John McCain's Victory Speech
-- Part
Two of Two
Thank you. Thank you, Texas, Ohio, Vermont and Rhode Island. I am very
grateful for the broad support you have given our campaign. And I am
very pleased to note that tonight, my friends, we have won enough
delegates to claim with confidence, humility and a sense of great
responsibility that I will be the Republican nominee for President of
the United States.
I want to thank all of you here and all the Republicans, Independents,
and independent thinking Democrats, in all parts of this great country,
who supported our campaign for the nomination, and have brought us
across the finish line first, an accomplishment that once seemed to more
than a few doubters unlikely.
I want to commend again, my friend, Governor Mike Huckabee, and his
supporters, for their passionate commitment to their campaign that
Governor Huckabee so ably represented. And I want to thank all my former
rivals for the nomination and their supporters for their steadfast
dedication to keeping America free, safe, prosperous, and proud.
And, of course, I want to thank my family: my wife, Cindy; my children,
and our dear friends who have been throughout this campaign, and will
remain in the challenging months ahead, an unwavering source of support
and love.
Now, we begin the most important part of our campaign: to make a
respectful, determined and convincing case to the American people that
our campaign and my election as President, given the alternatives
presented by our friends in the other party, are in the best interests
of the country we love. I have never believed I was destined be
President. I don't believe anyone is pre-destined to lead America. But I
do believe we are born with responsibilities to the country that has
protected our God-given rights, and the opportunities they afford us. I
did not grow up with the expectation that my country owed me more than
the rights owed every American. On the contrary, I owe my country every
opportunity I have ever had. I owe her the meaning that service to
America has given my life, and the sense that I am part of something
greater than myself, part of a kinship of ideals that have always
represented the last, best hope of mankind.
I understand the responsibilities I incur with this nomination, and I
give you my word, I will not evade or slight a single one. Our campaign
must be, and will be more than another tired debate of false promises,
empty sound-bites, or useless arguments from the past that address not a
single American's concerns for their family's security. Presidential
candidates are judged on their records, their character and the whole of
their life experiences. But we are also expected to concentrate our
efforts on the challenges that will confront America on our watch and
explain how we intend to address them.
America is at war in two countries, and involved in a long and difficult
fight with violent extremists who despise us, our values and modernity
itself. It is of little use to Americans for their candidates to avoid
the many complex challenges of these struggles by re-litigating
decisions of the past. I will defend the decision to destroy Saddam
Hussein's regime as I criticized the failed tactics that were employed
for too long to establish the conditions that will allow us to leave
that country with our country's interests secure and our honor intact.
But Americans know that the next President doesn't get to re-make that
decision. We are in Iraq and our most vital security interests are
clearly involved there. The next President must explain how he or she
intends to bring that war to the swiftest possible conclusion without
exacerbating a sectarian conflict that could quickly descend into
genocide; destabilizing the entire Middle East; enabling our adversaries
in the region to extend their influence and undermine our security
there; and emboldening terrorists to attack us elsewhere with weapons we
dare not allow them to possess.
The next President must encourage the greater participation and
cooperation of our allies in the fight against al Qaeda and the Taliban
in Afghanistan.
The next President must lead an effort to restructure our military, our
intelligence, our diplomacy and all relevant branches of government to
combat Islamic extremism, encourage the vast majority of moderates to
win the battle for the soul of Islam, and meet the many other rising
challenges in this changing world.
I will leave it to my opponent to argue that we should abrogate trade
treaties, and pretend the global economy will go away and Americans can
secure our future by trading and investing only among ourselves. We will
campaign in favor of seizing the opportunities presented by the growth
of free markets throughout the world, helping displaced workers acquire
new and lasting employment and educating our children to prepare them
for the new economic realities by giving parents choices about their
children's education they do not have now.
I will leave it to my opponent to claim that they can keep companies and
jobs from going overseas by making it harder for them to do business
here at home. We will campaign to strengthen job growth in America by
helping businesses become more competitive with lower taxes and less
regulation.
I will leave it to my opponent to propose returning to the failed, big
government mandates of the sixties and seventies to address problems
such as the lack of health care insurance for some Americans. I will
campaign to make health care more accessible to more Americans with
reforms that will bring down costs in the health care industry down
without ruining the quality of the world's best medical care.
And I will campaign to reduce our dangerous dependence on foreign oil
with an energy policy that encourages American industry and technology
to make our country safer, cleaner and more prosperous by leading the
world in the use, development and discovery of alternative sources of
energy.
These are some of the challenges that confront us. There are others just
as urgent, and during this campaign I'll travel across the country in
cities and rural areas, in communities of all ethnic backgrounds and
income levels, offering my ideas and listening to the concerns and
advice of Americans. Americans aren't interested in an election where
they are just talked to and not listened to; an election that offers
platitudes instead of principles and insults instead of ideas; an
election that results -- no matter who wins -- in four years of unkept
promises and a government that is just a battleground for the next
election. Their patience is at an end for politicians who value ambition
over principle, and for partisanship that is less a contest of ideas
than an uncivil brawl over the spoils of power.
Nothing is inevitable in America. We are the captains of our fate. We're
not a country that prefers nostalgia to optimism; a country that would
rather go back than forward. We're the world's leader, and leaders don't
pine for the past and dread the future. We make the future better than
the past. We don't hide from history. We make history. That, my friends,
is the essence of hope in America, hope built on courage, and faith in
the values and principles that have made us great. I intend to make my
stand on those principles and chart a course for our future greatness,
and trust in the judgment of the people I have served all my life. So
stand up with me, my friends, stand up and fight for America -- for her
strength, her ideals, and her future. The contest begins tonight. It
will have its ups and downs. But we will fight every minute of every day
to make certain we have a government that is as capable, wise, brave and
decent as the great people we serve. That is our responsibility and I
will not let you down.
Part One