*report of the platform committee
PREAMBLE
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As we come together to declare our vision as Democrats,
we are mindful that the challenges of our times are new and
profound. This November, the choice we face as Americans may
have more impact on our people and our place in the world
than any in our lifetimes. We approach this task with a
seriousness that matches the challenges before us, but also
with a profound optimism about our future--an optimism that
springs from our great faith in America, and our great pride
in what it means to be Americans.
We know the stakes are immeasurably high. For the first time
in generations, we have been attacked on our own shores. Our
brave men and women in uniform are still in harm's way in
Iraq, Afghanistan, and the war against terror. Our alliances
are frayed, our credibility in doubt. Our great middle class
is hard-pressed. Millions of Americans have lost their jobs,
and millions more are struggling under the mounting burden
of life's everyday costs. In Washington, the President and
his allies stubbornly press on, without regard to the needs
of our people or the challenges of our times. It is time for
a new direction. John Kerry, John Edwards and the Democratic
Party bring a new vision for America--strong at home,
respected abroad. An America that offers opportunity,
rewards responsibility, and rejoices in diversity. We have a
plan to build a strong, respected America: protecting our
people, rebuilding our alliances, and leading the way to a
more peaceful and prosperous world. We have a plan to build
a strong, growing economy: creating good jobs, rewarding
hard work, and restoring fiscal discipline. We have a plan
to help our people build strong, healthy families: securing
quality health care, offering world-class education, and
ensuring clean air and water. And we will honor the values
of a strong American community: widening the circle of
equality, protecting the sanctity of freedom, and deepening
our commitment to this country.
In offering this vision, we affirm our faith in the
greatness of America. We recommit to the ideal of a people
united in helping one another, an ideal as old as the faiths
we follow and as great as the country we love. To those who
are threatened, we pledge protection; to those who are
victims, we promise justice; to those who are hopeless, we
offer hope. And to all Americans who seek a better future
for themselves, for their loved ones, and for our country,
we say: your cause is our own. That is the America we
believe in. That is the America we are fighting for. That is
the America we will build together--one nation, under God,
indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.
A STRONG, RESPECTED AMERICA
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Alone among nations, America was born in pursuit of an
idea--that a free people with diverse beliefs could govern
themselves in peace. For more than a century, America has
spared no effort to defend and promote that idea around the
world. And over and over, that effort has been marked by the
exercise of American leadership to forge powerful alliances
based on mutual respect with longtime allies and reluctant
friends; with nations already living in the light of
democracy and with peoples struggling to join them.
The might of our alliances, coupled with the strength of our
democratic ideals, has been a driving force in the survival
and success of freedom--in two World Wars, in the Korean
War, in the Cold War, in the Gulf War and in Kosovo. America
led instead of going it alone. We extended a hand, not a
fist. We respected the world--and the world respected
us.
As Americans, we respect and honor our veterans. We are
indebted to all those courageous men and women who have
answered our country's call to duty. Their service and
sacrifice, their dedication and love of country advance our
cause of freedom and uphold our finest traditions as a
nation. That is the America we believe in.
That is the America we are fighting for. And that is the
America we can be. But the Bush Administration has walked
away from more than a hundred years of American leadership
in the world to embrace a new--and dangerously
ineffective--disregard for the world.
They rush to force before exhausting diplomacy. They bully
rather than persuade. They act alone when they could
assemble a team. They hope for the best when they should
prepare for the worst. Time and again, this Administration
confuses leadership with going it alone and engagement with
compromise of principle. They do not understand that real
leadership means standing by your principles and rallying
others to join you.
John Kerry, John Edwards and the Democratic Party believe in
a better, stronger America--an America that is respected,
not just feared, and an America that listens and leads. Our
vision has deep roots in our Declaration of Independence and
Franklin Delano Roosevelt's Four Freedoms, and in the
tough-minded tradition of engagement and leadership&emdash;a
tradition forged by Wilson and Roosevelt in two world wars,
then championed by Truman and Kennedy during the Cold War.
We believe in an America that people around the world
admire, because they know we cherish not just our freedom,
but theirs. Not just our democracy, but their hope for it.
Not just our peace and security, but the world's. We believe
in an America that cherishes freedom, safeguards our people,
forges alliances, and commands respect. That is the America
we are going to build.
Our overriding goals are the same as ever: to protect our
people and our way of life; and to help build a safer, more
peaceful, more prosperous, more democratic world. Today, we
face three great challenges above all others--first, to win
the global war against terror; second, to stop the spread of
nuclear, biological and chemical weapons; and third, to
promote democracy and freedom around the world, starting
with a peaceful and stable Iraq.
To meet these challenges, we need a new national security
policy guided by four new imperatives: First, America must
launch and lead a new era of alliances for the
post-September 11 world. Second, we must modernize the
world's most powerful military to meet the new threats.
Third, in addition to our military might, we must deploy all
that is in America's arsenal--our diplomacy, our
intelligence system, our economic power, and the appeal of
our values and ideas. Fourth and finally, to safeguard our
freedom and ensure our nation's future, we must end our
dependence on Mideast oil.
DEFEATING TERRORISM
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Today, the Bush Administration is waging a war against a
global terrorist movement committed to our destruction with
insufficient understanding of our enemy or effort to address
the underlying factors that can give rise to new recruits.
This war isn't just a manhunt. We cannot rest until Osama
bin Laden is captured or killed, but that day will mark only
a victory in the war on terror, not its end. Terrorists like
al Qaeda and its affiliates are unlike any adversary our
nation has ever known. We face a global terrorist movement
of many groups, funded from different sources with separate
agendas, but all committed to assaulting the United States
and free and open societies around the globe. Despite his
tough talk, President Bush's actions against terrorism have
fallen far short. He still has no comprehensive strategy for
victory. After allowing bin Laden to escape from our grasp
at Tora Bora, he diverted crucial resources from the effort
to destroy al Qaeda in Afghanistan. His doctrine of
unilateral preemption has driven away our allies and cost us
the support of other nations.
We must put in place a strategy to win--an approach that
recognizes and addresses the many facets of this mortal
challenge, from the terrorists themselves to the root causes
that give rise to new recruits, and uses all the tools at
our disposal. Agents of terrorism work in the shadows of
more than 60 nations, on every continent. The only possible
path to victory will be found in the company of others, not
walking alone. With John Kerry as Commander-in-Chief, we
will never wait for a green light from abroad when our
safety is at stake, but we must enlist those whose support
we need for ultimate victory.
Victory in the war on terror requires a combination of
American determination and international cooperation on all
fronts. It requires the ability and willingness to direct
immediate, effective military action when the capture or
destruction of terrorist groups and their leaders is
possible; a massive improvement in intelligence gathering
and analysis coupled with vigorous law enforcement; a
relentless effort to shut down the flow of terrorist funds;
a global effort to prevent failed or failing states that can
become sanctuaries for terrorists; a sustained effort to
deny terrorists any more recruits by conducting effective
public diplomacy; and a sustained political and economic
effort to improve education, work for peace, support
democracy and extend hope.
Improving intelligence to find and stop terrorists.
We will train and equip the military to enhance its
capabilities to seek out and destroy terrorists. We will
strengthen the capacity of intelligence and law enforcement
around the world by forging stronger international
coalitions to provide better information and
communication.
We must also improve our intelligence here at home. From the
failure to uncover the September 11th plot to the deeply
misguided reports about Iraq's supposed weapons of mass
destruction, we have experienced unprecedented intelligence
failures in recent years. We must do what President Bush has
refused to do--reform our intelligence system by creating a
true Director of National Intelligence with real control of
intelligence personnel and budgets. We must train more
analysts in languages spoken by terrorists. And we must
break down the old communications barriers between national
intelligence and local law enforcement, taking care to fully
preserve our liberties.
Cutting off terrorist funds. We will move decisively
to cut off the flow of terrorist funds. We will impose tough
financial sanctions against nations or banks that engage in
money laundering or fail to act against it. We will
strengthen our anti-money laundering laws to prevent
terrorists from using hedge funds and unregulated
institutions to finance terror. We will launch a "name and
shame" campaign against those that are financing terror. If
nations do not respond, they will be shut out of the U.S.
financial system. And in the specific case of Saudi Arabia,
we will put an end to the Bush Administration's kid-glove
approach to the supply and laundering of terrorist
money.
Preventing Afghanistan and other nations from becoming
terrorist havens. Nowhere is the need for collective
endeavor greater than in Afghanistan. The Bush
Administration has badly mishandled the war's aftermath. Two
years ago, President Bush promised a Marshall Plan to
rebuild that country. Instead, he has all but turned away
from Afghanistan, allowing it to become again a potential
haven for terrorists.
We must expand NATO forces outside Kabul. We must accelerate
training for the Afghan army and police. The program to
disarm and reintegrate warlord militias into society must be
expedited and expanded into a mainstream strategy. We will
attack the exploding opium trade ignored by the Bush
Administration by doubling our counter-narcotics assistance
to the Karzai Government and reinvigorating the regional
drug control program.
Beyond Afghanistan, terrorist attacks from Saudi Arabia and
Indonesia to Kenya, Morocco, and Turkey point to a widening
network of terrorists targeting this country and our
friends. Failed and failing states like Somalia or countries
with large areas of limited government control like the
Philippines and Indonesia need international help to close
down terrorist havens.
Increasing public diplomacy to promote understanding and
prevent terrorist recruitment. At the core of this conflict
is a fundamental struggle of ideas: democracy and tolerance
against those who would use any means and attack any target
to impose their narrow views. The war on terror is not a
clash of civilizations. It is a clash of civilization
against chaos.
America needs a major initiative in public diplomacy to
support the many voices of freedom in the Arab and Muslim
world. To improve education for the next generation of
Islamic youth, we need a cooperative international effort to
compete with radical Madrassas. And we must support human
rights groups, independent media, and labor unions dedicated
to building a democratic culture from the grassroots up.
Democracy will not blossom overnight, but America should
speed its growth by sustaining the forces of democracy
against repressive regimes and by rewarding governments that
work toward this end.
KEEPING WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION OUT OF THE HANDS OF
TERRORISTS
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There is no greater threat to American security than the
possibility of terrorists armed with weapons of mass
destruction. Preventing terrorists from gaining access to
these weapons must be our number one security goal.
Containing this massive threat requires American leadership
of the highest order--leadership that brings our allies,
friends, and partners to greater collaboration and
participation--and compels problem states to join and comply
with international agreements and abandon their weapons
programs. Unfortunately, this Administration's policies have
moved America in the opposite direction. They have weakened
international agreements and efforts to enforce
nonproliferation instead of strengthening them. They have
not done nearly enough to secure existing stockpiles and
bomb-making materials. They have failed to take effective
steps to stop the North Korean and Iranian nuclear programs.
We must change course now.
Defending America against attack at all costs. First,
the world should be on notice that we will take every
possible measure to defend ourselves against the possibility
of attack by unconventional arms. If such an attack appears
imminent, we will do everything necessary to stop it. If
such a strike does occur, we will respond with overwhelming
and devastating force. But we should never wait to act until
we have no other choice but war. We must build and lead an
international consensus for early preventive action to lock
up and secure existing weapons of mass destruction and the
material to manufacture more.
Locking away existing nuclear weapons and material.
The first step is to safeguard all bomb making material
worldwide. We need to find it, catalog it, and lock it away.
Our approach should be simple: treat the nuclear materials
that make bombs like they are bombs.
More than a decade after the fall of the Berlin Wall, Russia
still has nearly 20,000 nuclear weapons and enough nuclear
material to produce 50,000 more. For most of these weapons
and materials, cooperative security upgrades have not been
completed. The world is relying on whatever measures Russia
has taken on its own. At the current pace, it will take 13
years to secure potential bomb material in the former Soviet
Union. We cannot wait that long. We will do it in four
years.
Stopping the creation of new nuclear material for nuclear
weapons. We will lead an international coalition to put
an end to the production of new materials--highly enriched
uranium and plutonium--for use in nuclear weapons. And we
will reduce excess stocks of existing nuclear materials and
weapons. We will conduct a global cleanout initiative to
remove stockpiles of vulnerable highly enriched uranium at
research reactors and facilities in dozens of countries
around the world within four years.
Leading international efforts to shut down nuclear
efforts in North Korea, Iran, and elsewhere. We must
show determined leadership to end the nuclear weapons
program in North Korea and prevent the development of
nuclear weapons in places like Iran. North Korea has sold
ballistic missiles and technology in the past. The North
Koreans have made it clear to the world--and to the
terrorists--that they are open for business and will sell to
the highest bidder. But while this Administration has been
fixated on Iraq, the nuclear dangers from North Korea have
multiplied. The North Koreans allegedly have made enough new
fuel to make six to nine nuclear bombs.
We should maintain the six-party talks, but we must also be
prepared to talk directly with North Korea to negotiate a
comprehensive agreement that addresses the full range of
issues for ourselves and our allies. But we should have no
illusions about Kim Jong Il. Any agreement must have
rigorous verification and lead to complete and irreversible
elimination of North Korea's nuclear weapons program.
Even as we have scoured Iraq for signs of weapons of mass
destruction, Iran has reportedly been working to develop
them next door. A nuclear-armed Iran is an unacceptable risk
to us and our allies. The same is true for other countries
that may be seeking nuclear weapons. This is why
strengthening the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty is so
critical. We must close the loophole that lets countries
develop nuclear weapons capabilities under the guise of a
peaceful, civilian nuclear power program. We also need to
strengthen enforcement and verification and make rigorous
inspection protocols mandatory.
We must work with every country to tighten export controls,
stiffen penalties, and beef up law enforcement and
intelligence sharing. That way we can make absolutely sure
that a disaster like the AQ Khan black market network, which
grew out of Pakistan's nuclear program, can never happen
again. We must also take steps to reduce tension between
India and Pakistan and guard against the possibility of
their nuclear weapons falling into the wrong hands.
PROMOTING DEMOCRACY, PEACE, AND SECURITY
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We know that promoting democracy, human rights, and the
rule of law is vital to our long-term security. Americans
will be safer in a world of democracies. We will work with
people and nongovernmental organizations around the world
struggling for freedom, even as we work with their
governments to protect our security from weapons of terror.
We will restore America's credibility and commitment as a
force for democracy and human rights, starting in Iraq.
We believe that upholding international standards for the
treatment of prisoners, wherever they may be held, advances
America's national security, the security of our troops, and
the values of our people. And we believe torture is
unacceptable. America should abide by its own laws and the
treaties it has ratified, including the Geneva Conventions.
We will also support international efforts to address the
problem of landmines, while at the same time ensuring that
our troops are protected.
Winning the peace in Iraq. More than a year ago,
President Bush stood on an aircraft carrier under a banner
that proclaimed "mission accomplished." But today we know
that the mission is not finished, hostilities have not
ended, and our men and women in uniform fight almost alone
with the target squarely on their backs.
People of good will disagree about whether America should
have gone to war in Iraq, but this much is clear: this
Administration badly exaggerated its case, particularly with
respect to weapons of mass destruction and the connection
between Saddam's government and al Qaeda. This
Administration did not build a true international coalition.
This Administration disdained the United Nations weapons
inspection process and rushed to war without exhausting
diplomatic alternatives. Ignoring the advice of military
leaders, this Administration did not send sufficient forces
into Iraq to accomplish the mission. And this Administration
went into Iraq without a plan to win the peace.
Now this Administration has been forced to change course in
order to correct this fundamental mistake. They are now
taking up the suggestions that many Democrats have been
making for over a year. And they must--because having gone
to war, we cannot afford to fail at peace. We cannot allow a
failed state in Iraq that inevitably would become a haven
for terrorists and a destabilizing force in the Middle East.
And we must secure more help from an international community
that shares a huge stake in helping Iraq become a
responsible member of that community, not a breeding ground
for terror and intolerance.
As a first step, we must create a stable and secure
environment in Iraq. To do this right, we must truly
internationalize both politically and militarily: we cannot
depend on a US-only presence. Other nations have a vital
interest in the outcome, and we must bring them in to commit
troops and resources. The Bush Administration has missed
three great opportunities to do that. First, the President
broke his promise to build a legitimate coalition in Iraq by
exhausting diplomacy before resorting to the use of military
force. Second, when the statue fell in Baghdad, Kofi Annan
invited the United States to come to the table to discuss
international support--but we rejected his offer. Third,
when the President addressed the United Nations last fall,
he once again refused to acknowledge the difficulties we
faced in Iraq and failed to elicit support from other
nations.
The President has not given our troops the clarity of
mission, the equipment or the international support they
need and deserve. We have a different approach based on a
simple commitment: Troops come first. Our helicopter pilots
have flown battlefield missions without the best antimissile
systems. In a Democratic Administration, that will change.
Too many of our nation's finest troops have died in attacks,
because tens of thousands were deployed to Iraq without the
best bulletproof vests, and there is a shortage of armored
vehicles on the ground. In a Democratic Administration, that
will change. Thousands of National Guardsmen and reservists
have been forced to leave their families and jobs for more
than a year--with no end in sight--because this
Administration ignored the pressing need for a true
coalition. In a Democratic Administration, that will
change.
To succeed, America must do the hard work of engaging the
world's major political powers in this mission. We must
build a coalition of countries, including the other
permanent members of the UN Security Council, to share the
political, economic, and military responsibilities of Iraq
with the United States.
To win over allies, we must share responsibility with those
nations that answer our call, and treat them with respect.
We must lead, but we must listen. The rewards of respect are
enormous. We must convince NATO to take on a more
significant role and contribute additional military forces.
As other countries, including Muslim majority countries,
contribute troops, the United States will be able to reduce
its military presence in Iraq, and we intend to do this when
appropriate so that the military support needed by a
sovereign Iraqi government will no longer be seen as the
direct continuation of an American military presence.
Second, we need to create an international High Commissioner
to serve as the senior international representative working
with the Iraqi government. This Commissioner should be
backed by a newly broadened security coalition and charged
with overseeing elections, assisting with drafting a
constitution, and coordinating reconstruction. The
Commissioner should be highly regarded by the international
community, have the credibility to talk to all the Iraqi
people, and work directly with Iraq's interim government,
the new U.S. Ambassador, and the international
community.
At the same time, U.S. and international policies must take
into consideration the best interests of the Iraqi people.
The Iraqi people desperately need financial and technical
assistance that is not swallowed up by bureaucracy and
no-bid contracts, but instead goes directly into grassroots
organizations. They need to see the tangible benefits of
reconstruction: jobs, infrastructure, and services. They
should also receive the full benefits of their own oil
production as quickly as possible, so as to rebuild their
country and help themselves as individuals, while also
reducing the costs of security and reconstruction on the
American taxpayer and the cost of gasoline to American
consumers. And they need to be able to communicate their
concerns to international authorities without feeling they
are being disrespected in their own country.
America also needs a massive training effort to build Iraqi
security forces that can actually provide security for the
Iraqi people. It must be done in the field and on the job as
well as in the classroom. Units cannot be put on the street
without backup from international security forces. This is a
task we must do in partnership with other nations, not just
on our own. And this is a task in which we must succeed. If
we fail to create viable Iraqi security forces--military and
police--there is no successful exit for us and other
nations.
The challenges in Iraq are great, but the opportunity is
also significant. Under John Kerry and John Edwards, we will
meet those challenges, win the peace in Iraq, and help to
create new hope and opportunity for the entire Middle
East.
- Africa.
- U.S. engagement in Africa should reflect its vital
significance to U.S. interests and the moral imperative
to help a continent struggling with the scourge of
HIV/AIDS and under the long shadow of chronic poverty.
The HIV/AIDS pandemic in southern and eastern Africa is a
massive human tragedy. It is also a security risk of the
highest order that threatens to plunge nations into
chaos. Chronic and debilitating hunger also threatens the
very survival of communities where investment in
agriculture has suffered for over a decade. We are
committed to bringing the full weight of American
leadership to bear against this crisis. We must also work
with the United Nations and Africa's regional
organizations to address Africa's persistent,
disproportionate share of the world's weak, failing
states and chronic armed conflicts, and to promote
effective relief efforts when there is a humanitarian
crisis--particularly at this moment in Sudan. We value
our deepening economic ties with Africa, including
Central and West Africa's rapidly rising position as a
major source of non-Gulf oil. We recognize Africa's
promise as a trade and investment partner and the
importance of trade policies that reduce poverty and
promote growth in Africa. We will continue to promote
policies to support newly democratic states that have
shown a commitment to economic reform and respect for
human rights.
- Asia.
- In Asia, we must better engage with China to secure
Chinese adherence to international trade,
non-proliferation and human rights standards. We are
committed to a "One China" policy, and will continue to
support a peaceful resolution of cross-Straits issues
that is consistent with the wishes and best interests of
the Taiwanese people. We must maintain our strong
relationship with Japan, and explore new ways to
cooperate further. And we will actively seek to enhance
relations with our historic ally South Korea in order to
advance our collaborative efforts on economic and
security issues. We must also work with our friends,
India and Pakistan, in their efforts to resolve
longstanding differences.
- Europe.
- Throughout the 20th century, America's most trusted
and reliable allies were the democracies of Europe;
together, the two sides of the Atlantic ensured that
democracy and free markets prevailed against all
challenges. The Bush Administration has allowed the
Atlantic partnership to erode, leaving the United States
dangerously isolated from its indispensable allies. The
Democratic Party is committed to revitalizing the
Atlantic partnership. The international goals that the
United States pursues will be easier to attain if Europe
and America are working together. We will ensure that
NATO remains strong, continuing to consolidate peace in
Europe even as the alliance takes on new tasks in
Afghanistan and Iraq. We look forward to the evolution of
the European Union and to a prosperous and unified Europe
that joins the United States in meeting today's security
challenges and expanding the global economy.
- Latin America and the Caribbean.
- We believe that it is time to create a new Community
of the Americas that reflects our close relationship with
our regional neighbors. We will return U.S.- Latin
American relations to a place marked by dialogue,
consensus and concerted action to address common
concerns. We understand that our collective security and
prosperity are furthered by mutual efforts to promote
democracy, generate wealth, reduce income disparities,
and provide sound environmental stewardship. We are
committed to strong and steady support for democratic
processes and institutions in our hemisphere. We believe
that democratic governments deserve our support, and that
we should exercise our considerable diplomatic and moral
force in support of democratically elected leaders.
Mexico has made steady progress toward building a mature
democracy, and we will make relations with Mexico a
priority in order to best address economic, environmental
and social issues of concern. We support effective and
peaceful strategies to end the Castro regime as soon as
possible and enable the Cuban people to take their
rightful place in the democratic Community of the
Americas. We will work with the international community
to increase political and diplomatic pressure on the
Castro regime to release all political prisoners, support
civil society, promote the important work of Cuban
dissidents, and begin a process of genuine political
reform. Within this framework the Democratic Party
supports a policy of principled travel to Cuba that
promotes family unity and people-topeople contacts
through educational and cultural exchanges. We will seek
to reinforce democratic values in Haiti and throughout
the Caribbean. We will support economic development to
increase employment and economic opportunity, reducing
incentives for emigration by dangerous and
lifethreatening means. We will increase efforts to combat
drug-trafficking throughout the Caribbean and ensure that
those involved in bringing drugs into the U.S. are
brought to justice. We will assist in combating
corruption so that funds made available for development
are used appropriately.
- The Middle East.
- he Democratic Party is fundamentally committed to the
security of our ally Israel and the creation of a
comprehensive, just and lasting peace between Israel and
her neighbors. Our special relationship with Israel is
based on the unshakable foundation of shared values and a
mutual commitment to democracy, and we will ensure that
under all circumstances, Israel retains the qualitative
edge for its national security and its right to
self-defense. Jerusalem is the capital of Israel and
should remain an undivided city accessible to people of
all faiths.
Under a Democratic Administration, the United States will
demonstrate the kind of resolve to end the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict that President Clinton
showed. We will work to transform the Palestinian
Authority by promoting new and responsible leadership,
committed to fighting terror and promoting democracy. We
support the creation of a democratic Palestinian state
dedicated to living in peace and security side by side
with the Jewish State of Israel. The creation of a
Palestinian state should resolve the issue of Palestinian
refugees by allowing them to settle there, rather than in
Israel. Furthermore, all understand that it is
unrealistic to expect that the outcome of final status
negotiations will be a full and complete return to the
armistice lines of 1949. And we understand that all final
status negotiations must be mutually agreed.
- Northern Ireland.
- We are determined to help create a lasting peace in
Northern Ireland. We support efforts by the Irish and
British Governments and the political parties to break
the current impasse, and we stand ready to assist in any
way to achieve full implementation of the Belfast
Agreement.
- Russia.
- Democrats will pursue a Russia policy that recognizes
that country's importance and advances the core U.S.
security interests at stake in Russia's historic
transformation, beginning with cooperative work to secure
vulnerable stockpiles of nuclear weapons and materials.
We reiterate that respect for human rights, the rule of
law and Russia's fledgling democratic institutions and
independent media outlets are essential to Russia's
continued integration into international institutions and
the global economy.
- Global health.
- Addressing global health challenges--including the
AIDS pandemic--is a humanitarian obligation and a
national security imperative. We are committed to a
coordinated effort to combat the HIV/AIDS epidemic in the
United States and in all other regions throughout the
world. Epidemics can decimate societies and contribute to
failed states which can become bases for terrorists and
other criminal elements. And a strong global public
health system is essential to effectively combating
bio-terror threats. Our global health policy will bring
the best of our scientific knowledge, financial
resources, management skills, and compassion to the
challenge of improving health conditions around the
world. And we will restore America's leadership in global
health by rejecting policies driven by ideology instead
of science.
- International development.
- We understand that promoting international economic
development is a strategic imperative of the United
States. We will use American economic power to extend
security and prosperity--which leads to peace--around the
world. And we will work with poor countries to help
stabilize and diversify their economies, including
through the consideration of sensible debt relief
measures where appropriate. We will support efforts to
reach universal basic education and the other Millennium
Development Goals.
- Supporting America's foreign affairs
community.
- We are committed to the best training, facilities and
support for America's diplomats, the men and women of
America's foreign affairs community, who represent our
country and work to promote our values around the
world.
STRENGTHENING OUR MILITARY
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We need a new military to meet the new threats of the
21st Century. Today's American military is the best in the
world, but tomorrow's military must be even better. It must
be stronger, faster, better armed, and never again stretched
so thin.
John Kerry, John Edwards and the Democratic Party will send
a clear message to every man and woman in our armed forces:
We guarantee that you will always be the best-led,
best-equipped and most respected fighting force in the
world. You will be armed with the right weapons, schooled in
the right skills, and fully prepared to win on the
battlefield. You will never be sent into harm's way without
enough troops for the task, and never asked to fight a war
without a plan to win the peace. You will never be given
assignments which have not been clearly defined and for
which you are not professionally trained.
The Bush Administration was right to call for the
"transformation" of the military. But their version of
transformation neglected to consider that the dangers we
face have also been transformed. The Administration was
concerned with fighting classic conventional wars, instead
of the asymmetrical threats we now face in Iraq,
Afghanistan, and the war against al Qaeda. To rise to those
challenges, we must strengthen our military, including our
Special Forces, improve our technology, and task our
National Guard with homeland security.
- Expanding active duty personnel.
- As a first step, we will expand America's active duty
forces. The war in Iraq has overextended our armed
services. The vast majority of the Army's active duty
combat divisions are committed to Iraq&emdash;currently
there, preparing to go, or recently returned. That is a
dangerous and potentially disastrous strain that limits
our capacity to respond to other crises.
To pick up the slack, we've called up our Guard and
Reserves at historic levels. Some have been on the ground
in Iraq for as many as 15 months, much longer than was
expected or promised. Many of these units are being
pushed to the limit and stretched far too thin. The
Administration's answer has just been to stretch further.
They have extended tours of duty, delayed retirements,
and prevented enlisted personnel from leaving the
service--effectively using a stop-loss policy and recall
of Individual Ready Reserve members as a back-door
draft.
We will add 40,000 new soldiers--not to increase the
number of soldiers in Iraq, but to sustain our overseas
deployments and prevent and prepare for other possible
conflicts. This will help relieve the strain on our
troops and bring back more of our soldiers, guardsmen and
reservists. We are dedicated to keeping our military
operating on a volunteer basis. We are committed to
management reform both to ensure that our defense funding
is spent effectively and to help pay for these new
forces.
- Doubling Special Forces capability.
- Next, we need to create a "New Total Force," a
military prepared to defeat any enemy, at any time, in
any place. We will double the capacity of our Special
Forces, the troops who took the fight to the Taliban with
remarkable creativity after September 11th. These troops
conduct counter-terrorism operations, perform
reconnaissance missions, and gather intelligence. They
also train local forces and build the relationships that
are vital for our victory in the war on terror.
We will increase our civil affairs personnel--those who
arrive on the scene after the major conflict ends to work
with local leaders and officials to get the schools back
in shape, the hospitals reopened, and the banks up and
running. We also need more military police, because
public order is critical to establishing the conditions
that allow peace to take hold.
- State-of-the-art equipment.
- Third, we need the best possible equipment. We can't
have a 21st century military unless we're using 21st
century technology and preparing our forces for 21st
century threats. That means educating, training, and
arming every soldier with state-of-the-art equipment,
whether body armor or weapons. It also means employing
the most sophisticated communications to help our troops
prevail and protect themselves in battle. Every soldier
in every unit should have access to technology that can
mean the difference between life and death. We will make
sure every solider does.
And we will build and train new forces equipped with the
most-sophisticated technology to specialize in finding,
securing, and destroying weapons of mass destruction and
the facilities that build them.
The best training.
- Fourth, we must match our commitment to innovation
with a commitment to the training, education, and
facilities necessary to make the most of it.
Standing up for military families.
- ifth, we will make sure that America's commitment to
the men and women of our armed forces (our active duty,
our reservists, and our national guard) and their
families is ironclad. We will enact a Military Family
Bill of Rights to ensure that our men and women in
uniform and their families receive the benefits and
respect they deserve: competitive pay and quality
housing, decent health care and dental care, quality
education for their children, and timely deployment
information. And we will ensure that America will care
for them and their families if the worst should
happen.
- Better use of the National Guard.
- Finally, we need to make better use of a key asset in
homeland defense--our National Guard. The National Guard
has served in every war, and they're serving now. They
were the first ones called to line city streets, guard
bridges, and patrol our airports after September 11th. We
will make homeland security one of the Guard's primary
missions, and assign Guard units to a standing joint task
force commanded by a General from the Guard.
ACHIEVING ENERGY INDEPENDENCE
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No strategy for American security is complete without a
plan to end America's dependence on Mideast oil. Today, the
American economy depends on oil controlled by some of the
world's most repressive regimes. This leaves our economy
dangerously vulnerable to nations that do not share our
interests. America too often is silent about the practices
of some governments because we depend on oil they
control.
John Kerry, John Edwards and the Democratic Party believe a
strong America must no longer rely on the cooperation of
regimes that do not share our values. We believe a strong
America must move toward energy independence.
In the Bush Administration, energy independence doesn't get
a thought. Their energy policy is simple: government by big
oil, of big oil, and for big oil. This Administration let
oil industry lobbyists and executives write our nation's
energy policy in secret. They even went to the Supreme Court
to stop the public from learning what they were doing.
They've done nothing as gas prices have soared to record
levels. Even the Administration's own economists have found
that their energy plan will do nothing to reduce gas prices.
This President's approach to energy policy leaves America
shackled to foreign oil, dependent, vulnerable, and exposed.
John Kerry, John Edwards and the Democratic Party believe in
a better, stronger, more independent America. We are
committed to achieving energy independence, and we know we
can do it. Our ingenuity and determination built the cars we
drive and the bridges we use. It electrified rural America
in the 1930s, and took us to the moon in the 1960s. Our
resolve helped conquer polio.
It's this simple: When we see a problem, we roll up our
sleeves and solve it. And that's what we pledge to do
now.
Achieving energy independence will improve our ability to
protect our values and interests in the world. It will
reduce energy costs for our families. It will create
high-paying new jobs. And it will improve our environment
and make our people healthier.
- Harnessing American ingenuity to create renewable
energy.
- Our plan begins with commonsense investments to
harness the natural world around us&emdash;the sun, wind,
water, geothermal and biomass sources, and a rich array
of crops&emdash;to create a new generation of affordable
energy for the 21st century. By mobilizing the amazing
productivity of America's farmers, we can grow our own
cleaner-burning fuel. We support tax credits for private
sector investment in clean, renewable sources of energy,
and we will make ethanol credits work better for farmers.
And we will ensure that billions of gallons of renewable
fuel are part of America's energy supply while striving
for strong, national renewable energy goals.
- Creating the energy-efficient vehicles of
tomorrow.
- We support creating more energy-efficient vehicles,
from today's hybrid cars to tomorrow's hydrogen cars. We
support the American people's freedom to choose whatever
cars, SUVs, minivans, and trucks they choose, but we also
believe American ingenuity is equal to the task of
improving efficiency. We support improving fuel
standards, and because of the challenges this poses, we
will offer needed incentives for consumers to buy
efficient vehicles, and for manufacturers to build them.
We are also committed to developing hydrogen as a clean,
reliable domestic source of energy. Our economy cannot
convert to hydrogen overnight, so we will fund research
to overcome the obstacles to hydrogen fuel and continue
our other efforts to achieve energy independence.
- Moving beyond OPEC.
- We can improve our energy security in other ways. We
will seek more diverse sources of oil around the world
and here at home. We support balanced development of
domestic oil supplies in areas already open for
exploration, like the western and central Gulf of Mexico.
We support the expansion of new infrastructure to develop
supplies from non-OPEC nations like Russia, Canada, and
nations in Africa. We will increase efficiency of natural
gas use, develop the Alaska natural gas pipeline, and
enhance our nation's infrastructure to help supply
natural gas more effectively.
- Electricity.
- We will work to create new technology for producing
electricity in a better, more efficient manner. Coal
accounts for more than one-half of America's electric
power generation capacity today. We believe coal must
continue its important role in a new energy economy,
while achieving high environmental standards. Working
with the coal industry, we will invest billions to
develop and implement new, cleaner coal technology and to
produce electric and hydrogen power. We will also work to
make sure that our people have access to an affordable,
secure, and reliable supply of electricity at all times.
We support mandatory, enforceable reliability standards.
We also support public-private partnerships to make our
power systems more flexible, resilient, and
self-healing&emdash;and more environmentally friendly
than ever before.
- Government as a role model.
- The federal government is the largest single consumer
of energy in the world. We will cut the federal
government's energy use and challenge local governments,
corporations, universities, small businesses and
hospitals to do the same.
- Our commitment to conservation.
- A balanced energy policy must create real incentives
for energy conservation in our homes, our offices, our
factories, and our infrastructure, saving money and
improving security even as it creates good jobs and
rebuilds our communities. With sixty-five percent of the
world's oil reserves in the Middle East, we cannot drill
our way to energy independence. But we can create, think,
imagine, and invent our way there. And we will create
jobs, help our environment, and build a stronger country
as we do.
STRENGTHENING HOMELAND SECURITY
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The first and foremost responsibility of government is to
protect its citizens from harm. Unfortunately, Washington
today is not doing enough to make America safe.
We have made some progress since the terrible attacks of
September 11th. We have taken steps to secure our airports.
After resisting Democratic efforts for months, the
Administration finally agreed to create the Department of
Homeland Security.
But we have not done nearly enough. Our intelligence
services remain fragmented and lack coordination. Millions
of massive shipping containers arrive at American ports
every year without being searched and without even a
reliable list of their contents. Our borders are full of
holes. Our chemical plants are vulnerable to attack. Across
America, police officers, firefighters, and other first
responders still lack the information, protective gear, and
communications equipment to do their jobs safely and
successfully.
The Bush Administration, full of tough talk about terror,
has no coherent plan for domestic defense. John Kerry, John
Edwards and the Democratic Party believe America can do
better. We believe America must do better. We believe
America will do better.
- A comprehensive strategy to protect
America.
- We need a new strategy for homeland security that
addresses five major challenges. We need to improve our
ability to gather, analyze, and share information so we
can track down terrorists and stop them before they cause
harm. We need to do a better job securing our airports,
seaports, and borders. We need to harden likely terrorist
targets. We need to improve domestic readiness. Finally,
we must win the war on terror without losing the values
of freedom and justice for all that make us so proud to
be Americans.
- Better intelligence.
- The war on terror begins with good intelligence.
Shockingly, many of the same flaws in
intelligence-sharing that allowed terrorists to slip in
and out of America before September 11th still exist. The
government has missed its own deadlines for upgrading and
integrating security databases, and still fails to share
information with the state and local law enforcement
agencies on the frontlines. This must change.
We will ensure that our watch lists are accessible when
and where they are needed. We will also give security
clearances to appropriate state and local officials so
they can get critical information at the critical times.
Our intelligence apparatus needs significant reform, and
so creating a true Director of National Intelligence is
critical.
More secure borders.
- We will improve security at our borders and
entry-points to block the individuals and weapons that
would harm us. We will strengthen container security
rules, improve the detection equipment in our shipping
systems, ensure that private companies are providing
adequate information about the goods they are shipping,
and work with other nations to increase inspection levels
abroad.
We will put an end to political delays in adopting
tighter controls on air cargo, tons of which goes
uninspected every day. We will increase perimeter
inspections at U.S. airports and work with international
aviation authorities to make sure the same standards are
in place overseas. Working with our Northern and Southern
neighbors, we will strengthen controls at border
crossings, and use modern technology and better staffing
to improve the quality of border inspections while
enhancing commerce.
Hardened targets.
- We will launch a major effort to harden our most
vulnerable targets--from chemical and nuclear plants to
rails and tunnels--and better protect them from attack.
Security upgrades at some nuclear weapons facilities are
a shocking three years behind. That is unacceptable, and
we will fix it. We must better protect nuclear facilities
and waste sites which today are too vulnerable to attack.
We will improve transit rail and subway security, by
adding chemical release detectors to deter attacks like
we saw in Tokyo, and taking other steps.
There are more than 100 chemical plants where an attack
could endanger more than one million people, and the FBI
has warned that al Qaeda may target our chemical
industry. The Bush Administration was actually moving
toward a commonsense solution that would set minimum
standards for safety at chemical plants. But dangerously
true to form, after heavy lobbying by the chemical
industry, they backed down. We will make these plants
secure; by requiring more guards, more fencing, and the
use of less dangerous chemicals when possible.
Domestic readiness.
- We need to improve domestic readiness so people on
the frontlines have the training and equipment to respond
to any attack with all the speed, skill, and strength
required.
Our first responders are the first ones up the stairs in
the event of the emergency, and it is wrong that today they
are last in line when it comes to this administration's
budgets. Under the Bush Administration, police departments
in small cities have lost more than 15 percent of their
full-time paid police and employees. And today, two-thirds
of our nation's fire departments are not fully staffed. We
can do more for the heroes of 9/11 and we can do more for
our fellow citizens. And we will. We will provide direct
assistance to our police officers and firefighters on the
frontlines. They'll have the equipment and manpower they
need to protect us. We will also ensure that front line
workers throughout our transportation system receive the
security training necessary to respond to terrorist threats.
We also need to modernize our emergency warning system to
provide localized warnings, treat the fighters on the
frontlines as partners, and give families all the
information they need. This Administration may think that
homeland security is about changing the alert from yellow to
orange. They're wrong; the colors of safety are firefighter
red, EMT white, and police officer blue.
We will dramatically improve our ability to respond to a
biological attack. We will appoint one individual to oversee
all bioterrorism programs, budgets and strategic priorities.
We will set national benchmarks for state and local
preparedness so community leaders aren't flying blind. We
will harness America's bioscience genius to increase drug
and vaccine development. We will revitalize our public
health system, improving monitoring capabilities and
coordination. And we will strengthen hospitals, which today
cannot prepare for a bio-terrorism emergency because they
are overwhelmed by the everyday emergencies of people
without insurance.
We also will encourage all Americans to do their part to
make America safer. We support the development of a new
community defense service grounded in neighborhoods and
comprised of ordinary Americans from across the country.
Like a 21st Century Neighborhood Watch, members would work
within their communities to make a
contribution&emdash;helping health professionals, assisting
with evacuation plans, and standing ready in emergency.
- Crime and violence.
- While terrorism poses an especially menacing threat
to our nation, a strong America must remain vigilant
against the scourge of homegrown crime as well. We are
proud that Democrats led the fight to put more than
100,000 cops on the beat through the COPS program, and we
will continue our steadfast support for COPS and
community policing. To keep our streets safe for our
families, we support tough punishment of violent crime
and smart efforts to reintegrate former prisoners into
our communities as productive citizens. We will crack
down on the gang violence and drug crime that devastate
so many communities, and we will increase drug treatment,
including mandatory drug courts and mandatory drug
testing for parolees and probationers, so fewer crimes
are committed in the first place. We support the rights
of victims to be respected, to be heard, and to be
compensated. We will help break the cycle of domestic
violence by punishing offenders and standing with
victims. We will protect Americans' Second Amendment
right to own firearms, and we will keep guns out of the
hands of criminals and terrorists by fighting gun crime,
reauthorizing the assault weapons ban, and closing the
gun show loophole, as President Bush proposed and failed
to do.
Guarding liberty.
- We must always remember that terrorists do not just
target our lives; they target our way of life. And so we
must be on constant guard not to sacrifice the freedom we
are fighting to protect. We will strengthen some
provisions of the Patriot Act, like the restrictions on
money laundering. And we will change the portions of the
Patriot Act that threaten individual rights, such as the
library provisions, while still allowing government to
take all needed steps to fight terror. Our government
should never round up innocent people only because of
their religion or ethnicity, and we should never stifle
free expression. We believe in an America where freedom
is what we fight for--not what we give up.
Together, we can make America safer, stronger, and more
respected. We can do it in a way that safeguards all the
greatness of America by protecting our people, securing our
homeland, and reinforcing our values--faith and family, duty
and service, individual freedom and a common purpose to
build one nation under God. We can do it in a way that keeps
faith with the best measures of American leadership around
the world--the builder of alliances, the defender of
freedom, the champion of human rights. We can do it, and we
will.
A STRONG, GROWING ECONOMY
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The great promise of America is simple: a better life for
all who work for it. No matter who you are, where you come
from, or what you believe, as an American, you live in a
land that offers you all the possibilities your hard work
and God-given talent can bring.
The opportunity to build a better future starts with a good
job. It has always been that way. From the time when most
people worked in the fields, through the Industrial
Revolution and into the Information Age, the opportunity for
work, the rewards from work, and the dignity of work have
made Americans successful and America strong.
CREATING GOOD JOBS
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We offer America a new economic plan that will put jobs
first. We will renew American competitiveness, make honest
budget choices, and invest in our future.
A strong America keeps the promise of opportunity for all
and heeds the warning of special privileges for none. That's
the America we believe in. That's the America we're fighting
for. And that's the America we can build together.
In President George Bush's America, unfortunately, too often
you need special privileges if you want opportunity. This
White House values wealth over hard work, lavishes special
treatment upon a fortunate few at the expense of most
businesses and working people, and defends policies that
weaken America's competitive position and destroy American
jobs. Instead of meeting the challenge of globalization by
strengthening our workers' ability to compete and win, this
Administration uses globalization as an excuse not to fight
for American jobs.
John Kerry, John Edwards and the Democratic Party believe in
a better America&emdash;a strong America. We believe that a
strong America begins at home, with good jobs that support
families and an equal chance for all our people. We believe
in progress that brings prosperity for all Americans, not
just for those who are already successful.
We believe that good jobs will help strengthen and expand
the strongest middle class the world has ever known. We
believe the private sector, not government, is the engine of
economic growth and job creation. Government's
responsibility is to create an environment that will promote
private sector investment, foster vigorous competition, and
strengthen the foundations of an innovative economy. We
believe Americans are the smartest, toughest competitors in
the world. Our products and ideas can compete and win
anywhere, as long as we're given a fair chance. And our
companies can keep and create jobs in America without
sacrificing competitiveness.
We will fight for American jobs and we will fight for
American workers. Under John Kerry and John Edwards, we will
revive America's manufacturing sector, create new jobs and
protect existing ones by ending tax breaks for companies
that ship jobs overseas and cutting taxes for companies that
create jobs here at home; by fighting for free, fair and
balanced trade; by encouraging investment in small
businesses and helping companies deal with rising health
care costs; by promoting new technologies, like energy, that
will lead to the companies and jobs of tomorrow; and by
ensuring that people of every age learn the skills to
succeed in today's economy.
- Tax reform to create jobs.
- Today's tax law provides big breaks for companies
that send American jobs overseas. Current "deferral"
policies allow American companies to avoid paying
American taxes on the income earned by their foreign
subsidiaries. John Kerry and John Edwards will end
deferral that encourages companies to ship jobs overseas,
and they will close other loopholes to make the tax code
work for the American worker. They'll use the savings to
offer tax cuts for companies that produce goods and
create jobs here at home. Under John Kerry and John
Edwards, 99 percent of American businesses will pay lower
taxes than today.
A plan to reinvigorate manufacturing.
- Manufacturing has lost 2.5 million jobs under
President Bush in its worst jobs crisis since the
Depression. John Kerry, John Edwards and the Democrats
will launch a concerted effort to revitalize American
manufacturing. The measures outlined above are important
components of our overall strategy. In addition, based on
the model that has helped launch some of America's most
successful companies, we will establish new investment
corporations to give small and medium-sized businesses
access to capital. And we will support the growth of
high-technology "clusters" that invest in new industries
around research institutions.
Free and fair trade that creates American
jobs.
- Exports sustain about 1 in 5 American factory jobs.
Open markets spur innovation, speed the growth of new
industries, and make our businesses more competitive. We
will make it a priority to knock down barriers to free,
fair and balanced trade so other nation's markets are as
open as our own.
We will stand up for American workers and consumers by
building on President Clinton's progress in including
enforceable, internationally recognized labor and
environmental standards in trade agreements. We will
aggressively enforce our trade agreements with a real plan
that includes a complete review of all existing agreements;
immediate investigation into China's workers' rights abuses
and currency manipulation; increased funding for efforts to
protect workers' rights and stop child labor abuse; new
reforms to protect the innovations of high-tech companies;
and vigorous enforcement of U.S. trade laws. We will use all
the tools we have to create new opportunities for American
workers, farmers, and businesses, and break down barriers in
key export markets, like the Japanese auto market and the
Chinese high-technology market. We will effectively enforce
our trade laws protecting against dumping, illegal
subsidies, and import surges that threaten American
jobs.
New trade agreements must protect internationally recognized
workers' rights and environmental standards as vigorously as
they now protect commercial concerns. We will build on and
strengthen the progress made in the Jordan agreement to
include strong and enforceable labor and environmental
standards in the core of new free trade agreements. And no
trade agreement should stop government from protecting the
environment, food safety or the health of its citizens. Nor
should an agreement give greater rights to foreign investors
than to U.S. investors, require the privatization of our
vital public services, or limit our government's ability to
create good jobs in our communities.
- Investing in technology to create good
jobs.
- We will invest in the technologies of the future,
from renewable energy to nanotechnology to biomedicine,
and will work to make permanent the research and
development tax credit. We will achieve universal access
to broadband services, which could add $500 billion to
our economy, generate 1.2 million jobs, and transform the
way we learn and work. And we will put science ahead of
ideology in research and policymaking
Enhancing Our Transportation System.
- Our nation's transportation network is an integral
part of our economy and an engine for economic expansion
that must be strengthened. We are committed to vigorous
federal highway and transit initiatives that put
Americans to work, relieve traffic congestion, and foster
long-term projects at state and local levels.
Free markets and honest competition.
- Economic growth and job creation depend on free
markets and competition, but competition and free markets
depend on trust, transparency, and integrity. We are
committed to requiring honesty in corporate accounting
effective corporate governance, a fair shake for small
investors and worker pension funds, a level playing field
and competitive bidding practices for those who wish to
transact business with the government, and vigorous
prosecution of criminal conduct in executive suites.
Promoting small businesses.
- Small businesses and entrepreneurs are the lifeblood
of our economy. We will encourage small business growth
with a plan to make it easier for small businesses to
secure capital and loans. We support tax credits and
energy investments that slash overall operating costs for
small businesses and encourage them to grow and expand
here in America. For America's 350,000 small
manufacturers, which account for over half the total
value of U.S. industrial production and employ 11 million
people in high-skill, high-wage jobs, we will double
funding to use technology to grow.
We will help businesses cope with the skyrocketing cost
of health care by reforming our health care system and
cutting taxes to help small businesses pay for health
insurance. Retiree health costs impose major burdens on
many employers, particularly manufacturers, and we will
push for reform so that companies are not forced to
choose among retirees, current workers, and their own
ability to compete.
Fiscal Relief in an economic downturn.
- When states are the thrust into a fiscal crisis due
to a national economic downturn, we should support
Federal fiscal relief to states as an effective tool to
jumpstart growth and job creation, and to prevent harmful
tuition and tax increases, as well as painful cuts to
vital education, health, homeland security, and other
critical services; and to prevent underfunded
mandates.
Standing up for workers.
- We will ensure that the right to organize a union
exists in the real world, not just on paper, because
that's how we create more jobs that can support families.
That means reforming our labor laws to protect the rights
of workers (including public employees) to bargain
contracts and organize on a level playing field without
interference. It also means barring the permanent
replacement of legal strikers. And we will of course
reverse this Administration's cuts in wages for working
people by restoring overtime protections for hard-working
Americans. We will strengthen health and safety
protections as well.
Lifelong learning.
- We will make sure that Americans are the
best-skilled, best-trained workers in the world. In
addition to reforming K-12 education, we will expand
training and opportunities for Americans of all ages. We
will support regional skills alliances, workforce
development conducted at community colleges, and other
initiatives that prepare workers for high-skills jobs
that offer family-sustaining wages and benefits. And we
will support high-quality distance learning so that
Americans everywhere can use a keyboard to learn from
experts anywhere.
Unlike the Bush administration, we will always stand by
workers who lose their jobs as the economy changes. We will
require companies to give employees at least three months
notice before a planned shutdown. We will expand efforts to
help manufacturers, workers, the long-term unemployed, and
communities hurt by imports, including extending trade
adjustment assistance to workers in the service sectors and
making health insurance more affordable for workers who lose
their jobs due to trade. Through our jobs plan, we will
bring hope and jobs back to the cities and small towns
devastated by the shuttering of factories.
STANDING UP FOR THE GREAT AMERICAN MIDDLE CLASS
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The heart of the American promise has always been the middle
class, the greatest engine of economic growth the world has
ever known. When the middle class grows in size and
security, our country gets stronger. And when more American
families save and invest in their children's future, America
grows stronger still.
But in President George Bush's America, where everyday costs
are soaring and ordinary incomes are sinking, the middle
class is struggling, and our economy is suffering.
Today, the average American family is earning $1,500 less
than in 2000. At the same time, health care costs are up by
nearly one-half, college tuition has increased by more than
one-third, gas and oil prices have gone through the roof,
and housing costs have soared. Life literally costs more
than ever before--and our families have less money to pay
for it. Three million more Americans have fallen into
poverty since 2000. Average family debt is higher than ever.
And as they lose the struggle to make ends meet, one out of
every seven middle class families may be bankrupt by the end
of the decade.
President Bush and the Republicans in Congress have ignored
the middle class since day one of this Administration. They
have catered to the wealth of the richest instead of
honoring the work of the rest of us. They have promised
almost everything and paid for almost nothing. And the
middle class is shouldering more taxes, earning less money,
and bearing higher costs. The bottom line for the middle
class under President Bush and the Republican Party is this:
Instead of working hard to get ahead, the middle class is
working hard just to get by.
John Kerry, John Edwards and the Democratic Party believe in
a stronger, more prosperous America for all our people. We
believe in an America where the great American promise of
upward mobility is alive and well. We believe in an America
where the middle class is growing, our economy is thriving,
and America is strong. And we have a plan to build that
America.
- Cutting taxes for middle class Americans.
- First, we must restore our values to our tax code. We
want a tax code that rewards work and creates wealth for
more people, not a tax code that hoards wealth for those
who already have it. With the middle class under assault
like never before, we simply cannot afford the massive
Bush tax cuts for the very wealthiest. We should set
taxes for families making more than $200,000 a year at
the same level as in the late 1990s, a period of great
prosperity when the wealthiest Americans thrived without
special treatment. We will cut taxes for 98 percent of
Americans and help families meet the economic challenges
of their everyday lives. And we will oppose tax increases
on middle class families, including those living
abroad.
Helping families cope with rising costs.
- We must help Americans deal with the staggering
increase in everyday costs of living, from insurance
premiums to child care to the price of gas. Today,
thousands of businesses that would otherwise provide
raises are using that money to pay climbing health care
premiums. That is cutting wages for working people.
Reforming health care, offering tax credits to pay for
it, and cutting health costs will raise wages for working
people.
College tuitions rose by 35 percent between 2000 and
2003, and this year, 220,000 Americans were priced out of
college by its high costs. We will make college
affordable for every qualified student with a tax credit
for four years of college.
Child care costs are rising twice as fast as inflation,
and millions of working parents worry desperately how to
care for their children between 3 p.m. and 6 p.m. each
day. Other families must care not only for their
children, but also for loved ones who are older or have
disabilities. We will increase tax credits to pay for
child care and eldercare, and make sure those credits are
available to lower-income families and stay-at-home
parents. We will expand after-school opportunities, help
schools stay open until 6 p.m., and offer good
transportation so young people can take advantage of it.
We support expanding family and medical leave to help
parents meet the growing challenge of balancing work and
family responsibilities.
The price of gas is at an all time-high, placing an
enormous burden on millions of Americans who have no
choice but to drive to work. We will help cut costs in
the short-run by halting additional stockpiling of oil
reserves and working more effectively to ensure that OPEC
increases production. For the long-run, we offer a
detailed plan for energy independence.
Protecting retirement security.
- We must protect the retirement security of America's
workers and their families. Workers should never lose all
their savings because their employer locked those savings
into the company's own stock. We will bar that practice.
We need to require honest information and full
disclosure, and protect older workers from unfair
treatment when their benefits are converted to cash
balance plans. At the same time, we will strengthen and
promote both defined-contribution and defined-benefit
pension plans, and increase the portability of retirement
savings and help all families save.
We are absolutely committed to preserving Social
Security. It is a compact across the generations that has
helped tens of millions of Americans live their
retirement years in dignity instead of poverty. Democrats
believe in the progressive, guaranteed benefit that has
ensured that seniors and people with disabilities receive
a benefit not subject to the whims of the market or the
economy. We oppose privatizing Social Security or raising
the retirement age. We oppose reducing the benefits
earned by workers just because they have also earned a
benefit from certain public retirement plans. We will
repeal discriminatory laws that penalize some retired
workers and their families while allowing others to
receive full benefits. Because the massive deficits under
the Bush Administration have raided hundreds of billions
of dollars from Social Security, the most important step
we can take to strengthen Social Security is to restore
fiscal responsibility. Social Security matters to all
Americans, Democrats and Republicans, and strengthening
Social Security should be a common cause.
- Expanding the middle class.
- The dream of the middle class should belong to all
Americans willing to work for it. We still have work to
do as long as millions of Americans work full-time,
fulfill their responsibilities, and continue to live in
poverty. We will offer these Americans a ladder to the
middle class. That means raising the minimum wage to
$7.00, increasing the Earned Income Tax Credit and
extending child credits so that parents who work
full-time don't have to raise their children in poverty.
It means working to eliminate hunger in our rural and
urban communities. It means using our tax code and
savings incentives to help families build their savings,
become homeowners, and start businesses. And it means
continuing on the path of welfare reform. We must match
parents' responsibility to work with the real opportunity
to do so, by making sure parents can get the health care,
child care, and transportation they need. And we must
expect increased responsibility from fathers as well as
mothers by increasing child support enforcement and
promoting responsible fatherhood together with religious
and civic organizations.
Strengthening our cities.
- We will invest in the businesses, schools, and
hospitals that metropolitan areas need to thrive. We will
support quality housing opportunities and a balanced
housing policy for all Americans, defending good rental
housing and extending the American Dream of homeownership
to more families. At a time when so many families are
losing their homes and life savings to unscrupulous
lenders, we will rein in predatory lending and expand
access to mainstream financial services for urban
families. And we will redouble our nation's commitment to
closing the "digital divide."
Revitalizing rural and small-town America.
- Small towns are at the heart of America, but today,
they are often losing people, jobs, and hope. We will use
new technologies like distance learning and telemedicine
to link our towns with cutting-edge advances and bring
back investment to our small towns. We will ensure that
American farmers have a strong safety net and can achieve
profitability in the marketplace, and we will support
incentives for farmers to use conservation practices and
sustainable farming methods. Americans should be able to
make the choice to raise their children in the towns and
rural communities where they grew up.
Fiscal discipline.
- We must restore responsibility to our budget, or we
will strangle opportunity for the next generation of
middle class Americans. Over the last three years, record
surpluses have turned into record deficits. Not once has
this Administration tried to balance new spending with
new savings or pay for new initiatives--including its
enormous tax breaks for the wealthy. Today, we face
unsustainable foreign borrowing and rising interest
rates.
Fiscal discipline helped create 23 million new jobs in
the 1990s. Fiscal discipline frees up money for
productive investment. And over time, fiscal discipline
saves families thousands of dollars on their mortgages
and credit cards.
We will roll back the Bush tax cuts for those making more
than $200,000. We will restore commonsense budget rules
that this Administration has abandoned, like
"Pay-As-You-Go" rules that require the government to pay
for new initiatives. We will commit to living within
tough budget caps&emdash;real and enforceable limits on
what the government can spend. We will enact a
Constitutional version of the line-item veto to make it
easier to root out pork-barrel spending. And we will make
our government more efficient by cutting the waste of
taxpayer dollars in the federal budget, from unneeded
travel budgets to crony contracting. We are committed to
cutting the deficit in half over the next four
years.
Ending corporate welfare.
Many American corporations today pay less than ever in
taxes because of tax loopholes secured by powerful
lobbyists. We will end corporate welfare as we know it.
We will eliminate the indefensible loopholes in our tax
code&emdash; from tax deals that have no purpose but
avoiding taxes to the very shelters that Enron used to
drive so many lives toward financial ruin. And we will
eliminate the corporate subsidies that waste taxpayer
dollars and undermine fair competition.
The Democratic Party understands that working people
built modern America. We understand that today's global
economy requires new rules, new skills, and new approaches,
and we believe that the time-honored values of equal
opportunity, fair play, and good rewards for hard work still
apply. That's how we give all our people the chance to
succeed. That's how we keep on building the America we
believe in. That's how we keep the promise of America.
STRONG, HEALTHY FAMILIES
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Family is the center of everyday American life. Our
parents are our first protectors, first teachers, first role
models, and first friends. Parents know that America's great
reward is the quiet but incomparable satisfaction that comes
from building their families a better life. Strong families,
blessed with opportunity, guided by faith, and filled with
dreams are the heart of a strong America.
REFORMING HEALTH CARE
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We believe not just that a strong America begins at home,
but that a strong America begins in the home. And just as
government's first responsibility is the health and safety
of its people, parents' first responsibility is the health
and safety of their children. We believe that health care is
a right and not a privilege.
Today, a family's ability to ensure that all its members get
the quality health care they deserve is challenged like
never before. For the most fortunate, America offers the
best health care in the world. But tens of millions of
Americans pay too much and get too little from our health
care system, and tens of millions more have no health
insurance at all.
Skyrocketing health care costs not only hurt our families;
they hurt our economy. American businesses pay more than
their competitors for health care, reducing their
competitiveness. American incomes suffer because raises are
stifled by rising insurance premiums.
We will attack the health care crisis with a comprehensive
approach. Our goal is straightforward: quality, affordable
health coverage for all Americans to keep our families
healthy, our businesses competitive, and our country
strong.
In President George Bush's America, drug company and HMO
profits count for more than family and small business health
costs. Health care costs increased four times as fast as
wages in the last year alone. Prescription drug spending has
more than doubled during the past five years. Nearly 82
million Americans went without health care coverage at some
point in the last two years. And the President has done
nothing to bring costs down or lift these burdens. The few
small proposals he has offered would further divide our
health system between one that is affordable for the healthy
and wealthy, and one that is unaffordable for the elderly,
the sick, and increasingly, for America's broad middle
class.
John Kerry, John Edwards and the Democratic Party believe in
a better, stronger, healthier America. Our resolve to fix
the health crisis is stronger than ever. In the wealthiest
country in the world, every expectant mother should get
quality prenatal care; every child should get regular
check-ups; every senior should be able to get safe,
affordable prescription drugs; and no hardworking family
should ever lose everything because illness strikes a loved
one. Ensuring health care for children. The job begins with
our children. It is a disgrace that nearly 8.5 million
children still lack health insurance. We will strengthen
Medicaid for our families and expand the children's health
program created under President Clinton so no child goes
without medical care.
- Expanding coverage.
- Under the leadership of John Kerry and John Edwards,
we will offer individuals and businesses tax credits to
make quality, reliable health coverage more affordable.
We will provide tax credits to Americans who are
approaching retirement age and those who are between jobs
so they can afford quality, reliable coverage. We will
expand coverage for low income adults through existing
federal-state health care programs. And we will provide
all Americans with access to the same coverage that
members of Congress give themselves.
Cutting health care costs.
- At the center of our efforts will be a plan to reduce
health costs. We will lift a financial burden on
families, businesses, and the self-employed by picking up
the tab for the highest-cost medical cases. That will
save America's families up to $1,000 on their
premiums.
We will improve the quality of care and the efficiency of
the medical system by using American technological
know-how to cut billions of dollars wasted in
administrative processing and paperwork. Today, about a
quarter of all health-related spending is not even
medical. We can do better. We will ensure that all
Americans have secure, private electronic medical records
by 2008, and we will give medical providers incentives
and resources to simplify their paperwork so patients
spend more time with doctors and less time filling out
forms. We recognize that our health care system is
substantially strengthened by the daily efforts of the
men and women in a variety of health professions and we
support fair treatment for all health professionals.
We will enact a real Patient's Bill of Rights to put
doctors and nurses back in charge of making medical
decisions with their patients--instead of allowing HMO
bureaucrats to decide what a patient needs.
Helping seniors by protecting Medicare and cutting
prescription costs.
- We oppose privatizing Medicare. We will not allow
Republicans to destroy a commitment that has done so much
good for so many seniors and people with disabilities
over the past 39 years. Instead, we want to strengthen
Medicare and make it more efficient.
We will ensure that seniors across the country,
particularly in small-town and rural America, no longer
suffer from geographic discrimination. We will end the
disgrace of seniors being forced to choose between meals
and medication. Today, our seniors are paying too much
for prescription drugs, while options abroad are far
cheaper and just as safe. We will allow the safe
reimportation of drugs from other countries.
The current Medicare drug program serves drug companies
more than seniors. It allows these companies to change
the price of prescriptions more frequently than seniors
can change their plans. It does virtually nothing to
bring down prescription drug costs. It forces seniors
into HMOs. Elderly Americans deserve a real prescription
drug benefit--one that uses the government's purchasing
power to lower costs and ensures access to new therapies
for their illnesses.
We will cut the waste and abuse that cost Medicare
billions each year, using competitive bidding to lower
the costs of buying medical equipment, educating
providers to file claims more efficiently, and increasing
penalties for those who bilk the system.
Dignity for all.
- We will ensure that elderly Americans and people with
disabilities can live in dignity, with quality
options for long-term care. We need to expand alternative
care options and provide better assistance for those who
give care. No one should be kept in a nursing home or
institution if they prefer living in dignity elsewhere
and can do so. And we will ensure that no person with a
disability has to choose between quality health care and
the dignity of work. We will also work to ensure that
people with HIV and AIDS have the care they need, and we
will support the community-based prevention programs,
built on experience with real life, that President Bush
has cut. We are committed to passing the Wellstone mental
health parity legislation, ending discrimination against
Americans with mental illnesses, and ensuring equal
treatment for mental illness in our health system.
Eliminating health disparities.
- Millions of African Americans, Latinos, Asian
Americans, Pacific Islanders, and American Indians
continue to live sicker and die younger in America.
Cultural and language barriers remain a particular
problem for immigrant communities. We will fight racial
and ethnic health care disparities by increasing research
and training in the medical profession, breaking down
language barriers, and ensuring good health care for all
Americans. We will encourage and support enabling more
minority students to enter the sciences. We will also
work to ensure that women have access to the best
medicines and state-of-the-art prevention and detection
techniques to stop diseases early. We will also support
prevention of illness through better nutrition and
exercise.
Investing in science to battle disease.
- We will push the boundaries of science in search of
new medical therapies and cures. The Bush Administration
has put ideology over science, skewing information about
everything from women's health to scientific research.
Americans deserve access to the best evidence available
about illnesses, therapies, and cures. From new therapies
to prolong life for people with AIDS, to new openings in
the battle to cure cancer, the possibilities of medical
research fill us with hope. We will secure more funding
for aggressive biomedical research seeking affordable and
effective therapies based on real science.
President Bush has rejected the calls from Nancy Reagan,
Christopher Reeve and Americans across the land for
assistance with embryonic stem cell research. We will
reverse his wrongheaded policy. Stem cell therapy offers
hope to more than 100 million Americans who have serious
illnesses--from Alzheimer's to heart disease to juvenile
diabetes to Parkinson's. We will pursue this research
under the strictest ethical guidelines, but we will not
walk away from the chance to save lives and reduce human
suffering.
Honoring our veterans.
- Finally, we will never forget the debt America owes
our veterans. Patriotism means keeping faith with those
who have worn the uniform of the United States. This
Administration has broken its promises to our
veterans--raising their health costs and reducing their
access to care. John Kerry, John Edwards and the
Democrats will keep faith with our veterans. We will
continue the fight for mandatory funding for veterans'
health care and we will make sure that disabled veterans
and military retirees are not penalized with reductions
in their pension benefits. And we will aggressively
address the inexcusable backlogs in veterans'
compensation and pension claims.
We believe in an America where health care is available
and affordable. Where every family looks to the future with
hope and excitement, without worry that the cost of health
care is becoming too great to bear. Where strong, healthy
families build a stronger America.
IMPROVING EDUCATION
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The simple bargain at the heart of the American Dream
offers opportunity to every American who takes the
responsibility to make the most of it. That bargain is the
great source of American strength, because it unleashes the
amazing talent and determination of our people. And as our
people seize the opportunity to build a better life, they
build a stronger country.
Today, our people compete with workers on every continent.
Information flows across oceans. High-wage jobs are more
dependent than ever on high-level skills.
Now, as never before, education is the key to opportunity,
essential to a strong America. So we believe in an America
that offers the best education to all our children--wherever
they live, whatever their background. Period. We believe in
an America where every child comes to school ready to learn.
Where every student is held to high standards, and every
school has the resources and responsibility to meet those
standards. Where every classroom has a great teacher, and
every student gets enough personal attention to foster a
talent or overcome a difficulty.
We believe in an America where every teenager completes a
rigorous high school curriculum. Where every qualified young
person who wants to go to college can afford it. And where
every adult who needs additional job training can get
it.
In President George Bush's America, our government ignores
the shameful truth that the quality of a child's education
depends on the wealth of that child's neighborhood. Our best
public schools are the best schools in the world, but too
many children go to schools that just don't work. Too many
children who beat the odds and succeed in school can't
afford to go on to college. And too many adults who need
added training aren't able to get it.
For this White House, education is an easy promise--easy
come, and easy go. When President Bush signed the No Child
Left Behind Act, he said the right things--asking more from
our schools and pledging to give them the resources to get
the job done. And then he promptly broke his word, providing
schools $27 billion less than he had promised, literally
leaving millions of children behind.
The President also gets a failing grade for higher
education. Over the last three years, college tuitions have
risen by 35 percent, pricing 220,000 students out of
college. Yet while then- Governor Bush promised to increase
college aid, President Bush tried to charge more for student
loans and eliminate Pell Grants for 84,000 students.
John Kerry, John Edwards and the Democratic Party believe
that a strong America begins at home with strong families,
and that strong families need the best schools. We believe
schools must teach fundamental skills like math and science,
and fundamental values like citizenship and responsibility.
We believe providing resources without reform is a waste of
money, and reform without resources is a waste of time. And
we believe politicians who expect students to learn
responsibility should start by keeping their own
promises.
- Meeting our responsibilities.
- Under John Kerry and John Edwards, we will offer high
quality early learning opportunities, smaller classes,
more after school activities, and more individualized
attention for our students, particularly students with
special needs, gifts, and talents. The federal government
will meet its financial obligations for elementary and
secondary education and for special education.
A great teacher in every classroom.
- Continuing the fight for reform, we will make an
intensive effort to put a great teacher in every
classroom. Nothing has a bigger impact than a teacher on
the quality of a child's education. We need to do more to
attract and retain teachers, more to encourage their
excellence, and more to ensure that all teachers are
offering high-quality teaching. We must raise pay for
teachers, especially in the schools and subjects where
great teachers are in the shortest supply. We must
improve mentoring, professional development, and new
technology training for teachers, instead of leaving them
to sink or swim. At the same time, we must create
rigorous new incentives and tests for new teachers. We
need new rewards for teachers who go the extra mile and
excel in helping children learn. And teachers deserve due
process protection from arbitrary dismissal, but we must
have fast, fair procedures for improving or removing
teachers who do not perform on the job.
Parents are our children's first and most important
teachers, and they have a responsibility to participate
in their children's education. We will help them do so by
offering information and resources to better teach their
children, whether reminding them about homework or
attending a parent-teacher conference.
Securing high achievement for all.
- Vast achievement gaps persist in America. Nearly half
of African-American, Latino, and American Indian youth
don't graduate high school. We believe in the potential
of every child and we will not accept this loss of
talent. Because education in the earliest years of a
child's life is critical, we will expand and improve
preschool and Head Start initiatives with the goal of
offering these opportunities to all children. Because
children need safe, loving, and disciplined homes in
order to learn, we will work on a bipartisan basis to
reform foster care. And we will undertake a national
campaign to raise graduation rates by raising student
achievement, expecting more from schools, reaching out to
troubled youth with mentoring and tutoring, and
strengthening the basic high school curriculum. We will
meet these challenges together&emdash;parents, teachers,
principals, educational support professionals and
paraprofessionals, along with universities,
community-based and faith-based organizations.
Making schools work for children.
- We will use testing to advance real learning, not
undermine it, by developing high-quality assessments that
measure the complex skills students need to develop. We
will make sure that federal law operates with high
standards and common sense, not just bureaucratic
rigidity. Instead of pushing private school vouchers that
funnel scarce dollars away from the public schools, we
will support public school choice, including charter
schools and magnet schools that meet the same high
standards as other schools. And at a time when so many
schools charged with our future are relics of the past,
we will build new schools and offer the technology and
equipment for a 21st century education.
Making college affordable.
- With the leadership of John Kerry and John Edwards,
we will make college more affordable, so that more young
people get higher education, and more of those who
graduate get relief from the crushing burden of debt. We
will make student aid faster and simpler to get so
students aren't scared off by the complicated process. We
will offer generous tax credits to reduce the price of
four years of college for all students, including those
who pay their own way and can least afford college now.
We will strengthen our aid programs for students while
eliminating wasteful subsidies for lenders. At a time
when all good jobs increasingly depend on advanced
skills, we will strengthen technical training for those
who do not attend college. Finally, we must place a
special emphasis on expanding achievement in math and
science. These are subjects where America has always led
the world and must continue to lead in the 21st
century.
Teaching good citizenship and good values.
- We must remain committed to the moral and civic
dimensions of education. Education requires the
engagement of the whole community in order to teach the
whole child. Students should learn responsibility in our
schools, and students who are irresponsible&emdash;using
drugs or bringing violence into schools&emdash;must face
strict discipline. We should support character education
in our elementary and secondary schools and community
service as a condition of graduation from high schools.
We should also give back to those who give to America, in
the tradition of the G.I. Bill and AmeriCorps.
The promise of America is the promise of opportunity. If
we are going to keep that promise, every child should have a
great teacher and every high school graduate should have the
chance to go to college. Nothing less is good enough for
America.
PROTECTING OUR ENVIRONMENT
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For generations, Americans of all political beliefs have
understood that the protection of our environment and the
stewardship of our land are vital to the strength of our
nation. God gave America extraordinary natural gifts; it is
our responsibility to protect them. The health of our
families, the strength of our economy, and the well-being of
our world all depend upon a clean environment.
But in President George Bush's government, where polluters
actually write environmental laws and oil company profits
matter more than hard science and cold facts, protecting the
environment doesn't matter at all. Even though 133 million
Americans already live with unhealthy air, the Bush
Administration bowed to energy industry lobbying and rewrote
rules to allow 20,000 facilities to spew more smog, soot,
and mercury into the air. Even though public water systems
in many cities are polluted, they have taken environmental
cops off the beat and pushed to allow more arsenic in our
water.
Even though the President promised more than five billion
dollars for our national parks, he has delivered a fraction
of that, leaving trails closed, historic structures
collapsing, and our parks losing luster. And even though
overwhelming scientific evidence shows that global climate
change is a scientific fact, this administration has
rewritten government reports to hide that fact.
John Kerry, John Edwards and the Democratic Party believe in
a stronger, safer, healthier America. A strong America
depends on healthy families, and healthy families depend on
fresh air, pure water, and clean neighborhoods.
These are our commitments: we will make our air cleaner and
our water purer. We will ensure our children can safely play
in our neighborhoods, our families can enjoy our national
parks, and our sportsmen can hunt and fish in our lakes and
forests. We will foster a healthy economy and a healthy
environment by promoting new technologies that create good
jobs and improve our world. And we will work with our allies
to achieve these goals and to protect the global
environment, for this generation and future generations.
We reject the false choice between a healthy economy and a
healthy environment. We know instead that farming, fishing,
tourism, and other industries require a healthy environment.
We know new technologies that protect the environment can
create new high-paying jobs. We know a cleaner environment
means a stronger economy.
Cleaner air. We will strengthen protection for our
air by making our government and our markets work together.
We will strengthen the Clean Air Act, by controlling all of
the top pollutants and offering new flexibility to
industries that commit to cleaning up within that framework.
We will reduce mercury emissions, smog and acid rain, and
will address the challenge of climate change with the
seriousness of purpose this great challenge demands. Rather
than looking at American industries only as polluters, we
will work with the private sector to create partnerships
that make a profit and a cleaner world for us all. At the
same time, we will plug Republican-created legal loopholes
and renew public enforcement of the law.
Cleaner water and healthier communities. We will work
with communities to reduce water pollution&emdash;not only
from factories, but also from large corporate farms, storm
water runoff, and sewer overflows. We will bring
environmental justice to low-income, rural, and minority
communities, using federal resources to improve public
health and spur economic development by cleaning up polluted
sites. We will restore the "polluter pays" principle to fund
the cleanup of the most polluted sites, so that those who
cause environmental problems pay to fix them. We will
protect Nevada and its communities from the high-level
nuclear waste dump at Yucca mountain which has not been
proven to be safe by sound science.
Protecting public lands. We will use our natural
resources to fuel our economy, but end Republican giveaways
to special interests that exploit public lands without
regard for environmental consequences. We will require
companies to restore leased lands to their original state
after their work is done. And we will make sure our
government treats our national parks with the same respect
and care that millions of families show each year when they
visit.
Honoring our hunting and fishing heritage. We are
committed to protecting the lands used by hunters and
anglers, and we will open millions of new acres of land to
public hunting and fishing. We will conserve and restore the
habitats where wildlife flourish, expanding use of
voluntary, incentive-based programs that target private
landowners.
International leadership to protect the global
environment. We know that America's fight for a healthy
environment cannot be waged within our borders alone.
Environmental hazards from around the globe reach America
through the oceans and the jet streams encircling our
planet. And climate change is a major international
challenge that requires global leadership from the United
States, not abdication. We must restore American leadership
on this issue as well as others such as hazardous waste
emissions and depleted fisheries
This great land has been placed in our hands for
safekeeping. It is our responsibility to protect it. We will
exercise that responsibility with the courage to take on
special interests, the creativity to promote new
technologies, the determination to reassert our global
leadership, and the commitment to achieve real results. That
is how we will ensure that God's gifts of nature bless all
of God's children for generations to come.
STRONG AMERICAN COMMUNITY
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American history is the story of a diverse people
striving--sometimes fitfully, but in the end, faithfully--to
realize our ideals: a common dream of equality, and
opportunity, freedom and community. Each step along that
path has made us stronger.
This year we recall two of our country's greatest steps
toward equality and inclusion--fifty years ago, Brown v.
Board of Education, and forty years ago, the Civil Rights
Act of 1964. Those great achievements of the civil rights
movement strengthened America immeasurably&emdash;by
breaking down the legal barriers to equal citizenship for
African-Americans and expanding the circle of equal
opportunity for all. This year, as we celebrate these
anniversaries, we recommit to the spirit of service that
secured these breakthroughs and the values they embody: all
of our people should have the opportunity to fulfill all of
their potential, and each of us should be as equal in the
eyes of the law as we are in the eyes of God.
That is the America we believe in. That is the America we
are fighting for. That is the America we will build
together. President Bush has a different vision--instead of
searching for common ground to bring our people together, he
has sought political advantage in driving our people apart.
He has neglected the opportunity of most Americans, choosing
instead to lavish resources on those who need them least. He
has rejected the American vision of greater equality,
appointing judges more interested in rolling back rights
than protecting them. Perhaps most striking of all, in a
time of war, he has abandoned our great tradition of asking
Americans to meet shared challenges in a spirit of shared
sacrifice. This President has regularly governed for the
benefit of special interests, not the public interest.
John Kerry, John Edwards and the Democratic Party believe in
a better America, more equal, more free--more American. We
believe in common service to our commonwealth. And we will
restore the commitment to ethics in government.
Our commitment to civil rights is ironclad. We will restore
vigorous federal enforcement of our civil rights laws for
all our people, from fair housing to equal employment
opportunity, from Title IX to the Americans with
Disabilities Act. We support affirmative action to redress
discrimination and to achieve the diversity from which all
Americans benefit. We believe a day's work is worth a day's
pay, and at a time when women still earn 77 cents for every
dollar earned by men, we need stronger equal pay laws and
stronger enforcement of them. We will enact the bipartisan
legislation barring workplace discrimination based on sexual
orientation. We are committed to equal treatment of all
service members and believe all patriotic Americans should
be allowed to serve our country without discrimination,
persecution, or violence. We support the appointment of
judges who will uphold our laws and constitutional rights,
not their own narrow agendas.
Voting is the foundation of democracy, a central act of
civic engagement, and an expression of equal citizenship.
Voting rights are important precisely because they are
protective of all other rights. We will call for legislative
action that will fully protect and enforce the fundamental
Constitutional right of every American to vote -- to ensure
that the Constitution's promise is fully realized and that,
in disputed elections, every vote is counted fully and
fairly.
To advance these goals, and to guarantee the integrity of
our elections and to increase voter confidence, we will seek
action to ensure that voting systems are accessible,
independently auditable, accurate, and secure. We will
support the full funding of programs to realize this
goal.
Finally, it is the priority of the Democratic Party to
fulfill the promise of election reform, reauthorize the
expiring provisions of the Voting Rights Act, and vigorously
enforce all our voting rights laws.
Our voting procedures are observed by people and nations
around the world. Every vote must count and every vote must
be counted, including absentee ballots. To achieve all of
our goals, we support moving toward a census that duly
counts every American. And we support the election of
candidates who express the many voices of America. Because
our democracy thrives on public access to diverse sources of
information from multiple sources, we support measures to
ensure diversity, competition, and localism in media
ownership.
We will defend the dignity of all Americans against those
who would undermine it. Because we believe in the privacy
and equality of women, we stand proudly for a woman's right
to choose, consistent with Roe v. Wade, and regardless of
her ability to pay. We stand firmly against Republican
efforts to undermine that right. At the same time, we
strongly support family planning and adoption incentives.
Abortion should be safe, legal, and rare.
Racial and religious profiling is wrong and we will work to
stamp it out. Hate crimes desecrate sacred spaces and demean
good people, and we support a strong national law to punish
them.
We will extend the promise of citizenship to those still
struggling for freedom. Today's immigration laws do not
reflect our values or serve our security, and we will work
for real reform. The solution is not to establish a massive
new status of second-class workers; that betrays our values
and hurts all working people. Undocumented immigrants within
our borders who clear a background check, work hard and pay
taxes should have a path to earn full participation in
America. We will hasten family reunification for parents and
children, husbands and wives, and offer more
English-language and civic education classes so immigrants
can assume all the rights and responsibilities of
citizenship. As we undertake these steps, we will work with
our neighbors to strengthen our security so we are safer
from those who would come here to harm us. We are a nation
of immigrants, and from Arab-Americans in California to
Latinos in Florida, we share the dream of a better life in
the country we love.
We support full inclusion of gay and lesbian families in the
life of our nation and seek equal responsibilities,
benefits, and protections for these families. In our
country, marriage has been defined at the state level for
200 years, and we believe it should continue to be defined
there. We repudiate President Bush's divisive effort to
politicize the Constitution by pursuing a "Federal Marriage
Amendment." Our goal is to bring Americans together, not
drive them apart.
We will honor our nation's tradition of equal justice under
law. President Bush and Attorney General Ashcroft believe
they can claim powers above and beyond the law of the land.
As Democrats and Americans, we yield to no one in our
commitment to do everything necessary to win the war on
terror. But we can and must win that war without sacrificing
the values we are defending. America must be strong and
free.
As we encourage democracy around the world, we must extend
democracy here at home. We support equal rights to
democratic self-government and Congressional representation
for the citizens of our nation's capital.
We believe that four million disenfranchised American
citizens residing in Puerto Rico have the right to the
permanent and fully democratic status of their choice. The
White House and Congress will clarify the realistic status
options for Puerto Rico and enable Puerto Ricans to choose
among them.
We support full self-government for the people of Guam,
American Samoa, and the Virgin Islands, and their right to
decide their future status.
For all those who live under our flag, we support strong
economic development and fair and equitable treatment under
federal programs. We honor the sovereignty of American
Indians and reaffirm our commitment to respectful and
meaningful government-to-government relations. We must renew
the trust obligations that this Administration has
disregarded, and must improve the education, health, and job
opportunities for American Indians who too often face
terrible poverty.
We honor the central place of faith in the lives of our
people. Like our Founders, we believe that our nation, our
communities, and our lives are made vastly stronger and
richer by faith and the countless acts of justice and mercy
it inspires. We will strengthen the role of faith-based
organizations in meeting challenges like homelessness, youth
violence, and other social problems. At the same time, we
will honor First Amendment protections and not allow public
funds to be used to proselytize or discriminate. Throughout
history, communities of faith have brought comfort to the
afflicted and shaped great movements for justice. We know
they will continue to do so, and we will always protect all
Americans' freedom to worship.
We pledge to stand up for our beliefs and rally Americans to
our cause. But we recognize that disagreements will remain,
and we believe disagreement should not mean disrespect.
Members of our party have deeply held and differing views on
some matters of conscience and faith. We view diversity of
views as a source of strength, and we welcome into our ranks
all Americans who seek to build a stronger America. We are
committed to resolving our differences in a spirit of
civility, hope and mutual respect. That's the America we
believe in.
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