An
American
Call to
Action
I'm
Kathleen
Sebelius,
Governor
of the
State of
Kansas.
And I am
grateful
for the
opportunity
to speak
with you
tonight.
I'm a
Democrat,
but
tonight,
it
really
doesn't
matter
whether
you
think of
yourself
as a
Democrat
or a
Republican
or an
Independent.
Or
none-of-the-above.
Instead,
the fact
you're
tuning
in this
evening
tells me
each of
you is,
above
all … an
American,
first.
You are
mothers,
and
fathers.
Grandparents,
and
grandchildren.
Working
people,
and
business-owners.
Americans,
all.
And the
American
people —
folks
like
you, and
me — are
not
nearly
as
divided
as our
rancorous
politics
might
suggest.
In fact,
right
now,
tonight,
as
political
pundits
discuss
the
President's
speech —
chances
are,
they'll
obsess
over the
reactions
of
Members
of
Congress.
"How
many
times
was the
President
interrupted
by
applause?
Did
Republicans
stand?
Did
Democrats
sit?"
And the
rest of
us will
roll our
eyes and
think,
"What in
the
world
does any
of that
have to
do with
me?"
And, so,
I want
to take
a slight
detour
from
tradition
on this
State of
the
Union
night.
In this
time,
normally
reserved
for the
partisan
response,
I hope
to offer
you
something
more:
An
American
Response.
A
national
call to
action
on
behalf
of the
struggling
families
in the
heartland,
and
across
this
great
country.
A wakeup
call to
Washington,
on
behalf
of a new
American
majority,
that
time is
running
out on
our
opportunities
to meet
our
challenges
and
solve
our
problems.
Our
struggling
economy
requires
urgent
and
immediate
action,
and then
sustained
attention.
Families
can't
pay
their
bills.
They are
losing
their
jobs,
and now
are
threatened
with
losing
their
homes.
We heard
last
week and
again
tonight
that
Congress
and the
President
are
acting
quickly,
on a
temporary,
targeted
stimulus
package.
That is
encouraging.
But you
and I
know
that a
temporary
fix is
only the
first
step
toward
meeting
our
challenges
and
solving
our
problems.
There is
a chance
Mr.
President,
in the
next 357
Days, to
get real
results,
and give
the
American
people
renewed
optimism
that
their
challenges
are the
top
priority.
Working
together,
working
hard,
committing
to
results,
we can
get the
job
done.
In fact,
over the
last
year,
the
Democratic
majority
in
Congress
has
begun to
move us
in the
right
direction
— with
bipartisan
action
to
strengthen
our
national
security,
raise
the
minimum
wage,
and
reduce
the
costs of
college
loans.
These
are
encouraging
first
steps.
But
there is
still
more to
be done.
And, so
we ask
you, Mr.
President
— will
you join
us?
Let's
get to
work.
We know
that we
are
stronger
as a
nation
when our
people
have
access
to the
highest-quality,
most-affordable
health
care.
When our
businesses
can
compete
in the
global
marketplace
without
the
burden
of
rising
health
care
costs
here at
home.
We know
that
caring
for our
children,
so they
have a
healthy
and
better
start in
life, is
what
grownups
do.
Governors
in both
parties,
and a
large
majority
of the
Congress
are
ready,
right
now, to
provide
health
care to
10
million
American
children,
as a
first
step in
overhauling
our
health
care
system.
Join us,
Mr.
President,
sign the
bill and
let's
get to
work.
Sitting
with the
First
Lady
tonight
was
Steve
Hewitt,
the city
manager
of
Greensburg,
Kansas.
Many of
you
remember
Greensburg
— our
town
nearly
destroyed
by a
tornado
last
year.
Thanks
to
Steve's
efforts,
and
hundreds
of
others
in our
state,
and
across
the
country,
Greensburg
will
recover.
Folks
rolled
up their
sleeves
and got
to work,
and
local,
state
and
federal
governments
assisted
in the
effort.
But more
than
just
recover
— the
Kansans
who live
in
Greensburg
are
building
green -
rebuilding
a better
community
for
their
children
and
grandchildren;
making
shared
sacrifices,
and
investments
for the
next
generation.
Greensburg
is not
alone.
You and
I —
stand
ready —
ready to
protect
our
environment
for
future
generations,
and stay
economically
competitive.
Mayors
have
committed
their
cities
to going
green;
governors
have
joined
together,
leading
efforts
for
energy
security
and
independence;
and the
majority
in
Congress
is ready
to
tackle
the
challenge
of
reducing
global
warming
and
creating
a new
energy
future
for
America.
So we
ask you,
Mr.
President,
will you
join us?
It's
time to
get to
work.
Here in
the
heartland,
we honor
and
respect
military
service.
We
appreciate
the
enormous
sacrifices
made by
soldiers
and
their
families.
As
Governor
of
Kansas,
I am the
Commander
in Chief
of our
National
Guard.
Over the
past
five
years, I
have
seen
thousands
of
soldiers
deployed
from
Kansas.
I've
visited
our
troops
in Iraq;
attended
funerals
and
comforted
families;
and seen
the
impact
at home
of the
war
being
waged.
We stand
ready in
the
heartland
and
across
this
country,
to join
forces
with
peace-loving
nations
across
the
globe
and to
fight
the war
against
terrorists,
wherever
they may
strike.
But our
capable
and
dedicated
soldiers
can't
solve
the
political
disputes
where
they
are, and
can't
focus on
the real
enemies
elsewhere.
The new
Democratic
majority
of
Congress
and the
vast
majority
of
Americans
are
ready —
ready to
chart a
new
course.
If more
Republicans
in
Congress
stand
with us
this
year, we
won't
have to
wait for
a new
President
to
restore
America's
role in
the
world,
and
fight a
more
effective
war on
terror.
The last
five
years
have
cost us
dearly —
in lives
lost; in
thousands
of
wounded
warriors
whose
futures
may
never be
the
same; in
challenges
not met
here at
home
because
our
resources
were
committed
elsewhere.
America's
foreign
policy
has left
us with
fewer
allies
and more
enemies.
Join us,
Mr.
President,
and
working
together
with
Congress
to make
tough,
smart
decisions,
we will
regain
our
standing
in the
world
and
protect
our
people
and our
interests.
I know
government
can work
to
benefit
the
people
we
serve,
because
I see it
every
day, not
only
here in
Kansas,
but in
states
across
the
country.
I know
government
can
work,
Mr.
President,
because
like
you, I
grew up
in a
family
committed
to
public
service.
My
father
and my
father
in law
both
served
in
Congress
- one a
Republican
and one
a
Democrat.
They had
far more
in
common
than the
issues
that
divided
them - a
love for
their
country
that led
them
from
military
service
to
public
service.
A
lifetime
of
working
for the
common
good,
making
sacrifices
so their
children
and
grandchildren
could
have a
better
future.
They are
called
"the
greatest
generation."
But I
believe,
like
parents
across
America,
that our
greatest
generations
are
still to
come.
That we
must
chart a
new
course,
at home
and
abroad,
to give
our
future
greatest
generations
all the
opportunities
our
parents
gave us.
These
are
uncertain
times,
but with
strength
and
determination,
we can
meet the
challenges
together.
If
Washington
can work
together,
so
quickly,
on a
short-term
fix for
families
caught
in the
financial
squeeze,
then we
can work
together
to
transform
America.
In these
difficult
times —
the
American
people
aren't
afraid
to face
difficult
choices.
But, we
have no
more
patience
for
divisive
politics.
Tonight's
address
begins
the
final
year of
this
presidency,
with new
leaders
on the
horizon
and
uncertainty
throughout
our
land.
Conditions
we face,
at home
and
abroad,
are
results
of
choices
made and
challenges
unmet.
In spite
of the
attempts
to
convince
us that
we are
divided
as a
people,
a new
American
majority
has come
together.
We are
tired of
leaders
who
rather
than
asking
what we
can do
for our
country,
ask
nothing
of us at
all.
We are
Americans
sharing
a belief
in
something
greater
than
ourselves,
a nation
coming
together
to meet
challenges
and find
solutions;
to share
sacrifices
and
share
prosperity;
and
focus,
once
again,
not only
on the
individual
good but
on the
common
good.
On
behalf
of the
new
American
majority
— the
majority
of
elected
officials
at the
national,
state
and
local
level,
and the
majority
of
Americans,
we ask
you, Mr.
President,
to join
us. We
are
ready to
work
together,
to be
the
America
we have
been —
and can
be once
again.
Thank
you for
listening.
God
bless
and
sleep
well.
And in
the
morning,
let's
get to
work.
|