Featured Democratic Speakers
Remarks of Caroline Kennedy Schlossberg
Democratic National Convention
Tuesday, August 15, 2000
Thank you.
Thank you all
very, very much.
It's an honor to be here with you.
I feel a special
sense of kinship
here tonight--
You see,
in more ways
than one,
I wouldn't be here
if it weren't for
the Gore family.
For nearly
half a century ago,
when my father
and mother
were first
getting to know
each other,
two of the helpful matchmakers were
Al Gore's parents, Albert and Pauline.
Al Gore and I share something more
than that happy circumstance.
Both of us were raised to believe
that we can
make the world
new again--
....if only we try.
That is what
my father
sought to do
forty years ago,
in this city,
when he stood
before you and declared
the opening of
the New Frontier.
It was not
a set of promises,
he said,
but a set of challenges--
challenges of
the mind and
heart and spirit--
the challenge of giving of ourselves,
of giving
to our country.
I know that when
my brother
John and I were
growing up,
hardly a day went by when someone
didn't come up to us and say:
"Your father
changed my life.
I went into public service because
he asked me."
I take great pride
in knowing that
one of those
he inspired to enter public life is the next
Vice-President of
the United States--Joe Lieberman.
So as I look out across this hall,
and across
this country,
I know that
my father's spirit
lives on--
....and I thank
all of you.
Now,
it is our turn
to prove that
the New Frontier
was not
a place in time
....but a timeless call.
Now,
we are the
New Frontier.
And now,
when many of us
are doing so well,
it is time
once again
to ask more of ourselves.
As much as we
need a prosperous economy,
we also need
a prosperity of kindness and decency.
We need a President who will work to create an America where our parents and grandparents
feel secure,
our children are
cared for, and Americans grow up believing that each one of us is necessary to make our democracy work.
We need
a President who is not afraid of complexity,
who believes in
an open and
tolerant society,
and who knows
that the world
can be made
new again--
and that President
is Al Gore.
When I was writing
a book on
the Bill of Rights,
I spoke with
a woman who had spent 15 years fighting for the
First Amendment.
When I asked her why she had
given up so much
of her life to do this, she said,
"It's up to each
of us to create
a government
that is close to
our heart's desire....
Because,
if we don't do it, somebody else will."
It is up to
every single
one of us
to leave this Convention and
work as hard
as we can to help
Al Gore
create the America
of our ideals.
Because,
let me tell you...
.....that Somebody Else's government
is not what we want.
If we believe in
civil rights and human rights--
and closing the
racial divide--
then it is up to us.
If we believe in
clean air and
clean water--
then it is up to us.
If we want a Supreme Court that will protect the freedoms in the Constitution
and the
Bill of Rights--
including
the right to privacy--
that will keep our personal financial
and medical information from being up for grabs--
and will guarantee our right to make
our own reproductive decisions--
then it is up to us.
If we believe that
we have seen
enough gun violence in our land and
in our lifetimes--
that guns should
no longer
take the lives
of those we love--
then it is up to us.
If we believe in
these things,
then it is up to us
to elect Al Gore
and Joe Lieberman.
I was lucky enough
to grow up
in a world where adults taught by example.
They dreamed impossible dreams, yet they fought hard each day to make those dreams
come true.
They taught us
the importance of faith and family,
and how these
values must be woven together
into lives of purpose and meaning.
That is what
my husband
Ed and I want
for our three children.
That is what
Al and Tipper Gore want for their children.
That is what
we all want for America's children.
And,
I believe that is
what my father wanted for us,
as he stood here
four decades ago--
.....not only to make better the world
that surrounds us,
but to dream of something more.
I thank all
Americans,
for making me
and John,
and all our family,
a part of your families--
.....for reaching out
and sustaining us through the
good times,
and the
difficult ones,
and for helping
us dream
my father's dream.
"Our call is to
the young at heart, regardless of age,"
he said.
"A whole world
looks to see
what we will do.
We cannot
fail their trust;
we cannot
fail to try."
Now it gives me
great pride to introduce to you
a man who has
never stopped trying,
who has worked harder than anyone for the world
my father envisioned, whose public service
is an inspiration.
The nation knows him as a
courageous fighter
for working families;
a voice for the elderly;
a champion of all
who have been
left out,
or locked out,
of America's
promise.
For his mother,
his brothers
and sisters,
his children,
for me
and my cousins,
he has always
been there when
we needed him.
My father was
his godfather,
and he is godfather now to my
daughter Rose.
To all my children, he's like a godfather and grandfather
rolled into one.
So much so,
that the stuffed bear Rose sleeps with
at night is not
called Teddy.
His name is
Uncle Teddy.
No uncle
could be better.
No Senator has
ever achieved more.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Senator
Edward M. Kennedy.
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