2012 Democratic National
Convention: Remarks as Prepared for
Delivery by The Honorable Pat Quinn, Governor of Illinois
CHARLOTTE, Sept. 4, 2012
/PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — The following is a transcript of a speech, as
prepared for delivery, by The Honorable Pat Quinn, Governor of Illinois at the
Democratic National Convention on Tuesday, September 4, 2012:
Delegates and fellow Americans,
it is an honor to be with you this evening. And it’s an honor to
represent the great state of Illinois, the home of President Barack Obama.
Tonight I want to talk to you
about a scary subject for many, many Republicans. I want to talk about facts.
You know, I watched the Republican National Convention last week, and I heard a
lot of things that are simply not true.
One of our founding fathers,
President John Adams of Massachusetts, once said that “facts are stubborn
things.” But last week, as they nominated a very different man from
Massachusetts, Republicans stubbornly smeared President Obama’s excellent
record of reforming welfare. They went on and on, pretending that he weakened
its work requirement. Everyone knows that is a ridiculous charge. Even the
Republican author of “Welfare Reform” says Romney is wrong. Fact-checkers
have called this talking point “blatantly false, a drastic distortion and
widely debunked,” and “a mind-boggling act of untruth telling.”
In Illinois, we know President
Barack Obama. We know his record. And we know that President Obama has made
sure that work is always part of welfare. As an Illinois State Senator, Barack
Obama spearheaded welfare reform in the Land of Lincoln. And the fact is, under
President Obama, states can get flexibility only if they move 20 percent more
people to work.
Let me repeat that for our
Republican friends: more people working, not less. Then there’s Medicare. Mitt
Romney and Paul Ryan want to take away the promise that makes Medicare,
Medicare. They want to give seniors a voucher that caps what Medicare will
cover and then tell seniors they’re on their own for what’s left. That would
cost seniors thousands of dollars a year. And if they don’t have the money, it
could cost them their lives. But that didn’t stop Romney and Ryan from telling
the American people that their plan won’t hurt
seniors. The fact is, it will. President Obama’s plan will protect Medicare and
protect our seniors.
Facts are stubborn things. Now,
when Paul Ryan got his turn, he blamed President Obama for a plant that closed
under President George W. Bush. Here’s a fact: when President Obama took office
in January 2009, the Chrysler plant in Belvidere, Illinois employed just 200
people. Today, because President Obama saved the auto industry, that same
Chrysler plant is employing more than 4,000 American workers.
There’s something else the
Republicans left out of their convention: any explanation of why they call Mitt
Romney “Governor Romney.” We already knew this extremely conservative man takes
some pretty liberal deductions. Evidently that includes writing off all four
years he served as Governor of Massachusetts.
And if you want to know how
someone’s going to govern the country, look at how he governed his state.
Mitt Romney promised
Massachusetts three things: more jobs, less debt and smaller government. Then
he left his state 47th out of 50 in job growth, added $2.6 billion in debt and
on his watch, government jobs grew six times faster than private-sector jobs.
What does Romney promise today? More jobs, less debt and smaller government.
But he didn’t do it then, and he won’t do it now.
From day one, President Obama
has told you where he stands, what he believes and what he is doing to make our
middle class strong again. America is moving forward under President Obama’s
leadership—and that’s a fact. Now it’s our job in the next nine weeks to make
sure that the American people know the facts.
Your vote is a valuable thing.
Entrust it to someone who respects you enough to tell you the truth. Join me in
voting for President Obama and together let’s make the will of the people the
law of the land.
Thank you very much!
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