the will to become great Americans. I believe we do. My decision is made.
Now you will all have a vital choice to make next year, for the good of your families, and for the good of the country you love and carry in your hearts. It is a choice that people will ask you about for years to come.
And so, when a child with a world of learning ahead asks who you voted for, I want you to be able to tell that child, "I voted for you."
When you see a dad sweating through another long shift in order to give his daughter a better future, I want you to be able to tell him, "I voted for you."
When you see a mom working long hours at two jobs for the dream of sending her son to college, I want you to be able to tell her, "I voted for you."
When you see a young father who hungers for a decent job to support his family, I want you to be able to tell him, "I voted for you."
The story of our country's best days is not found in a history book, because this generation of Americans is about to write it!
And that is why today, to you -- and to all who can hear my voice -- I declare that I am a candidate for President of the United States -- and I'm running for YOU.
May God bless you and may God bless the United States of America.
Cross-posted at The Huffington Post
Follow Chris on Twitter: @ChrisWeigant
General comment/question -
I noticed that when I did this back in 2007, it was actually right around Thanksgiving. In other words, much further along in the campaign.
So my question to readers is: should I revisit this series later this year? That would give the candidates time to have a lot more speeches to choose from, and it would be a lot closer to when everyone is getting ready to vote.
So let me know, should we do another series later in the year, maybe around the holidays?
Also, one note for my Twitter followers: tomorrow's column is pre-loaded and should appear roughly 24 hours from now, but I may not be able to tweet it. Or I may tweet very late tomorrow night. Either way, just wanted to warn folks.
-CW
Chris,
Since it is still early in the game, I think it would be a great idea to revisit this series again.
In addition to giving the candidates more time to refine their positions, it would also allow some time to (mercifully) whittle down the number of candidates, assuming we revisit after Iowa and the first primaries.
Besides, we have other things that require a careful reading, after all ...cough Iran deal cough ...
I'm tempted to go look up a video of that speech and see if it sounds as good as it reads. His theme of the American Dream really worked well in my eyes. I particularly liked this one line:
"Because the enduring symbol of our nation is not the barbed wire fence... it is the Statue of Liberty."
That's something a lot of politicians, especially republicans, seem to have forgotten.
That's something a lot of politicians, especially republicans, seem to have forgotten.
Ahem... FDR... Democrat... Internment camps...
Let's be fair here...
Many MANY Democrats are intimately familiar with the concept of "barbed wire fences", metaphorically speaking..
In addition to the FDR example, Obama's drone and domestic surveillance programs surely come under the (metaphorical) heading of "barbed wire fences"...
I know ya'all just LOVE to blame the GOP for all this country's ills...
But look to your own house before casting stones, eh??
I'm just sayin....
Michale
"Our nation was founded on two self-evident truths: That all of us are created equal."
I find that Bowdlerization of the Declaration of Independence very troubling. The Declaration doesn't say all of us are created equal. It says "all men are created equal." From the historical record we know that the word MEN was not used synonymously with HUMAN BEING, it meant Caucasian males with property.
"No fine print. No expiration date." says O'Malley, but he's of Irish extraction, so he knows better than that ("no dogs or Irish"). Plenty of fine print (starting with the original Constitution) and if there was no expiration date to the US Constitution (Jefferson advocated one) the much broader definition of American Equality (more or less recognized today) required more than 200 years of ripening.
I get what O'Malley is doing. He's preaching a platform of economic fairness, and he's framing the topic in a way that makes white middle class Democrats feel comfortable. But, it's intellectually dishonest pandering. It makes him seem look like he's auditioning for the role of VP (balancing pole for a wire walking Hillary), which I think is likely true.
More perfect union. That's they concept Dems need to focus on.
But, it's intellectually dishonest pandering.
To paraphrase Bill Murray in GroundHog Day??
"Yea Rita... They're politicians.."
:D
Michale