Democrats
respond
to the
president’s
address
Sen. Jim
Webb of
Virginia
delivers
formal
Democratic
reaction
This is
the text
prepared
for
delivery
by Sen.
Jim Webb
as the
Democratic
response
to the
president’s
State of
the
Union
speech
Tuesday
night.
Good
evening.
I'm
Senator
Jim
Webb,
from
Virginia,
where
this
year we
will
celebrate
the
400th
anniversary
of the
settlement
of
Jamestown
— an
event
that
marked
the
first
step in
the long
journey
that has
made us
the
greatest
and most
prosperous
nation
on
earth.
It would
not be
possible
in this
short
amount
of time
to
actually
rebut
the
President's
message,
nor
would it
be
useful.
Let me
simply
say that
we in
the
Democratic
Party
hope
that
this
administration
is
serious
about
improving
education
and
healthcare
for all
Americans,
and
addressing
such
domestic
priorities
as
restoring
the
vitality
of New
Orleans.
Further,
this is
the
seventh
time the
President
has
mentioned
energy
independence
in his
state of
the
union
message,
but for
the
first
time
this
exchange
is
taking
place in
a
Congress
led by
the
Democratic
Party.
We are
looking
for
affirmative
solutions
that
will
strengthen
our
nation
by
freeing
us from
our
dependence
on
foreign
oil, and
spurring
a wave
of
entrepreneurial
growth
in the
form of
alternate
energy
programs.
We look
forward
to
working
with the
President
and his
party to
bring
about
these
changes.
There
are two
areas
where
our
respective
parties
have
largely
stood in
contradiction,
and I
want to
take a
few
minutes
to
address
them
tonight.
The
first
relates
to how
we see
the
health
of our
economy
- how we
measure
it, and
how we
ensure
that its
benefits
are
properly
shared
among
all
Americans.
The
second
regards
our
foreign
policy -
how we
might
bring
the war
in Iraq
to a
proper
conclusion
that
will
also
allow us
to
continue
to fight
the war
against
international
terrorism,
and to
address
other
strategic
concerns
that our
country
faces
around
the
world.
When one
looks at
the
health
of our
economy,
it's
almost
as if we
are
living
in two
different
countries.
Some say
that
things
have
never
been
better.
The
stock
market
is at an
all-time
high,
and so
are
corporate
profits.
But
these
benefits
are not
being
fairly
shared.
When I
graduated
from
college,
the
average
corporate
CEO made
20 times
what the
average
worker
did;
today,
it's
nearly
400
times.
In other
words,
it takes
the
average
worker
more
than a
year to
make the
money
that his
or her
boss
makes in
one day.
Wages
and
salaries
for our
workers
are at
all-time
lows as
a
percentage
of
national
wealth,
even
though
the
productivity
of
American
workers
is the
highest
in the
world.
Medical
costs
have
skyrocketed.
College
tuition
rates
are off
the
charts.
Our
manufacturing
base is
being
dismantled
and sent
overseas.
Good
American
jobs are
being
sent
along
with
them.
In
short,
the
middle
class of
this
country,
our
historic
backbone
and our
best
hope for
a strong
society
in the
future,
is
losing
its
place at
the
table.
Our
workers
know
this,
through
painful
experience.
Our
white-collar
professionals
are
beginning
to
understand
it, as
their
jobs
start
disappearing
also.
And they
expect,
rightly,
that in
this age
of
globalization,
their
government
has a
duty to
insist
that
their
concerns
be dealt
with
fairly
in the
international
marketplace.
In the
early
days of
our
republic,
President
Andrew
Jackson
established
an
important
principle
of
American-style
democracy
- that
we
should
measure
the
health
of our
society
not at
its
apex,
but at
its
base.
Not with
the
numbers
that
come out
of Wall
Street,
but with
the
living
conditions
that
exist on
Main
Street.
We must
recapture
that
spirit
today.
And
under
the
leadership
of the
new
Democratic
Congress,
we are
on our
way to
doing
so. The
House
just
passed a
minimum
wage
increase,
the
first in
ten
years,
and the
Senate
will
soon
follow.
We've
introduced
a broad
legislative
package
designed
to
regain
the
trust of
the
American
people.
We've
established
a tone
of
cooperation
and
consensus
that
extends
beyond
party
lines.
We're
working
to get
the
right
things
done,
for the
right
people
and for
the
right
reasons.
With
respect
to
foreign
policy,
this
country
has
patiently
endured
a
mismanaged
war for
nearly
four
years.
Many,
including
myself,
warned
even
before
the war
began
that it
was
unnecessary,
that it
would
take our
energy
and
attention
away
from the
larger
war
against
terrorism,
and that
invading
and
occupying
Iraq
would
leave us
strategically
vulnerable
in the
most
violent
and
turbulent
corner
of the
world.
I want
to share
with all
of you a
picture
that I
have
carried
with me
for more
than 50
years.
This is
my
father,
when he
was a
young
Air
Force
captain,
flying
cargo
planes
during
the
Berlin
Airlift.
He sent
us the
picture
from
Germany,
as we
waited
for him,
back
here at
home.
When I
was a
small
boy, I
used to
take the
picture
to bed
with me
every
night,
because
for more
than
three
years my
father
was
deployed,
unable
to live
with us
full-time,
serving
overseas
or in
bases
where
there
was no
family
housing.
I still
keep it,
to
remind
me of
the
sacrifices
that my
mother
and
others
had to
make,
over and
over
again,
as my
father
gladly
served
our
country.
I was
proud to
follow
in his
footsteps,
serving
as a
Marine
in
Vietnam.
My
brother
did as
well,
serving
as a
Marine
helicopter
pilot.
My son
has
joined
the
tradition,
now
serving
as an
infantry
Marine
in Iraq.
Like so
many
other
Americans,
today
and
throughout
our
history,
we serve
and have
served,
not for
political
reasons,
but
because
we love
our
country.
On the
political
issues -
those
matters
of war
and
peace,
and in
some
cases of
life and
death -
we
trusted
the
judgment
of our
national
leaders.
We hoped
that
they
would be
right,
that
they
would
measure
with
accuracy
the
value of
our
lives
against
the
enormity
of the
national
interest
that
might
call
upon us
to go
into
harm's
way.
We owed
them our
loyalty,
as
Americans,
and we
gave it.
But they
owed us
- sound
judgment,
clear
thinking,
concern
for our
welfare,
a
guarantee
that the
threat
to our
country
was
equal to
the
price we
might be
called
upon to
pay in
defending
it.
The
President
took us
into
this war
recklessly.
He
disregarded
warnings
from the
national
security
adviser
during
the
first
Gulf
War, the
chief of
staff of
the
army,
two
former
commanding
generals
of the
Central
Command,
whose
jurisdiction
includes
Iraq,
the
director
of
operations
on the
Joint
Chiefs
of
Staff,
and
many,
many
others
with
great
integrity
and long
experience
in
national
security
affairs.
We are
now, as
a
nation,
held
hostage
to the
predictable
- and
predicted
-
disarray
that has
followed.
The
war's
costs to
our
nation
have
been
staggering.
Financially.
The
damage
to our
reputation
around
the
world.
The lost
opportunities
to
defeat
the
forces
of
international
terrorism.
And
especially
the
precious
blood of
our
citizens
who have
stepped
forward
to
serve.
The
majority
of the
nation
no
longer
supports
the way
this war
is being
fought;
nor does
the
majority
of our
military.
We need
a new
direction.
Not one
step
back
from the
war
against
international
terrorism.
Not a
precipitous
withdrawal
that
ignores
the
possibility
of
further
chaos.
But an
immediate
shift
toward
strong
regionally-based
diplomacy,
a policy
that
takes
our
soldiers
off the
streets
of
Iraq's
cities,
and a
formula
that
will in
short
order
allow
our
combat
forces
to leave
Iraq.
On both
of these
vital
issues,
our
economy
and our
national
security,
it falls
upon
those of
us in
elected
office
to take
action.
Regarding
the
economic
imbalance
in our
country,
I am
reminded
of the
situation
President
Theodore
Roosevelt
faced in
the
early
days of
the 20th
century.
America
was
then, as
now,
drifting
apart
along
class
lines.
The
so-called
robber
barons
were
unapologetically
raking
in a
huge
percentage
of the
national
wealth.
The
dispossessed
workers
at the
bottom
were
threatening
revolt.
Roosevelt
spoke
strongly
against
these
divisions.
He told
his
fellow
Republicans
that
they
must set
themselves
"as
resolutely
against
improper
corporate
influence
on the
one hand
as
against
demagogy
and mob
rule on
the
other."
And he
did
something
about
it.
As I
look at
Iraq, I
recall
the
words of
former
general
and
soon-to-be
President
Dwight
Eisenhower
during
the dark
days of
the
Korean
War,
which
had
fallen
into a
bloody
stalemate.
"When
comes
the
end?"
asked
the
General
who had
commanded
our
forces
in
Europe
during
World
War II.
And as
soon as
he
became
President,
he
brought
the
Korean
War to
an end.
These
Presidents
took the
right
kind of
action,
for the
benefit
of the
American
people
and for
the
health
of our
relations
around
the
world.
Tonight
we are
calling
on this
President
to take
similar
action,
in both
areas.
If he
does, we
will
join
him. If
he does
not, we
will be
showing
him the
way.
Thank
you for
listening.
And God
bless
America.
|