Published:
2008 Democratic National Convention: Remarks as Prepared for Delivery by Tim Kaine, Governor of Virginia
DENVER, Aug. 28 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The following is a transcript
of a speech, as prepared for delivery, by Tim Kaine at the Democratic National
Convention on Thursday, August 28, 2008:
What an honor to be here on this powerful night! What an honor to speak
not just to those gathered here inDenver but to homes across America -- and
not just those owned by John McCain.
Looking out at this crowd and feeling the energy, I can tell you this: We
are making history.
I am here tonight not just as the governor ofVirginia who knows the
people of my state need a better partner in White House, not just as a
Democrat who is tired of politics as usual, but most importantly as an
American who wants to see American values guiding our country again.
For eight years we've seen what happens when a president letsWashington
values become more important than American values. Gas prices skyrocket when
the White House lets oil companies call the shots. Our children are left
behind when an administration cares more about sound bites than sound schools.
And middle-class families are left to fend for themselves to save their jobs,
their homes, and their grasp on the American dream.
Maybe for John McCain the American dream means seven houses-and if that's
your America, John McCain is your candidate. But for the rest of us, the
American dream means one home -- in a safe neighborhood, with good schools and
good health care and a little money left over every month to go out for dinner
and save for the future.
Does that seem like too much to ask? John McCain thinks it is.
He'll keep answering to the special interests andWashington lobbyists --
we're ready for leadership that answers to us. And the leader who will deliver
the change we need is Barack Obama.
Now folks, it won't be easy. Change never is. And if we are to succeed,
we'll need a little extra something. The Gospel of Matthew says, "If you have
faith the size of a mustard seed, you will say to the mountain 'move mountain'
and it will move." My life-long faith deepened when I traveled toHonduras to
work with Catholic missionaries after my first year in law school.
Hay algunos Latinos aqui? Estamos unidos, verdad?
I learned from a great mentor there, Brother Jim O'Leary, that faith is
about more than words or doctrine -- it's about action. And that led me to
spend my life in public service. While I was learning how to put my faith into
action inHonduras, Barack Obama was doing the same thing on the streets of
South Side Chicago -- empowering people to rebuild their communities and
reclaim their lives after the steel plants closed down.
Joe Biden has also spent his lifetime putting faith into action --
overcoming unspeakable tragedy in his personal life, and as a U.S. Senator
making our world safer, our air cleaner, and protecting women from crimes of
violence.
For Barack Obama, for Joe Biden, for me, for all of us, the principles of
faith call us to service.
With faith in the American dream, we strive for better schools, economic
justice, and smarter foreign policies because we believe in the God-given
principles of equality, freedom, and opportunity. With faith in each other, we
work for a common-sense approach to politics that focuses on results, not
partisan division, because we recognize that we're all in this together.
Aren't we all tired of aWashington that doesn't have any faith in us?
Fellow delegates, fellow Democrats, and fellow Americans, now is the time to
let our faith guide us to action once again.
We need to put our faith into action -- to elect a president who will put
middle-class Americans first again and reward companies who create jobs in
America instead of shipping them overseas.
We need to put our faith into action -- to elect a president who will end
our dangerous dependence on foreign oil and invest in green-collar, clean-
energy jobs right here at home.
We need to put our faith into action -- to elect a president who will
invest in our students, teachers and schools, and make college affordable once
again for every American family.
We need to put our faith into action -- to elect a president who will
responsibly end the war inIraq, give our veterans and their families the
support they need, and reinvigorate our military to face the challenges ahead.
If we put our faith into action, we can move mountains.
We can move the mountains of negativity and division and gridlock.
We can move the mountains of special interests and business as usual.
We can move the mountains of hopelessness that surround too many of our
people and communities.
Does anybody here have a little faith tonight? Is anybody here ready to
move those mountains?
Starting right here in the Mile High City, we will put our faith into
action; we will reject the failed policies of George Bush and John McCain; we
will elect Barack Obama our next president.
In the words of the gospel hymn -- "move mountain."
Say it with me -- "move mountain."
Say it with me again -- "move mountain."
Mountain, get out of our way!
SOURCE 2008 Democratic National Convention Committee
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Copyright © 2008, NewsBlaze,
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