Announcement of Candidacy
Democratic Nomination for President of the United States
Tuesday, December 12, 2006
Cleveland City Hall
On November 7th, the people voted for a new direction for our
nation. They voted for the Democrats because they expected
us to end the occupation and to bring the troops home from Iraq.
On October 1st Congress appropriated $70 billion for the war in
Iraq. The money is in the pipeline right now to bring the
troops home. Unfortunately our Democratic leaders have already
announced they will support an additional appropriation
for the war of up to $160 billion dollars. Not only are we not
listening to the voters and taking steps to withdraw our forces
quickly, we are actually planning to spend twice as much on the war
as we did last year!
Somebody didn’t get the message. And unfortunately it is the
leadership of the Democratic Party and the consequences
may be disastrous for our party, our nation and the world.
My home is in Cleveland. Each day I see the effect of our misplaced
national priorities on my city: The number of factories
and businesses, large and small, closing. My constituents and people
just like them across America are losing their
jobs, losing their middle class status and being pushed into
poverty. Blue and white collar workers in the city and suburbs
are losing their homes. They are losing their hard-earned
retirement. A total of one hundred million Americans have no
health care or are underinsured. Budget deficits have crippled
school districts. Many cities are in financial trouble, forced
to lay off vital city workers, unable to finance repairs to bridges,
roads, water systems and sewer systems. The price of natural
gas is rising. Huge utility rate increases are in the offing. It is
getting more and more difficult for people to make ends
meet.
Meanwhile millions of entrepreneurs whose ingenuity will create new
jobs by bringing forth advanced clean energy technologies
are being starved for capital.
I live in the same working class neighborhood in the same home I
purchased thirty five years ago. My parents raised seven
children and never owned a home. We lived in twenty-one different
places by the time I was seventeen, including a couple
of cars. I know what people go through. I have seen first hand the
effects of poverty and social disorganization. I also
know of the powerful strivings of the human heart. I know that with
just a little help, a little encouragement, and a little
money, people are capable of creating new wealth and new worlds.
That creative power is part of the birthright of all
Americans.
I also know what the destructive power of war does to families and
to our nation.. I know what Vietnam did to this country
and did to my family. I know how it divided our nation and set
America apart from the world. The war in Iraq has already
taken its toll on Cleveland and in communities like Cleveland across
the United States. The war, tax cuts for the already
privileged, and our trade policies have become a massive engine to
redistribute upwards the wealth of our nation and to
transfer our national wealth out of the country. Policies which
divide people and fracture the social compact are inherently
un-American. Our nation’s very name makes of striving for unity a
sacred cause.
How can we unite America around the health care needs of our people
if we instead spend trillions of dollars in Iraq? How
can we meet the educational needs of the children of our nation if
we have money for arms build-ups, but no money for
education build -ups? For example, the $160 billion dollars which
our leaders are ready to appropriate for more war is
equal to three times the entire annual federal education budget.
In a period of two years the budget for the military, plus the war
in Iraq, will exceed one trillion dollars. The billions we
are spending in Baghdad we are borrowing from Bejing. We must end
this reckless sacrifice of blood and treasure. We
must stop sacrificing our dreams and the dreams of future
generations of Americans to the nightmare of this war.
How can we have strong neighborhoods in our cities, with solid city
services, adequate police and fire protection, if our
cities are starving for tax resources because the federal government
has money for war and not much else?
The National Priorities Project issued a report that says that in
the year 2005, twenty-nine cents of every federal tax dollar
went to the military, plus another nine cents went to pay interest
on borrowing to finance the military. That’s 38% of federal
tax income being spent for guns not butter. Contrast this with 0.3%
on job training, 2% on housing, 4% on education.
Consider that our nation is now spending more money on arms then all
the other countries in the world put together and
you can understand why our leaders have trouble extricating
ourselves from a war based on lies. As President Dwight
David Eisenhower recognized, the dramatic shift of resources to grow
a military industrial complex does not help protect
democracy, it destroys it.
This is the moment to remember first principles, to remember why
America was founded, to remember our strivings for
liberty, for truth, for justice, to remember the primacy of our
Constitution. This is the moment to remember the deep historic
mission of the Democratic Party. We are the party of the people. We
are the Party of FDR and the New Deal. We are
the party of JFK and the New Frontier. We are the Party of LBJ and
the Great Society. We are the party of the courage of
Martin Luther King and Rosa Parks, the moral power of Cesar Chavez,
the daring of Robert Kennedy, the compassion of
Jimmy Carter, the brilliance of Bill Clinton. We have a sacred
responsibility to keep alive the spirit of our nation, to protect
people’s faith in not just our party, but in the political process
itself.
At this moment, people’s trust in government is on the line. Trust
in the Democratic Party is on the line. What does it say
if only one month after the voters gave us control of Congress on
the issue of Iraq, that we turn around and say we will
keep funding the war?
What kind of credibility will our Party have if we say we are
opposed to the war, but continue to fund it?
There is still time to change the outcome. There is still time to
rescue the people’s confidence in the Democratic party and
their trust in government. But only if someone steps forward quickly
to wake the nation and tell the people, to travel to
those dozens of cities like Cleveland, to go to the villages, the
farms and the factories and say: “This is the moment to stop
the US occupation, this is the moment to end our war against Iraq,
this is the moment to bring our troops home, because the
money is there to bring them home. And bring them home we must, to
rebuild our cities, to invest in our children, to restore
our environment, to work with the world to create new opportunities
through peace.
The constituents have called me to action. Their economic future
calls me to action. My country calls me to action. My
conscience calls me to action. I am not going to stand by and watch
thousands more of our brave young American men
and women killed in Iraq or permanently injured while our leaders
are ready to take action to keep the war going.
We Democrats were put back in power to bring some sanity back to our
nation. We are expected to take a stand. We are
expected to assert our constitutional power as a co-equal branch of
government. We are expected to do what we said we
would do: Get out of Iraq and bring the troops home.
Clevelanders remember that twenty-eight years ago this week, I put
my career on the line to protect the people’s right to
own a municipal electric system. They remember that I had the
courage to stand up for the people, to stand against all odds
and to prevail. Years later I was proven right. I know what it is
like to take a stand. I know what it is like to put my career
on the line. Today I am prepared to put my career on the line again
to save my community and my nation from the devastating
effects of more war.
Therefore, I am announcing my candidacy for President of the United
States, with the intention of rallying the American
people to the cause of the troops in the field, to the cause of
stopping more American families from suffering, to the cause
of ending a deepening tragedy in Iraq, to the cause of repairing
America’s reputation in the world,
to the cause of the dreams of people in my own neighborhood and my
own city.
I fully expect to be win, because when the American people hear this
clarion call for a new and true direction, this call to
confirm their intent, their power, I am confident that they will
respond as powerfully, as they did just one month ago, to
demand that America quickly change course in Iraq and to demand a
leader who will make it happen.
My campaign will be about the truth in action. It will be about the
power of decisiveness, and the power of compassion
which comes from an understanding of the imperative of human unity,
the imperative of human security, the imperative of
peace.
In 2002, I led the effort in the House of Representatives,
challenging the Bush Administration’s march toward war in Iraq.
It was that effort which gives me hope. Because although the
opposition to the authorization for war began with only a
handful of members of Congress, it soon grew to 125 Democrats.
Everything I said then has been proven to be true: Iraq
had nothing to do with 911. Iraq had no weapons of mass destruction.
Iraq had no intention or capability of attacking the
United States. But we attacked Iraq.
Consider these facts and consider that, according to the prestigious
Lancet publication, over 650,000 excess deaths have
occurred in Iraq as a result of the war. What an injustice has been
done to the Iraqi people. We must stop our betrayal of
our own heart and work immediately to rally the world community in
the cause of relieving the suffering of Iraqis. But we
cannot do it as occupiers.
I ran for President in 2004, not just to challenge the war and
Democratic Party policy, but to bring forth a message: Fear
ends. Hope begins. My candidacy will call forth the courage of the
American people to meet the challenge of terrorism
without sacrificing our liberties and everything that is near and
dear to us. My candidacy will inspire hope for a new
America, where social, economic and political progress is grounded
in work for peace.
My stand for peace is not simply being against the Iraq war. It was
against all war. We have the right to defend ourselves,
but our leaders have confused offense with defense. America has
separated itself from the world, put itself beyond the
reach of international law, We must reunite with the world. We must
rally the world in the cause of human unity, in the
cause of the survival of the planet facing challenges from global
climate change, nuclear proliferation and from useless war.
I believe that as human beings we have evolved to the point where we
can settle our differences without killing one another.
This is what President Franklin Roosevelt, who knew war, meant when
he spoke of our responsibility to pursue “the science
of human relations.” It was this thinking that inspired legislation
to create a Department of Peace which seeks to meet
the challenge of domestic violence, spousal abuse, child abuse,
violence in the schools, racial violence, violence against
gays, and to resolve conflict between police and community groups.
War is not inevitable. Peace is inevitable if we are
dedicated to creating new structures for peace.
Einstein once said “the significant problems we have cannot be
solved at the same level of thinking with which we created
them.” Yet that is what we are in Washington with respect to Iraq.
Even though we know that our presence in Iraq is totally
wrong, we seem unable to do anything about it, except keep spending
more money for the war. We must end this march of
folly. Together we are going to change this and rescue our nation.
This is a moment that we need to call our Democratic leaders to
courage. This is about leadership, clear vision and integrity.
The people were behind us in November. They are behind us now. We
must stand by our word and bring the troops
home now.
I am the only member of the House and the Senate running for
President who has consistently voted against funding for the
war, based on a principled opposition.
I was against the war then. I am against it now. A leader must have
not just hindsight, but foresight. The prophet Isaiah
said “Without vision, a people perish.” I am stepping forth at this
moment because I believe, as did Lincoln that “this
nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom and that
government of the people, by the people and for the people
shall not perish from this earth.”. Thank you.
Source: Dennis Kucinich for President Website.