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http://www.buzzflash.com/contributors/04/07/con04305.html

 

July 21, 2004

 

Doing Right By America

 

by Senator Tom Daschle

 

In just over 100 days, the American people will make

an historic and fateful decision.

 

They will decide whether we stay the course we’re on,

or move our country in a new and better direction.

 

As I’ve traveled around South Dakota and the nation,

I’ve heard a lot about the hopes and dreams Americans

have for their families. I’ve listened to ranchers and

farmers, teachers and mothers, police officers and

firefighters.

 

I am always humbled by the honesty of their message.

Families in South Dakota and across our nation aren’t

asking for special deals or special advantage. All

they want is a fair opportunity on a level playing

field. They want to know that there’s only one set of

rules, and that the game isn’t rigged against them.

 

Most of all, they want to know that as we make

decisions affecting the future of our country, our

first priority is Doing Right by America.

 

If a policy isn’t going to make us stronger and safer,

if it’s not going to expand opportunity and put common

sense ahead of ideology, then it’s not doing right by

America.

 

Doing Right by America rejects the defeatist view that

we have enough money to rebuild Iraq, but not enough

resources to take care of America.

 

At its heart, Doing Right by America means fulfilling

our moral responsibility – together – to create a

better future for our children and grandchildren.

 

It’s a simple value that Americans have always lived

by, but it’s been pushed aside these last four years.

Boardroom priorities have crowded out kitchen-table

needs, and special interests – like Enron,

Halliburton, and the giant oil companies – have

undermined our common purpose. Years of progress in

spreading opportunity for regular Americans has been

turned on its head.

 

We’re all proud that America is a place of great

wealth and success. But the genius of America has

never been just the ability of the rich to get richer.

The true genius of America has always been the promise

that all Americans who work hard and play by the rules

will have the opportunity to succeed.

 

The promise of opportunity is what inspired my

grandparents, and tens of millions of other

immigrants, to start a new life here.

 

And nearly every day, I hear a new story that reminds

me that my most important responsibility is defending

the opportunity of regular Americans to build a better

life for themselves and their children.

 

Middle-class families deserve an opportunity to

compete for good jobs that reward work.

 

They deserve an opportunity to send their children to

good schools, and then on to good colleges and

universities, without busting the family budget.

 

They deserve an opportunity to purchase health

insurance at a reasonable price so they can see a

doctor – one they choose – when they’re sick or

injured, and so they can fill a prescription if their

doctor writes one.

 

They deserve the opportunity to be safe – safe in

their communities and safe in their homes.

 

And, after a lifetime of hard work and years of paying

into Social Security, they deserve the opportunity to

retire with dignity and security.

 

That’s not a lot to ask. But in some ways, it’s

everything. Widening the circle of opportunity and

prosperity – year after year, decade after decade – is

what makes America great. It’s our heritage, and it

must be our legacy.

 

But today, those with power often seem to have lost

sight of this fundamental value and the difference

between right and wrong.

 

We saw that a few months ago, when a major

telecommunications company gave one of its executives

a severance package worth more than $8 million. This

executive had worked there for only seven months, and

he was leaving because he hadn’t done his job well.

 

As the company handed the failed executive his $8

million check, it handed out something else to 12,000

of its rank-and-file workers: pink slips.

 

That’s not doing right.

 

Around that same time, a man I’ve known for years

called my office. His name is Brad Besler. He’s 47 and

a fourth-generation rancher in western South Dakota.

He and his wife, Fern, have five children – four have

graduated from college, and the youngest is still in

grade school.

 

Brad called my office because South Dakota is entering

its fifth straight year of drought and he’s worried.

Two years ago, the drought was so bad, and trying to

survive it was so stressful, that he suffered a stroke

that left him blind in one eye. A few months ago, he

had another stroke.

 

If the drought is anywhere near as bad this year, he

says he’ll have to sell his entire herd of cattle –

the only income his family has. If that happens, he’ll

have to drop his family’s health insurance, which runs

$896 a month.

 

He’s trying desperately to avoid that because – with a

blind eye, a bad back, and a history of strokes – he

knows that if he loses his coverage, it will be next

to impossible for him to ever get health insurance

again.

 

Listening to Brad Besler, two things strike you. The

first is his incredible courage and willingness to

work hard to support his family.

 

The second is that Brad’s government seems to have

forgotten about him.

 

We’re not doing right by Brad Besler. And in my view,

we’re not doing right by America when we hand over

millions to a lucky few who already have so much,

while ignoring the real needs of those who are working

so hard and so honestly.

 

But that’s exactly what’s happening in America today.

There’s an ever growing list of government policies

that reward wealth, not work. That’s not an accident;

it’s a conscious choice.

 

With Republicans in control of the entire federal

government, it often seems as if their leaders are

trying to narrow the circle of opportunity and

prosperity in America. And they’ve put the needs of

middle-class families on the back burner.

 

We see that even as the economy slowly improves.

Corporations reap most of the benefits, while regular

workers continue to struggle. In fact, during this

recovery, corporations have gotten twice their normal

share of the increase in national income, while

workers have received their lowest share in over 50

years.

 

As the chief economist at Merrill Lynch observed:

“We’ve had a redistribution of income to the corporate

sector.”

 

Or as Warren Buffett, one of the wealthiest men in

America, put it: “If there’s class warfare going on,

my class is winning.”

 

That isn’t good for most American families, and it

isn’t doing right by America.

 

We can do better, and we have done better. During the

Clinton Administration, America created 21 million new

private-sector jobs. Now, just four years later, the

Bush Administration is on track to have the worst

job-creation record since the Great Depression.

 

During the first two-and-a-half years of the Bush

Administration, we lost over three million

private-sector jobs. And although the economy has

finally started to recover some jobs in recent months,

the new jobs pay, on average, 13 percent less than the

jobs they’re replacing.

 

As a result, too many average families are losing

ground, even as they work harder and harder. And to

make matters worse, the Bush Administration continues

to demand that millions of employees lose their right

to overtime pay.

 

Since President Bush took office, real weekly earnings

for average Americans have not grown at all – but

their expenses have soared. Gas prices have gone up

23%; college tuition has gone up 28%; and health care

premiums have gone up 36%.

 

And while the middle class is getting squeezed, huge

corporations are growing rich. While consumers are

struggling with record gas prices, Chevron-Texaco is

reporting record profits. While family incomes have

stagnated, overall corporate profits have risen by

more than 50%.

 

A generation ago, the average American CEO made about

50 times more than the average worker. Now, thanks to

bad policies and even worse values, the average CEO

makes 300 times more than the average worker.

 

That’s just not right. And unless we change course,

it’s going to get worse.

 

Instead of fighting to keep good jobs here, Republican

leaders in Washington are using tax breaks to reward

companies for shipping jobs overseas. Businesses are

walking jobs out of the country, and the government is

holding the door for them.

 

A few months ago, President Bush’s top economic

advisor told us that sending jobs overseas “is

probably a plus for the economy, in the long run. The

President believes this.”

 

The President also seems to believe it’s okay to send

millions of dollars in unemployment pay to former

Iraqi soldiers, while denying help to American workers

whose jobs have been shipped overseas.

 

That’s doing wrong by America.

 

As the election nears, the President’s economic team

has been grasping for ways to make a bad economy sound

good. To deal with the loss of more than 2 million

manufacturing jobs, they floated the idea of

redefining “manufacturing jobs” to include fast-food

workers preparing Big Macs and Whoppers. Manufacturing

once meant building cars or fabricating steel for good

wages – now the Bush Administration says it might mean

putting a burger on a bun for minimum wage.

 

That’s not being straight with America.

 

And we’re not doing right by America by running up

trillions in new debt and pretending it’s not a

problem.

 

During the Clinton Administration, we turned huge

deficits into record surpluses. Now, just four years

later, $5 trillion of expected surpluses have turned

into $3 trillion of new debt.

 

As a result, we are giving our children something they

don’t want and don’t deserve: a $25,000 birth tax.

That’s the share of our national debt owed by every

child in America. My two grandchildren both inherited

that debt the moment they were born.

 

It wasn’t long ago that Republicans came to Washington

promising fiscal discipline. Instead of keeping that

promise, they’ve taken us on a four-year fiscal binge

that has squandered record budget surpluses and

created record budget deficits.

 

In 2000, Republican leaders, including President Bush,

promised that “[t]he Social Security surplus is

off-limits, off budget, and will not be touched.”

 

Four years later, they’ve already raided $500 billion

from Social Security to pay for tax cuts, and they’re

planning to take another $2.4 trillion – $2.4 trillion

– over the next 10 years.

 

That’s your money. It comes out of your paycheck. It’s

supposed to be there when you retire. It’s not

supposed to be used to pay for tax breaks for

millionaire CEOs or to reward companies for shipping

American jobs overseas.

 

Looting Social Security is not doing right by American

workers and retirees, and we can’t let it happen.

 

The Bush Administration is draining trillions from

Social Security, borrowing hundreds of billions from

China and Japan to pay our debts, sending billions of

dollars to Iraq for roads and schools, and then

planning on cutting billions here at home for

education, environmental protection, medical research,

Head Start, and nutrition programs for pregnant women

and children. The Administration even wants to cut $1

billion from homeland security at the very time it’s

warning of likely new terrorist attacks.

 

That’s not doing right by America, and it doesn’t make

any sense.

 

But this Administration is making a habit of decisions

that don’t make much sense.

 

A couple of months ago, the Secretary of Health and

Human Services defended the Administration’s plan to

provide health care to all Iraqis, but not to all

Americans. He said, “Even if you don’t have health

insurance in America, you get taken care of. That

could be defined as universal coverage.”

 

Try telling that to the nearly 44 million Americans

who are uninsured – 4 million more than when George

Bush took office – and the millions more who are

under-insured.

 

Try telling that to the millions of families who, year

after year, are watching out-of-control health

insurance premiums bust the family budget.

 

Or try telling that to the Lakota woman in South

Dakota whose sister died a few months ago from a

stomach cancer that went undetected because the Indian

Health Service didn’t have money to refer her to a

specialist.

 

In America today, seniors can’t afford the medicine

they need and have discovered that last year’s

Medicare law is a sham that provides billions to

insurance and drug companies. Many veterans can’t use

the VA health system anymore because of arbitrary,

budget-driven barriers to care. And 32,000 National

Guard members and reservists who are serving in Iraq

will lose their health coverage when they come home

because the Bush Administration refuses to extend

their coverage.

 

These aren’t unintended consequences – they are clear

choices.

 

When record debt makes it difficult to repair our

crumbling roads and bridges, fund our children’s

schools, support our police and firefighters, and

honor our commitment to America’s veterans, that’s the

result of bad choices.

 

When American soldiers are sent into combat without

armor in their protective vests, when they’re losing

limbs and sacrificing their lives because there aren’t

enough armored cars, when health services are being

cut for veterans, and when the Bush Administration

says that there isn’t enough money to let reservists

and Guard members buy into the military health system,

that’s the result of bad choices.

 

These choices don’t do right by America, and we need

to change them.

 

There’s something else we need to change. In the last

four years, we’ve seen more and more secrecy and less

and less accountability in the Bush Administration.

 

During the past few years, a small group of courageous

individuals has stepped forward and said things this

Administration didn’t want to hear and didn’t want

anyone else to know. In every case, their patriotism,

honesty, or competence was attacked.

 

Senator John McCain found that out. So did the

President’s former treasury secretary Paul O’Neill.

And so did Medicare actuary Richard Foster, former

Army Chief of Staff General Eric Shinseki, and former

White House counter-terrorism advisor Richard Clarke.

 

When Ambassador Joe Wilson told the truth about the

Administration’s misleading claims about Iraq’s

nuclear weapon capability, some government officials

retaliated by disclosing that his wife was a

deep-cover CIA agent. For nothing more than political

gain, they were willing to endanger the life of one of

the people who protect our national security.

 

That’s not doing right by America. Those aren’t our

morals and they aren’t our values.

 

In the America I know, moms and dads sit at the

kitchen table every month and balance the family

checkbook. When the car breaks down or there are

unexpected doctor visits, there’s a pinch. They don’t

expect the government to bail them out when that

happens, but they want a fair shake. They want their

government to focus on jobs and health care and

education, and they don’t want their government to

take their Social Security money to pay for tax breaks

for millionaires and big corporations.

 

They want their government to do right by them, and

they have a right to expect that.

 

But when they see oil industry interests coming before

their interests . . . and HMO profits coming before

the health of seniors ? and special deals for

Halliburton coming before the safety of their sons and

daughters in Iraq . . . they know their government

isn’t doing right by America.

 

I’m as frustrated as they are about these choices, but

I’m not discouraged about our ability to fix things –

we can and we will. We can get America back on track

by doing right by America.

 

Doing Right by America means putting our common

interests ahead of the special interests. It means

paying as much attention to Middle America as we are

paying to the Middle East. And it means bringing

common sense back to government.

 

We should be thinking not just about the people who

own Wal-Mart, but about the millions of Americans who

work and shop there.

 

We should be changing tax polices so corporations have

an incentive to keep jobs here at home, not ship them

overseas, and we should aggressively enforce our trade

laws to protect workers from unfair competition.

 

We should be improving roads and bridges and creating

millions of jobs along the way, and investing in

education, training, and technological innovation so

workers who’ve lost jobs can find new ones, and

workers who have jobs can get better ones.

 

And if we are truly going to do right by American

workers, it is long past time that we increase the

minimum wage, and it is absolutely essential that we

stop the Bush Administration from following through

with its plan to strip millions of workers of their

right to overtime pay.

 

Doing Right by America means honestly confronting the

health care crisis in our country, not pretending that

it doesn’t exist. As a first step, we should provide

every American with the opportunity to choose from the

same health care options, at the same price, as

members of Congress have.

 

If it’s good enough for those of us in government, it

ought to be an option for every American who needs

health insurance.

 

Doing Right by America means an honest prescription

drug policy that doesn’t funnel billions of dollars in

windfalls to drug companies and HMOs, but instead

offers seniors the medications they need at a fair

price – without the mind-boggling complexity of the

Bush Administration’s drug plan.

 

It means properly funding our children’s schools and

giving every American family a guarantee – if your

sons and daughters work hard in school and get good

grades, they will have a first-rate and affordable

college education waiting for them the day they

graduate from high school.

 

And it means putting our nation on the road to energy

independence. The next generation should be able to

look forward to a future that’s not put at risk by

unrestrained pollution and a dangerous dependence on

foreign oil.

 

Finally, Doing Right by America means being honest

about performance, both at home and abroad. It’s not

pessimistic to acknowledge the problems workers have

endured over the past four years; it’s pessimistic to

think that we can’t do better.

 

And it doesn’t endanger our troops to ask questions

that might save their lives. If we’re going to do

right by them, we have to stand up for them, even if

that means asking tough questions about the

Administration and its policies. And when our troops

return home, we have to make sure they receive the

medical attention they earned. We owe them more than

empty promises.

 

We will have a clear choice in November.

 

We can continue on the course we’re on, where special

interests come before common interests, where

boardroom issues come before kitchen-table issues, and

where opportunity is reserved for a small,

members-only club. Or we can choose a new and better

direction.

 

Doing Right By America means that our values guide our

policies. Our strength comes from opportunity and

responsibility – and a commitment to making sure that

our middle-class has a fair chance. It means fixing

health care, creating good jobs again, and making

education affordable.

 

Mr. President, we can do this, and we should do it

together. Doing Right by America shouldn’t be an idea

we just talk about, it should be the value that guides

all our decisions in Congress.

 

 

Tom Daschle is the Senate Democratic Leader.

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