For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
October 1, 2004
Remarks by the President at Victory 2004 Rally
Mcintyre Ski Area
Manchester, New Hampshire
3:58 P.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT: Thanks for coming. I appreciate you all coming,
thanks. It's great to be back in the great state of New Hampshire.
(Applause.)
So guess what happened? We pulled up in our entourage and I opened
the door, I come bounding in the tent -- and mother's there checking up
on me. (Applause.) They said -- you know, sometimes they say I get a
little too blunt, reminds me of the time a woman in Texas said, well,
you got your daddy's eyes and your mother's mouth. (Laughter.) I love
you, mom, thanks for coming. (Applause.)
I'm keeping really good company up here on the stage. First, I'm
proud to be standing with your great United States Senator, Judd
Gregg. (Applause.) He's as solid as the granite in this state. I
know you're going to send him back for six more years. (Applause.)
And I'm proud to be in New Hampshire with John McCain, what a fine
American he is and a good friend. (Applause.) He told me a little
something about New Hampshire politics -- in case you forgot.
(Laughter.) I didn't. I picked up on the lessons and carried the state
of New Hampshire in 2000, and with your help, we'll carry it again in
2004. (Applause.)
We had a great debate last night. (Applause.) It highlighted some
fundamental differences between my opponent and me -- differences I
believe are crucial to our nation's national security. First of all,
there's a big difference when it comes to supporting our troops in
harm's way. When American [sic] puts our troops in combat, I believe
they deserve the best training, the best equipment, the full support of
our government. (Applause.)
Last night my opponent said our troops deserve better. They
certainly deserve better than they got from Senator Kerry when he voted
to send them to war, then voting -- then voted against funding our
troops in combat.
AUDIENCE: Booo!
THE PRESIDENT: You may remember his quote when they asked him
about his vote. He said: Well, I actually did vote for the $87
billion, right before I voted against it. (Laughter.) Not a lot of
people in New Hampshire talk that way. Last night he said he had made
a mistake in how he talked about that vote. I don't know if you
remember that part of the debate or not. I certainly do. But the
mistake wasn't what Senator Kerry said, the mistake was what Senator
Kerry did. (Applause.)
During the course of this campaign they kept asking him to explain
the vote, he said the famous quote, then he went on and said he was
proud of his vote. He said the whole thing was a complicated matter.
And earlier this week he gave yet another explanation of his vote. He
said, well, it was a protest vote. (Laughter.) Exactly what he said,
"protest vote."
AUDIENCE: Booo!
THE PRESIDENT: When we put American troops in harm's way, they
certainly deserve better than to have a candidate for President use
them as a protest. (Applause.)
Last night was very revealing. He continued his pattern of
confusing contradictions. After voting for the war, after saying my
decision to remove Saddam Hussein from was the right decision, he now
said it was all a mistake. But asked a logical question, does that
mean our troops are dying for a mistake? He said, no. You can't have
it both ways. You can't say it's a mistake and not a mistake. You
can't be for getting rid of Saddam Hussein when things look good, and
against it when times are difficult. You can't claim terrorists are
pouring across the border into Iraq, yet at the same time try to claim
that Iraq is somehow a diversion from the war on terror. The American
President must speak clearly, and when he speaks, must mean what he
says. (Applause.)
The crucial difference between my opponent and me is the most
important question for voters in this election, and that is: Who can
lead this war against terror to victory? (Applause.) And here my
opponent has a fundamental misunderstanding of the nature of this war
against terror, and he has no plan to win in Iraq. The cornerstone of
Senator Kerry's plan for Iraq is to convene a summit. That's what he
said. Now, look, I've been to a lot of summits. (Laughter.) Since
I've been your President, I've been honored to be at summits throughout
the world. I've never been to a meeting that has deposed a tyrant or
brought a terrorist to justice. (Applause.) The way to defeat the
terrorists is to stay on the offense and to bring them to justice.
(Applause.)
My opponent last night claims he can work with our allies, yet, he
said those who are standing with us are not a part of a genuine
coalition.
AUDIENCE: Booo!
THE PRESIDENT: He earlier called them a coalition of the coerced
and bribed, and dismissed their sacrifices as window dressings.
AUDIENCE: Booo!
THE PRESIDENT: See, you cannot lead by pushing away the allies who
are already with us, who are sacrificing along with our soldiers. You
can't expect any support for a cause you have called a mistake, a grand
diversion, or the wrong war at the wrong time. As I said last night,
I've been meeting with these leaders around the world. Imagine walking
into a room, and say, get your sons to sacrifice and your daughters to
sacrifice for the wrong war at the wrong place at the wrong time.
Imagine. (Laughter.) The way to lead this coalition -- coalition is
not to be disdainful or dismissive. The way to lead this coalition to
victory is to be clear about our thinking, grateful for their
sacrifices, and resolute in our determination to achieve victory.
(Applause.)
Let me say one other thing, one more thing I want to share with you
about last night's debate. Perhaps it was the most disturbing aspect
of the debate. Senator Kerry said that America has to pass some sort
of global test --
AUDIENCE: Booo!
THE PRESIDENT: -- before we can use our troops to defend
ourselves. Think about that. He wants our national security decisions
subject to the approval of a foreign government.
AUDIENCE: Booo!
THE PRESIDENT: Listen, I'll continue to work with our allies.
I'll work with the international community. But I will never submit
America's national security to an international test. (Applause.) The
President's job is not to take an international poll. The President's
job is to defend the United States of America. (Applause.)
AUDIENCE: USA! USA! USA!
THE PRESIDENT: I've come for more reasons than just to talk about
last night's debate and to see my mother. (Laughter.) I have come
back to New Hampshire to ask for your vote. (Applause.) And I am here
to ask for your help. I ask you to register your friends and
neighbors. I ask you, then, to head them to the polls come voting
time. And as you do so, remind them if they want a safer America, a
stronger America, and a better America to put me and Dick Cheney back
in office. (Applause.)
I -- I'm glad my mother is here, but I really wish Laura were
here. (Applause.) What a great First Lady. You know, when I asked
her to marry me, she said, fine, just so long as I never have to give a
political speech. (Laughter.) I said, okay, you'll never have to give
one. (Laughter.) Fortunately, she didn't hold me to that promise. In
New York, at our convention, America got to see a compassionate,
strong, fine First Lady in Laura Bush. (Applause.)
And I'm proud -- I'm proud I'm running with Dick Cheney. He's a
fine man. (Applause.) I concede he doesn't have the waviest hair in
the race. (Laughter.) I didn't pick him -- I didn't pick him because
of his hair. I picked him because of his experience, his judgment, and
because he can get the job done for the American people. (Applause.)
I want to sing the praises of your other United States Senator,
John Sununu. (Applause.) You got two really fine senators in Judd and
John. And I'm proud to work with them. They're kind of independent
sometimes. (Laughter.) Just like the people of New Hampshire.
(Applause.)
I'm -- I appreciate your governor, Craig Benson. I hope you put
him back into office. Thanks for coming, Craig. (Applause.) I
appreciate you being here, Craig. (Applause.) I'm proud of
Congressman Jeb Bradley, he's working, the United States Congress, a
fine member of the House of Representatives. (Applause.) I want to
thank Ted Gastas and his wife, Cassandra. I want to thank Brian Golden,
who's a "Democrats for Bush" member from Massachusetts. I am honored
you're here, Brian. Thank you for coming. (Applause.)
I want to thank all the other state and local officials. But most
importantly, I want to thank the grass roots activists, and those who
are doing the hard work, getting ready to turn out the vote come
November. (Applause.)
I appreciate the Oak Ridge Boys who are here with us today.
(Applause.) I'm proud to call them friends. And I want to thank
Kaleigh Cronin, the student from Manchester Central High, who performed
the National Anthem. (Applause.) I want to thank Manchester Central
High School Band for being here today. (Applause.) I'll try to keep
my speech short, so you can get home and do your homework. (Laughter.)
Listen, I'm looking forward to this campaign. I like coming here
to New Hampshire. (Applause.) And I'm coming back. (Applause.) I
want to tell the people where I stand, what I believe, and where I'll
lead this country for the next four years. (Applause.) I believe
every child can learn and every school must teach. That's what I
believe. I went to Washington to challenge the soft bigotry of low
expectations. I didn't like the practice of having such low
expectations that we would shuffle some children through the schools,
grade after grade, year after year, without teaching them the basics.
(Applause.) I know we can do better in America.
So we changed the law to measure early, so we can solve problems.
We believe in local control of schools. We're closing the achievement
gap in America, and we're not going to go back to the old days of
failed policy. (Applause.)
I believe we have a moral responsibility to honor our seniors with
good health care. I went to -- I went to Washington to fix problems.
I saw a problem in Medicare. For example, Medicare would pay nearly
$100,000 for heart surgery, but not one dime for the prescription drugs
that might prevent the heart surgery from being needed in the first
place. That wasn't fair to our seniors and it wasn't fair to the
taxpayers. We worked with Republicans and Democrats to modernize
Medicare. Seniors will get prescription drug coverage in 2006, and
we're not going back to the old days. (Applause.)
I believe in the energy and innovation and the spirit of America's
workers, small business owners and farmers and ranchers. That's why we
unleashed that energy with the largest tax relief in a generation.
(Applause.) I want you to remind your friends and neighbors what this
economy has been through. The stock market was heading down before
Dick Cheney and I showed up in Washington. Then we had a recession
just as soon as we showed up. And then we had some corporate scandals,
which affected our economy. We passed tough laws, we made it
abundantly clear we will not tolerate dishonesty in the boardrooms of
America. (Applause.) And then the attacks came, of September the
11th, and that affected our economy.
But because we acted, our economy is growing at a -- at rates as
fast as any in nearly 20 years; the national unemployment rate is 5.4.
percent, which is lower than the average of the 1970s, 1980s and
1990s. (Applause.) The unemployment rate in the state of New Hampshire
is 3.7 percent. (Applause.)
I believe the most solemn duty of the American President is to
protect the American people. If America shows uncertainty and weakness
in this decade, the world will drift toward tragedy. This will not
happen on my watch. (Applause.)
AUDIENCE: Four more years! Four more years! Four more years!
THE PRESIDENT: I am running for President with a clear and
positive plan to build a safer America, a safer world, and a more
hopeful America. I am running with a compassionate conservative
philosophy that government should help people improve their lives, not
try to run their lives. (Applause.) I believe this nation wants
steady, consistent, principled leadership and that is why, with your
help, we'll carry New Hampshire again and win a great victory in
November. (Applause.)
But I understand the world in which we're living is changing. It
wasn't all that long ago that a person in the workplace would have one
job and one career, one pension plan, one retirement system, and that
person was usually a man. The workplace has changed. Think about it.
People are changing jobs, people are changing careers, women are
working inside the house and outside the house in America today. And,
yet, the fundamental systems of our government -- the tax code, the
pension plans, health coverage, and worker training -- were designed
for the world of yesterday, not tomorrow.
I'm running to transform these systems so that all citizens are
equipped, prepared and truly free to be able to make your own choices
and pursue your own dreams. A hopeful country is one that has a
growing economy. In order to keep jobs here in America, America must
be the best place in the world to do business. If you want jobs here,
this has got to be the best place in the world to risk capital. That
means less regulations. That means -- that means legal reform to stop
the frivolous lawsuits that are plaguing our employers. (Applause.)
We want to keep this economy growing and have jobs here in America,
Congress needs to pass my energy plan. It's a plan that encourages
conservation; it's a plan that spends money to make sure we do a better
job with renewables, like ethanol and biodiesel; it's a plan that uses
technology to burn coal in clean ways; it's a plan that uses technology
to explore for natural gas in environmentally friendly ways. It is a
plan that recognizes this fact: To keep this economy growing, we must
be less dependent on foreign sources of energy. (Applause.)
In order to keep jobs here in America, we must open up markets to
U.S. products. We've opened up our markets for goods from overseas for
a reason. It's good for our consumers. Think about this, if you've
got more products to choose from, you're likely to get that which you
want at a better price. That's how the market works. So rather than
falling prey to economic isolationism, I'm saying to countries like
China and elsewhere, you treat us the way we treat you. I say that
because I know when the rules are fair, we can compete with anybody,
anytime, anywhere in the world. (Applause.)
Finally, to make sure this economy continues to grow, we've got to
be wise about how we spend your money in Washington, and we've got to
keep your taxes low. (Applause.) Taxes are an issue in this
campaign. I'm running against a fellow who lived right south from
here. (Laughter.) He's so far promised $2.2 trillion in new spending.
That's a lot, even for a senator from Massachusetts. (Laughter.) So
they said, how are you going to pay for it? He said, that's easy,
we're going to tax the rich. You've heard that before, haven't you?
AUDIENCE: Yes!
THE PRESIDENT: About every campaign. The problem with that,
there's some flawed logic. You can't raise enough money by taxing the
rich to pay for $2.2 trillion in new spending. There's what I would
call a tax gap. Guess who gets to fill the tax gap?
AUDIENCE MEMBER: We do.
THE PRESIDENT: Yes. I'll tell you something else about the
rhetoric of taxing the rich. The rich hire lawyers and accountants for
a reason, so they can avoid the bill and stick you with it. The good
news is, we're not going to let him tax you. We're going to win in
November. (Applause.)
Speaking about the tax code, it's a complicated mess. It's full of
special interest loopholes. It's a million pages long. Americans
spend 6 billion hours a year filling out their tax reforms [sic]. In
order to make sure this tax code is fair and simple, I'm going to call
Republicans and Democrats together to do something about an antiquated
tax code that needs to be changed. (Applause.)
Listen, we'll help our workers gain the skills of the 21st
century. In a changing economy, sometimes there's a skills gap. Jobs
are available, but workers don't have the skills necessary to fill the
jobs. That's why I'm such a strong believer in the community college
system. I believe -- and I know that most new jobs in a changing
economy are filled by people with at least two years of college, yet,
one in four of our students gets there. In our high schools, we'll
fund early intervention programs to help at-risk students. We'll
emphasize math and science. Over time, there ought to be a rigorous
exam before graduation. By raising performance in our high schools,
and by expanding Pell grants for low- and middle-income families, more
Americans will start their career with a college diploma. (Applause.)
Let me talk about health care. There is a wide, philosophical
divide when it comes to health care. Let me see if I can summarize it
this way. My opponent wants the government to run the health care --
AUDIENCE: Booo!
THE PRESIDENT: -- which would lead to high prices and rationing.
I want you to make the decisions when it comes to health care.
(Applause.) I have a practical, commonsense way of dealing with health
care to make sure it's available and affordable. Let me give you some
ideas. First of all, most of the uninsured work for small businesses.
Many small businesses are having trouble affording health care. We
ought to change the law to allow small businesses to pool risk, so they
can buy insurance at the same discounts big businesses can buy
insurance for. (Applause.)
We'll expand tax-free health savings accounts. We'll give small
businesses tax credits to pay into health savings accounts for their
employees. We'll help low-income, uninsured working Americans to
afford health savings accounts. These are innovative ways to make sure
people get good health care coverage with catastrophic coverage, as
well. We will expand community health centers to every poor county in
America so the poor and the indigent can get preventative and primary
care in places other than emergency rooms of your hospitals.
(Applause.) We'll make sure poor children are enrolled in our
low-income children's programs. To make sure health care is available
and affordable, we've got to do something about these junk lawsuits
that are running good docs out of practice and running your costs of
medicine up. (Applause.) In all we do reform health care, we'll make
sure the decisions are made by doctors and patients, not by bureaucrats
in Washington, D.C. (Applause.)
In changing times, ownership helps bring stability to people's
lives. The home ownership rate in America is at an all-time high
during my administration. I love that statistic. (Applause.) Think
about it. More and more people are opening up the door where they live
and saying, welcome to my home; welcome to my piece of property. Over
the next four years, we'll expand home ownership to every corner of
America.
And I want to implement a -- a part of ownership into the
retirement system, as well. You might remember some of the rhetoric
that took place in 2000 when I was running. They said, if George W.
gets elected, he's going to take away your Social Security check. I
don't know if you remember that or not. Well, you still got the check;
nothing happened. What I'm telling you is, is that when I talk about
Social Security reform, if you're a senior citizen on Social Security,
you don't have to worry about your check. That's that same old stale
rhetoric that they're going to put out every year. You'll get your
check. Baby boomers like me, we'll probably get our checks, because
the Social Security trust is that solvent.
But we need to worry about our children and grandchildren when it
comes to Social Security. I believe younger workers ought to be able
to take some of their own money and set up a personal savings account
to make sure Social Security fulfills its promise, a personal savings
account you call your own, a personal savings account the government
can never take away. (Applause.)
Listen, in this world of change there are some things that won't
change, the values we try to live by: courage and compassion,
reverence and integrity. In changing times, we'll support the
institutions that give our lives direction and purpose: our schools,
our families, our religious congregations. We stand for a culture of
life in which every person matters and every being counts.
(Applause.) We stand for marriage and family, which are the
foundations of our society. (Applause.) And we stand for the
appointment of federal judges who know the difference between personal
opinion and the strict interpretation of the law. (Applause.)
This election will also determine how America responds to
continuing danger of terrorism. Since 2001 -- September the 11th,
2001, we have fought the terrorists across the Earth, not for pride,
not for power, but because the lives of our citizens are at stake. Our
strategy is clear, we're defending the homeland, we'll transform our
military, we'll keep the all-volunteer Army an all-volunteer Army.
(Applause.) We'll strengthen the intelligence services. We'll stay on
the offensive. We'll defeat the terrorists around the Earth so we do
not have to face them here at home. (Applause.)
We'll continue to advance liberty in the broader Middle East and
throughout the world, and we will prevail. Our strategy is
succeeding. Think about this: Four years ago, Afghanistan was the
home base of al Qaeda; Pakistan was a transit point for terrorists;
Saudi Arabia was fertile ground for terrorist fundraising; Libya was
secretly pursuing nuclear weapons; Iraq was a gathering threat; and al
Qaeda was largely unchallenged as it planned attacks.
Because we acted, Afghanistan is fighting terror; Pakistan is
capturing terrorist leaders; Saudi Arabia is making raids and arrests;
Libya is dismantling its weapons programs; the army of a free Iraq is
fighting terror; and three quarters of al Qaeda's leadership have been
brought to justice. (Applause.)
This progress involved careful diplomacy, clear moral purpose, and
some tough decisions -- the toughest came on Iraq. We knew Saddam
Hussein's record of aggression and support for terror. We knew that.
I want you to remember that he harbored Abu Nidal, the leader of a
terrorist organization that carried out attacks in Europe and Asia. We
knew he harbored Abu Abbas, who killed American Leon Klinghoffer
because of his religion. Zarqawi was in and out of Baghdad. He
ordered the killing of an American citizen from Baghdad. We knew
Saddam Hussein's long history of pursuing and using weapons of mass
destruction. We knew that he would hope the world would turn away and
not pay attention to him. We also knew that we must think differently
after September the 11th. This country must take threats seriously
before they fully materialize. (Applause.) That is a lesson we must
never forget.
So I went to the United States Congress. The Congress looked at
the same intelligence I looked at, remembered the same history I
remembered, and concluded Saddam Hussein was a threat, and voted to
authorize the use of force. My opponent looked at the same
intelligence I looked at. He concluded that Saddam Hussein was a
serious threat. He voted "yes" when it came to the authorization of
force. He may not want to admit it today.
Before the Commander-in-Chief commits troops into harm's way, he
must try all options before military options. And so I went to the
United Nations in hopes that diplomacy would work, in hopes that
somehow the free world would finally convince Saddam Hussein to listen
to the demands. The United Nations Security Council debated the issue
and voted 15 to nothing to say to Saddam Hussein: disclose, disarm, or
face serious consequences. I believe that when an international body
speaks, it must mean what it says in order to keep this world
peaceful. (Applause.) Saddam Hussein ignored the demands yet again.
Last night my opponent said, well, we probably should have -- not
"probably" -- we should have taken more time and passed another
resolution, as if number 18 would have convinced him. We sent
inspectors in -- the U.N. did,- they were systematically deceived.
That's what history shows. My opponent said, we should have left the
inspectors in there. Why? I don't know. Maybe Saddam could deceived
them even more. The truth was diplomacy had failed. And so I now have
a choice to make: Do I take the word of a madman and forget the
lessons of September the 11th, or take action to defend this country?
Given that choice, I will defend America every time. (Applause.)
We didn't find the stockpiles we thought would be there. We didn't
find the stockpiles everybody thought would be there. But I want you
to remember, Saddam still had the capability of making weapons of mass
destruction. He could have passed that capability onto an enemy, and
that is a risk we could not have afforded to have taken after September
the 11th. Knowing what I know today, I would have made the same
decision. (Applause.)
And the world is safer with Saddam Hussein sitting in a prison
cell. (Applause.) Because we acted to defend our country, 50 million
people now live in freedom in Afghanistan and Iraq. (Applause.)
Remember what -- remember what it was like in Afghanistan some three
years ago. People were living under the brutal reign of the Taliban.
These people are -- when I talk about ideologues -- ideologues of hate,
that's what I'm talking about, people just like them. They would not
let young girls go to school. They'd whip their mothers in the public
square if they disagreed with their ideology of hate. They executed
women in sports stadiums. They were barbaric and backwards. And they
were harboring al Qaeda.
Today, Afghanistan is an ally in the war on terror, and 10 million
people, 41 percent of whom are women, have registered to vote in the
upcoming October presidential election. (Applause.) Think about that
for a minute. This country has gone from darkness to light because of
freedom, and America and the world are better for it. (Applause.)
In Iraq, we have got a plan to win this war against the
terrorists. First of all, we've got an ally in the war, and a strong
leader in Prime Minister Allawi. Secondly, there will be national
elections in January of 2005. We're continuing our reconstruction
efforts over the next months to help rebuild that country. We'll
continue to work with our allies and friends. There will be a donors
summit in Japan next month. There will be a regional conference of
neighbor -- of countries in the neighborhood to work with Iraq. We
will continue to train the Iraqis so they will do the hard work of
defending their country against those who want to stop the advance of
freedom. That is our strategy. We'll implement it as quickly as
possible. We'll get this country on the road to stability and
democracy, and then our troops will come home with the honor they have
earned. (Applause.)
I am proud of our United States military, and I want to thank the
veterans who are here for having set such a great example. (Applause.)
I believe in the transformational power of liberty. The other
night, I said, I am realistic about what's taking place in Iraq. I
understand how hard it is. I'm optimistic we will succeed. I'm
optimistic we'll succeed, and one of the main reasons why is because I
do believe in the transformational power of liberty. I'll tell you
what I mean by that. Perhaps the best way to explain that to you is --
is using this example.
One of the leaders I enjoy meeting with is Prime Minister Koizumi
of Japan -- interesting fellow. I told him in New York when I saw him,
I said, do you mind if I tell the people in my country that we've got a
good relationship? He said, fine. I didn't tell him I was going to
tell you that his favorite singer was Elvis. (Laughter.) Interesting
man; and a friend.
Think about this, though, that I sit down and talk to this leader
of Japan some 60 years after our nation was at war with them. Sixty
years isn't very long in the march of history. It's long if you're
58-years-old. (Laughter.) But I want you to think about that for a
minute. My dad, your dads, your granddads fought against the Japanese,
and, yet, today, I now sit down at the table with the Prime Minister.
See, fortunately, Harry Truman and other citizens of the country
believed in the transformational power of liberty, that liberty could
transform an enemy into an ally. And because they overwhelmed the
skeptics and the doubters, I now sit at the table with a leader of a
former foe talking about the peace we all want. (Applause.) Someday
-- someday, an American President will be sitting down with a duly
elected leader of Iraq, talking about keeping the peace. And our
children and our grandchildren will be better off for it. (Applause.)
I believe millions in the Middle East plead in silence for their
liberty. I believe women in the Middle East want to be free to realize
their dreams, and they can raise their children in hopeful societies.
I believe that if given the chance, people in the Middle East will
embrace the most honorable form of government ever devised by man:
democracy. I believe all these things because freedom is not America's
gift to the world, freedom is the Almighty God's gift to each man and
woman in this world. (Applause.)
This young century will be liberty's century. By promoting freedom
at home and abroad, we'll build a safer world, and a more hopeful
America. By reforming our systems of government, we will help more
Americans realize their dreams. We'll spread ownership and opportunity
to every corner of this country. We'll pass the enduring values of our
country to a new generation. We will continue to make the world more
peaceful and more free.
For Americans -- for all Americans, these years in our history will
always stand apart. There are quiet times in the life a nation, when
little is expected of its leaders. This isn't one of those times.
This is a time when we need firm resolve, clear vision, and a deep
faith in the values that makes this a great nation. (Applause.)
None of us will ever forget that week when one era ended and
another began. On September the 14th, 2001, I stood in the ruins of
the Twin Towers. It's a day I'll never forget. The memories are
vividly etched in my mind. There were workers in hard hats yelling at
the top of their lungs: Whatever it takes. I remember working the
line, trying to comfort people coming out of that rubble, and a guy
grabbed me by the arm, and he said: Do not let me down. Ever since
that day, that fateful day, I've woken up doing whatever I can to
protect this country. I will never relent in defending you, whatever
it takes. (Applause.)
Four years ago as I had the honor of traveling your state, I made
this pledge, I said if you gave me the chance to serve, I would
uphold the honor and the dignity of the office. With your hard work,
with your help, I will do so for four more years.
May God bless you, and may God bless our great country. Thank you
all. (Applause.)
END 4:39 P.M. EDT
|