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Ted Strickland Democratic National Convention Speech

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Ted Strickland Democratic National Convention Speech
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Transcript of the speech from Ted Strickland at the 2008 Democratic National Convention on Tuesday, August 26, 2008.

Ted Strickland

Tuesday, August 26, 2008 at 04:50 PM



Earlier today, we had a moment of silence to remember the life of Congresswoman

Stephanie Tubbs Jones. Right now, let’s have a moment of celebration for everything

she’s given us. The state she helped represent—the great state of Ohio—has a bit of

almost everything this great nation has to offer.



But along with the beauty and promise of America, a big, diverse state like Ohio also

lives with the challenges of the American economy. And tonight, at kitchen tables across

Ohio and the heartland, mothers and fathers are worried. They’re worried because DHL

just said it was planning to cut 8,200 jobs, and they wonder if their jobs are going to be

next.



They’re worried because they have a child in Iraq, risking life and limb in a war that has

taken too many lives, cost too much money and injured too many families. And when

their child returns to America, they worry that their child might have to leave their

hometown again to find a job.



They’re worried because Midwesterners are more likely to lose a neighbor to foreclosure

than gain a neighbor who buys a house. And can you imagine? There’s now a realtor’s

group outside Cincinnati offering a class called “foreclosure opportunities.”



And while families are losing sleep tonight trying to figure out some way to make their

paycheck stretch through one more day, John McCain is sleeping better than ever. He's

sleeping better than ever because he thinks “Americans, overall, are better off…” thanks

to President Bush.



And would you believe he said last week that the fundamentals of the economy are

strong. He has no problem hitting the snooze button on the economy, because he's never

been a part of the middle class. And I would say to him: Senator McCain, it’s time for

your wake-up call. Because we just can’t afford more of the same.



Now, when I was a little boy, I went to a one-room school house. One of the rules we had

in school was that when you made mistakes on your homework, you had to correct them

because if you didn't correct your mistakes, you would repeat them. If John McCain

doesn’t know the economic policies he’s been supporting for eight years have failed the

heartland—and failed this country—he's destined to repeat those mistakes.



Now, I could say that John McCain represents four more years of Bush policies. But I

don’t have to, because his campaign is telling you the very same thing. He and the

Washington lobbyists who run his campaign are offering policies that are stuck in the

past and that will keep our economy stuck in reverse. Stuck-in-the-past policies that mean

Warren Buffet, one of the wealthiest men in America, pays a lower rate of income tax

than his secretary, and he’ll be the first to tell you, that’s wrong.

Stuck-in-the-past trade deals that mean a father has to give up his high-skilled job

manufacturing refrigeration equipment, for a low-wage job, stocking the freezer aisle at a

grocery store; a stuck-in-the-past energy policy that can’t look beyond old fuels like oil to

new sources like wind and solar, because oil lobbyists wrote the policy; and a war that

sends 10 billion of our tax dollars per month to build the Iraqi economy, while bridges

and roads collapse here at home.



You know, it was once said of the first George Bush that he was born on third base and

thought he’d hit a triple. Well, with the 22 million new jobs and the budget surplus Bill

Clinton left behind, George W. Bush came into office on third base—and then he stole

second. And John McCain cheered him every step of the way. For Ohioans and all

Americans, we can’t afford more of the same. It’s time for a change—and Barack Obama

will bring the change we need.



Barack Obama will give a $1,000 tax cut for the middle class, and end the tax cuts that

encourage corporations to send jobs overseas. He’ll invest in advanced manufacturing

and green industries. He’ll work to bring down the cost of health care and make college

more affordable. He’ll remove roadblocks in front of new small businesses and start-up

companies.



For Ohio and for the nation, there’s more than hope in these ideas—there are jobs.

Investing in advanced energy industries will create 5 million green jobs across this

country. In Ohio alone, investing in wind power could boost wages by more than $3.5

billion by 2020. That’s the change we need.



It’s the change from thinking everyone’s born on third base, to making sure everybody

has their chance at bat. That people don’t have to sit out in this economy anymore

because they can pay for college, can get a loan to start a small business, can afford the

treatment they need to get healthy.



It’s time for a president who will bring our jobs back and bring our troops home. For the

change we need, it’s time for Barack Obama.


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