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Remarks of
President-Elect
Barack Obama—as
prepared for
delivery
Election Night
Tuesday, November
4th, 2008
Chicago, Illinois
If there is
anyone out there who
still doubts that
America is a place
where all things are
possible; who still
wonders if the dream
of our founders is
alive in our time;
who still questions
the power of our
democracy, tonight
is your answer.
It’s the answer told
by lines that
stretched around
schools and churches
in numbers this
nation has never
seen; by people who
waited three hours
and four hours, many
for the very first
time in their lives,
because they
believed that this
time must be
different; that
their voice could be
that difference.
It’s the answer
spoken by young and
old, rich and poor,
Democrat and
Republican, black,
white, Latino,
Asian, Native
American, gay,
straight, disabled
and not disabled –
Americans who sent a
message to the world
that we have never
been a collection of
Red States and Blue
States: we are, and
always will be, the
United States of
America.
It’s the answer that
led those who have
been told for so
long by so many to
be cynical, and
fearful, and
doubtful of what we
can achieve to put
their hands on the
arc of history and
bend it once more
toward the hope of a
better day.
It’s been a long
time coming, but
tonight, because of
what we did on this
day, in this
election, at this
defining moment,
change has come to
America.
I just received a
very gracious call
from Senator McCain.
He fought long and
hard in this
campaign, and he’s
fought even longer
and harder for the
country he loves. He
has endured
sacrifices for
America that most of
us cannot begin to
imagine, and we are
better off for the
service rendered by
this brave and
selfless leader. I
congratulate him and
Governor Palin for
all they have
achieved, and I look
forward to working
with them to renew
this nation’s
promise in the
months ahead.
I want to thank my
partner in this
journey, a man who
campaigned from his
heart and spoke for
the men and women he
grew up with on the
streets of Scranton
and rode with on
that train home to
Delaware, the Vice
President-elect of
the United States,
Joe Biden.
I would not be
standing here
tonight without the
unyielding support
of my best friend
for the last sixteen
years, the rock of
our family and the
love of my life, our
nation’s next First
Lady, Michelle
Obama. Sasha and
Malia, I love you
both so much, and
you have earned the
new puppy that’s
coming with us to
the White House. And
while she’s no
longer with us, I
know my grandmother
is watching, along
with the family that
made me who I am. I
miss them tonight,
and know that my
debt to them is
beyond measure.
To my campaign
manager David
Plouffe, my chief
strategist David
Axelrod, and the
best campaign team
ever assembled in
the history of
politics – you made
this happen, and I
am forever grateful
for what you’ve
sacrificed to get it
done.
But above all, I
will never forget
who this victory
truly belongs to –
it belongs to you.
I was never the
likeliest candidate
for this office. We
didn’t start with
much money or many
endorsements. Our
campaign was not
hatched in the halls
of Washington – it
began in the
backyards of Des
Moines and the
living rooms of
Concord and the
front porches of
Charleston.
It was built by
working men and
women who dug into
what little savings
they had to give
five dollars and ten
dollars and twenty
dollars to this
cause. It grew
strength from the
young people who
rejected the myth of
their generation’s
apathy; who left
their homes and
their families for
jobs that offered
little pay and less
sleep; from the
not-so-young people
who braved the
bitter cold and
scorching heat to
knock on the doors
of perfect
strangers; from the
millions of
Americans who
volunteered, and
organized, and
proved that more
than two centuries
later, a government
of the people, by
the people and for
the people has not
perished from this
Earth. This is your
victory.
I know you didn’t do
this just to win an
election and I know
you didn’t do it for
me. You did it
because you
understand the
enormity of the task
that lies ahead. For
even as we celebrate
tonight, we know the
challenges that
tomorrow will bring
are the greatest of
our lifetime – two
wars, a planet in
peril, the worst
financial crisis in
a century. Even as
we stand here
tonight, we know
there are brave
Americans waking up
in the deserts of
Iraq and the
mountains of
Afghanistan to risk
their lives for us.
There are mothers
and fathers who will
lie awake after
their children fall
asleep and wonder
how they’ll make the
mortgage, or pay
their doctor’s
bills, or save
enough for college.
There is new energy
to harness and new
jobs to be created;
new schools to build
and threats to meet
and alliances to
repair.
The road ahead will
be long. Our climb
will be steep. We
may not get there in
one year or even one
term, but America –
I have never been
more hopeful than I
am tonight that we
will get there. I
promise you – we as
a people will get
there.
There will be
setbacks and false
starts. There are
many who won’t agree
with every decision
or policy I make as
President, and we
know that government
can’t solve every
problem. But I will
always be honest
with you about the
challenges we face.
I will listen to
you, especially when
we disagree. And
above all, I will
ask you join in the
work of remaking
this nation the only
way it’s been done
in America for
two-hundred and
twenty-one years –
block by block,
brick by brick,
calloused hand by
calloused hand.
What began
twenty-one months
ago in the depths of
winter must not end
on this autumn
night. This victory
alone is not the
change we seek – it
is only the chance
for us to make that
change. And that
cannot happen if we
go back to the way
things were. It
cannot happen
without you.
So let us summon a
new spirit of
patriotism; of
service and
responsibility where
each of us resolves
to pitch in and work
harder and look
after not only
ourselves, but each
other. Let us
remember that if
this financial
crisis taught us
anything, it’s that
we cannot have a
thriving Wall Street
while Main Street
suffers – in this
country, we rise or
fall as one nation;
as one people.
Let us resist the
temptation to fall
back on the same
partisanship and
pettiness and
immaturity that has
poisoned our
politics for so
long. Let us
remember that it was
a man from this
state who first
carried the banner
of the Republican
Party to the White
House – a party
founded on the
values of
self-reliance,
individual liberty,
and national unity.
Those are values we
all share, and while
the Democratic Party
has won a great
victory tonight, we
do so with a measure
of humility and
determination to
heal the divides
that have held back
our progress. As
Lincoln said to a
nation far more
divided than ours,
“We are not enemies,
but friends…though
passion may have
strained it must not
break our bonds of
affection.” And to
those Americans
whose support I have
yet to earn – I may
not have won your
vote, but I hear
your voices, I need
your help, and I
will be your
President too.
And to all those
watching tonight
from beyond our
shores, from
parliaments and
palaces to those who
are huddled around
radios in the
forgotten corners of
our world – our
stories are
singular, but our
destiny is shared,
and a new dawn of
American leadership
is at hand. To those
who would tear this
world down – we will
defeat you. To those
who seek peace and
security – we
support you. And to
all those who have
wondered if
America’s beacon
still burns as
bright – tonight we
proved once more
that the true
strength of our
nation comes not
from our the might
of our arms or the
scale of our wealth,
but from the
enduring power of
our ideals:
democracy, liberty,
opportunity, and
unyielding hope.
For that is the true
genius of America –
that America can
change. Our union
can be perfected.
And what we have
already achieved
gives us hope for
what we can and must
achieve tomorrow.
This election had
many firsts and many
stories that will be
told for
generations. But one
that’s on my mind
tonight is about a
woman who cast her
ballot in Atlanta.
She’s a lot like the
millions of others
who stood in line to
make their voice
heard in this
election except for
one thing – Ann
Nixon Cooper is 106
years old.
She was born just a
generation past
slavery; a time when
there were no cars
on the road or
planes in the sky;
when someone like
her couldn’t vote
for two reasons –
because she was a
woman and because of
the color of her
skin.
And tonight, I think
about all that she’s
seen throughout her
century in America –
the heartache and
the hope; the
struggle and the
progress; the times
we were told that we
can’t, and the
people who pressed
on with that
American creed: Yes
we can.
At a time when
women’s voices were
silenced and their
hopes dismissed, she
lived to see them
stand up and speak
out and reach for
the ballot. Yes we
can.
When there was
despair in the dust
bowl and depression
across the land, she
saw a nation conquer
fear itself with a
New Deal, new jobs
and a new sense of
common purpose. Yes
we can.
When the bombs fell
on our harbor and
tyranny threatened
the world, she was
there to witness a
generation rise to
greatness and a
democracy was saved.
Yes we can.
She was there for
the buses in
Montgomery, the
hoses in Birmingham,
a bridge in Selma,
and a preacher from
Atlanta who told a
people that “We
Shall Overcome.” Yes
we can.
A man touched down
on the moon, a wall
came down in Berlin,
a world was
connected by our own
science and
imagination. And
this year, in this
election, she
touched her finger
to a screen, and
cast her vote,
because after 106
years in America,
through the best of
times and the
darkest of hours,
she knows how
America can change.
Yes we can.
America, we have
come so far. We have
seen so much. But
there is so much
more to do. So
tonight, let us ask
ourselves – if our
children should live
to see the next
century; if my
daughters should be
so lucky to live as
long as Ann Nixon
Cooper, what change
will they see? What
progress will we
have made?
This is our chance
to answer that call.
This is our moment.
This is our time –
to put our people
back to work and
open doors of
opportunity for our
kids; to restore
prosperity and
promote the cause of
peace; to reclaim
the American Dream
and reaffirm that
fundamental truth –
that out of many, we
are one; that while
we breathe, we hope,
and where we are met
with cynicism, and
doubt, and those who
tell us that we
can’t, we will
respond with that
timeless creed that
sums up the spirit
of a people:
Yes We Can. Thank
you, God bless you,
and may God Bless
the United States of
America.
Source: Obama
for America |
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