Featured Democratic Speakers
Remarks of Senator Joseph Lieberman
Democratic National Convention
Wednesday, August 16, 2000
Is America a great
country,
or what?
Ten days ago,
with courage and
friendship,
Al Gore asked me to
be his running mate.
This has been an
extraordinary week
for my family and
me.
There's an old saying
that behind every
successful man...
...there is a surprised
mother-in-law.
I am here tonight to
tell you:
...it's true.
I want to thank the
daughter of my
mother-in-law,
the woman who just
introduced me.
Hadassah -
even before Al Gore
made me
his running mate,
you made me the
luckiest guy in the
world.
I am fortunate to have you by my side on this journey
and I thank you sweetheart.
That miraculous
journey begins here
and now.
Tonight,
I am so proud
to stand as your
candidate for
Vice President
of the United States.
Only in America.
I am humbled by this
nomination and
so grateful to Al Gore
for choosing me.
And I want you to
know...
I will work my heart
out to make sure
Al Gore is the next
President of the
United States.
We have become
the America that so
many of our parents
dreamed for us.
But the great
question this year,
is what will we
dream for our
country...
...and how will we
make it come true?
We who gather here
tonight believe,
as Al Gore has said,
that it's not just the
size of our national
feast that is
important...
...but the number
of people we can fit
around the table.
There must be room
for everybody.
As every faith
teaches us -
and as Presidents
from Lincoln to
Roosevelt to Reagan
to Clinton have
reminded us-
we must
as Americans,
try to see our nation
not just through our
own eyes...
...but through the eyes of others.
In my life,
I have seen the
goodness of this
country through
many sets of eyes.
I have seen it
through the eyes of
my grandmother.
She was raised in
Central Europe,
in a village where
she was often
harassed because
of the way she
worshiped God.
Then,
she immigrated
to America.
On Saturdays,
she used to walk
to synagogue,
and often,
her Christian
neighbors would
pass her and say,
"Good Sabbath,
Mrs. Manger."
It was a source of
endless delight and
gratitude for her that
here in this country,
she was accepted
for who she was.
I have seen America
through the eyes of
my parents,
Henry and Marcia
Lieberman.
My father lived in an
orphanage when he
was a child.
He went on to drive
a bakery truck and
own a package store
in Stamford,
Connecticut.
He taught my
sisters and me the
importance of work
and responsibility.
With my mother by
his side,
he saw me become
the first person in
my family to
graduate from
college.
My mom is here
tonight.
She's 85 years old,
and never felt
younger than she
does today.
Mom -
thank you,
I love you -
and you and I know
how proud dad
would be tonight.
And I have tried to see America through
the eyes of people
I have been
privileged to know.
In the early 1960s,
when I was a college
student,
I walked with
Martin Luther King
in the March on
Washington.
Later that fall,
I went to Mississippi,
where we worked
to register
African-Americans
to vote.
The people I met
never forgot that
in America...
...every time a
barrier is broken...
...the doors
of opportunity
open wider for everyone.
And I have tried to see America through
the eyes of families
who had the deck
stacked against
them...
...but fought back.
As Connecticut's
Attorney General,
I worked to be the
people's lawyer.
I went after polluters
who were spoiling
our water and our
air.
I stood with single
moms to go after
deadbeat dads.
We even sued
big oil companies
who were trying
to gouge consumers at the pump.
And I have seen
America through the
eyes of my wife and
her parents.
By now,
most of you know
Hadassah's story.
Her family was
literally saved by
American GI's
who liberated the
concentration camps.
Then her parents escaped Communism and were welcomed as immigrants
to America and given a new life.
The fact that a half
century later,
their daughter
would be standing
on this stage
is a testament
to the power of the
American Dream.
In my life I have
tried to see this
world through the
eyes of those
who have suffered
discrimination.
And that's why
I believe that the
time has come to
tear down the remaining walls
of discrimination
in this nation
based on race,
gender,
nationality or
sexual orientation.
And that's why I continue to say,
when it comes to affirmative action...
...mend it,
don't end it.
When you try to see
the world through
other people's eyes...
...you understand that
the smallest changes
can make the
biggest differences
in all of our lives.
That's something
I'm sorry to say
I don't think our
Republican friends
really understand.
They're fond of dismissing the achievements of the past eight years.
But at the end of the day the people I talk with tell me that their lives are better than they were eight years ago.
Our opponents are
decent and likable
men.
I am proud to call
many in their party
my friends.
But America must
understand:
there are very real
differences between
us in this election.
Two weeks ago,
our Republican
friends tried to walk
and talk a lot like us.
But let's be honest...
...we may be near
Hollywood...
But not since
Tom Hanks won
an Oscar has there been that much acting in Philadelphia.
I am glad the GOP
has changed their
rhetoric...
...but I wish they
would also change
their policies.
As my friend
John McCain
might say...
...and let me say that John is in our thoughts and prayers tonight ---
let me now do some
straight talking.
I think it's a
good thing that our
opponent talks about
the environment.
But I'm sad to say
that in Texas,
the quality of the
air and water is
some of the worst
in America.
We see the
environment through
a different set of
eyes.
For more than
20 years Al Gore
has been a leader
on the environment.
He and I will
continue the work
we have done
together to keep
our air, water and
land clean.
We are going to
continue to work to
make sure that a
child can drink a
glass of water,
or a father can
fish in a stream,
or a family can go
to a park,
without having to
worry that their
health and safety
is at risk.
And it's a good thing
that our opponent
is talking about
health care.
But I'm sad to say
that Texas is also
falling behind on that.
Texas led the nation
in the percentage
of residents
who were uninsured.
Today,
it ranks next to last
for health insurance
for both
women and kids.
We see health care
through a different
set of eyes.
We know that health
care is one of the
most important
problems facing
families today.
We believe that
medical decisions
should be made
by doctors,
not bureaucrats.
We believe that
senior citizens
shouldn't be stopped from filling a prescription because they can't afford to pay for it.
And Al Gore and
I are the only
candidates in this
race who will extend
access to health
care coverage to
every single child
in America.
And, I think it's a
good thing that our
opponent talks about
education.
Schools need to be
held to the highest
standards of
performance and
accountability.
But I'm sad to say
their plan doesn't
provide the
resources our
schools need to meet
those high standards.
Sometimes it seems to me like their
idea of school
modernization
means buying
a new calendar
for every building.
We see education
through a different
set of eyes.
We're committed to
making America's
public schools the
best in the world.
We are going to
target more
education funding
to the schools
that need it most...
...to rebuild and
modernize our
crumbling
classrooms...
...and to provide
all children with the
skills they need to
succeed in the
21st Century...
...And we're going to
do one other thing
that our Republican
friends will not:
we are going to
treat the people
who teach our children like the professionals
that they are.
This is a question of
priorities.
Our opponents want
to use America's
hard-earned surplus
to give a tax break
to those who need it
least...
...at the expense
of all our other needs.
Under their plan,
the middle class gets a little...
...and the wealthy
get a lot.
Their tax plan
operates under that
old theory that the
best way to feed
the birds...
...is to give more
oats to the horse.
We see the surplus
through a different
set of eyes...
...the eyes of working
middle-class families.
We want to use
America's
hard-earned success
to preserve the
future of Social
Security and
Medicare,
to pay off our
national debt,
and cut the taxes of
middle class families.
We want to make
the investments that
will keep our
economy moving forward.
It's this simple ---
--- we Democrats
will expand the
prosperity ---
--- they will
squander it.
And this party will
reform campaign
finance, because
it is only Al Gore and
not George W. Bush
who will send the
McCain-Feingold bill
to Congress and sign
it when it's passed.
For those of you at home who haven't made up your mind if you want to build on our prosperity...
...if you want progress not partisanship in Washington...
...if you want to reform the system and not retreat from the problems...
...then your choice is clear...
... Al Gore is the best
man for the job.
I have known Al for
15 years.
I know his record
and I know his heart.
I know him as
a public servant
and I know what it is
like to sit with him
around the dining
room table.
We have discussed--
sometimes even
debated --
policy issues,
and we have shared
private moments of
prayer.
I can tell you that
Al Gore is a man of
family and faith--
a father,
and now a
grandfather.
When my daughter
was six,
after spending time
with Al,
she looked at me
and said...
..."he must be a
daddy."
Al Gore is a man
of courage and
conviction.
He believes in
service to America.
He volunteered for
Vietnam.
Together,
we crossed party
lines to support the
Gulf War.
I was there in the
room when he
forcefully argued
that America's
principles and
interests were at
stake in Bosnia and
Kosovo.
Two weeks ago...
...our opponent claimed that America has a hollow military.
I must tell you,
that made me angry.
America...
we know better than
that ---
--- our fighting men and women are the
best-trained,
best-equipped,
most potent fighting
force in the history
of the world,
and they will stay
that way when
Al Gore and I are
elected.
And Al Gore is
also a man of
vision and values.
Long before it
became popular,
Al and Tipper led a
crusade to renew
the moral center of
this nation,
to call America to
live by its highest
ideals.
He knows that in
many Americans,
there is a swelling
sense that our
standards of decency
and civility have
eroded.
No parent should be
forced to compete
with popular culture to raise their children.
For his entire career,
Al Gore's values
have guided the way
he meets the
challenges that lie
ahead.
That's why I hope
you will conclude---
as I have---
that for his honesty---
for his strength---
for his integrity---
and for his
character---
Al Gore must
become the next
President of the
United States.
Forty years ago,
we came to this city
and crossed a new
frontier with a leader who inspired me...
...and so many in my generation...
...into public service.
Today, we return
with prosperity at
home and freedom
throughout the world
that John F. Kennedy
could have only
dreamed about.
We may wonder
where the next
frontier really is.
Tonight I believe that the next frontier isn't
just in front of us...
...but inside of us...
...to overcome the
differences that are
still between us...
...to break down the
barriers that remain...
...and to help every
American claim the
limitless possibilities
of their own lives.
Sometimes,
I try to see this
world as my dad
saw it from his
bakery truck.
About this time,
he'd be getting ready
for the all-night run.
And I know that
somewhere in
America right now...
...there is another
father loading a
bakery truck...
...or a young woman
programming a
computer...
...or a parent dreaming of a
better future for
their daughter
or their son.
If we keep the faith,
then 40 years
from now,
one of their children
will stand before a
gathering like this...
...with a chance to
serve and lead this
country that we love.
So, let them look back to this time,
and this place,
and this stage
and say of us:
they kept the faith.
Let them say that
we helped them
realize their hopes
and their dreams.
And let them look
around at this
great and good nation that we are all
so blessed to share, and say:
Only in America.
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