Remarks Announcing
Candidacy
The Battle For Our Values Begins Today
Thank you very much. Thank you. I accept your nomination.
Thank you for that warm Huntington welcome. And thank you to Senator Dan
Coats, my very dear friend. I only wish that he were still in the United
States Senate. What a special day. What a fantastic welcome. This is the
heart of America.
Huntington is where I brought my young bride, Marilyn, back here in 1974.
I graduated from Huntington High School. I began my career here. I became
a father here. I taught business law at Huntington College. We started the
law firm of Quayle and Quayle, and I want to be clear about this. My best
friend in life, the love of my life, my political confidante for all these
years, my wife Marilyn was the senior partner of that law firm.
I first ran for Congress in 1976. I ran against a man who also was from
Huntington, a fine gentleman. The experts at that time, they said I didn’t
have a chance. And I said to the experts, “Watch me,” and we won.
In 1980 I ran for the United States Senate. And again the experts said,
“You can’t win.” They said, “Birch Bayh, he beat Dick Lugar, Bill
Ruckelshaus; you can’t win.” And again, I said to the experts, “Watch me,”
and we won.
Eight years later, I came back to Huntington as George Bush’s running
mate. At that time, some in the media have told me in recent days that
they didn’t feel that welcome in Huntington. Well, today is a new day, a
new campaign, and let’s turn around and give a rousing welcome to the
national media.
And in 1988 at one time we were behind 17 points, and we won again.
Every campaign that begins in Huntington results in victory.
Today I announce that I will seek and I will win the presidency of the
United States of America.
Here is why I am running.
This last century, we have seen a lot of wars, we have seen financial
distress. This next century, with the right leadership, hopefully we can
have peace and prosperity. And to have peace and prosperity, not just for
Americans, but for all the world. That should be our goal. Today, America
is the undisputed superpower. We have climbed a high mountain over these
last 200 years to attain that responsibility of being the world’s only
superpower.
There is no doubt about it that today America is number one militarily,
economically, scientifically, technologically. But you know, even though
we are number one, we know that something is missing. Something
fundamentally isn’t quite there.
We are coming to the end of a dishonest decade of Bill Clinton and Al
Gore. My friends, it is time that we work to reclaim the values that made
America great in the first place. Values like respect, responsibility,
courage, patriotism, integrity.
Respect. Parents should respect their children. And the children should
respect their parents.
Responsibility. Shoulder the burden of being good citizens.
Courage. Have the courage of your convictions. Stand up for what you
believe in.
Integrity. Always tell the truth.
Patriotism. Love your country. Believe in our God.
In your hearts, you know that prosperity without values is no prosperity
at all. We must have the courage to lead, the courage to change, the
courage to believe in ourselves. And I’m here to tell you that I will lead
the fight for our values and for our families.
America today is divided over what is right and what is wrong. There is a
cultural divide.
Some that are leading this country today, unfortunately, still adhere to
the culture of the 1960s that said, “If it feels good, just do it.” Some
of the self-anointed are saying that truth can be compromised. They will
say that people of faith are fanatics, that people that believe in the
sanctity of life are extremists, and that people who are patriotic are
just old-fashioned.
This divide could not be more evident than on the day that Bill Clinton
was impeached by the House of Representatives. My friends, on that day
that Bill Clinton was impeached, his vice president, Al Gore, said this:
That Bill Clinton will go down in history as one of America’s greatest
presidents.
What arrogance. What disdain for the values that parents are trying to
teach their children. What contempt for the rule of law. This shall not
stand. Starting in this town, in this place, at this hour, we will fight
back.
I know and you know that values matter most. Because God has written on
our hearts the difference between what is right and what is wrong, between
justice and injustice, between good and bad. Yet, the self-anointed, they
will tell us, “Don’t talk about values.” Even some in my party say we
shouldn’t address the issue of values and virtues because it might be
risky or divisive.
I ask you, what is the greatest challenge facing America today? Is it
jobs, or is it values? It is values; of course it is.
Leadership is not just a popularity contest. Leadership is doing what is
right for the American people. Telling the truth may not be easy, but it’s
always the right thing to do.
And I can tell you, when you tell the truth, you’ll be controversial
sometimes. You may recall the speech that I made in May of 1992 titled
“The Poverty of Values.” I made a speech in California on the poverty of
values, and I lamented the fact that too many of our children are born
into homes without fathers. And the point I made was that raising a child
is not just a mother’s responsibility; it is a father’s responsibility
too. And I did make a reference to a particular TV sitcom. And I made that
reference because I want to work with popular culture to get them to help
us. We shouldn’t celebrate the idea of fathers abandoning their children.
That is wrong. It is wrong for fathers to not pay attention and to help
raise their children.
And when you speak the truth, ultimately you will win. Remember, Murphy
Brown is gone and I’m still here fighting for the American family.
It’s time to recognize and to appreciate the contribution and the
importance of the great middle class of America. The middle class is the
bedrock of our community. The middle class, you are the ones that work
hard. You play by the rules. You pay your fair share of taxes. You’re
involved in your communities, trying to make your community better. You
are the ones that make America great.
But today, there is a middle-class tax squeeze. The middle class is
working harder than ever before. And many feel that they aren’t getting
ahead. We have an economy that works seven-days-a-week, 24-hours-a-day.
You work hard. You miss dinners. You miss breakfasts. Sometimes you skip
your child’s play at school. You come home in the evening and you’re
exhausted.
Why? Why are you exhausted and stressed? The reason is you are paying too
much taxes. You are being overtaxed. And wouldn’t it be nice if the
politicians in Washington would just say that we have overtaxed you, and
it’s time that you keep more of your hard-earned money.
Today it takes two incomes what it used to just take one. Two parents are
working today, not just because of choice, that’s fine; but because of
economic survival.
Look at the taxes you pay today, direct taxes and indirect taxes. You pay
taxes throughout your whole life. You pay local taxes, state taxes,
federal taxes, car taxes, utility taxes, sales taxes, gas taxes, excise
taxes, phone taxes, water taxes. I could go on and on and on, and then,
after you pay all these taxes when you are alive, you have the audacity to
die, and you pay another 55 percent in death taxes.
My friends, it is time for a real tax cut. It is time to cut the tax rates
30 percent across the board. And let me be clear about this. It is time to
get rid of the death taxes in America and the grim reapers of the IRS.
Every tax hike takes away your freedom. Every regulation takes away your
freedom. When government gets bigger, it takes away your freedom. We are
losing our freedoms and we don’t even know it. And I’m here to tell you I
will fight for our freedom.
Freedom to keep more of your money. Freedom to choose your own doctor when
you’re sick. Freedom from government discrimination. Freedom to study and
respect your heritage. Freedom to start your own business. Freedom to send
your child to a good school.
Excellence in education is absolutely critical to our future. We need to
have the courage to challenge the education bureaucrats. We need to have
the courage to put our children first. We need to have the courage to say
that we should pay the good teachers more and weed out those teachers that
don’t come up to our standards.
It’s time that we move forward to the basics — the three R’s, reading,
writing, and arithmetic. I’ll throw two more R’s in there, respect and
responsibility, too. No more fuzzy math, where four plus three feels like
seven; it is seven. No more creative spelling, either. I’ve tried that; it
doesn’t work.
Freedom begins with a 30 percent tax cut. The ruling class won’t like
this. They will say that you don’t want it. They will say the people don’t
want a tax cut. They’re wrong.
They will say that we have to save the surplus for 30 years. Hello —
Washington is going to save a surplus for 30 years? They can’t save it for
30 seconds.
I will appoint a secretary of treasury, someone who comes from the growth
wing of the Republican Party. Someone who understands that tax cuts will
create more jobs, that when you give people incentives there will be more
productivity. Because we can grow this economy more.
Why not harness the prosperity we have today and grow it even more?
Because some people are being left behind. Many in the middle class are
being left behind. The poor are being left behind. The underclass is being
left behind. And if we have the courage to cut taxes we will grow this
economy more and no one will be left behind.
When I left the White House, the United States was clearly the undisputed
superpower. But we were more than that. The American president and the
office of the American presidency had the moral authority to lead, to make
decisions. Nobody ever questioned our credibility to lead. Nobody ever
questioned our commitment to do what is right for America. No one ever
suggested that we would sacrifice national security for campaign cash
donations.
Today, the White House looks a lot different.
When I traveled the world as vice president, I was in 47 different
countries. I met with all the heads of state and the people in those
countries. And not one time, not one time did I ever hear any criticism
because America was too strong. They always said, “We want America to be
involved, we want America to lead.”
And I can tell you they had respect not just for who was the president at
that time, but they had respect for the office of the American presidency.
That’s the way it should be.
And look at the situation today, my friends. Look at the situation today
where we have depleted our armed forces. We are asking our armed forces to
do more with less. The ships in the Navy over this last decade have been
reduced from 600 to 300. Air wings in the Air Force have been reduced from
36 to 18. Divisions in the Army have been reduced from 18 to 9.
America must lead. We must reject the idea of isolationism. I am an
internationalist, and I will assume international responsibilities. But
that doesn’t mean that we should get involved in every civil war around
the world.
In my debate with Al Gore in Atlanta 1992, I raised this question for the
American people to think about. I said at that time some day, someplace,
there will be an international crisis. And the question was, who do you
want to manage that crisis? I didn’t think of Kosovo at that time, but
that’s where the situation is today. Because we do have a crisis in the
Balkans. Today there are no good options because of mistake after mistake,
miscalculation after miscalculation.
But once the commander in chief makes the decision, we will support our
military. We will support the men and women who wear the uniform. And we
will pray for them and we will support them and we hope they come home
safely.
I’ve been there when these decisions have been made. And the way it works
is that you work with a very small group. You have your vice president
there, the secretary of state, the secretary of defense, the national
security adviser, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. It’s a very
small group. And you talk about what you’re going to do. And the question
we always ask: What is right for America, what is in our best interests?
And once the discussions are concluded, it comes down to the decision of
one person, the president of the United States. It is an awesome
responsibility, it is an awesome challenge. And foreign policy is serious
business. You have to pay attention to it. You have to take time to know
the world and to know what the issues are.
And let me be very clear about this. When we left the White House, we had
a tremendous record of accomplishment in foreign policy. Communism was
assigned to the ash heap of history. The Cold War was won. Germany was
reunited. The Berlin Wall came down. Apartheid was eliminated in South
Africa. Noriega was apprehended in Panama, and we saved democracy in the
Philippines.
We handed this administration the most favorable foreign policy cards of
any administration since World War II. And unfortunately, one by one by
one, they have frittered them away. Today, I will tell you, if I’m your
president, never will our armed forces report to the secretary general of
the United Nations. Our armed forces will always report to the commander
in chief of the United States of America.
I intend to make foreign policy an issue in this presidential campaign. We
do not need another president who needs on-the-job training. We can ill
afford to have another president who has inexperience when it comes to
foreign policy.
You can only get so much from briefing books and crash courses. You need
experience.
Today, I can look you in the eye and assure you on day one I will be
prepared to lead this great nation of ours.
As we stand and are seated in this gymnasium, let us be mindful of the
movie “Hoosiers,” a great movie. Remember that movie? Milan High School
came from behind and won the state championship. They beat the big shots.
They were the underdogs. They beat all the big names. If they had taken a
poll in those days, they would have said, “Milan High School, you can’t
win.” But they did.
Why did they win? Because they worked hard. They worked together. They
were determined. They were focused. And they prevailed. And they won, and
I’ll win.
In life, it’s not a question of whether you’re going to get knocked down
or not. You will. The question is are you ready to get back up, and
willing to get back up, and fight for what you believe in? And I am.
The presidency is not to be inherited. The presidency will not be bought.
It must be earned, and I intend to earn it.
You’ve now heard what I have to say; I want to hear what you have to say.
I will fight for your values. Will you stand with me?
I will fight for lower taxes. Will you stand with me?
I will fight for your freedom. Will you stand with me?
I will fight to return honor and respect to the Oval Office. Will you
stand with me?
This campaign is for you. You’ve heard so many candidates come and say,
“Believe in the candidates.” I’m here to say I believe in you. I believe
in your dreams, in your hopes, and in your future.
The battle for our families and our future begins today. Working together
we will prevail. We will make America a better place to live.
Thank you. God bless you, and God bless America.
Paid for by the Quayle 2000 Exploratory
Committee, Inc.
Source: Dan Quayle for President Official 2000 Campaign Web Site
©2000-2007 by the 4President Corporation