ARLINGTON, Va., July 8 /Standard Newswire/ --
U.S. Senator John McCain will deliver the
following remarks as prepared for delivery to
the 79th Annual League of United Latin American
Citizens (LULAC) Convention in Washington, D.C.,
today at 12:00 p.m. EDT:
Thank
you. I'm very pleased to be here to discuss with
you some of the issues in this campaign that
most concern Americans, particularly the issue
that worries us the most -- the American
economy.
All of
us know what is happening to the economy. It is
slowing. Over 400,000 people have lost their
jobs since December, and the rate of new job
creation has fallen sharply. Some economists
have noted that companies seem to be on a
"hiring strike." Americans are worried about the
security of their current job, and they're
worried that they, their kids and their
neighbors may not find good jobs and new
opportunities in the future. To make matters
worse, gas is over $4 a gallon and the price of
oil has nearly doubled in the last year. The
cost of everything from energy to food is
rising.
I have a
plan to grow the economy, create more and better
jobs, and get America moving again. I have a
plan to reform government, achieve energy
security, and ensure that healthcare and a
quality education are affordable and available
for all. I believe the role of government is to
unleash the creativity, ingenuity and hard work
of the American people, and make it easier to
create jobs.
At its
core, the economy isn't the sum of an array of
bewildering statistics. It's about where
Americans work, how they live, how the pay their
bills today and save for tomorrow. It's about
small businesses opening their doors, hiring
employees and growing. It's about giving workers
the education and training to find a good job
and prosper in it. It's about the aspirations of
the American people to build a better life for
their families; dreams that begin with a job.
So how
are we going to create good jobs? Let's start
with small businesses, which create the majority
of all jobs. A recent report says small
businesses have created 233,000 jobs so far this
year while other sectors are losing jobs. Small
businesses are the job engine of America, and I
will make it easier for them to grow and create
more jobs. There are two million Latino owned
businesses in America, a number that is growing
very rapidly. The first consideration we should
have when debating tax policy is how we can help
those companies grow and increase the prosperity
of the millions of American families whose
economic security depends on their success.
It is a
terrible mistake to raise taxes during an
economic downturn. Increasing the tax burden on
Americans impedes job growth, discourages
innovation and makes us less competitive. Small
businesses are the biggest job creators in our
economy. Keeping individual rates low isn't
intended as a favor to wealthy Americans. 23
million small business owners pay those rates,
and taking more money from them deprives them of
the capital they need to invest and grow and
hire. If you believe you should pay more taxes,
I am the wrong candidate for you. Jobs are the
most important thing our economy creates. When
you raise taxes in a bad economy you eliminate
jobs. I'm not going to let that happen. I will
keep current rates low and cut them where I can.
For those of you with children, I will double
the child deduction from $3500 to $7000 for
every dependent, in every family in America. I
will reduce the estate tax to fifteen percent,
so parents who have spent long years working
hard to build a business, and provide a decent
living to their employees, can leave the product
of a lifetime of labor and love to their
children.
My
health care plan is careful not to impose
greater burdens on small business. A "pay or
play" health mandate on small business would add
a crushing $12,000 to the cost of employing
anyone with a family. That would not only
prevent them from creating new jobs, but will
force them to cut jobs, and reduce the wages of
current employees to pay for it. I intend to
make health care more available to more
Americans by making it more affordable and
portable. The answer is to get health care costs
under control by creating real competition among
insurance companies, reforming the way medical
treatment is billed, and helping American
families make their own health care decisions
with a $5000 tax credit.
Our
current business tax rate, the second highest in
the world, will postpone our recovery from this
downturn and make us increasingly less
competitive in the world economy. When a
corporation plans to expand and hire more
workers, they face a choice between building a
new plant here at home or building it in a
country where they will pay a third or a half
the tax rate they pay in America. Employers can
hire more people, or they can pay more taxes.
They can rarely do both. We can no longer afford
the luxury of nostalgia for past times when
American business faced little serious
competition in the world. I propose to reduce
the business tax rate from 35 percent to 25
percent.
The
global economy is here to stay. We cannot build
walls to foreign competition, and we shouldn't
want to. When have Americans ever been afraid of
competition? America is the biggest exporter,
importer, producer, manufacturer, and innovator
in the world. That's why I reject the false
virtues of economic isolationism. Any confident,
competent country and its government should
embrace competition - it makes us stronger - not
hide from our competitors and cheat our
consumers and workers. We can compete and win,
as we always have, or we can be left behind.
Lowering barriers to trade creates more and
better jobs, and higher wages. It keeps
inflation under control. It makes goods more
affordable for low and middle income consumers.
Ninety-five percent of the world's consumers
live outside the U.S. Our future prosperity
depends on opening more of these markets, not
closing them.
For
Americans who have lost their job to foreign
competition, I have proposed a comprehensive
reform of our unemployment insurance and worker
retraining programs. We will use our community
colleges to help train workers for specific
opportunities in their communities. And for
workers of a certain age who have lost a job
that won't come back, we'll help make up the
difference in wages between their old job and a
temporary, lower paid one until they've
completed retraining and found secure new
employment at a decent wage.
In the
global economy what you learn is what you earn.
Today, studies show that half of Hispanics and
half of African Americans entering high school
do not graduate with their class. By the 12th
grade, U.S. students in math and science score
near the bottom of all industrialized nations.
Many parents fear their children won't have the
same opportunities they had. That is
unacceptable in a country as great as ours. In
many schools, particularly where people are
struggling the hardest, the situation is dire,
and I believe poses the civil rights challenge
of our time. We need to shake up failed school
bureaucracies with competition; hold schools
accountable for results; strengthen math,
science, technology and engineering curriculums;
empower parents with choice; remove barriers to
qualified instructors, attract and reward
superior teachers, and have a fair but sure
process to weed out incompetents.
Few
problems hurt Americans more than our dangerous
dependence on foreign oil, and the rapid and
dramatic increase in the price of gasoline it
has caused. Obviously, the crisis hurts lower
income Americans, who often drive the furthest
to work and own the oldest cars. But because the
cost of almost everything is affected directly
by the cost of oil, the quality of life for many
millions of Americans and the growth and hiring
plans of millions of small businesses are
suffering. Our dependence on foreign oil has
been thirty years in the making, and was caused
by the failure of politicians in Washington to
think long term about the future of the country.
If we don't act now to achieve energy security,
we are putting our national security, our
economy and our environment at grave risk. By
2030, America's demand for energy will rise by
nearly twenty percent. Our jobs and our very way
of life depend on the next President beginnin g
to solve this challenge.
Two
weeks ago, I announced the Lexington Project to
secure our energy future, named for the place
where Americans first fought for their
independence. We will begin by producing more of
our own oil and gas. Increasing our own supply
will send a message to the market and result in
lower prices for oil and gas.
We will
develop more clean energy. Nuclear power is the
most dependable source of zero-emission energy
we have. We will build at least 45 new nuclear
plants that will create over 700,000 good jobs
to construct and operate them.
The
development of clean coal technology will create
jobs in some of America's most economically
disadvantaged areas. Our coal reserves are
larger than Saudi Arabia's supply of oil. Clean
coal demonstration projects alone will employ
over 30,000 Americans.
My
proposal to help automakers design and sell new
generations of cars that don't depend on
gasoline will re-invigorate that struggling
industry. My plan to develop wind and solar
power and renewable technologies will drive
innovation and create high tech jobs. The
Lexington Project will create millions of jobs,
help protect our environment, improve our
security, and solve the nation's energy
problems. It is an ambitious plan, but I am
confident our American workers, industry and
entrepreneurs are up to this next great
challenge in our history. The genius, hard work
and courage of Americans have never failed us,
and will not fail us now.
Let me
close by talking briefly about my respect and
gratitude for the contributions of
Hispanic-Americans to the culture, economy and
security of the country I have served all my
adult life. I represent Arizona where Spanish
was spoken before English was, and where the
character and prosperity of our state owes a
great deal to the many Arizonans of Hispanic
descent who live there. And I know this country,
which I love more than almost anything, would be
the poorer were we deprived of the patriotism,
industry and decency of those millions of
Americans whose families came here from other
countries in our hemisphere. I will honor their
contributions to America for as long as I live.
I and
many other colleagues twice attempted to pass
comprehensive immigration legislation to fix our
broken borders; ensure respect for the laws of
this country; recognize the important economic
necessity of immigrant laborers; apprehend those
who came here illegally to commit crimes; and
deal practically and humanely with those who
came here, as my distant ancestors did, to build
a better, safer life for their families, without
excusing the fact they came here illegally or
granting them privileges before those who have
been waiting their turn outside the country.
Many Americans, with good cause, did not believe
us when we said we would secure our borders, and
so we failed in our efforts. We must prove to
them that we can and will secure our borders
first, while respecting the dignity and rights
of citizens and legal residents of the United
States. But we must not make the mistake of
thinking that our responsibility to meet this
challenge will end with that accomplishment. We
have economic and humanitarian responsibilities
as well, and they require no less dedication
from us in meeting them.
When I
was in prison in Vietnam, I like other of my
fellow POWs, was offered early release by my
captors. Most of us refused because we were
bound to our code of conduct, which said those
who had been captured the earliest had to be
released the soonest. My friend, Everett
Alvarez, a brave American of Mexican descent,
had been shot down years before I was, and had
suffered for his country much more and much
longer than I had. To leave him behind would
have shamed us. When you take the solemn stroll
along that wall of black granite on the national
Mall, it is hard not to notice the many names
such as Rodriguez, Hernandez, and Lopez that so
sadly adorn it. When you visit Iraq and
Afghanistan you will meet some of the thousands
of Hispanic-Americans who serve there, and many
of those who risk their lives to protect the
rest of us do not yet possess the rights and
privileges of full citizenship in the country
they love so well. To love your country, as I
discovered in Vietnam, is to love your
countrymen. Those men and women are my brothers
and sisters, my fellow Americans, an association
that means more to me than any other. As a
private citizen or as your President, I will
never, never do anything to dishonor our
obligations to them and their families or to
forget what they and their ancestors have done
to make this country the beautiful, bountiful,
blessed place we love.
Thank
you.
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