Edwards' Endorsement Speech Transcriptby: philgoblueThu May 15, 2008 at 10:36:12 AM EDT |
From The New York Times and CQ Transcripts (I've changed the comments in parantheses): Thank you, thank you. So, the question is -- thank you. Thank you. So the question is what am I doing here? You know, I was promised a jet ski. And I hadn't gotten it yet. I am proud to be here with all of you, proud to be in Michigan, proud to be in Grand Rapids. During the course of this presidential campaign, I've gotten to know the candidates and the top candidates very, very well. We have all been out speaking about the causes that are so near and dear to our heart as Democrats. And now we're here down to two amazing candidates. And before I get too far, I want to take just a minute and say a word about my friend and your friend, Senator Hillary Clinton. (Smattering of boos from folks who are in the heat of primary passions and who haven't yet realized that Edwards is here to both praise and bury Hillary and endorse Obama, however, they soon figure it out and these are the last boos we hear during the discussion of Senator Clinton) In the past few weeks, I've got -- past few months and past few weeks -- I've gotten to know Senator Clinton very well. We've talked. We've met in North Carolina. We've talked about the things that she cares about, that every single one of you care about: about the men and women in this country who don't have health care; about the children who don't have health care; about the men and women in America who just want to have a decent job and go to work. We've talked about our own children, our own families. (Edwards now moves on to the push for Democratic Party unity -- the reason he hasn't endorsed until now, when the nomination is no longer in reasonable doubt and after most voters have spoken including his fellow North Carolinians who voted for Senator Obama overwhelmingly) And we, when this nomination battle is over -- and it will be over soon -- brothers and sisters, we must come together as Democrats and, in the fall, stand up for what matters for the future of America and make America what it needs to be. And we are a stronger party, because Hillary Clinton is a Democrat. We are a stronger country because of her years of public service. And we're going to have a stronger presidential nominee in the fall because of her work. (Looking back on this primary, I couldn't agree more: Edwards encouraged Obama to get specific about change and hope and Hillary got Obama to show his toughness and determination and they both pushed him to more directly emphasize main street economic issues -- we're going to have a great nominee and a better President Obama because of this long, long primary) Now, what brought all of us here is the profound -- (Cheers: The crowd knows what is coming, that they are in for a treat and that this rally is suddently major national news) The rest of the speech on the flip. |
What brought all of us together is the profound belief that we can change this country, that there are servicemen and women in Iraq who can come home starting today; that our kids deserve to go to better schools than we went to; that we can run our cars on something other than oil; that we have good jobs that can fill these empty factories; and that the anxiety that all of our people face every day can change when we finally make two Americas one America for every single one of us. (Cheers. Edwards is skillfully combining the Obama message of outsider change and his message of building One America. I think it's a message that can lead to a tidal wave in November which will lead to previously unthought of victories accross this land and right here in West Michigan) And the reason I am here tonight is because the Democratic voters in America have made their choice, and so have I. There is one man who knows and understands that this is a time for bold leadership. There is one man that knows how to create the change, the lasting change, that you have to build from the ground up. There is one man who knows in his heart that it is time to create one America, not two. And that man is Barack Obama. (The crowd went wild!) This is not going to be easy. It's going to be the fight of our lives. But we're ready, because we know that this election is about something bigger than the tired old hateful politics of the past. This election is about taking down these walls that divide us, so that we can see what's possible -- what's possible, that one America that we can build together. Barack Obama understands that to his core. (Applause.) And it's about the one America we're going to build for them. One America, where Main Street is strong; one America, where struggling towns come back to life, because we finally transformed our economy by ending our dependence on oil; one America, where the men and women who work the late shift, who get up at dawn to drive a two- hour commute, and the young person who closes the store to save for college. They will actually be honored for that work. One America, where no child, no child, goes to bed hungry; when we finally end the moral shame of 37 million Americans who wake up every day in poverty. (Applause. Here's the one complaint I've always had with Edwards rhetoric -- he should use "us" rather than "them") One America, where we finally start tackling the real health care crisis in America; one America, with one public school system, where a boy in the city and a girl in the suburbs will wake up every day with an equal chance to a quality education. One America, that rebuilds our moral authority in the world, not just with our strength, but with our soul. One America, where the walls will fall, when the war in Iraq ends in 2009, and our servicemen and women -- (Stormy Applause) And our servicemen and women will come home to the heroes' welcome that they deserve. And we will take care of our veterans. We're going to get this part of the war right. We will never again stand by while men and women who have worn the uniform of the United States of America stand in line and have to wait for health care. We will never stand by while 150,000 men and women who wore our uniform, veterans, go to sleep every night on grates and under bridges -- not in our America, not in our America, and not in our America when Barack Obama is president of the United States of America. (Stormy Applause) You know, we've been in this kind of place before. In times of war, great depression, deep divisions that tore at the soul of this nation, we came together. And we went to work to make sure that we passed on a stronger and better country to our children. We will meet this challenge again. This is who we are. This is our moment. This is our time to take down these walls, to close our divide, and build one America that we all believe in. If you want that, if you believe in that, then join me in helping send Barack Obama to 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue; because we believe that in our America -- (Crowd goes wild. This is Edwards at his best. Our time is now, we live at a 1932 moment when the Americans of today can transform the county and set it on a course for the next 50-100 years) Because what all of us believe, what all of us believe, is in this America that we love so much, no matter who you are, no matter who your family is, and no matter what the color of your skin, none of those things will control your destiny; and that that one America that I've talked about is not only possible, but it will be achieved under President Barack Obama starting in January of 2009. Thank you. God bless you. I'm honored to be here with you. Thank you, all. (Wild cheers. Thanks Senator Edwards, it was great having you in Grand Rapids, hope to see you again real soon) Photos by wizzardkitten |