Skip to main content

tv   Politics Public Policy Today  CSPAN  March 30, 2012 10:30pm-6:00am EDT

10:30 pm
not to general axelrod. [applause] we need a president who will stand up and for our ally israel and against iran. [applause] a president who will dramatically cut spending, who will capet and balance our budget and fight to say to congress -- we finally need a balanced budget amendment to the united states constitution. go get it done. [applause] who will use his common sense to say, yes, america has natural resources -- oil, gas, and other types of resources. we should use them. a president who will approve the keystone pipeline. he will get rid of excessive regulations that make it harder for our businesses to put people
10:31 pm
to work, starting with obamacare. that is why this election matters. that is why you matter so much as ground zero for this presidential election. i am a strong supporter of mitt romney. i campaigned hard for him. [applause] i campaign very hard for him in new hampshire. we are a first in the nation primary. i sat down with our candidates. we met them all face-to-face. we had coffee and vetted them. this is very important to us. i decided to support mitt romney because i know he can turn this country around. i want to thank you as a strong supporter of mitt romney for delivering ohio for mitt romney. i know how important your votes
10:32 pm
were. i know how seriously took the primary. i know how important ohio is to governor mitt romney. we have some great candidates running for president. all of them would be better than president barack obama. [applause] i believe that mitt romney will be our nominee. it is time. it is time for us to come together and unite behind him. he in my view is hands down our strongest candidate to take on barack obama and win. if there was ever a time in the history of our nation that we needed somebody who was actually from outside of washington, somebody that has private sector business -- experience that knows how our private economy
10:33 pm
works. if there was ever a time we needed somebody with experience in the private sector and as a governor, it is now. it is no mistake that you hear no -- that you hear all the time that obama, joe biden, they are all going after mitt romney. they are afraid to run against him. we need to make sure that we nominate a candidate, go forward, and be barack obama. that is what i want to say to you tonight. i think it is so important from where we are. when we come back, we all have to be together. it comes back to ohio. i want to paint a picture for you, something i am so worried about and i think about a lot. that is november 7. that is the day after the
10:34 pm
presidential election. can you imagine what it will be like if we wake up on november 7 and we have not won the presidential election? even if we have been successful in the house and the senate, if we have not won the presidential election, what will it feel like that morning? what will the sinking feeling be in your stomach? what will you be thinking about in terms of the future of our country and where we are and what damage this president can do in four more years to our country? i have thought about that a lot. i do not want to have that feeling in my stomach on wednesday, november 7. i know that you do not either. we have to give it everything that we have for our nominee at the end of the day after our convention. it is critical.
10:35 pm
i ran for the united states senate. the speaker has said -- i had actually never run before. in new hampshire the attorney general is not an elected position. i was appointed originally by the governor. my first run was the united states senate. i have to tell you, i never thought i was going to run for political office. this is not something in my family because i have a 4-year- old and a 7-year-old. we have a lot going on in our family. small business, my husband served in the military. i saw what was happening in our country, and that is what compelled me to run for the united states senate. just like you -- my husband and i spent so much time in 2009 yelling and our television with what this president was doing. i just cannot stand it anymore. [applause]
10:36 pm
you may be thinking, what am i doing here listening to a senator from new hampshire. i cherish my time with my children. i came here tonight because i am is still so worried about our country. we need your help to turn this country around for my children, for your children, for all of us. that is why i am here tonight. i want to have you imagine a different scenario. that is when we wake up on november 7, speaker banner, leader mitch mcconnell, josh mandel won, and we haqve mitt romney as president. how happy would we feel? we would feel great. would it matter?
10:37 pm
let me give you what i think is one of the top examples of why it matters. we cannot hang all of our hopes for obamacare on the united states supreme court. i will leighton and up here a little bit. it has been quite a week on the presidential campaign. when i was doing my research on ohio, i also learned that ohio -- the ohio art company came from here and happens to be the company that thought of the etch a sktech. we have heard a lot about that on the campaign trail this year. i want you to think about why it matters. if we wake up on november 7, we have mitt romney as president, speaker dinner in the house, and we have senate leader mitch mcconnell. here is why it matters.
10:38 pm
you cannot be able to see this. it says obamacare. that is what this etch a sketch says -- obamacare. here is what will happen when we have mitt romney as the president, speaker bain are in the house, and mitch mcconnell leading the senate. [applause] it is all done. no more obamacare. if we lose. if we lose this presidential election, obamacare will be etched in stone. we cannot allow that to happen for our country. that is why this is just one example. we know all the other examples
10:39 pm
of how much this matters. think about that. we have to win this election. we all have to come together. we have to do everything we can to make sure that we do. this is a huge time for america. that weomise ourselves will do everything to win the swing states of ohio and new hampshire. we have less electoral votes at stake in new hampshire, yet we are one of the swing states. i will do everything i can to make sure that i deliver new hampshire for republicans. i know that you will do everything that you can to deliver ohio for the republican presidential win in 2012. let's work as hard as we can for the future of our country. nothing less is at stake. our children, my children, your children, our grandchildren all depend on it. the greatest country on earth
10:40 pm
depends on that. i t why so much for having me tonight. a thank you for all you are doing. i know that you are going to deliver ohio for republicans. i know that we are going to turn this country around. we can do it. we are in america. there has never been a challenge that we have faced that we have not overcome and the better for at the end of the day. god bless you and may god bless the united states of america. [cheers and applause] [captions copyright national cable satellite corp. 2012] [captioning performed by national captioning institute] >> next, president obama at a fund-raiser in vermont. then a pentagon briefing concerning the dover mortuary.
10:41 pm
president clinton and former secretary albright. tomorrow on washington journal, alison black discusses the 90 day extension of the transportation program and the impact it has on states and their employees. maneesha mithal talks about the agency's report on online consumer privacy. mark matthews discusses the future of the international space station. >> life sunday, our founding fathers, civility and conservative politics. your questions for richard brookhiser. he will take your phone calls, e-mails, and tweets sunday on "booktv."
10:42 pm
>> now, president obama at a fund-raiser in vermont. he talks about some of his accomplishments during his first term and his plans for a second term. he made four campaign spots, two in vermont and two in maine. this is about 35 minutes. [cheers and applause] >> hello, vermont. [cheers and applause] thank you.
10:43 pm
thank you. thank you. this is a good crowd here in vermont. it is good to be at uvn. it is good to be in vermont. [cheers and applause] now, out of all 50 states, vermont has gone the longest without a presidential visit. [cheers and applause] the last time a president stopped by was president clinton in 1995. we decided that today we will reset the clock. [cheers and applause]
10:44 pm
when disaster struck, he was here. we cannot be prouder of him. [applause] we got two outstanding senators , patrick leahy and bernie sanders. you have an outstanding mayor elect. [applause]
10:45 pm
i also want to thank the entire committee for helping organize this unbelievable event. one more thing i want to do. i want to express my condolences to everybody who knew and loved millis said jenkins. some are going on to that funeral-funeral- melissa jenkins. she devoted her life to her community to shape young minds. i know vermont is heartbroken. michele and i want to express our thoughts and prayers to everyone that knew her. i know that is a tough situation. [applause]
10:46 pm
now, i am here -- [cheers and applause] maybe i should quit while i am ahead. [cheers and applause] i will take off my jacket. it is warm. i am not just here because i need your help. i am here because the country needs your help. there are a lot of reasons that so many of you work your hearts out for our campaign in 2008. it was not because it was going
10:47 pm
to be easy. it was not because it was a sure thing. when you decide to get behind a candidate named barack hussain obama, that is not a guarantee of success. he did not need a poll to tell you that. the point is, you did not join the campaign because of me. he joined it because we had a shared vision for america. it was not a vision where everybody is left to fend for themselves. it was not a vision where the rules are made just for the powerful. it was a vision of an america where everybody who works hard has a chance to get a head. everybody. [cheers and applause]
10:48 pm
that is the vision that we share. that is the change that we believe in. we knew it would not come easily or quickly. we had confidence, we had faith in each other. we believe that when americans make commitments to each other about a bold, generous vision for the country, we can achieve it. there is no challenge we cannot overcome. here is what i want to report. in three years because of what so many of you did in 2008, we have begun to see what change looks like. we have begun to see what change looks like. [applause] change is the first bill i signed into law. a sign that says women deserve an equal day's pay for an equal
10:49 pm
day's work. i want our daughters to be treated just like our sons. [cheers and applause] change is a visit we made to rescue an auto industry that was on the verge of collapse, even when somebody said lead detroit to go bankrupt. 1 million jobs were at stake. we were not going to let that happen. today gm is back on top of the no. 1 auto maker, reported the highest profits and 100 years. the american auto industry is back and it is making cars that are more fuel-efficient and that is helping the environment, even as we are putting people to work. [cheers and applause] change is a decision we made it to stop waiting for congress to do something about our oil addiction.
10:50 pm
we raise our fuel efficiency standard and by the middle of next year come out -- the next decade, we will be driving american cars with 55 miles a gallon. [applause] this will save the family more than a thousand dollars at the pump. that is what change is. change is a fight we want to stop handing $60 billion in taxpayer giveaways to the banks who are processing student loans. we decided to give the student loans to students. [applause] this means we can make college more affordable for young people who need it. [applause] that is what change is. that happened because of you. [applause] yes, change is the health care reform that we passed after over a century of trying. [applause]
10:51 pm
reform that will finally insure that in the united states of america, no one will go broke because they get sick. already, already, 2.5 million young people now have health insurance who did not have it before because this law let them stay on their parents' plan. [applause] already, millions of seniors are paying less for their prescription drugs because of this law. already, americans cannot be denied or dropped by their insurance companies when they need care the most. [applause] already, they're getting preventive care they did not have before. that is happening right now. [applause] change is the fact that for the first time in history, you do
10:52 pm
not have to hide who you love in order to serve the country you love because we ended do not ask, do not tell. [cheers and applause] change is the fact that for the first time in nine years, there are no americans fighting in iraq. [cheers and applause] we refocus our efforts on terrorists to actually attack us on 9/11 and thanks to the great men and women in uniform, al qaeda is weaker and osama bin laden is no more. we have a transition in afghanistan to put them in the week and start bringing our troops home from afghanistan. that is what changes. [cheers and applause] -- that is what change is. [cheers and applause]
10:53 pm
none of this has been easy. we have had a little bit of resistance from the other side. [laughter] we have got more work to do. there are still to many americans who are looking for work. there are still too many families who can barely afford to pay the bills or make the mortgage. we are still recovering from the worst economic storm in generations. i love you, back. [laughter] [cheers and applause] but, over the past two years, over the past two years, businesses have added 4 million new jobs. [cheers and applause]. our manufacturers claim -- our manufacturers are creating jobs for the first time since the nineties.
10:54 pm
our economy is getting stronger. the recovery is accelerating. all of this means the last thing we can afford to do is to go back to the same policies that got us into this miss in the first place. [cheers and applause] that is what the other side wants to do. they make no secret about it. they want to go back to the days where wall street plays by its own rules. they want to go back to the day when insurance companies can do whatever they want. they want to go back to the day when -- continue to spend trillions of dollars on tax breaks for the wealthiest individuals in america, even if it means adding to the deficit or cutting education or gutting investment between energy -- for clean energy. their philosophy is simple. you are on your own. you are on your own. if you are out of work, tough
10:55 pm
luck. you are on your own. if you do not have health care, that is your problem. you are on your own. if you are born into poverty, lift yourself up with your own bootstraps, even if you do not have boots. you are on your own. they believe that that is how america -- they believe that is how america has advanced. that is the conception they have of liberty. they are wrong. [cheers and applause] they're wrong. in the united states of america, we are greater together than we are on our own. [cheers and applause] this country advances when we keep that basic american promise. if you work hard, you can do well enough to raise a family. on a home. send your kids to college. put away for retirement.
10:56 pm
it does not matter who you are, where you come from, what you look like. that is what has created this extraordinary country of ours. [cheers and applause] that is what we are fighting for. that is the choice in this election. this is not just your usual run- of-the-mill political debate. this is the defining issue of our time. a make or break a moment for the middle class. that is what we have to fight for. [cheers and applause] we can go back to an economy that was built on outsourcing and bad debt and phony financial problems -- profits, or we can build an economy that is built to last. an economy that is built on american manufacturing. american innovation.
10:57 pm
american energy. american workers who are skilled. at the values that make this country great -- hard work and shared responsibility. that is the vision i believe in. [cheers and applause] that is what i am fighting for. we have got to make sure that the next generation of manufacturers take root in factories in detroit and pittsburgh and cleveland. i do not want this nation to be known for buying and consuming things. i want is to build and sell things all around the world. [cheers and applause] i want us to stop rewarding businesses that ship jobs overseas, record companies that are investing right here in the u.s. [cheers and applause]
10:58 pm
i want to make our schools the envy of the world. [cheers and applause] that starts with the man or woman at the front of the classroom. [cheers and applause]. a good teacher can increase the lifetime earning of a classroom by over $250,000. and a great teacher can help a child trapped in poverty dream and then live beyond their circumstances. i do not want people in washington to be bashing teachers. i do not want them to defend the status quo. i want us to give schools the resources they need to hire good teachers. [cheers and applause] reward great teachers. i want us to grant schools flexibility to teach with creativity and passion and stop teaching for the test.
10:59 pm
i want to replace teachers who are not helping kids learn. that is what i want to see happen. [cheers and applause] when kids do graduate, the most daunting challenge can be the cost of college. when americans owe more tuition debt than they do credit card debt, you know we have a problem. the first thing we have to do is congress has to stop interest rates that are currently scheduled -- this is a huge problem for a lot of people. i a party as congress to do it. they have not done its. they have not done it so far. colleges and universities have to do their part to keep tuition from going up. [cheers and applause] higher education cannot be a luxury. it is an imperative that every family in america should be able to afford.
11:00 pm
[cheers and applause] an economy built to last is one that supports scientists and researchers and science. and whether we're talking about stem cell or climate change, we do not need science deniers. we need people to understand that america is always succeeding because of our belief in science. [cheers and applause] our investment in research. we have to make sure the next great breakthrough in clean energy happens here in the united states of america. [cheers and applause] we have been subsidizing oil
11:01 pm
companies for 100 years now. through taxpayer giveaways. i think -- i just talked about this yesterday. it is time to stop taxpayer giveaways to an oil industry that has been rarely more profitable. let us double down on clean energy that has never been more promising. [cheers and applause] that is what we need to be investing in. we have got to rebuild america. our businesses and our people -- want them to have access to the best things. the faster high speed internet access. it is time for us to take the money we were spending at war, use half of it to pay down the debt and use the rest of it to start doing some nation-
11:02 pm
building right here at home. [cheers and applause] and we have to make sure that we have a tax system that is actually fair. [cheers and applause] part of that is something i call the buffett rule. very similar. re-. -- very simple. if you're making more than a million dollars a year, you should not pay a lower rate than your secretary. [cheers and applause] that is a simple proposition. now, if you make less than $250,000 a year, like 98 percent of all families, your
11:03 pm
taxes should not go up because right now, folks are struggling to dig themselves out of this incredible recession. if you are making more than $1 million per year, you can do it. this is not class warfare. this is basic math. [cheers and applause] that is what this is. look, if somebody like me gets a tax break that they do not need, and that the country cannot afford, then one of two things will happen. one, it adds to the deficit. or, we are taking something away from somebody else. the student has to pay a higher interest rate on their student loans because we have to make up the money somewhere. or that senior has to start paying more for medicare.
11:04 pm
the money has to be made up somewhere. or that veteran does not get the ptsd they need after serving the country. or a family that is struggling to get by is getting less home assistance. there is no way of getting around that. i there folks like me are doing more -- either folks like me are doing more or somebody who cannot afford it is getting less. that is not right. that is not who we are. [cheers and applause] that is not what america is about. [cheers and applause] i hear politicians talking about values in an election year. i hear a lot about that. let me tell you about values. hard work.
11:05 pm
personal responsibility. those are values. looking out for one another, that is of value. [cheers and applause] the idea we are all in this together. i my brother's keeper. i and my sister's keeper. that is a value. -- i am my sister's keeper. that is a value. the idea that we think about the next generation and we are taking care of our planet. that is a value. [cheers and applause] each of us is only here because somebody somewhere felt a responsibility to their families and to their fellow citizens. to our countries future. -- our country's future. the american story is not just about what we do our own. we are individualist and we expect personal responsibility and everyone has to work hard. but, we also have always
11:06 pm
understood that we would not win the race for new jobs and businesses and middle-class security if we were just applying some you are on your own economics. it has been tried it has not worked. it did not work when we tried it in a decade before the great depression. it did not work when we tried it in the last decade. we just tried this. what they are peddling has been tried. it did not work. [cheers and applause] we know this from our own lives. if we attract some outstanding in person to become a teacher -- young person to be a teacher by giving them what they deserve and that teacher educates the next steve jobs, we
11:07 pm
all benefit. we all do better. america rises. if we are providing faster internet to rural america so that some small business owner, someone can sell his or her goods around the world. that is good for all of us. if we build a new bridge that saves the shipping company time and money, everybody benefits. we do better. that is america became an economic superpower. this is not traditionally -- this has not been a democratic or republican idea. it was a republican, teddy roosevelt, who called for progressive income tax. it was light as an hour who build the interstate highway system. -- like eisenhower who builds the interstate system. it was president lincoln, who
11:08 pm
could not win the nomination for the primary right now -- [laughter] [cheers and applause] you know, in the middle of the civil war, he helped make the transcontinental railroad possible and the national academy of sciences. he understood that we are in this together. we have to make and has been in our futures. it was with the help that fdr gave heroes, including my grandfather, the chance to go to college through the gi bill. [cheers and applause] that same spirit of common purpose still exists today. out here in vermont, and all
11:09 pm
across america, it is there. [cheers and applause] is there when you talk to folks on main street and when you talk to members of our armed forces. is there when you talk to people in their places of worship. our politics may be divided, but most americans will understand that no matter where you come from and who you are, we rise and fall together as one nation. [cheers and applause] as one people. that is what is at stake right now. [cheers and applause] that is what this election is about. so, i know we have gone through some tough years. i know that for all the things we have done, we have still got some much undone. sometimes the change we thought
11:10 pm
for does not come as fast as we want it. when you see what has been going on in washington, i know it is tempting to get discouraged. to kind of think maybe change is not possible. maybe it was an illusion. i want you people to recall, i did say that in 2008, real change is hard. it takes time. it takes more than one single term. more than a single president. what it takes is ordinary citizens who are committed to keep fighting in to keep pushing and inching us closer and closer to our country's highest ideals. [cheers and applause] you know something else i used to sit back and 2008? i said i am not a perfect man. michaud will tell you that. -- michele will tell you that.
11:11 pm
[laughter] i will never be perfect president. i made a promise to you then. i will always tell you what i believe and i will always tell you where i stand and i will always wake up every single day, fighting as hard as i know how for you. i have kept that promise. [cheers and applause] i have kept that promise. i have kept that promise. if you're willing to keep going with me throughout the obstacles, through all the naysayers, if you're willing to keep reaching for that addition of america, -- that vision of america, the commitment you made -- we made to each other, i guarantee you, change will come. [cheers and applause] if you're willing to work harder in this election than the last one, i promise you, change will come.
11:12 pm
[cheers and applause] if you're willing to knock on some doors and make some phone calls, i promise you, change will come. it we will finish what we started in 2008. fight with me. press on with me and we will remind the world once again just what america is all about. god bless you. [cheers and applause] god bless the united states of america. [captioning performed by national captioning institute] [captions copyright national cable satellite corp. 2012]
11:13 pm
11:14 pm
11:15 pm
11:16 pm
11:17 pm
>> this weekend, c-span will re- release supreme court argument on the constitutionality of the health care law. sunday, jurisdiction on of the
11:18 pm
law includes a tax. and if the expansion of medicaid is an intrusion on the states. an argument on the individual mandate at 10:30 a.m. eastern. and if the mandate is unconstitutional, can the last of the law -- can the rest of the loss they intact? -- law stay intact? >> pentagon officials have briefed families about the remains of their families. they were told the remains were handled properly, part of an investigation that remain last year. some remained unprocessed and ended up at a landfill. this is about 15 minutes. >> good afternoon. as you know, the department of defense has made a sacred and the solemn commitment to treat
11:19 pm
the remains of fallen heroes with the utmost dignity and respect. for that reason, in response to allegations that improper handling was done, secretary pannetta conduct an independent investigation into operations at dover. the general appeared in this room last month to brief you on the report, which affirmed that the department of defense cares for our fall and in a compassionate and professional manner. it recommended a series of steps to make sure that we always treat our fallen heroes with the highest degree of honor, and we are committed to that standard. when the report was released last month, concerns were also raised that the remains of 9/11 victims were disposed of and the
11:20 pm
landfill rather than retired with appropriate dignity. in response to these concerns, we conducted a detailed examination of the procedures and practices used to identify, tree, and process remains from the attack. earlier today, i have the opportunity to brief the families of 9/11 victims of this examination which concluded that their loved ones were treated with the care, and dignity, and respect that we did so in accordance with procedures. reflecting our desire to be as transparent as possible, we are releasing an additional documents from the independent review today. in my meeting with the 9/11 family members, i assured them that all those lost on that tragic day will never be
11:21 pm
forgotten. the victims deserve the utmost care, dignity, and respect with regard to their treatments. that is what they and their families received, and what our fallen and their families continue to receive in the future. caring for the fallen and their families as a mission shared by the entire department of defense. we are committed to remedying any shortfalls exposed in our handling of this mission. the independent panels achieved two main goals. it largely validated the claims we made an identified further areas for improvement. our focus is now on the present and the future. we are confident that the improvement in changes provide the basis for us to ensure that
11:22 pm
we meet the extremely high standards we have set for ourselves in executing this solemn obligation. i would like to introduce myself as well as members of the team with me. the light name is jo ann rooney, the acting undersecretary of defense for personnel and readiness. >> i am the director of air forces services. a >> i am the armed forces medical examiner. >> i am the director of army casualties and mortuary research. >> at this point, we invite your questions. >> could i ask you about the e- mail exchange as you have had, the documents that show -- it is hard to tell, but it seems like a hair force colonel suggested initially that the unidentified portions of the 9/11 remains be
11:23 pm
disposed of at sea. there is back-and-forth and an official says no, they don't want to do that. can you tell us to those officials are, even if you don't know their names? >> i would like to give you clarity about that part as part of the overall this position. -- disposition. there were six different segments or ways that the medical examiner came divided the remains. the first was those that were intact. the second, those not intact, but the team was able to identify. the third, a group of remains that we know were human, and they were identified after the national release. we were able to identify them, but it was later on.
11:24 pm
the fourth are those portions that we know we're not terrorists, but did not meet the threshold for positive identification. we knew they were human, but we could not identify them. the fifth or terrorist remains, and the sixth, what those e- mail's referred to, the daughter associated or fragmented material. they could not be further identified, so those were specimens that we knew were biological in nature, but we could not determine if they were human or second, if there were terrorists remains mixed in. that was at the heart of the debate because we did not know if they were human remains to begin with. they were mixed in with pieces from the building and airplane.
11:25 pm
the debate you are talking to without specifics, it was that particular subsection and what would be appropriate. in a situation like that, the practice would be to treat that as medical waste. >> what i wanted to ask, there is a discussion about this group that you mentioned. it seems to be from a colonel of some sort suggesting that they be put to sea. they say no, because the nature of the remains, can you explain again -- it's like medical waste. can you tell me any more about who that person might be? again, not the name, but the position. >> what the debate ranged from
11:26 pm
throughout the department, it was very senior positions. in the appendix that you saw, indicating the final memo from the undersecretary of defense personnel at that time actually sent forth a memo and it has been in the press and 04. the debate to what throughout -- went throughout. the idea was that we wanted to do the best we could afford dignity and care for their remains, but wanted to really determine if these were biological. it was a range of people. >> i have a question. military.com, i wanted to ask the air force general here, there is an interesting detail about some of the decisions about who was going to be stationed at dover, and
11:27 pm
decisions about how long a time. i was wondering if you could go through with how those decisions were made, who was going to be at dover, how long, and talk a little bit about plans for the future for dover air force base. >> i'm not sure what you're referring to, it talked about manning. a lot of the employees that have bent over have been there for a number of years. -- been at dover have been there for a number of years. it is a rotating basis. >> in the appendices, there was employment in this space. there was a discussion back and forth about how long they should be there, who should be there, if the reserves should be there or not. i was wondering about the portion of it. >> i'm not sure what you mean
11:28 pm
about the decisions in terms of that, but there is the commander in charge of the hit it, and during times of war -- of the unit, and during times of war, like now, there is a deployment schedule. it was 120 days for rotation, the air forces now to 180 days. they come from the reserve and the active duty. >> thank you. the supporting, documentation includes a 2011 air force inspector general's report. the report seems to justify and minimize the allegations of mishandling remains at dover, for example.
11:29 pm
they talked about the marine whose humerus was left, so there was no need to notify the next of kin and it was done to accommodate their wishes. is the air force able to police itself on this matter? >> yes. i think as the general pointed out, as he did the independent review, those that we laid out for a future, there is a matrix that talks about corrective actions. as we go through the report and look at his recommendations, we will continue to improve practices and procedures. >> why hasn't anyone been fired? >> new processes going on and there will be disciplinary actions that will be completed in mid until late april. -- mid to late april. >> you couldn't even identify
11:30 pm
the remains, you said they were biological. if they are not human, what else could they possibly be in that situation? dodge anything biological. it could have been something from someone's lunch. nature.g of a biological late the captain did some of the work. >> our instructions to those who were to assume any thing that we might be able to get an identification of a victim of f of. let the forensic professionals evaluate them, test them, see if we can make additional identifications. we would rather have, literally, thousands of portions that we can never make an idea of love than this one thing that is
11:31 pm
something that could make the i.d. we have hundreds of thousands of come in.that we try to account for every single with them at every single incident. -- victim at every single incident. >> thank you. general, i was wondering if you could expand about the possible disciplinary actions that come out at april. the separation, prosecution? >> i can't, they are ongoing. i can't add anything. >> thank you. we appreciate it.
11:32 pm
>> next, former president clinton and madeleine albright discuss public-service. after that, mitt romney in wisconsin. and house speaker john boehner at a lincoln day dinner in ohio. >> ronald reagan was leaving his hotel after delivering a speech to the afl-cio. 15 feet from the president, the agency is surrounding him. six shots. the first hits and the secretary, he falls down. he turned around, and gets hit in the back. now the path to the president is clear. he has an effective range of 20 feet or 30 feet. he can hit a stationary targets 20 to 30 feet. >> the would-be assassin john hinckley fire is six shots.
11:33 pm
this weekend on american artifacts, they'll clinton on the race to save the president. -- dale quinten wilber on c- s0pan 3. >> the fifth annual clinton global initiative at george washington university, wadding about it this week. what is behind the initiative? how did it start, what is its purpose? dr. bill clinton came up with the idea five years ago. it is connected to the clinton global initiative to bring world leaders together to talk about the big problems of the day. the first group gathered in new orleans after hurricane katrina, and they looked out a whole bunch of different service projects that students have come up with all over the world. the idea is that president clinton wanted to take these
11:34 pm
projects and help students figure out how to make them available and turn them into reality. it is community service that has caught on. >> what is his role with the initiative? is it fund-raising, reaching out to the students that attended this weekend's events? >> they create the venue for it. the idea is that the people meet each other. a woman from new york university for kids that have night terrors. one in washington university, you have other team that is working toward health care needs in sub-saharan africa.
11:35 pm
the idea is to get these people and our room and get them to learn from each other. bill clinton brings is names and his credentials to the event. it brings them all together. >> a pretty a list live out. >> john's to work is going to be there, and they will do a conversation saturday afternoon, and died of chelsea clinton will be there. a bunch of other people, including those that founded the nonprofit or for-profit. >> with some commitment of funding for the group, -- >> it addresses the problem in some sort of novel way.
11:36 pm
i don't think it is guaranteed in any sort of funding. a to get them to learn how to make this in action, they are mostly students. non-don't know how to be profit directors. >> you can read his reporting at washingtonpost.com. thank you for the update. >> of the clinton global initiative university was founded in 2007 by former president bill clinton to engage students in developing solutions to global challenges. this meeting focuses on education and climate change, poverty, human rights, and public health. she moderate the discussion on how to foster a broader culture of civic engagement. among the speakers is the former secretary of state,
11:37 pm
madeleine albright. this is being held at george washington university. >> i especially thank the staff here who have been so great to put this together. they have the wonderful job. gw is the perfect toast for this. more than 200 years ago, president george washington called for the establishment of a great university horses and leaders. today, the george washington university is the environment of that vision. the university has established the center for civic engagement and public service to help develop the next generation of public service leaders. last year, the diane robinson
11:38 pm
color shift was established. a fellowship inspired by the deep commitment for community engagement that the students exhibit every week. i would also like to thank the sponsors that enabled us to have this meeting free of charge for all attendees. the peter peterson foundation, microsoft, other foundations and universities. thank you very much. [applause] tonight, there are more than 1000 of you here from more than 300 universities, more than a youth organizations, 82 nations, and all 50 states of the united states. you have already made 915 commitments to change your schools and communities, and the lives of people across the
11:39 pm
world. you represent your generation, young people who have a greater ability to enact change than any before you. in the past year, more than 30,000 students, faculty, and administrators have become engaged in commitments to action. as a result of the commitments in 2011 alone, more than 146,000 people have improved access to health care and social services. nearly 31,000 students have improved access to education. more than a million dollars has been raised for scholarships, humanitarian relief, hospitals, and other worthy endeavors. i am fortunate to see a lot of amazing examples of people taking this kind of action. this september, we will have the eighth annual meeting of the clinton global initiative, convening with nonprofit
11:40 pm
directors and philanthropists from across the world. they have, in seven years, made 2000 commitments which are ready have improved the lives of 300 million people in 180 countries. both cgi and cgiu are global networks of people seeking to use the resources at your disposal to make a difference. but you have something they do not. more time, for one thing. [laughter] all the years i was in politics, i loved it, but we spent most of our time arguing over 2 view of things. what are you going to do and how much money are you going to spend?
11:41 pm
are you going to cut taxes or put more money into education? what are you going to do, and how much money are you going to spend on it? we did not spend much time on the third question, which i think is the most important of the 21st century. whenever you are proposing to do, how the proposed to do it? how you turned your good intentions into real changes in other people's lives? one of the reasons we see so much innovation coming from college students is that you do not have all that money, so you have no choice but to think about the how question. but if you think about it and implement it, you might draw tens of money to it. really, over the last 10 years or so, one of the most hopeful things about our future is that it is now possible to raise a very large amounts of money in very small units. when the tsunami hit south asia, americans gave a billion dollars. half of it over the internet.
11:42 pm
first time. and the median contribution was about $56. when the earthquake hit haiti, the americans gave a billion dollars. the median contribution was even smaller, because it could not only give a over the internet, you could simply text the number of your favorite charity, the red cross or the clinton haiti fund or whatever it was, and immediately transfer $10. when we recognize the commitments that are made here today, they are worthy in their own right, but some of them are capable of dramatic expansion or adoption or modification. creativity is really important. i will just give a couple of examples of the commitments that have been made this year by you.
11:43 pm
christine schindler of duke will work to connect female engineering students with girls ages 14 through 17 for men turn ship reform and worship, and partner to work on medical devices for the developing world. she plans to implement this worldwide. why is this important? because only 14% of americans engineers are women, and only 15% of engineering students in our universities are women. it is well known that the united states has a shortage in the so-called stem fields. what is not so well known is if we can abolish the difference between women and men in those fields, and the difference between asian americans, european americans, americans of middle eastern descent,
11:44 pm
african-americans, and hispanic americans -- within a few years, our shortage would disappear. meanwhile, we would give out more visas, i think. [applause] shirley kotteo of virginia state is committed to replicating the hands for haiti model in order to increase employment and food security. she and her colleagues started a very successful facility in haiti and want to take it to scale across the country. the country has a serious protein deficiency that can be remedied partly with chickens and eggs, whichever comes first, and partly by growing their own fish in an environmentally healthy and responsible manner. you were going to hear later
11:45 pm
about the students from vanderbilt university who started, a couple of years ago, a program to train offenders who had been sent to prison and who were in halfway houses, having been released from prison but not into society that, so there were employable, and then helping to find them jobs. this is a huge deal. people who go to prison and get out, which is more than 90% of the people who go to prison, are much less likely to become repeat offenders if they have jobs. and yet even though we say we are a people of second chances and once you pay your debt to society are supposed to get one, the truth is that are one of the first casualties of the budget crisis of the last few years, the job-training and placement program. this is something that nearly every college or university in america could adopt.
11:46 pm
again i say do not be discouraged before you are doing starts off helping a relatively small number of people. if replicated are taken to scale, it could change the future for a huge number of people. we're going to try to address these challenges step-by-step, knowing that, as my good friend mario cuomo used to say, in politics you campaign in poetry, but you govern in prose. the same thing is true of citizen service. you work in prose. you take one step and another step and another step. pretty soon, you look around and you have walked several miles, and a lot of lives are better as a result. i thank you for your commitment to take those steps. i want to introduce our hosts,
11:47 pm
who have worked tirelessly to make education possible for thousands of students, the president of george washington. i want to tell you a little bit about him. he has a long history of supporting students. he was a professor of english and literature at the university of california at berkeley. dean of the college of arts and scientists and provost at john hopkins university up the road in baltimore. as president of george washington, he has made it a priority to increase student opportunities for public service. in order to be accessible and better serve the students here, he chose to take up residence on the campus, the first president of this university ever to do that. maybe he was just trying to avoid the well-known washington, d.c. traffic, but it looked to me like he was trying to remain open to the students. he has made a lot of green
11:48 pm
renovations to the residence, demonstrating his strong commitment to sustainability, and tried to make the university and model for sustainability. this kind of complete view of public service, how it permeates every decision he makes, makes him not just a good president for the students of gw, but an inspiration to people everywhere. please welcome the president of george washington university, steven knapp. [applause] >> thank you for that kind introduction, and for the inspiring leadership that has launched this extraordinary initiative. let us all recognize that leadership, if we could. [applause]
11:49 pm
ladies and gentlemen, it is truly an honor to host this event. i am pleased to honor our distinguished panelists. we have a number of trustees of our university who are present, as well as our presidents emeritus. above all, i am delighted to welcome the thousand students who successfully competed to participate in this year's cgiu. you come from 82 countries, all 50 states of the united states. you represent 300 colleges and universities. president clinton was very kind to mention the fact that the founding vision of our university goes all the way back to our namesake, who
11:50 pm
dreamed of a university in our nation's capital that would educate the citizen leaders of the very new nation he helped to found. and we have preserved the admission, except that now instead of training citizen leaders just for our nation, we educate citizen leaders for the world. at the core of that mission is a commitment to service. it is reflected in the way, two years ago, first lady michelle obama challenged us to perform 100,000 hours of service during the course of an academic year. we greatly exceeded that, she spoke of our commencement. for the third year in a row, we sent more students to the peace corps than any other school our size. we passed the 1000 peace corps volunteer market this spring. for the past four years, the number one employer of george washington graduates has been teach for america.
11:51 pm
in fact, this generation of students is marked by a deep commitment to service not just at gw, but worldwide. to give you a statistic published in the washington post, in 2010, more than 3 million students in the united states alone volunteered more than 300 million hours to service. two nights ago, we held a reception for students volunteering to support cgiu. i was inspired by the variety and creativity of our students' commitments to action. the range from a plan to make bicycles out of bamboo, panda bikes, an extremely inexpensive, sturdy, and renewable material. they are so inexpensive this program will be able to donate a bicycle for everyone it sells. they include a program of art therapy to prevent suicides during adolescence by lakota people.
11:52 pm
they donate to homeless shelters. we could multiplied as examples 100 fold. you have heard many examples from the president a few moments ago. you realize how much imagination and dedication and creativity has gone into these commitments to action. i would like to think the clinton global initiative and the university department of external relations for setting up such a terrific weekend. i urge you all to take advantage of the activities in store, including the plenary and briquettes sessions tomorrow and a service project on sunday. i close by saying congratulations to all who chose to participate in the events. you are making a transformative difference in our world, and i hope you will enjoy your time
11:53 pm
here at the george washington university. thank you, good luck to you, godspeed. [applause] >> i am going to begin as we always do, with the announcement of new commitments. i will ask the people who made them to come forward. first, a commitment named pay it forward. they are from illinois state. an undergraduate at michigan state. an undergraduate at the university of minnesota, twin cities campus. the students are all involved in a group called "students today, leaders forever." that are committed to creating new programs which will provide community service opportunities for young americans across the country. between september of 2010 and
11:54 pm
september of 2011, 25% of americans between the ages of 16 and 24 volunteered even once. ade and caroline will develop community service road trips to areas on the east and west coast, and topic specific service tours. shelby will use for resources to bring service opportunities to public high school students in lansing, michigan. cristina will implement an after-school literacy program for multi-cultural students in inner-city schools, to give them access to multi-cultural mentors. these projects together will help the organization scale up by 37,000 hours of service over the next year, and involve a lot more young people in doing this. let us give them a hand. that is a good idea.
11:55 pm
[applause] [applause] now i would like to invite to the stage sam king, an undergraduate at stanford university. [applause] he is wearing his commitment's name, code the change. here is the issue.
11:56 pm
more and more and more, the individuals and foundations that donate money to nonprofit organizations want to, understandably, keep down the percentage of the donations that goes too centralized costs, things that do not directly touched the intended beneficiaries. that is a laudable goal. but there are certain unavoidable costs for computer systems and technologies, for example. to better connect the world of non-profit and computer science, sam will increase the national presence of his organization, code the change. it holds events in which computer science students volunteer up to 24 hours of their skills to nonprofit projects.
11:57 pm
they hold 6 at stanford every year. he will expand the program to 10 additional universities, specifically targeting schools with strong computer science programs. each event connects 30 computer science students with eight nonprofits for a day-long coding session. it will address 480 additional technology needs for nonprofits. it is a good deal. let us give him a big hand. [applause]
11:58 pm
[applause] now i would like to introduce our panelists. as all of you know, i am going to ask them a question or two, and they are basically going to tell their stories in a way that makes it relevant to your lives and why you came here. after which we are going to take your questions. so supply us some. [laughter] first, president knapp, who has already been introduced. i would like for him to come out and take a chair. [applause] second, the first woman ever to be secretary of state of the united states, appointed by some long-ago president, madeleine albright. [applause] who -- [applause] madeleine -- [applause]
11:59 pm
here is -- [applause] you know what that reminded me of, for some bizarre reason? the time we went to buenos aires and went to the tango place. [laughter] anyway, here is what i want you to know about madeline. she is a professor at georgetown school of foreign service, my alma mater. but in her current life, she is a citizen servant, chairman of the national democratic institute, president of the truman scholarship foundation, on the board of the council of foreign relations and the center for american progress. third, i would like to call out the founder of [unintelligible].
12:00 am
[applause] he wrote an amazing book some of you are familiar with -- it happened on the way to the war." he served in the united states marine corps. he is a graduate of the university of north carolina at chapel hill, the kennedy school in the business school at harvard where he was an entrepreneur ship fellow. he lives in charlotte, north carolina with his wife and daughter. among other things, he works in the sustainable energy department as special adviser to the chairman.
12:01 am
i would like to invite out sadiqa basiri saleem, the executive director of the oruj learning center in afghanistan. [applause] she wins the prize for having worked the hardest to get here. when she was 5, sadiqa fled to pakistan during the soviet occupation and returned to afghanistan, hindered by her own life of education. -- which was hampered by a life of education. there are 30 million people in afghanistan. when she came back, two of nine of the thousand children had any access of -- to education. she cobbled together enough
12:02 am
money to educate 36 girls in an abandoned mosque in 2003. through the learning center, she now educates more than 3400 girls in six schools, 200 women in for literacy centers -- [applause] -- 120 women in a community college. she has established a family welfare center for the elimination of violence against women. domestic violence prevention initiative that serves 14,000. she received a bachelor's degree in 2009. she founded her nation's first of women's community college teaching women management and leadership brigid we are all in
12:03 am
her debt. thank you. [applause] our last panelist is a good friend of mine known to the larger world -- i am his token old friend. not old friend, "old" friend. note to the world as an usher -- raymond usher iv has been an artist for more than 15 years, known for his voice and his dynamic dance moves. [laughter] is acting in film, television, and stage including broadway and the tony award winning musical "chicago." he has won multiple grammies for his work.
12:04 am
in addition to all of that, he has been a staunch advocate for youth impairment and education and has proven to be a powerful force by mentoring young people around the world through his "new look foundation." in atlanta, 500 young people from around the world came to develop real world solutions to problems. he is a very good man who is doing something that someone in his position does not have to do. i have been too is event and i can tell you it is the real deal. please welcome usher. [applause]
12:05 am
somebody shouted "marry me." he cannot do that. he has a family. [laughter] i would like to -- i want to begin with rye. you are in the marine corps and you should tell everybody -- what skills did you get in the marine corps that got you involved in that kind of work and how did you decide when you left the service to do this? >> how many of you have -- it is located in nairobi, kenya residents call it a slum.
12:06 am
it is a slum community. about half a million folks live there. it is barely about the size of central park. i was a junior at unc chapel hill. i knew i was going in the marine corps. that was my calling in life. my father served in the marines. i wanted to make a difference. the marine corps appeared to be a way to do that. so i chased that dream. it had a clarifying effect. you often hear the use this opportunity to discover what you want to do. it is an amazing moment in life to discover what you want to do. but it really helps if you have a little bit of an idea going into it. i was able to kind of craft my studies based on my service in the marines. this was in 2000, so it was
12:07 am
before september 11. most of the missions marines were engaged in were peacekeeping missions. i wanted to understand why violence happened in the world. a mentor of mine, an anthropologist, told me there was only so much you can learn from books and if you want to understand how things happen, you get to go someplace and put yourself into it. i took some outclasses with our starting lineup of the men's basketball team. that was important for me. you have to learn some local language before going to a place at different from your own. the marine corps really gave me the courage in some ways to go to a place that was very different from my own and confront my fears in doing so. i rented a small shack with a young person about my age. i asked questions and i
12:08 am
listened. president clinton asked me what skills i learned in the military that transferred to the ngo world -- listening was not one of them. i was not intending to start an organization. what i realized in these very the occult conditions was a fundamental truth in the world -- talent is universal, but opportunity is not. [applause] it is really the truth. the question is -- how the best connect that talent with opportunity?
12:09 am
i did not know the answer, so i contended to foster relationships. we developed a relationship with it -- we develop carolina for kibera. one of my partners was a former nurse, widowed with three kids. at the end of my first summer she confronted me and asked me for 2000 shillings -- about $26. i had made a habit of not giving out any money, but i did not know where to begin. part of it was for my own safety. i asked what she was planning to do with it. she said she was going to sell vegetables across town in a somali community where i can undercut the constitution -- the competition. she had a plan and i was leaving the next day. it was only $26.
12:10 am
so i handed her 2000 shillings. i came back to the united states. i went into my senior year at and as i was going into my senior year, this line from the marines kept sticking into my head -- have a bias for action. what i was doing back at school was writing this research report -- i was not doing anything. i was not giving back to a particular committee. -- particular community. we started an organization -- carolina for kibera. initially the goal was to use sports to bring different ethnic groups together. i raised a little bit of money and the marine corps gave me three months of unpaid leave to do this.
12:11 am
most of the military commanders i served with had an appreciation of preventing violence. the cost to prevent violence are lower than the cost to intervene during it. i returned back to kibera. i had no idea i would see tabitha again, but she found me. she found me and took me through the alley ways to her own 10x10. she took her savings from selling vegetables for six months, about $100, and pursued her dream. she started a small medical clinic out of her shack. she was a nurse, but she was also in quality care. it made a lot of sense for her to become part of our organization -- carolina for kibera.
12:12 am
we took a participatory approach over many years and sheet group that clinic. today that clinic serves 40,000 patients a year. [applause] i am going to wrap up, but it started with $26 in the hands of a remarkable person, working in partnership together, taking a long view, taking a participatory approach over 10 years. when i step back and thinking about being in her shoes, i remember feeling overwhelmed by the number of options that i had in school. i still think real social change is a commitment to a particular place. that is what i hope you will be able to find with the causes and the places that you care about. [applause] >> thank you. madeleine, i want to ask you to talk a little bit about what you do now and why it is fun, even when you are not a college student. what do you want to say to them
12:13 am
about what you think their potential izbas to have a world that is more peaceful than the one we live in? >> thank you. i am really honored to be here on this panel. let me say, i have always tried to look for something more interesting to do then the thing i did before. not easy if you have been secretary of state. i have put the skills i learned as a secretary of state into terms of trying to solve problems, finding people to help solve problems, and do whatever i can to give back. it is a combination of things. i believe one of the greatest problems we have today is the gap between the rich and the poor. there are by absolute numbers -- [applause]
12:14 am
-- there are fewer poor people because of the chinese have brought so many out of poverty, but the gap between the rich and poor is the most serious one. it is wrong and dangerous. the things i have been involved in arbitrage -- involved in are partners are a new beginning -- try to get private corporation to work with the government in terms of economic empowerment for people, predominately in muslim communities, but to try to find a way to have economic empowerment, science and technology, education, people exchanges -- those are the vertical pillars. the horizontal ones are to get men and children involved. we are in a variety of places, using the skills, trying to get our corporations to be helpful in terms of creating job opportunities.
12:15 am
as the president mentioned, i am chairman of the board of the other democratic national institute. you cannot impose democracy. that is an oxymoron. what you can do is support those who want to learn the skills of democracy. through the national democratic institute, we train people in terms of how did you form a coalition, how you create campaigns, supporting women candidates. it allows people to work on behalf of those who need help i love teaching because i think it is a way to talk about what the opportunities are for you all in terms of giving back. my whole life has been about giving back. i was not born in this country. i came here when i was 11-years old in order to escape communism and i have been grateful ever since. public service is an amazing way to give back. i will forever be grateful to this wonderful president who
12:16 am
allow me to be able to use the goodness of american power to make a difference for an awful lot of people, to end ethnic cleansing, to make sure people have an opportunity to live a free life. i took those skills now in a way to give back, i am particularly working with young people. i went to kibera for a project with a wonderful program about legal empowerment for the poor. poor people are not stupid. they are very entrepreneurial. they may be more so than a lot of people. [applause] they just want an opportunity. it is giving people who want to make a difference the opportunity to do it. i hope i will be able to do that until the day i die. [applause]
12:17 am
>> i just want to point out that matalin was with the united nations. in my second term, we did the same thing in kosovo. the victims that we sought to save or almost all muslims. i thought it was very important to prove that the united states met what we said when we said everybody is welcome here and we believe in human rights of people all over the world. it was gratuitous that -- it was sad for them, but it was fortuitous that it was our responsibility to stop theatnet cleansing of european muslims in bosnia and cause a vote. she was great at it. i thought she was wonderful. [applause]
12:18 am
sadiqa, you need to fill in the blanks of the introduction i gave you. a lot of people would hear your story and say, my goodness. the woman was taken out of afghanistan as a child, she went back, then she gets out, graduated from mount holyoke, a very distinguished american university -- she could have gone anywhere and done anything, but she goes back home to one of the poorest places on earth where people think they have poor political prospects. i have always thought that when people say afghanistan is a loser and we should not be involved, the british were run out of there, but that is because you should not try to conquer a place. you should help the people in the place caulker their own future. -- cocker their own future. -- conquer their own future?
12:19 am
why did you do it? how did you begin and how did the fund the expansion? tell them a little bit about what you did and why? >> the reason i came to mount holyoke, it was luck. the reason why i went back home -- the original -- the initial region to come to the united states to get an education was to get education and myself and contribute to the cause that is so dear to me. i see a huge connection between educated people and empowered nations. it will be the educated people who will be able to move us forward. we have been in war for the last three decades.
12:20 am
i was born in war. i was raised in war. i still lived with war. i do not think war is the solution. i strongly believe that only education is the solution to the whole problem, not only in afghanistan, but in the region. [applause] what really made me work on the education sector -- the country is poor. there are great needs. now that i reflect back, i see that there are questions that have really shaped my mission. the first question is coming from anger.
12:21 am
when i was a child, i question the education i was getting. the system i was getting education in was a poor refugee school. later in life, i would question myself. i was challenged by women who did not have any idea what an education means or what it looks like. to tell you my story -- when i went to my school, it was established in pakistan. basically my school was far over 3000 schools. it was conducted in two sessions -- the morning and the afternoon. but it was not a real school for me as a child.
12:22 am
the real school for me was a school that would but light in the movies. the school i went to had only 20 classrooms. more than 30 pence. a huge playground that was taken over by class's conducted in open air, including mine. i was not a passionate student. i have not really shared this story that i am sharing today. i was an extremely slow student. i was getting a lot of managements from my teachers, but i was fighting for my class. when we had at the new blackboards, which could only enjoy them for one week at the most because senior class is would steal our blackboards. we were even fighting for space. the way we could identify with our classes was to draw a square and put our blackboard in it. it was not an ideal school for me.
12:23 am
therefore, i was not studying one day my teacher beat me so hard that my home -- she was using a stick -- my hand started bleeding. i still have the scar on my palm. that was the time that my father made a decision to take us back to afghanistan. in 1994, it was still civil war. the reason my father wanted to take us to afghanistan was to experience life back home so that when we return, we would not be surprised. in 1994 when we got home, one day i was walking in an orchard with my cousin. he asked me questions. what does your school look like?
12:24 am
how do teachers look like? is it true you go to school alone and you return by yourself? i was angry in the first place. i thought he was making fun of me. later i discussed it with my father. my father at the same questions. did you noticed any schools coming from pakistan to afghanistan? any hospital, any clinic, anything? my answer was no. basically for me, it was all these questions that really shaped my motives, that really shaped my mission. it is easy to criticize things as i did in my childhood. it is easy to get angry at things, but it is equally important to reflect back and see that, ok, we can be
12:25 am
critical, but then i think it is important to answer one question -- what can i do to make a change? i think that was the beautiful -- the most beautiful gift from my father -- to take us back home to where we came from. for me, it was a beautiful trip, that my father gave to us. it really helped me to reflect back and really get things i could not have received if i was living back home. that motivated me to go to afghanistan after the taliban and established the first class with 36 girls. later on, i received proposals from other communities to
12:26 am
establish further class's and -- classes and schools. that is my vision, to bring education to girls in the most remote areas of afghanistan where they will not have access to education. [applause] >> usher, anybody who gets the kind of reception you did when you came out here and has made the kind of money you have and has become the profile you have would have to set up some sort of charitable operation. you know as well as i do that a lot of people in your position in the past have done that and just checked the box. i know you have not checked the box.
12:27 am
you thought about what you wanted to do, why you wanted to do it, and once you did it, you went all in. i have seen some of your kids. i did not know until we did our deal together that you were perhaps the discoverer of justin beiber. [laughter] i want you to tell these young people why you decided to do exactly what you are doing and how you stay involved in it now to make sure it achieves the objectives that you want?
12:28 am
>> absolutely not. you would assume to whom much is given, much is required. that should be a consideration. you have to flip that. i was given a lot at a very young age, not simply someone believing in me, someone encouraging me to move in a positive direction. there were a lot of people my age at the time coming from at- risk environments, underserved communities, did not really have a lot to believe in, but it was simply a few people who really made the difference and molded me. they say it is not how you start, it is how you end. for me, i flip that, too. ultimately, my entire perspective was a new look on life. it is how you started it is the seas that are planted at those very key moments in our lives that truly make a difference. then, the next step was the
12:29 am
evidence. my mother, who at the time served as my manager, we had conversations about the youth in atlanta. she said and the courthouse in atlanta's georgia and observed for cases where children were coming from foster homes and were really devastated. no track our success. no one to be there for them. nothing. it really pained me that there was someone out there that could actually make a difference in our world and there is no motivation for them. i began to speak on panels. i began to speak at high schools, anywhere and they would accept me, and talk about the evidence of the reality of having an education, finding a career. and now being able to use it as a tool to offer service and, at
12:30 am
least, the hope that you can make a difference with your life as well. after that, i decided that i would start 8 nonprofit and focus specifically on youth. there are many things we can do. you travel all around the world, you are successful, you go on stages, but i wanted to be remembered for something else other than just dance. i really wanted to make a difference. i wanted to do something significant with my talent. so i figured i would be that motivator that motivated me. i am able to recognize talent or encourage those who have yet to recognize the talent they have. it is beneficial in it -- beneficial for me. just in bieber is one of the cases -- justin beiber was one
12:31 am
of the cases. as a philanthropist, education is so important, so keep. having a talent, obviously recognizing a career, and, in turn, offering a service as a result of you founding these things. since then, the reality, the evidence that that see it that could be planted has harvested. you actually put dissipated in it. as a matter of fact, in 2006 we had a conversation. it was pretty motivating. here i had been doing a lot of work internally. i felt i had my chops up. i am going to talk to him you
12:32 am
did not know who i was as a philanthropist at all. [laughter] i thought that was great. that meant it was not fluff, the hard work i had put into what i had done had touched the service and the ground had been killed, the sea had been planted. the opportunity to be with you gave me the opportunity to expand much further than i could have imagined with the clinton global initiative. we created power by service. that led to many different campaigns of disaster relief, those individuals who came from underserved communities who were truly affected by katrina, rita, and haiti as well. after that, we made a connection in africa at your event. i was able to establish another campaign. then on to the world leadership conference in atlanta, georgia. you are obviously a very supportive man of me, right? [applause]
12:33 am
little did he know to all of that he had been a mentor and a motivator from the beginning. all along, you had planted a seed at a very young age where i felt like i could make a difference in my community. through that indication of that you could make a difference, i felt like i could make a difference. the new look foundation became what it is today 12 years later, successfully leading the charge and being a huge voice and also preparing future leaders with a service mind, of course, because the only thing i ask is that they be as influential to each other as one was to me at some point. since then, i hoped to be successful, other than just music, and it happened. now we are able to sit here on
12:34 am
this panel. we just had a celebration not too long ago. you probably saw it. but we're backstage joking -- we were backstage and joking. there was one little thing i really hated -- i actually performed in front of the president with it all hanging out. my pants split on stage. not many people can say that they did that, but we have been able to share. >> if it was not an x-rated situation and he never missed a beat. he did the whole thing all the way through. [laughter] [applause] >> but happy that we have been
12:35 am
able to share those experiences [laughter] -- you have been a motivator for me. thank you very much. [applause] >> i want you all to hear the story. this is something you can all do before you go to school. when i was a governor 20 years ago and, my primary responsibilities were public education, helping people go to college, and generating economic opportunity. i read a steady, the name of which i have long forgotten, but this sociologists followed for a period of 20 years these kids who grew up in absolutely horrible circumstances mostly. there were not all poor. a couple of them had parents who are drug addicts. one of them was wealthy, but
12:36 am
did some horrible crime. most of their brothers and sisters got in trouble, but these kids have all done great. so he studied them over 20 years trying to figure out how the young people turn out ok and missed a birdie, which is relevant to what you do. what he discovered was that at critical points in their lives, every one of them was made to feel they were the most important person in the world. that they could be something. they could amount to something. [applause] there was one young man who was part of a four brothers. they were abandoned by their parents who had terrible drug addiction. the report grandmother tried to raise them all in a little apartment in new york city. they spent half the night sleeping outside. three of these guys went to
12:37 am
jail, one of them became a doctor. the one who became a doctor would pass on one of those kiosks on the street in new york where you sell magazines. the guy there saw him, took an interest in him. he told him when he went to school he should learn something. he would stop him when he came home and say "show me your homework." when the guy would go to school the next day, he would show the man he had done his homework. it sounds simple, but what you are doing can change the lives of thousands and thousands of people. i thank you. [applause] i will let you wrap up and then what we will take questions. we have more than 20 minutes for questions, so i hope we have them coming in. tell me exactly what you do to promote student service at gw and how you came to find it so
12:38 am
important. >> to find myself on a panel within these kinds of stories, it inspires all of us to and take an interest in service. not quite five years ago i was talking to an undergraduate who had gone on to be a graduate in noticed someone that had been a victim of sexual abuse by a melissa at a time of conflict. she founded on her own a soccer team called "girls kick it." none of these women had any
12:39 am
experience with a place before and all of a sudden they were involved with athletic activity. it was transported far her. she made that into our lives were to continue that kind of effort. i did not think the number of games that would come together here -- we talked about disparity. we have some of the most striking disparities, and come, education levels wrote one thing we did here at george washington is engaging our students and we make sure people across the district of columbia in their service projects. one thing we are doing is commemorating every september 11, not only to remember the terrible losses that occurred that day, but to fan out across the entire city, paint schools for the children after the comeback. they come back and find these
12:40 am
goals fresh, clean, and painted. they do that over the weekend. we engage our veterans. we have over 700. they are tremendous leaders. they have the experience, the dedication, and the skills they brought back with them that allow them to be leaders in our student body. at the same time, we are developing initiatives a little more formal than that.
12:41 am
one is a center for civic engagement and public service. we have a person to lead that effort at to have a continuous focus on service throughout the year. we are watching some activities that are germane to some of the things we are talking about this evening. it is our new and institute for global issues. it will simultaneously improve public health, and reduce violence -- the education and empowerment of women. [applause] it is everything from hands on experience. what impresses me about this generation of students, mr. president, we have students that do not just go into activities, they create opportunities for activities.
12:42 am
they are entrepreneurial as well as dedicated in their service. that was not true of our generation. we were involved in political activism. a lot of that was going on in my generation. what we did not see is this extraordinary inventiveness and creativity that goes into the projects that have been coat -- that have been chosen and are represented here. students come into my office and come up with an idea. and they will say here is my list of endorsements from the city council, here is my business plan, here are the capital funds i started collecting. that is a hallmark this generation has reflected. they are doing something that my generation could not have imagined would be possible. [applause]
12:43 am
>> we are going to go to question it now. the reason i -- i participated in a community action program first semester. at night, i went into neighborhoods and went into people's owns and talk to kids and parents. i did not do it the second semester. i did not recruit other people to do it. it was institutionalized. what i have been trying to do with this anti-clinton global initiative at large and with the one we have for the american economy is to convince people that in this century the definition of citizenship have to enclose this. -- have to include this.
12:44 am
it is doing this kind of work and helping people. ok. question no. one comes from james lee. it is for rye. how can we become more action- based? >> i love that question, james. a mentor of mine is a writer. he wrote a book called "gates of firepower "good book. he was coaching me a little bit when i was working on a book. i was hitting this robot because i was confronted my own fears of how you get words out on a page. he wrote a short little manifesto called "do your work." it is about the creative process -- with you are starting a business, a social enterprise, writing a book, writing a song. we were all speaking about
12:45 am
usher's creative process backstage. that was a critical moment in my life. -- that was a pretty cold moment in my life. what ever you are doing, start before you are ready. confront your fears and put yourself out there. there is no shortage of things to care about, right? the huge one that collects with your own life narrative. [applause] >> this question is for secretary albright. what is the role of the private-sector in creating opportunities for public service, especially through partnerships? >> there are so many opportunities because the private sector really has the desire and the need to create jobs. there is no question. in order to make it work, it had to create jobs. the private sector working abroad, particularly, which is what i have been involved in,
12:46 am
wants to be able to be part of the society in which they operate. what they do is provide opportunities for young people to be able to earn a living and be able to get an education and to get trained. one of the most interesting things recently about the private sector is understanding that it is not just a matter of putting people to work, but also giving them an education that allow them to take part in innovation and be a part of developing new ways of operating within their society. the other part i find interesting is the private sector operating abroad need to also do good things. many of them established foundations. the work on creating schools. they like to combine with people in terms of getting them involved in it also. i have learned a lot in terms of how public and private sectors operate together.
12:47 am
often, there has been the thought that they are not similar interest. in the we have learned, for instance, but the private sector can do well by doing good. what they do in society is make sure that the health care programs are good, that there is education. they employed women and young people. i think it is a very important tool that one has not thought about, at least i have not. i think they want to operate well. in the we need to take advantage of that. [applause] >> i agree with that. one of the things we try to do in my foundation is to work with companies and governments and hope we can find something to do after, a cheaper, or better in a way that will make a business or want to incorporate it into the business model or a government see that it is now possible to adopt. i think this is really important.
12:48 am
next question is for usher. what do you think about the power of the performing arts as an education tool in developing countries? can it help? should we think about that as a luxury or should we try to use the culture of performing arts in this country to promote education and how can it be done? >> the passion lies in something identified in talent. the four pillars i have created through the foundation, it obviously starts with education. identify that talent and allow that pallet to -- allow that talent to offer a sustainable career to get you to the point where you are able to make a difference. obviously, leaders of service. that is the hope that if you are blessed and there is an opportunity to make a difference, then you will.
12:49 am
[applause] >> sadiqa, here is an interesting question. i do not have a name. how can men joined the movement to empower women? do you have mail supporters in afghanistan? -- male supporters in afghanistan and how important is that? >> in a society like afghanistan where people actually make decisions for everything, men are the key in supporting women and making their dream come true. i have seen in my life and i have witnessed in the lives of so many friends, not only in afghanistan, but worldwide that women do care, not only for
12:50 am
themselves, but they care for the world. they are the ones who are making a difference. if i were not supported by my father and if i were not supported by my husband, who let me come to mount holyoke after we were married for only two months -- he stayed in afghanistan and set me to mount holyoke to study -- and come back and make a change in the lives of women who do not even know what education means and what kind of difference education can make in their lives. i have always said to my father why do we not have many fathers like you? actually, i hate to complain. i asked my father why do you not have a coalition of fathers who should be supporting their daughters so that we keep the ball rolling?
12:51 am
[applause] i think my father is getting that. i think he will be soon that he wrote. >> one of the question i asked you before and you did not have time to answer -- how did you go to your first relatively modest education project to educating so many young girls and then having a community college and other training programs? how did the greatest thing and did you get financial help from others? >> indefinitely. -- definitely. i knew the need was great, but i could do it -- i could not do it by myself alone. as a teenager, i could not do anything.
12:52 am
but i knew that there must be a way to change this perception. i believe that the status quo must be changed. the initial support i got was from my father. i really wanted him to support me and take me to afghanistan because i could not travel by myself alone. at mount holyoke, that helped me develop leadership skills. i grew in many many ways at mount holyoke. i was inspired by the founder of mount holly not -- mount holyoke. she was able to establish at this first women's college in 1836. she did not have funding. basically she had a small house and she was riding a horse, walking through committees, collecting coins. the students, in return for their education, would bring butter, eggs, and milk.
12:53 am
that is out now polio was started. i compared -- that is out mount holyoke was started. i compared myself to that. i said now that the world is paying so much attention to women's rights in afghanistan and a lot of support is coming and a lot of money is coming to afghanistan, yes, women are not able to be benefited to actually see the impact. i said i think this is the right time they want us to start. at mount holyoke i learned specifically what you said -- you are motivated by the stress you see, by the danger or the stress it, but seize the opportunities that are available there. approach those opportunities in strategic ways. it was a big treat our me. i shared this idea with my professors at mount holyoke.
12:54 am
i got support from huntington public service award. it was a national competition all across the world. it was for senior students in colleges. it was difficult for me to enter the competition. i felt my writing skills or not that much to compete with american students to write a proposal. but i ended up one of the students who got the award. i was able to get some kind of exposure to organizations that really care about women's education in afghanistan. another award helped me to basically find a building for the school. later on, i started writing grant proposals, national endowment for democracy -- it all made a difference.
12:55 am
it happened while i was in senior year at mount holyoke. i worked hard trying to meet the deadlines. at the end, i graduated not only with a degree from the prestigious college that i love and i mess so much, but also enough funding to start a woman's college. i realize do not intimidate, just do. there is also plenty of work to make a change. [applause] >> mr. president, this question should be for me. someone said education allows other people to learn, earn, and return.
12:56 am
what idea do you have about how every college and university in america -- first of all, we know they all have vigorous community service programs. but not every school has integrated the university the way you have. is there some way we could accelerate that and in so doing increase the numbers of young people doing work around colleges in the country? is there some way to work from the base of the college's and get more people who run universities and colleges to institutionalize this sort of thing? >> it is important to recognize a lot of the impetus is coming directly from our students who
12:57 am
are pushing and universities in this direction. it goes back to that sense of this generation of students wanting to make a difference and wanted to make a connection. i think what was impressive about what we just heard, -- a pretty extraordinary story that sadiqa just told -- her leadership skills she received in college were translated into action. we are starting to get students thinking about their careers, not just in the last semester of their senior year, but all along try to think about the shape of their lives a connect that with their intellectual experience. i think many faculty pink service time is try to reduce the intellectual seriousness of the classroom. what we are finding is as our students began to make more of
12:58 am
these connections, it is somewhat contagious. they are starting to exemplify how you can take what is going on in the classroom and connect it with real life opportunities so those things that reflect the skills they are developing -- the campus cost from students. we have a long way to go, but i have seen a tremendous change in the attitude of my colleagues in the last few years in been responsive, to our students. [applause] >> thank you. very briefly -- when i found my presidential library in arkansas, the university of arkansas agreed to establish a graduate school for me -- there are 46 such a institutions around the world, but i with the only one to give a degree for public service, not public policy. we spent half hour time in the
12:59 am
field doing service projects. there are people there -- older students, nontraditional students -- from thailand come back because they wanted to know -- he was happy to do the epidemic work, but wanted to know how to get the show on the road once he started. i told him i thought i was on his side. madeleine, i particularly like this question from melissa. how do we get older generations involved in our work so that we can motivate more young people? in other words, not just you and i doing what we are doing, but how do we help them more? >> i really do think that
1:00 am
cross-generational partnerships a very important. i think that in many ways young people motivate people our age. i have been listening to this and i am blown away, i have to say. i taught at georgetown in the '80s. and i was asked by the president, when there was a reunion class, how do the students of the 80's compare with the students today? i said the students in the 80's were interested in their retirement program. all of a sudden, they were booing. and i thought, "my god, i am addressing the students of the 80's." and i think that what is useful -- for instance --i think that what is useful, for instance there are many programs were older people are going abroad and working with young people in partnership. some of these experiences of
1:01 am
being older are then matched. i do think that there's a great opportunity for cross mentor ship. it is not the the older can enter the younger ones, but in terms of the enthusiasm and activity that the younger students have. if i might also speak for wellesley, who train young women, what is very important is to look at how to do interdisciplinary training. we have a tendency to think that one discipline might be the best one in and doing public service across the board. you need people and understand health, music, biology, and religion. i do think that older people can have a great partnership with younger people. i have been to your school and it is fantastic in terms of people being motivated. i also think, mr. president, that to have the possibility of understanding to learn by doing. a great way is to brett -- to
1:02 am
get credit by doing rather than just spending time in the library. understanding the facets and assets. what i believe foley is in democracy, but it has to deliver. people want to be able to work and understand what they're doing and give back. the most exciting thing about everything you and these young people are doing is the understanding that giving back is the way to make the world work better. r [applause] >> go ahead. >> i wanted to ask something. most of the time students are in student mode. we have this plan where we are done with college, the next thing is red school. -- grad school. yes, ph.d. and great plans to change the world. i think that that is too late
1:03 am
if we are thinking of getting an education also. going out to the world and saying i am here and want to make a change. when i graduated from mount holyoke, i was offered a scholarship by georgetown university. i dared to say no. i really wanted to go back home. because i had done fundraising, i knew my plan and i wanted to deliver before it took more. and i did it. in two years' time, it worked. then what happened? i went home, established a school. i wanted to be not the sole implement, but to make sure that everything was ok and functioning the way that it should. but then the minister of higher
1:04 am
education said that i was not qualified enough to do so. why? i am not 35 and i do not have a masters. in that way ahead to leave the country because they did not offer master's degrees. now it is the open society institute in new york and ottawa that is investing in me to make sure that i am qualified enough to make sure i am qualified enough to go back and work for the university. [applause] >> most of the people that i work with -- let me say -- not all of them, but most, the vast majority are 30 years younger than i am. or more. and, you know, i like it. a lot. but one of the things that happens to people is, just naturally, most people spend most of their time with people who are in their age group. i think that, to give a serious answer to the question that was that's, my view is that all of
1:05 am
you who know that you would like some older people because they can help you to raise money or they have got experience, or they have got the time -- you might try asking. i mean, it may be as simple as that. there are a lot of older people who want to feel like their life has meeting -- meaning, all the way to the very end. the idea that they cannot do the job they used to do, they want to keep doing something. i think that if you were really serious about this, you would be shocked at the number of older people that would tell you yes, if you ask for help, support, or guidance. often when your hair gets gray and you're hearing gets bad, you think and no one wants to around anymore. it is a big deal.
1:06 am
the baby boom generation cannot afford to be mentally or physically as rapidly declining as previous generations of seniors, otherwise we will really cramp your style financially. and that of our grandchildren. i think you have been doing a good thing for society as a whole by getting more older people involved in whatever your endeavor is. now, we are out of time, but i cannot resist this. i will ask one more serious question, then i will ask the most unbelievable question that we got from twitter. anyone else can answer this, though it is asked of madeline. how can women like me, who want to help other women across the world actually do that? in other words, i am one person out here following this.
1:07 am
i want to help women in haiti, and other places. where should i start? your device? anybody? go ahead, madeleine. >> i do think that first of all, you have been doing an amazing amount of work there. you have been able to get money and support into a variety of areas. it is important to get with someone who is doing something. people with projects. or, for instance, the national democratic institute. we have been there, trying to help people identify their needs and work with them. i think that there are organizations that are the best way to do this. i do think that one can go there and be helpful, but i would say that the best thing is to get involved with an organization directly because the individual can help the organization and the organization can help them.
1:08 am
but talking about it, the problem is americans are the most generous people in the world, with the shortest attention span. a lot of people have forgotten about haiti. it was very much in the news all the time. things are still not good there. >> let me say this. haiti is second only to india with the largest number of ngo's operating there, per- capita. it is much smaller, but there are a couple of thousand, with a few hundred seriously and deeply. my recommendation is that you, first of all, figure out exactly what you want to do. if it is an organization the you know about, go to their website. or, you can go to my foundation,
1:09 am
track haiti and see the things that are going on there. right across the board. you can find an ngo to work with that fits which were caring about. we have lists of a lot of them and you can follow it through. that is a sensible way to start. i am going to lose a friend over this, but i will ask the question anyways. what inspires you to do service? singing the answer is encouraged. [cheers and applause]
1:10 am
>> you guys will not be happy until i do a concert? [laughter] no, um. i did not say no. [laughter] i said no, um. [laughter] no. the evidence, by applying what i created, of which we have spoken about for the entire night, to engage youth at a young age and support those who are in need, for you to be engaged, ask and except the help, all of those things lead me to do the community work i do. simply the evidence that it is a
1:11 am
reality. the very students i was able to meet when i first started, they are now in college. they have now identified a talent and continue to get back to the community. as we travel across the world, nairobi, kenya. actually going all over the world to make a difference by identifying the similarities between the issues in our communities. not isolated by the differences. so, that is the thing that motivates me. now, you want me to sing it? [cheers and applause] you can help me with this one, ok? ♪ i believe the children are our future change the world and let them lead the way show them all the beauty they possess in side give them a sense of pride
1:12 am
to make it easier led the children's laughter remind us how we used to be everybody searching for our hero they need someone to look up to i never found anyone to fulfill my needs a loan with it -- a lonely place to be so, i learned to depend on me ♪ >> [groups singing together] [cheers and applause] >> ♪ the love of all is
1:13 am
happening to me i found the greatest love of all inside of me ♪ >> thank you, very much. thank you. [cheers and applause] >> tomorrow, live coverage of two sessions from the campus at george washington university. at 1:00 p.m. eastern, a panel on crating opportunity in an unstable world, moderated by chelsea clinton. then a conversation with comedy
1:14 am
central's john stuart -- jon stewart. after this, president obama at a fund-raiser in vermont. now, republican presidential candidate mitt romney in appleton, wisconsin. he will focus on economic proposals. the event took place on the campus of lawrence university. wisconsin republicans hold elections on tuesday. wisconsin will award 42 delegates. this is just over 30 minutes. host: -- [captioning performed by national captioning institute] [captions copyright national cable satellite corp. 2012]
1:15 am
[cheers and applause] >> thank you, thank you. good afternoon. it is my pleasure and honor to welcome you all on behalf of lawrence university. while today's visit certainly marks a significant visit for our school and community, it is not the first time that a major political group -- figure has made a stop at our little college. such events have happened regularly over the years. william howard taft, richard nixon, john f. kennedy, george h. w. bush, and john kerry, to name a few. what is it about this school of 1500 students that provides such a draw for our nation's most prominent political leaders? it is certainly not our rolling mountains or white sand beaches. [laughter]
1:16 am
no, time and again we have the opportunity to host these events, and it speaks to something deeper. lawrence university is a place where education and civil discourse are of paramount importance. whether we agree with a candidate's views it or not, we will be ready to engage in honest and respectful discussion. our liberal arts education has taught us that in order to learn, we must ask questions and listen. today is not the first time, and likely will not be the last that a candidate or leader will choose lawrence as a place to discuss matters of great importance. it is nonetheless a tremendous honor to welcome the governor to our institution. i would like to invite our next speaker to the podium. a wisconsin native serving in his seventh congressional term, representing the first district, our next speaker is the chairman of the house budget
1:17 am
committee and senior member of the house ways and means committee. he was named the 2011 human events conservative of the year. at this time, please join me in welcoming congressman paul ryan. [applause] >> that is right. absolutely. appreciate that. thank you. hey, everyone. how are you? thanks a lot. appreciate it. awesome. i have not been on this campus since i was a college student, visiting my buddies. it has only been a few years since i was here. let me get to the point. wisconsin nights -- wisconsinites, we have a big opportunity ahead of us. wisconsin has been in the epicenter of political discourse for a long time.
1:18 am
as a republican, i must tell you, we have not had a relevant republican primary for quite some time. i think it was like 1980. what i would say is that we in wisconsin have a great opportunity this tuesday. our country is on the wrong track. headed in the wrong direction. and it is not the fault of just democrats or republicans. it is where we are. politicians from both political parties have made lots of empty promises to americans that our government cannot keep. what we need now, more than ever, is summoned to be straight and honest with us. not finger-pointing, but solutions. we want you to fix our problems.
1:19 am
turn on the tv, look at what is going on in europe. that fate could await us if you do not fix our country's problems. we have got to address this. that takes courage. it takes principled leadership. it takes action. i am afraid to say that that is not happening right now with our government. yesterday we passed a budget for the second year in a row to address these challenges head- on. we believe that we have a moral and legal responsibility to get the nation back on track, back on the path to prosperity. keep the promises the government has made to people. especially retirees who have organized their lives around these commitments, but do it in a way to give our kids and grandkids a nation that is free of debt. that is not the path the we are on right now, though. what it will take is leadership. we believe we must offer our fellow citizens, as a wisconsin
1:20 am
rep, i feel i must offer the people i work for in the first congressional district a choice. if we do not think things are headed in the right direction, we owe you a clear choice between two futures. respect the american people and their decision. what kind of country do you want america to be? that is our obligation and opportunity as wisconsinites, this tuesday and this november, to make that decision. when you look at the challenges ahead of america, the deaths falling on us, the economic stagnation that is occurring and the lack of answers and solutions coming from some corners of washington, what we need is a leader who sees this moment for what it is.
1:21 am
a leader who has the courage of conservative principles and conviction, the integrity and tenacity to do what it takes to get america back on track. in my humble personal opinion, as a guy from janesville, we need mitt romney to be the next president of the united states of america. [applause] i am excited. i am encouraged. i am enthusiastic. in this man we have a person of conviction, a man with the right kind of experience, the right kind of leader that we are going to need to get this country right and back on track. i want to ask you to join me in welcoming home michael becomes the next president of the united states, governor mitt romney. [applause]
1:22 am
-- welcoming -- welcoming whom i hope becomes the next president of the united states, government romney. [applause] >> thank you. thank you. congressman paul ryan. a man who takes responsibility and is a courageous leader. whether or not you agree with him on every issue, this person has led a clear path for the party and the nation. i appreciate the fact that we have someone from wisconsin who is a real leader in washington and i hope we continue to see his leadership in washington. thank you, congressman. thank you. [applause] now, jake's popularity was remarkable. i do not think that either of you or i got the kind of applause that jake got. if you can give us a lesson
1:23 am
afterwards, jake, i would appreciate it. i am honored to have the privilege here with many members of the student body and faculty here. it embodies the importance and significance of what is happening in our world right now, happening in america. i and 222 days something quite extraordinary will happen in america. we will have an election. across this country, millions and millions of americans will be able to do something that is really quite amazing. they will choose not only a president, but an entire house of representatives and one-third of the u.s. senate. the entire world will be watching us. by around midnight on november 6, maybe earlier or later, we will know the results of millions of americans exercising
1:24 am
their right to vote. in doing so, making such a profound choice that it is difficult for us to grasp. no one can predict the next crisis that the next president will confront, or know what the next world will look like at the end of the president's term. in the world of the economy -- in a world economy where athens, wisconsin and athens, greece are connected, everything is more complex. but i believe that americans face a fundamental choice in this election. a decision that is more important than the candidates or political parties. we are not just selecting who will guide us as president, but a choice between two distinct pads and destinies for america. in the days and months ahead, we should ask ourselves fundamental questions about who we are as a nation and who we are becoming. what does it mean to be an american in 2012?
1:25 am
2016 and beyond? are we keeping faith with the legacy and truss handed to us by prior generations? " will we leave the next generation? your generation? this campaign, you will hear a deafening cacophony of charges and countercharges and my guess is that by november 6, most of you will be afraid to turn on your television. in the relative quiet before the storm, let's start with basic facts about which there can be no debate. first of all, since president obama became president, over a hundred thousand americans have lost their jobs. millions of americans spend longer looking for a job than ever before in history. long-term unemployment is the worst it has been since the great depression. 46 million americans are now living in poverty. more than ever before in history.
1:26 am
households with single mothers, over 30% are living in poverty. 46.5 million americans are now on food stamps, by the way. 2.8 million homes have been foreclosed on. new business start-ups are at the lowest level in 30 years. over 2000 chrysler and general motors dealerships have been closed. 22 automobile manufacturing plants have been shut down. our yearly budget deficits are huge. our national debt now stands at an all-time high. the president presided over the first $1 trillion deficit in american history. and he has repeated that dreadful distinction for every year he has been in office. for the first time since world war ii, the national debt is
1:27 am
greater than the size of the entire united states economy. each american's share of the national death stands at $50,000. president obama did not cause the recession, but he most certainly failed to lead the recovery. his stimulus protective government did not protect the american people. they have promised to hold unemployment below 8%. they did not. his stimulus was as ineffective as it was expensive. his obama care did not create jobs either. it was thought frank that hurt the community banks when it came to loaning to small businesses. the two big to fail banks are bigger today than they were before. he also failed on so many of the promises, it is hard to list them all.
1:28 am
on the issue of jobs, he failed. but on one goal, he succeeded. to raise energy prices. all in all, president obama prolong the recession and slow the recovery. president obama's economic strategy is busted. these troubling facts are the president's legacy and are now our shared history. as much as we would like to, we cannot undo what has happened. for the families that lost their homes, the factories that have been closed, the students that had to drop out of college, those that could never make it to the front door, those are lost opportunities, chances that cannot be regained. president obama thinks he is doing a good job. i am not kidding. he thinks he's doing a great job. and historically great job. according to the president, only lincoln and fdr, and lyndon johnson, have accomplished more.
1:29 am
and he did not say that on "saturday night live." how can this be? is it that the president is so disconnected from what is happening across america that he does not rest the real consequences of his failures? the answer is easy. the answer is yes. of course, this was a president elected not on the strength of a compelling record of accomplishment, but by a compelling personality and story. there was much about the campaign of barack obama that appealed to many americans. although the reality has failed the hope and change that he promised, he runs with true believers who attack anyone who challenges the power. each day they will fight more fiercely to hold on to the power. that is all to be expected. our love's power and does not let go easily.
1:30 am
the white house has lost touch with the american people. we have seen that before as well. we should also remember that candidate obama pledged that he wanted to transform the nation. unfortunately, that is exactly what he has been doing. this is one more reason i believe the election is so critical. the choice before us could not be more clear or profound. barack obama and i have fundamentally different visions of america. he has spent the last three or four years laying the foundation for a new government-centered society. i will spend the next four years rebuilding the foundation of our opportunity society, led by three people and free enterprises. barack obama once said that his work as a community organizer motivated him to help communities that had been
1:31 am
ravaged by plant closings. his desire to help others could not be more admirable, but it is clear that he saw free enterprise as the villain and not the solution. the only real solution to helping communities devastated by lost jobs is more jobs. president obama never seems to have understood the basic point that a plant closes the way business starts to lose money. when this president attacks businesses for making money, when his policies make it more difficult for businesses to make money, he is attacking the very communities that he wanted to help. that is how it works in america. at least how it works america is working. under president obama, america has not been working. the ironic tragedy is that the community organizer that wanted
1:32 am
to help the people who were hurt by a plant closing became the president on watch for the most closings since the great depression. instead of doing it impossible to promote and create jobs and get us out of this crisis, barack obama has -- has promoted the power of government. the results have been predictable and dismal. but he has transformed us, as he likes to say. closer to his vision of a government-centered society. in barack obama's society, the government must do more, because the economy is doomed to do less. when you attack business and vilify success, you will have less business and less success. then the debate becomes about how much to extend unemployment insurance. because you are guaranteeing that there will be more than -- there will be millions more
1:33 am
employer -- unemployed. tax rates are bestowed not to make us more productive or build a stronger economy, but to reshape society into something more fashionable and politically correct. of course, because business is inherently suspect, government regulators, who know better, must oversee and direct business decision making. in his government-centered society, barack obama's tax increases become a necessity and a desire tool for social justice. in a world of shrinking means, there is a finite amount of money. as someone famously said, use the taxes to spread the wealth around. i am barack obama government- centered society, government spending will always increase. because there is no reason for it not to. there is always someone who is
1:34 am
entitled to something more and will vote for anyone who promises them something more. in a government-centered society, government dispenses the benefits, are those with a cannot take, consuming a greater and greater share of the total economy. think about these numbers. today, government at all levels consumes 38% of the total economy, or gdp. if obama-care is allowed to stand, government would directly control almost half of the u.s. economy. then, through increasing controls the government has imposed on industries like energy, financial-services, and automobiles, it will directly or indirectly control well over half of the u.s. economy. so, you have got to ask yourself, will we still be a
1:35 am
free enterprise nation? will we still have economic freedom? america is on the cusp of having a government-run economy. president obama is transforming america into something very different than the land of the free and land of opportunity. and we know where that transformation leads. other nations have followed that path. it leads to chronic unemployment, crushing debts, and stagnant wages. sound familiar? i do not want to transform america. i want to restore to america the values of economic freedom and small government that have made this nation the leader of the world. and i will get that job done. [applause]
1:36 am
freedom and opportunity have made america the most powerful economy in the world. let me say that again. what made us powerful? freedom and opportunity. those are the foundations of a nation that has full employment. that has rising wages. that is fiscally stable. the best thing that we can do for the economic well-being of our people is not to grow government. it is to restore freedom and opportunity. it is opportunity that has always driven america. it has a fine dust, as americans. my father -- actually, my grandfather was the first in construction in my family. he never really made it, himself. but he held to commit -- convince my father that he could accomplish anything he set his mind to. by father had no chance to go to
1:37 am
college, but he was an apprentice. based on his excellent training, he went on to run and turnaround a great car company. later on, he became the governor of michigan. my father made the most of the opportunities that came before him. by the time i came along, fourth out of four kids, i had the chance to get the education my father could not. i love cars and was tempted to stay in michigan and go into the car business, like he had. but i would always wonder if my success was due to my father. when i got out of business school, after staying in massachusetts i got an entry- level job the best company that would hire me. most importantly, i was married and on the way to having five sons. for the last 25 years, my business career has had ups and downs, with great successes and
1:38 am
definite failures, but each step of the way i learn more about the transforming power of the american free enterprise system. i am not so naive to believe that free enterprise is the solution to all our problems. but i am also not leave enough to doubt that it is one of the greatest forces of good and this world has ever known. free enterprise has done more to lift people out of poverty, to help to build a strong middle-class, to help to educate our children and make our lives better, than all of the government programs put together. [applause] if we become one of those societies that attacks success,
1:39 am
one outcome is certain. there will be less success. that is not who we are. the promise of america has always been that if you work hard and were willing to take some risks, there was an opportunity to build a better life for you, your family, and the next generation. it is not the role of government to guarantee that everyone will achieve success. this nation was founded on the principle that we have a god- given right to pursue happiness. the pursuit is guaranteed. not the result. it is the opportunity that is guaranteed, not the outcome. we are an opportunity nation. over the centuries, men and women, pursuing happiness in their own unique ways have made our economy the leading economy in the world. as we look to the future i am confident that the principles
1:40 am
that created our strength of the very principles that will preserve it. meaning that government must be smaller. it has to have strict limits placed on its power. obama care violates those principles. as president, i will repeal it. and [applause] taxes should be as low as possible, in line with those of competing nations, designed to foster innovation and growth. i will cut marginal tax rates across the board for all americans. regulation -- a [applause] sometimes people get confused about this one, but regulations are necessary. but they have to be continuously updated, streamlined, and modernized. regulators should see that part of their job is protecting economic freedom and promoting
1:41 am
enterprise, fostering job creation. workers should also have the right to form unions, but unions should not be forced on them. union should not have the power to take money out of their members paychecks to buy the support of politicians favored by union bosses. [applause] in short, government must make america the best place in the world for innovators, small business, big business, the job creators of all kinds. business is not the enemy. it is a friend of jobs and rising wages. the friend of revenues the government needs to care for -- government needs to pay for
1:42 am
national defense. they often said they want a strong economy, but they do not like business very much. but the economy is just a product of all the nation's businesses added together. it is like saying that you love on let's -- omelettes, but you do not like eggs. reducing poverty, building a strong nation, you need successful businesses of every kind imaginable. president obama has been attacking successful businesses of every kind imaginable. apple, microsoft, they were not started to save the world. neither were general motors or alcoa. nor were companies like i started, like staples or the sports authority. they started because and evaders have great ideas and ambitions and they became great commercial ventures and successes. which is just a way of saying
1:43 am
that they made a lot of money. they help people buy homes, go to school, retire, start other businesses. we have always been a country where the dreamers and the dreams -- or one dream with success and an idea creates other dreams and successful ideas. by the way, if those dreamers are rewarded with prosperity, we view that as a reason others may be encouraged to dream as well. we have to understand that today much of the world is hungry for big dreamers with big ideas. america has to fight to grow them. to attract them from other lands as well. my father used to have a favorite saying. it goes like this. nothing is as vulnerable as entrenched success.
1:44 am
nothing is as vulnerable as entrenched success. today, because america has been so successful for so long, we seem to have forgotten what brought us here. america has become vulnerable to new competition, to massive debts and those who would substitute more government power for more freedom. we made some bad choices. we have ignored many of the mounting threats. if the hill is a little steeper before us, we have always been a nation of stepping big. last year i went all over the country. from student unions to kitchen tables, to factory break rooms and board rooms. i have heard frustration and anger, but rarely hopelessness. many americans have given up on this president, but they have not thought about giving up on ourselves, on themselves, on each other, on america. we have a sacred duty to restore the promise of america. and we will do it.
1:45 am
because we believe in america. this tuesday, i want the people of wisconsin to join me in the next step towards that destination, november 6, when across america we can give a sigh of relief and know that the promise of america has been kept. the dreamers can dream bigger. the help wanted signs can be dusted off and we can start again. this time, we will get it right. we will stop the days of apologizing for success at home and never again apologize for america abroad. [applause]
1:46 am
together, we will build the greatest america we have known. where prosperity is known and shared, not limited and divided. and america the guarantees that ours is the door that innovation and greatness always knock on first. there was a time not long ago when we could walk caller and stand straighter, because we had a gift that no one else in the world shared. we were americans. it meant something different to each of us, but it meant something special to all of us. we knew it without question. those days are coming back. that is our destiny. join me. what together this tuesday. take another step. we believe in america. we believe in ourselves, our greatest days are still ahead of us.
1:47 am
we are, after all, americans. god bless this great country, god bless you. thank you so much. [applause] ♪
1:48 am
1:49 am
1:50 am
1:51 am
>> republican presidential candidates are scheduled to speak tomorrow at the wisconsin faith and freedom event in milwaukee ahead of today's wisconsin primary. house representative paul ryan will also speak. our coverage begins at 11:00 a.m. eastern. in new hampshire republican senator was the keynote speaker last weekend at the lincoln day dinner. she was speaking as a surrogate for the mitt romney campaign.
1:52 am
akashi endorsed the former governor earlier this year, during the new hampshire primary. this was held in west chester, ohio. it is about 40 minutes. [applause] >> good evening, everybody. thank you. thank you. it is so good to be here with a lot of friends and a lot of neighbors. let me start by thanking dave for his leadership here. he has done a lot -- he has done
1:53 am
a good job on our behalf. [applause] i am very pleased that our state auditor was here. thank you for a great speech and a kind introduction. [applause] i could not be more proud of all that dave is doing -- all that our team in columbus is doing on our behalf. a lot of people in washington can learn one or two things about what is going on in ohio. here in ohio they have a balance the budget, upgraded our credit rating, removed government barriers to private sector growth, and all of this without raising taxes in our state. i know it has not been easy. they have been under constant pressure from the white house and all of their allies on the left. rather than looking at the example of ohio and other states, the president is more
1:54 am
focused on blaming others for all of his inefficiencies and all of his failed policies that have given nothing to us. think about this for a moment. think about the last three years. we have a one trillion dollars stimulus bill. a we have the obama government takeover of health care. we have a spending bill with 9000 your marks that were never exposed to the light of day. that is not to mention the new rules, new regulations that drive up the cost of virtually everything including the cost of gasoline. none has created jobs. the policies of the president have not only not helped the economy, they have made it worse. the american people saw all of this in 2010. they began to do something about it.
1:55 am
here in ohio they elected ron portman as our united states senator. [applause] they also elected five new republican members of the house from here in ohio. they swept the democrats out of the halls of columbus, ohio. nationally i think the story was equally impressive. we elected 89 new freshmen members of the house of representatives making up 40% of our majority. kelly ayotte who is with us today is a proud new freshman member elected in 2010. joining a great new class of new members in washington, d.c. she gave up her career as a prosecutor, gave up her first big elected office as the first female to be elected attorney general in the state of new hampshire to take a shot at a seat in the united states senate. she had the courage to want to go to washington to deliver real change. she is doing just that. [applause]
1:56 am
in our short time in washington, she has been an important voice to promote life, to project our veterans and stop runaway spending. i hear she is beginning to lead a bipartisan revolt in the united states senate against harry reid to actually do a budget for the first time in three years. [applause] i do not have to tell kelly this, but guess what, it is a about time. it has been more than three years. i will turn this all over to kelly in a couple of minutes but i have a couple of things i want to say. the upcoming election will be
1:57 am
the most important election of our lifetimes. you have heard politicians over the course of your life talk about this upcoming election being the most important election of our lifetime. guess what? most of the time it was not. i say the most important election of my lifetime will occur this november. the election will be a referendum on the president's economic policies. whether it is about jobs in the economy, whether it is about gasoline prices, or whether it is about obamacare, that is what the election will be about. the president will try to make the election a about anything other than those three issues. nobody has tried to work with the president more than i have. lord knows i have tried everything in the world to try to find common ground with the president. last summer to spend months trying to find a way to bring
1:58 am
our fiscal house in order and realign entitlement programs so they are sustainable for the long term. the president could not muster the courage to do the right thing. at the last minute he decided to move the goalposts. he demanded a 1.2 trillion dollars in new taxes. he knew that i was not going to go to that point. there has been a lot talk about about how this whole thing played out. the white house tried to spin that i walked out of the negotiations. there is a lot being written about this all of a sudden. the washington post for a big article. republicans love to talk to dozens of staffers and people who were in the room. they can get down to the details about what kind of muffins or in the room while wilbur having breakfast. one thing i found interesting from an unnamed source from the white house who was horrified that i had the audacity to say that obamacare -- while pushing
1:59 am
the president to cut his own health-care law. you can excuse me for speaking like an ordinary american. the american people do not want obamacare. washington and democrats forced it down the throat of the american people and the american people rise up and do something about it. [applause] guess what? the white house knows this. yesterday marked the second anniversary of the signing into law of obamacare. guess what? the president hit and the vice president hit. everybody in the cabinet hit. these are the things they love to do to go out there and celebrate. nowhere were any of them to be
2:00 am
found. apparently they observe the day with a full slate of staff meetings. they were sitting around holding each others hands in sorrow over about what was going to happen in november. [applause] now republican majority will do exactly what we said we would do. we are going to listen to the american people, follow the will of the american people, and have the courage of our conviction to do what we thought was in the best interest of our country. one of the great things about our political system is there is no limit to the size of the team you can build. we know how this works. the road to the white house will go right through butler county. every yard sign, every door that is not of our candidates from the top of the ticket to the bottom of the ticket.
2:01 am
we have to pull together and make sure we deliver for the american people our state and our county republican team that will do the right thing for our country. i am looking forward to working with each and every one of you in this room. we have a lot of work to do this year. i want to thank you for being here. there is not a better group of republicans anywhere in this country. now to kelly. i told you about tally ayotte the center -- kelly ayotte, the new senator. her husband was a former fighter pilot in the air force and is a small-business owner in new hampshire. i have been to new hampshire more times than i can count. it is a little different than it is here in butler county. she gets this. she decided to show up and have dinner with what people in
2:02 am
washington call "the rat pack." you have heard me talk about my friends in washington, when seagram will show up once and awhile we can put up with him. -- lindsey gramm will show up once in awhile when we can put up with him. you have dinner with our crowd a couple of times, you get to know each other pretty well. kelly understands what is going on in america. she understands what the american people want. she is somebody i am very proud of. ladies and gentlemen, join me in welcoming the freshman senator from the state of new hampshire, kelly ayotte.
2:03 am
[applause] >> thank you. thank you so much. it is wonderful to be here with the tonight. first of all, i want to thank your chairman for his leadership. i know it is a thankless job to be chairman of a party in a county. it is such an important job. thank you so much for your leadership. [applause] i want to thank mr. speaker. it is an honor to be here with you and butler county and share
2:04 am
the stage with you in your hometown. both of you have been so gracious to me and i appreciate the opportunity to be here tonight in your district. thank you so much. i know in the past you traveled to new hampshire to campaign for our house candidates. we appreciate it. i am hoping to bring a little bit of the live at free or die state here to ohio. [applause] it is wonderful to be here with all of you. such a great crowd. i was thinking about it on my way here and how smart you folks are. let's face it, you selected the speaker of the house of representatives -- a terrific speaker of the house. not only did to elect a terrific speaker of the house, you also elected the next vice president of the united states, center ron portman. [applause]
2:05 am
-- senator ron portman. it is an honor to serve with him in the senate. he is conservative, smart, knowledgeable. i can tell you he is a go to person and a leader in the republican caucus in the united states senate. you should be very proud you elected him to represent you in 2010. we are so blessed to have john boehner to serve as speaker of the house at a time of such consequence to our nation. we all know it. we know how important to this is in terms of where our country as perry added he is strong, conservative, tough. he has been a reformer and washington from the minute you elected him to represent you in the house.
2:06 am
let's face it, he was against your marks before it was cool. when he became speaker of the house he made sure the house was not going to stuff that wasteful spending the or pet projects into bigger bills again. thank you, mr. speaker. [applause] let's talk about his leadership in the house of representatives. the critical legislation that the house has passed for the good of our great country. they passed a balanced budget amendment. they pass the repeal of obamacare. they passed approval of the keystone pipeline project. [applause] they had the common sense to pass a responsible budget for our country.
2:07 am
speaker john boehner has done all of this in the house only to see every piece of legislation that i just talked about die in the graveyard of the united states senate, led by harry reid. but i want you to know that not only are you going to have a very important role in the presidential election, but the united states senate. you can change what is happening in the united states senate right now. send us josh mandel. [applause]
2:08 am
i got elected in 2010 and i am here to tell you we need reinforcements. we need more conservatives in the united states senate like josh mandell. as the wife of an iraq war veteran, my husband flew missions and iraq. i admire his service and sacrifice for our country. he is the kind of leader we need in washington. i have one more thing for you to think about when it comes to josh mandel. think about this could be one of the greatest political trades in history. josh mandel for sharon brown. [applause] i tried to think about it. i have to tell you.
2:09 am
i am a red sox fan. unfortunately, i have to say this. this trade is on par with the red sox trading babe ruth to the new york yankees, unfortunately. that is how good this trade could be for the united states senate and our country. if we have speaker john boehner leading our country and we take a majority in the united states senate, we have leader mitch mcconnell in the senate and we have the two of them working together for a common, conservative agenda for this country. it will be great. there is no question. we need to do it. it will not be enough to save our country. to save our country, we need to
2:10 am
take back the presidency. [applause] otherwise, if we have four more years of barack obama, he will be there vetoing every common- sense conservative piece of legislation that we put forward to put our fiscal house in order to save our country. he will continue to fill the executive branch with appointments that treat the private sector as the enemy. just think about what will happen if he gets more appointments to the united states supreme court. i believe as the speaker said that this is the most important presidential election in the history of our country.
2:11 am
we know that with over 15 trillion dollars in debt and a government that has become too big and too oppressive, our country is at a tipping point. we are on the precipice right now. our great country. we all in this room have to make sure that barack obama is a one-term president. let's commit ourselves to that. [applause] here is where you matter so much. ohio is ground zero in this presidential election. here is your assignment. i know how hard all of you work. if we win swing states like ohio and my home state of new hampshire, we will be incredibly hard to beat in
2:12 am
november. what you do in ohio could very well determine the future of america. i do not need to remind you what is at stake in november for our country. just look at what this president has done in four years. the speaker talked about some of the things this president has done. can you imagine what he would do with another four years without an election hanging over his head? just think about his record. he began his presidency with an apology tore around the world for our country. he appointed an attorney general that things we should treat terrorists like common criminals. he has time and time again
2:13 am
ignored his commanders, his military commanders in iraq and afghanistan. he has thrown our great friend and ally israel under the boss. on the domestic front, this president is on track to rack up more debt than all the other presidents combined in the history of our country. he has added close to five trillion dollars to our 15 trillion dollar plus debt. we have run trillion dollar deficits for the last four years. in february we have a marker -- why would we ever want to reach? the most amount of debt incurred ever in the history of our country. when it comes to budget, he has no idea how to use a calculator. he has no idea how to balance the budget. look at the budget he proposed
2:14 am
last year for our country. his budget was so fiscally irresponsible that when it was put out for a vote in the united states senate, not even one member of his own party could bring themselves to vote for it. it failed 97-0 in the united states senate. his budget this year is no better for our country. that is where we are when it comes to the fiscal state of the country and this president. look at what happened to gas prices under this president. i am married to a guy who owns a landscaping and snow plowing business. i hear from a lot of small businesses in new hampshire. i go and fill up my car at the pumps and i am appalled at how much we are paying for gas right now. do you realize we are paying $40 more a tank then when he came into office?
2:15 am
we cannot afford that. the average family, what that does to their budget. under his presidency, domestic production of gas and oil on federal lands and offshore has gone down significantly. let's not forget the keystone pipeline. it makes so much sense, i do not even know how we are where we are here today with the keystone pipeline. he does not want us to get our oil from canada. he would rather us get our oil from the middle east with countries that do not like us. he does not want to create 20,000 direct jobs for our country with the keystone pipeline. he would rather fund projects like solyndra. think about what he did this week. he thinks we are stupid. he goes to oklahoma and it shows up and says, i will expedite this portion of the keystone pipeline -- where he is irrelevant.
2:16 am
he is blocking where it matters the most. he thinks we're all going to suddenly think he is for the keystone pipeline. i know and you know that the american people reject they are not as stupid as he thinks they are. there are going to figure it out as the continue to go to the palms and pay more. he holds up something as common sense as the keystone pipeline. obamacare,orget passed in the middle of the night with the cornhuskers tictac. somebody who ran saying all of the health-care negotiations will be on c-span, and yet it was worked out in a back room with nancy pelosi and harry reid and they had to buy the votes of their own members to do it. nancy pelosi said, we have to
2:17 am
pass it to know what is in it. guess what, we know what is in it and the american people do not wanted. [applause] -- do not want it. we have already seen with the 1700 waivers to 4 million people. half of them are to the unions who campaigned for obamacare. i guess it must be nice and helpful to know people in high places to get waivers. it shows you that even those who supported this bill know that it does not work and it went out of it. hopefully our supreme court next week will call this bill offer what it is -- unconstitutional. [applause] finally, with regulations that are destroying our businesses. i come i around our state and i hear from our small businesses regulation after regulation
2:18 am
that is making it more difficult for them to put people to work. job killing but -- bodies that he packs with people who try to find ways so you cannot open up a plant and expand a plant in south carolina, a body that makes it more difficult to put people to work. he appointed these people in a recess appointment that is also unconstitutional, unfortunately. he has heard america's recovery. we cannot let it continue. -- he has hurt america's recovery. let's be clear. i know that we will have the president in a republican president. when it comes to protecting america, we need a president who believes in american exceptional as a man will never
2:19 am
apologize for the united states of america. [applause] we need an attorney general that is appointed that will make sure that no terrorist ever hears the words "you have the right to remain silent." [applause] we need a president who is not going to -- who will listen to our commander in afghanistan and not to general axelrod. [applause] we need a president who will stand up and for our ally israel and against iran. [applause] a president who will dramatically cut spending, who
2:20 am
will capet and balance our budget and fight to say to congress -- we finally need a balanced budget amendment to the united states constitution. go get it done. [applause] who will use his common sense to say, yes, america has natural resources -- oil, gas, and other types of resources. we should use them. a president who will approve the keystone pipeline. he will get rid of excessive regulations that make it harder for our businesses to put people to work, starting with obamacare. that is why this election matters. that is why you matter so much as ground zero for this presidential election. i am a strong supporter of mitt romney.
2:21 am
i campaigned hard for him. [applause] i campaign very hard for him in new hampshire. we are a first in the nation primary. i sat down with our candidates. we met them all face-to-face. we had coffee and vetted them. this is very important to us. i decided to support mitt romney because i know he can turn this country around. i want to thank you as a strong supporter of mitt romney for delivering ohio for mitt romney. i know how important your votes were. i know how seriously took the primary. i know how important ohio is to governor mitt romney. we have some great candidates running for president. all of them would be better than president barack obama. [applause]
2:22 am
i believe that mitt romney will be our nominee. it is time. it is time for us to come together and unite behind him. he in my view is hands down our strongest candidate to take on barack obama and win. if there was ever a time in the history of our nation that we needed somebody who was actually from outside of washington, somebody that has private sector business -- experience that knows how our private economy works. if there was ever a time we needed somebody with experience in the private sector and as a governor, it is now. it is no mistake that you hear no -- that you hear all the time that obama, joe biden, they are all going after mitt romney. they are afraid to run against him. we need to make sure that we
2:23 am
nominate a candidate, go forward, and be barack obama. that is what i want to say to you tonight. i think it is so important from where we are. when we come back, we all have to be together. it comes back to ohio. i want to paint a picture for you, something i am so worried about and i think about a lot. that is november 7. that is the day after the presidential election. can you imagine what it will be like if we wake up on november 7 and we have not won the presidential election? even if we have been successful in the house and the senate, if we have not won the presidential election, what will it feel like that morning?
2:24 am
what will the sinking feeling be in your stomach? what will you be thinking about in terms of the future of our country and where we are and what damage this president can do in four more years to our country? i have thought about that a lot. i do not want to have that feeling in my stomach on wednesday, november 7. i know that you do not either. we have to give it everything that we have for our nominee at the end of the day after our convention. it is critical. i ran for the united states senate. the speaker has said -- i had actually never run before. in new hampshire the attorney general is not an elected position. i was appointed originally by the governor. my first run was the united states senate. i have to tell you, i never thought i was going to run for political office. this is not something in my family because i have a 4-year- old and a 7-year-old.
2:25 am
we have a lot going on in our family. small business, my husband served in the military. i saw what was happening in our country, and that is what compelled me to run for the united states senate. just like you -- my husband and i spent so much time in 2009 yelling and our television with what this president was doing. i just cannot stand it anymore. [applause] you may be thinking, what am i doing here listening to a senator from new hampshire. i cherish my time with my children.
2:26 am
i came here tonight because i am is still so worried about our country. we need your help to turn this country around for my children, for your children, for all of us. that is why i am here tonight. i want to have you imagine a different scenario. that is when we wake up on november 7, speaker banner, leader mitch mcconnell, josh mandel won, and we haqve mitt romney as president. how happy would we feel? we would feel great. would it matter? let me give you what i think is one of the top examples of why it matters. we cannot hang all of our hopes for obamacare on the united states supreme court. i will leighton and up here a little bit. it has been quite a week on the presidential campaign. when i was doing my research on ohio, i also learned that ohio
2:27 am
-- the ohio art company came from here and happens to be the company that thought of the etch a sktech. we have heard a lot about that on the campaign trail this year. i want you to think about why it matters. if we wake up on november 7, we have mitt romney as president, speaker dinner in the house, and we have senate leader mitch mcconnell. here is why it matters. you cannot be able to see this. it says obamacare. that is what this etch a sketch says -- obamacare. here is what will happen when we have mitt romney as the president, speaker bain are in the house, and mitch mcconnell leading the senate. [applause]
2:28 am
it is all done. no more obamacare. if we lose. if we lose this presidential election, obamacare will be etched in stone. we cannot allow that to happen for our country. that is why this is just one example. we know all the other examples of how much this matters. think about that. we have to win this election. we all have to come together. we have to do everything we can to make sure that we do. this is a huge time for america. let's promise ourselves that we will do everything to win the swing states of ohio and new hampshire. we have less electoral votes at stake in new hampshire, yet we
2:29 am
are one of the swing states. i will do everything i can to make sure that i deliver new hampshire for republicans. i know that you will do everything that you can to deliver ohio for the republican presidential win in 2012. let's work as hard as we can for the future of our country. nothing less is at stake. our children, my children, your children, our grandchildren all depend on it. the greatest country on earth depends on that. i t why so much for having me tonight. a thank you for all you are doing. i know that you are going to deliver ohio for republicans. i know that we are going to turn this country around. we can do it. we are in america. there has never been a challenge that we have faced that we have not overcome and the better for at the end of the day. god bless you and may god bless the united states of america.
2:30 am
[cheers and applause] [captioning performed by national captioning institute] [captions copyright national cable satellite corp. 2012] >> and next, president obama at a fund-raiser in vermont. then a pentagon -- then it, a pentagon briefing on the dover mortuary. after that, the former president clinton and former secretary of state discussed public service. tomorrow on "washington journal ," alison black, maneesha
2:31 am
mithal, and mark matthews is them is the future of international space station. life at 7:00 a.m. eastern on c- span. >> i am appearing here today as one spokesperson for the hundreds of thousands of marines, sailors, their families, and loyal civilian employees who are unknowingly exposed to run this levels of toxins through their drinking water in north carolina. >> the documentary chronicles retired marine jerry ensminger and his quest to unveil the toxic water. >> one thing they have done over the years is they have told so many half-truths and total lies.
2:32 am
they have admitted a lot of information to the media. now, if they were to sit down with me, face-to-face, i could show them with their own documents what they have been saying. they do not want to do that. >> more on sunday night at 8:00 eastern. >> live sunday, the founding fathers, civility, and ethics. your questions for richard brookhiser. his latest book is on james madison. he will take your phone calls, e-mails, and tweets on booktv. >> now, president obama at a fund-raiser at the university of vermont in burlington.
2:33 am
he talked about his accomplishments during his first term and plans for his second term. he made four campaign stops, two in vermont and two in maine. this is about 35 minutes. >> hello, vermont. [applause] hello. thank you. thank you. thank you.
2:34 am
this is a good crowd here in vermont. [applause] it is good to be at ups -- go catamounts! [applause] it is good to be in vermont. now, out of all 50 states, vermont has gone along this without a presidential visit. [applause] the last time a president stopped by was president clinton in 1995. we decided that today, we are going to reset the clock. [applause] >> a couple of acknowledgments
2:35 am
are want to make. give jimmy a big round of applause for the introduction. [applause] you have one of the best governors in the country. [applause] when flooding came and disaster struck, he was here every single day working on your behalf. we could not be prouder of them. peter sutherland. [applause] two outstanding senators, patrick leahy and barry sanders. [applause] you have an outstanding mayor- elect. [applause] given up for grace potter and the nocturnals.
2:36 am
[applause] i also want to thank carolyn and the entire host committee for helping to organize this unbelievable event. one last thing i want to do. i want to express my condolences to everybody who knew and loved melissa jenkins. i knew some of the -- i know some of the elected officials are going to that funeral. a woman who devoted her life to her community and helping to shape young minds. i know that from what's heart is broken. all we can do is live our lives the way that pays tribute to her by looking out for her students and sons. michele and i want to express our thoughts and prayers to everyone who knew her. [applause] now, i am here -- [applause]
2:37 am
you know -- [applause] maybe i should just quit while i am ahead. [laughter] i am glad to take off my jacket. it is a little warm. [applause] i am here not just because i need your help. i am here because the country needs your help. there were a lot of reasons that so many of you work your hearts out for our campaign in 2008. it was not because it was going to be easy. it was not because it was a sure thing. when you decide to support a candidate named barack hussein
2:38 am
obama, that is not a guarantee of success. [laughter] some heavy sledding there. the point is, you did not join the campaign because of me. you joined it because we had a shared vision for america. it was not a vision where everybody is left to fend for themselves. it was not a vision or the rules are made just for the powerful. it was a vision of an america where everybody who works hard has a chance to get ahead. [applause] everybody. that is the vision that we shared. that is the change that we believed in. and we knew it was not want to
2:39 am
come easily or quickly. but we had confidence, faith in each other. we believed that when americans may commitments to each other about a bold, generous vision for the country, that we can achieve it. there is no challenge we cannot overcome. here is what i want to report. in three years, because of what so many of you did in 2008, we have begun to see what change looks like. [applause] we have begun to see what change looks like. changes the first bill i signed into law, a law that says women deserves an evil days pay for an equal day's work. [applause]
2:40 am
change in the decision we made to rescue an auto industry on the verge of collapse. some said lead detroit go bankrupt. 1 million jobs were at stake. we were not want to let that happen. today, gm has reported the highest profits in 100 years. 200,000 new jobs. >> gm created 200,000 new jobs. the american auto industry is back and it is making cars that are more fuel-efficient and that is helping the environment, even as we are putting people to work. [cheers and applause] change is a decision we made it to stop waiting for congress to do something about our oil addiction. we raise our fuel efficiency standard and by the middle of next year come out -- the next decade, we will be driving american cars with 55 miles a gallon.
2:41 am
[applause] this will save the family more than a thousand dollars at the pump. that is what change is. change is a fight we want to stop handing $60 billion in taxpayer giveaways to the banks who are processing student loans. we decided to give the student loans to students. [applause] this means we can make college more affordable for young people who need it. [applause] that is what change is. that happened because of you. [applause] yes, change is the health care reform that we passed after over a century of trying. [applause] reform that will finally insure that in the united states of america, no one will go broke
2:42 am
because they get sick. already, already, 2.5 million young people now have health insurance who did not have it before because this law let them stay on their parents' plan. [applause] already, millions of seniors are paying less for their prescription drugs because of this law. already, americans cannot be denied or dropped by their insurance companies when they need care the most. [applause] already, they're getting preventive care they did not have before. that is happening right now. [applause] change is the fact that for the first time in history, you do not have to hide who you love in order to serve the country you love because we ended do not ask, do not tell. [cheers and applause]
2:43 am
change is the fact that for the first time in nine years, there are no americans fighting in iraq. [cheers and applause] we refocus our efforts on terrorists to actually attack us on 9/11 and thanks to the great men and women in uniform, al qaeda is weaker and osama bin laden is no more. we have a transition in afghanistan to put them in the week and start bringing our troops home from afghanistan. that is what changes. [cheers and applause] -- that is what change is. [cheers and applause] none of this has been easy. we have had a little bit of
2:44 am
resistance from the other side. [laughter] we have got more work to do. there are still to many americans who are looking for work. there are still too many families who can barely afford to pay the bills or make the mortgage. we are still recovering from the worst economic storm in generations. i love you, back. [laughter] [cheers and applause] but, over the past two years, over the past two years, businesses have added 4 million new jobs. [cheers and applause]. our manufacturers claim -- our manufacturers are creating jobs for the first time since the nineties. our economy is getting stronger. the recovery is accelerating. all of this means the last thing we can afford to do is to go back to the same policies that got us into this miss in the first place. [cheers and applause]
2:45 am
that is what the other side wants to do. they make no secret about it. they want to go back to the days where wall street plays by its own rules. they want to go back to the day when insurance companies can do whatever they want. they want to go back to the day when -- continue to spend trillions of dollars on tax breaks for the wealthiest individuals in america, even if it means adding to the deficit or cutting education or gutting investment between energy -- for clean energy. their philosophy is simple. you are on your own. you are on your own. if you are out of work, tough luck. you are on your own. if you do not have health care, that is your problem. you are on your own. if you are born into poverty, lift yourself up with your own
2:46 am
bootstraps, even if you do not have boots. you are on your own. they believe that that is how america -- they believe that is how america has advanced. that is the conception they have of liberty. they are wrong. [cheers and applause] they're wrong. in the united states of america, we are greater together than we are on our own. [cheers and applause] this country advances when we keep that basic american promise. if you work hard, you can do well enough to raise a family. on a home. send your kids to college. put away for retirement. it does not matter who you are, where you come from, what you look like. that is what has created this extraordinary country of ours.
2:47 am
[cheers and applause] that is what we are fighting for. that is the choice in this election. this is not just your usual run-of-the-mill political debate. this is the defining issue of our time. a make or break a moment for the middle class. that is what we have to fight for. [cheers and applause] we can go back to an economy that was built on outsourcing and bad debt and phony financial problems -- profits, or we can build an economy that is built to last. an economy that is built on american manufacturing. american innovation. american energy. american workers who are skilled. at the values that make this country great -- hard work and shared responsibility. that is the vision i believe in.
2:48 am
[cheers and applause] that is what i am fighting for. we have got to make sure that the next generation of manufacturers take root in factories in detroit and pittsburgh and cleveland. i do not want this nation to be known for buying and consuming things. i want is to build and sell things all around the world. [cheers and applause] i want us to stop rewarding businesses that ship jobs overseas, record companies that are investing right here in the u.s. [cheers and applause] i want to make our schools the envy of the world. [cheers and applause] that starts with the man or
2:49 am
woman at the front of the classroom. [cheers and applause]. a good teacher can increase the lifetime earning of a classroom by over $250,000. and a great teacher can help a child trapped in poverty dream and then live beyond their circumstances. i do not want people in washington to be bashing teachers. i do not want them to defend the status quo. i want us to give schools the resources they need to hire good teachers. [cheers and applause] reward great teachers. i want us to grant schools flexibility to teach with creativity and passion and stop teaching for the test. i want to replace teachers who are not helping kids learn. that is what i want to see happen. [cheers and applause]
2:50 am
when kids do graduate, the most daunting challenge can be the cost of college. when americans owe more tuition debt than they do credit card debt, you know we have a problem. the first thing we have to do is congress has to stop interest rates that are currently scheduled -- this is a huge problem for a lot of people. i a party as congress to do it. they have not done its. they have not done it so far. colleges and universities have to do their part to keep tuition from going up. [cheers and applause] higher education cannot be a luxury. it is an imperative that every family in america should be able to afford.
2:51 am
[cheers and applause] an economy built to last is one that supports scientists and researchers and science. aboutether we're talking stem cell or climate change, we do not need science deniers. we need people to understand that america is always succeeding because of our belief in science. [cheers and applause] our investment in research. we have to make sure the next great breakthrough in clean energy happens here in the united states of america. [cheers and applause] we have been subsidizing oil companies for 100 years now. through taxpayer giveaways. i think -- i just talked about this yesterday. it is time to stop taxpayer giveaways to an oil industry
2:52 am
that has been rarely more profitable. let us double down on clean energy that has never been more promising. [cheers and applause] that is what we need to be investing in. we have got to rebuild america. our businesses and our people -- want them to have access to the best things. the faster high speed internet access. it is time for us to take the money we were spending at war, use half of it to pay down the debt and use the rest of it to start doing some nation- building right here at home. [cheers and applause]
2:53 am
and we have to make sure that we have a tax system that is actually fair. [cheers and applause] part of that is something i call the buffett rule. very similar. re-. -- very simple. if you're making more than a million dollars a year, you should not pay a lower rate than your secretary. [cheers and applause] that is a simple proposition. now, if you make less than $250,000 a year, like 98 percent of all families, your taxes should not go up because right now, folks are struggling to dig themselves out of this incredible recession. if you are making more than $1
2:54 am
million per year, you can do it. this is not class warfare. this is basic math. [cheers and applause] that is what this is. look, if somebody like me gets a tax break that they do not need, and that the country cannot afford, then one of two things will happen. one, it adds to the deficit. or, we are taking something away from somebody else. the student has to pay a higher interest rate on their student loans because we have to make up the money somewhere. or that senior has to start paying more for medicare. the money has to be made up somewhere. or that veteran does not get the ptsd they need after serving the country.
2:55 am
or a family that is struggling to get by is getting less home assistance. there is no way of getting around that. i there folks like me are doing more -- either folks like me are doing more or somebody who cannot afford it is getting less. that is not right. that is not who we are. [cheers and applause] that is not what america is about. [cheers and applause] i hear politicians talking about values in an election year. i hear a lot about that. let me tell you about values. hard work. personal responsibility. those are values. looking out for one another, that is of value. [cheers and applause] the idea we are all in this together. i my brother's keeper.
2:56 am
i and my sister's keeper. that is a value. -- i am my sister's keeper. that is a value. the idea that we think about the next generation and we are taking care of our planet. that is a value. [cheers and applause] each of us is only here because somebody somewhere felt a responsibility to their families and to their fellow citizens. to our countries future. -- our country's future. the american story is not just about what we do our own. we are individualist and we expect personal responsibility and everyone has to work hard. but, we also have always understood that we would not win the race for new jobs and businesses and middle-class security if we were just
2:57 am
applying some you are on your own economics. it has been tried it has not worked. it did not work when we tried it in a decade before the great depression. it did not work when we tried it in the last decade. we just tried this. what they are peddling has been tried. it did not work. [cheers and applause] we know this from our own lives. if we attract some outstanding in person to become a teacher -- young person to be a teacher by giving them what they deserve and that teacher educates the next steve jobs, we all benefit. we all do better.
2:58 am
america rises. if we are providing faster internet to rural america so that some small business owner, someone can sell his or her goods around the world. that is good for all of us. if we build a new bridge that saves the shipping company time and money, everybody benefits. we do better. that is america became an economic superpower. this is not traditionally -- this has not been a democratic or republican idea. it was a republican, teddy roosevelt, who called for progressive income tax. it was light as an hour who build the interstate highway system. -- like eisenhower who builds the interstate system. it was president lincoln, who could not win the nomination for the primary right now -- [laughter] [cheers and applause]
2:59 am
you know, in the middle of the civil war, he helped make the transcontinental railroad possible and the national academy of sciences. he understood that we are in this together. we have to make and has been in our futures. it was with the help that fdr gave heroes, including my grandfather, the chance to go to college through the gi bill. [cheers and applause] that same spirit of common purpose still exists today. out here in vermont, and all across america, it is there.
3:00 am
[cheers and applause] is there when you talk to folks on main street and when you talk to members of our armed forces. is there when you talk to people in their places of worship.
3:01 am
3:02 am
3:03 am
3:04 am
3:05 am
3:06 am
3:07 am
3:08 am
3:09 am
3:10 am
3:11 am
3:12 am
3:13 am
3:14 am
3:15 am
3:16 am
3:17 am
3:18 am
3:19 am
3:20 am
3:21 am
3:22 am
3:23 am
3:24 am
3:25 am
3:26 am
3:27 am
3:28 am
3:29 am
3:30 am
3:31 am
3:32 am
3:33 am
3:34 am
3:35 am
3:36 am
3:37 am
3:38 am
3:39 am
3:40 am
3:41 am
3:42 am
3:43 am
3:44 am
3:45 am
3:46 am
3:47 am
3:48 am
3:49 am
3:50 am
3:51 am
3:52 am
3:53 am
3:54 am
3:55 am
3:56 am
3:57 am
3:58 am
3:59 am
4:00 am
4:01 am
4:02 am
4:03 am
4:04 am
4:05 am
4:06 am
4:07 am
4:08 am
4:09 am
4:10 am
4:11 am
4:12 am
4:13 am
4:14 am
4:15 am
4:16 am
4:17 am
4:18 am
4:19 am
4:20 am
4:21 am
4:22 am
4:23 am
4:24 am
4:25 am
4:26 am
4:27 am
4:28 am
4:29 am
4:30 am
4:31 am
4:32 am
4:33 am
4:34 am
4:35 am
4:36 am
4:37 am
4:38 am
4:39 am
4:40 am
4:41 am
4:42 am
4:43 am
4:44 am
4:45 am
4:46 am
4:47 am
4:48 am
4:49 am
.
4:50 am
4:51 am
4:52 am
4:53 am
4:54 am
4:55 am
4:56 am
4:57 am
4:58 am
4:59 am
5:00 am
[captions copyright national cable satellite corp. 2012] [captioning performed by national captioning institute] usher, what inspires you to do service? singing the answer is encouraged. [applause]
5:01 am
>> you guys will not be happy until i do a concert? [laughter] no, um. i did not say no. [laughter] i said no, um. [laughter] no. the evidence, by applying what i created, of which we have spoken about for the entire night, to engage youth at a young age and support those who are in need, for you to be engaged, ask and except the help, all of those things lead me to do the community work i do. simply the evidence that it is a reality. the very students i was able to meet when i first started, they
5:02 am
are now in college. they have now identified a talent and continue to get back to the community. as we travel across the world, nairobi, kenya. actually going all over the world to make a difference by identifying the similarities between the issues in our communities. not isolated by the differences. so, that is the thing that motivates me. now, you want me to sing it? [applause] you can help me with this one, ok? ♪ i believe the children are our future
5:03 am
teach them well and let them lead the way show them all the beauty they possess inside give them a sense of pride to make it easier let the children's laughter remind us how we used to be everybody searching for our hero people need someone to look up to i never found anyone to fulfill my needs a lonely place to be so i learned to depend on me i decided long ago long ago not to stand in anyone's shadow if i fail if i succeed
5:04 am
[applause] because the greatest love of all is happening to me i found the greatest love of all inside of me ♪ [applause] >> thank you, very much. thank you. [applause] >> ladies and gentlemen, this session is now concluded. thank you for attending this evening.
5:05 am
members, please remain in your seats. you will now be directed from the stage for a 2012 class photo. >> ladies and gentlemen, we would like attendees on the floor for the class photo. >> today live coverage of two sessions from the fifth annual clinton global initiative meeting. at 1:00 p.m. eastern, a panel of creating opportunity in an unstable world moderated by chelsea clinton and then at 4:00 p.m. a conversation between former president clinton and comedy central's jon stewart.
5:06 am
next house speaker john boehner at a lincoln day dinner in ohio and then mitt romney campaigning in wisconsin. after that, president obama at a campaign rundraiser in verbatim. new hampshire republican senator kelly ayott was the keynote speaker last weekend at the renren lincoln day dinner. she has been mentioned as a possible vice-presidential candidate. john boehner also spoke at this event. it is about 40 minutes.
5:07 am
>> good evening, everyone. thank you, thank you and thank you. it feels good to be here with a lot of friends and a lot of neighbors. let me start by thanking dave for his leadership here. he has done a lot -- he has done a good job on our behalf. [applause] i am very pleased that david yost was here, our state auditor. thank you for a great speech and a kind introduction. [applause] let me also say i could not be more proud of all that dave is doing -- all that our team in columbus is doing on our behalf. a lot of people in washington can learn one or two things about what is going on in ohio.
5:08 am
when you look at ohio, they balanced the budget, upgraded our credit rating, removed government barriers to private sector growth, and all of this without raising taxes in our state. i know it has not been easy. they have been under constant pressure from the white house and all of their allies on the left. rather than looking at the example of ohio and other states, the president is more focused on blaming others for all of his inefficiencies and all of his failed policies that have given nothing to us. think about this for a moment. think about the last three years. we have a one trillion dollars stimulus bill. a we have the obama government takeover of health care. we have a spending bill with 9,000 earmarks that were never
5:09 am
exposed to the light of day. that is not to mention the new rules, new regulations that drive up the cost of virtually everything including the cost of gasoline. none has created jobs. the policies of the president have not only not helped the economy, they have made it worse. the american people saw all of this in 2010. they began to do something about it. here in ohio they elected ron portman as our united states senator. [applause] they also elected five new republican members of the house from here in ohio. they swept the democrats out of the halls of columbus, ohio. nationally i think the story was equally impressive. we elected 89 new freshmen members of the house of representatives making up 40% of our majority.
5:10 am
kelly ayotte who is with us today is a proud new freshman member elected in 2010. joining a great new class of new members in washington, d.c. she gave up her career as a prosecutor, gave up her first big elected office as the first female to be elected attorney general in the state of new hampshire to take a shot at a seat in the united states senate. she had the courage to want to go to washington to deliver real change. she is doing just that. [applause] in our short time in washington, she has been an important voice to promote life, to project our veterans and stop runaway spending. i hear she is beginning to lead
5:11 am
a bipartisan revolt in the united states senate against harry reid to actually do a budget for the first time in three years. [applause] i do not have to tell kelly this, but guess what, it is a about time. it has been more than three years. i will turn this all over to kelly in a couple of minutes but i have a couple of things i want to say. the upcoming election will be the most important election of our lifetimes. you have heard politicians over the course of your life talk about this upcoming election being the most important election of our lifetime. guess what? most of the time it was not. i say the most important election of my lifetime will occur this november. the election will be a referendum on the president's economic policies.
5:12 am
whether it is about jobs in the economy, whether it is about gasoline prices, or whether it is about obamacare, that is what the election will be about. the president will try to make the election a about anything other than those three issues. nobody has tried to work with the president more than i have. lord knows i have tried everything in the world to try to find common ground with the president. last summer, we spent months trying to find a way to bring our fiscal house in order and realign entitlement programs so they are sustainable for the long term. the president could not muster the courage to do the right thing. at the last minute he decided to move the goalposts. he demanded a 1.2 trillion dollars in new taxes. he knew that i was not going to go to that point.
5:13 am
there has been a lot talk about about how this whole thing played out. the white house tried to spin that i walked out of the negotiations. there is a lot being written about this all of a sudden. "the "washington post" last night wrote a big article. republicans love to talk to dozens of staffers and people who were in the room. they can get down to the details about what kind of muffins were in the room while we were having breakfast. one thing i found interesting from an unnamed source from the white house who was horrified that i had the audacity to say that obamacare -- while pushing the president to cut his own health-care law. you can excuse me for speaking like an ordinary american. the american people do not want obamacare. washington and democrats forced it down the throat of the american people and the american people rise up and do something about it.
5:14 am
[applause] guess what? the white house knows this. yesterday marked the second anniversary of the signing into law of obamacare. guess what? the president hid. the vice president hid. everybody in the cabinet hid. these are the things they love to do to go out there and celebrate. nowhere were any of them to be found. apparently they observe the day with a full slate of staff meetings. they were sitting around holding each others hands in sorrow over about what was going to happen in november. [applause] now republican majority will do exactly what we said we would do. we are going to listen to the american people, follow the will
5:15 am
of the american people, and have the courage of our conviction to do what we thought was in the best interest of our country. one of the great things about our political system is there is no limit to the size of the team you can build. we know how this works. the road to the white house will go right through butler county. every yard sign, every door that is not of our candidates from the top of the ticket to the bottom of the ticket. we have to pull together and make sure we deliver for the american people our state and our county republican team that will do the right thing for our country. i am looking forward to working with each and every one of you in this room. we have a lot of work to do this year. i want to thank you for being here. there is not a better group of republicans anywhere in this
5:16 am
country. now to kelly. i told you about kelly ayotte, the new senator. from new hampshire who is here with us tonight. she was a prosecutor. ran for attorney general. did a great job as attorney general. her husband was a former fighter pilot in the air force and is a small-business owner in new hampshire. i have been to new hampshire more times than i can count. it is a little different than it is here in butler county. i can tell you that. she gets this. she decided to show up and have dinner with what people in washington call "the rat pack." you have heard me talk about my friends in washington, when lindsey gramm will show up once in awhile when we can put up
5:17 am
with him. kelly decided to show up a couple of nights to have dinner with what they call in washington, the rat pack. when you dinner with our crowd a couple of times, you get to know each other pretty well. kelly understands what is going on in america. she understands what the american people want. she is somebody i am very proud of. she is someone that i'm very happy to call my friend. ladies and gentlemen, join me in welcoming the freshman senator from the state of new hampshire, kelly ayotte. [applause] >> thank you. thank you so much.
5:18 am
it is wonderful to be here with you tonight. first of all, i want to thank your chairman for his leadership. i know it is a thankless job to be chairman of a party in a county. it is such an important job. thank you so much for your leadership. [applause] i want to thank mr. speaker. it is an honor to be here with you, mr. speaker, in butler county, and share the stage with you in your hometown. both of you have been so gracious to me and i appreciate the opportunity to be here tonight in your district. thank you so much. i know in the past you traveled to new hampshire to campaign for our house candidates. we appreciate it. i am hoping to bring a little bit of the live at free or die state here to ohio. [applause]
5:19 am
most of all, it is wonderful to be here with all of you. such a great crowd. i was thinking about it on my way here and how smart you folks are. let's face it, you selected the speaker of the house of representatives -- a terrific speaker of the house. not only did to elect a terrific speaker of the house, you also elected the next vice president of the united states, senator rob portman. [applause] it is an honor to serve with him in the senate. he is conservative, smart, knowledgeable. i can tell you he is a go to person and a leader in the republican caucus in the united states senate. you should be very proud you elected him to represent you in
5:20 am
2010. we are so blessed to have john boehner to serve as speaker of the house at a time of such consequence to our nation. we all know it. we know how important this is in terms of where our country is. he's strong. he's conservative, he's tough. you know. you've seen it. john has been a reformer in washington from the minute you elected him to represent you in the house. let's face it, he was against your marks before it was cool. when he became speaker of the house he made sure the house was not going to stuff that wasteful spending or pet projects into bigger bills again. thank you, mr. speaker.
5:21 am
[applause] let's talk about his leadership in the house of representatives. the critical legislation that the house has passed for the good of our great country. they passed a balanced budget amendment. they pass the repeal of obamacare. they passed approval of the keystone pipeline project. [applause] they passed cut, cap and balance. and yes, they had the common sense to pass a responsible budget for our country. speaker john boehner has done all of this in the house only to see every piece of legislation that i just talked about die in the graveyard of the united states senate, led by harry
5:22 am
reid. but i want you to know that not only are you going to have a very important role in the presidential election, but the united states senate. you can change what is happening in the united states senate right now. send us josh mandel. [applause] i got elected in 2010 and i am here to tell you we need reinforcements. we need more conservatives in the united states senate like josh mandell. as the wife of an iraq war veteran, my husband flew missions and iraq. i admire his service and sacrifice for our country.
5:23 am
he is the kind of leader we need in washington. i have one more thing for you to think about when it comes to josh mandel. think about this could be one of the greatest political trades in history. josh mandel for sharon brown. ok? [applause] i tried to think about it. i have to tell you. i am a red sox fan. unfortunately, i have to say this. this trade is on par with the red sox trading babe ruth to the new york yankees, unfortunately. that is how good this trade could be for the united states senate and our country. if we have speaker john boehner leading our country and we take
5:24 am
a majority in the united states senate, we have leader mitch mcconnell in the senate and we have the two of them working together for a common, conservative agenda for this country. it will be great. there is no question. we need to do it. it will not be enough to save our country. to save our country, we need to take back the presidency. [applause] otherwise, if we have four more years of barack obama, he will be there vetoing every common-sense conservative piece of legislation that we put
5:25 am
forward to put our fiscal house in order to save our country. he will continue to fill the executive branch with appointments that treat the private sector as the enemy. just think about what will happen if he gets more appointments to the united states supreme court. i believe as the speaker said that this is the most important presidential election in the history of our country. certainly in our lifetimes. we know that with over 15 trillion dollars in debt and a government that has become too big and too oppressive, our country is at a tipping point. we are on the precipice right now. our great country. we all in this room have to make sure that barack obama is a one-term president. let's commit ourselves to that.
5:26 am
[applause] here is where you matter so much. ohio is ground zero in this presidential election. here is your assignment. i know how hard all of you work. if we win swing states like ohio and my home state of new hampshire, we will be incredibly hard to beat in november. what you do in ohio could very well determine the future of america. i do not need to remind you what is at stake in november for our country. just look at what this president
5:27 am
has done in four years. the speaker talked about some of the things this president has done. can you imagine what he would do with another four years without an election hanging over his head? just think about his record. he began his presidency with an apology tour around the world for our country. he appointed an attorney general that things we should treat terrorists like common criminals. he has time and time again ignored his commanders, his military commanders in iraq and afghanistan. he has thrown our great friend and ally israel under the bus.
5:28 am
trillion dollars to our 15 trillion dollar plus debt. we have run trillion dollar deficits for the last four years. in february we have a marker -- why would we ever want to reach? the most amount of debt incurred ever in the history of our country. when it comes to budget, he has no idea how to use a calculator. he has no idea how to balance the budget. look at the budget he proposed last year for our country. his budget was so fiscally irresponsible that when it was put out for a vote in the united states senate, not even one member of his own party could bring themselves to vote for it. it failed 97-0 in the united states senate.
5:29 am
his budget this year is no better for our country. that is where we are when it comes to the fiscal state of the country and this president. look at what happened to gas prices under this president. i am married to a guy who owns a landscaping and snow plowing business. i hear from a lot of small businesses in new hampshire. i go and fill up my car at the pumps and i am appalled at how much we are paying for gas right now. do you realize we are paying $40 more a tank then when he came into office? we cannot afford that. the average family, what that does to their budget. under his presidency, domestic production of gas and oil on federal lands and offshore has gone down significantly. let's not forget the keystone
5:30 am
pipeline. it makes so much sense, i do not even know how we are where we are here today with the keystone pipeline. he does not want us to get our oil from canada. he would rather us get our oil from the middle east with countries that do not like us. he does not want to create 20,000 direct jobs for our country with the keystone pipeline. he would rather fund projects like solyndra. think about what he did this week. he thinks we are stupid. he goes to oklahoma and it shows up and says, i will expedite this portion of the keystone pipeline -- where he is irrelevant. he is blocking where it matters the most. he thinks we're all going to suddenly think he is for the keystone pipeline. i know and you know that the american people, they are not as
5:31 am
stupid as he thinks they are. there are going to figure it out as the continue to go to the palms and pay more. he holds up something as common sense as the keystone pipeline. let's not forget obamacare, passed in the middle of the night with the cornhuskers kick back, the louisiana purchase. somebody who ran saying all of the health-care negotiations will be on c-span, and yet it was worked out in a back room with nancy pelosi and harry reid and they had to buy the votes of their own members to do it. nancy pelosi said, we have to pass it to know what is in it. guess what, we know what is in it and the american people do not want it. [applause] we have already seen with the 1700 waivers to 4 million people. half of them are to the unions who campaigned for obamacare. i guess it must be nice and
5:32 am
helpful to know people in high places to get waivers. it shows you that even those who supported this bill know that it doesn't work and thpt out of it. hopefully our supreme court next week will call this bill out for what it is. unconstitutional. [applause] finally, with regulations that are destroying our businesses. i come i around our state and i hear from our small businesses regulation after regulation that is making it more difficult for them to put people to work. job killing but -- bodies that he packs with people who try to find ways so you cannot open up a plant and expand a plant in south carolina, a body that makes it more difficult to put people to work. he appointed these people in a recess appointment that is also unconstitutional,
5:33 am
unfortunately. he has hurt america's recovery, and we cannot let it continue. we just can't take four more years of this president, so let's be clear what we need in the president of the united states and what we need -- i know that we will have the president in a republican president. when it comes to protecting america, we need a president who believes in american exceptional -- exceptionalism and will never apologize for the united states of america. [applause] we need an attorney general that is appointed that will make sure that no terrorist ever hears the words "you have the right to remain silent." [applause]
5:34 am
we need a president who is not going to -- who will listen to our commander in afghanistan and not to general axelrod. [applause] we need a president who will stand up and for our ally israel and against iran. [applause] a president who will dramatically cut spending, who will cap it and who'll balance our budget and who'll fight to say to congress, we finally need a balanced budget amendment to the united states constitution. go get it done! [applause] who will use his common sense to say, yes, america has natural resources -- oil, gas, and other types of resources. we should use them. a president who will approve the
5:35 am
keystone pipeline. he will get rid of excessive regulations that make it harder for our businesses to put people to work, starting with obamacare. that is why this election matters. that is why you matter so much as ground zero for this presidential election. i am a strong supporter of mitt romney. i campaigned hard for him. [applause] i campaigned very hard for him in new hampshire. we are a first in the nation primary. i sat down with our candidates. we met them all face-to-face. we had coffee and vetted them. this is very important to us. i decided to support mitt romney because i know he can turn this country around.
5:36 am
i want to thank you as a strong supporter of mitt romney for delivering ohio for mitt romney. i know how important your votes were. i know how seriously took the primary. i know how important ohio is to governor mitt romney. we have some great candidates running for president. all of them would be better than president barack obama. [applause] i believe that mitt romney will be our nominee. it is time. it is time for us to come together and unite behind him. he in my view is hands down our strongest candidate to take on barack obama and win. if there was ever a time in the history of our nation that we needed somebody who was actually
5:37 am
from outside of washington, somebody that has private sector appearance who knows how our economy works. if there was ever a time we needed somebody with experience in the private sector and as a governor, it is now. it is no mistake that you hear all the time, the obama team and vice president biden going after mitt romney. they are afraid to run against him. we need to make sure that we nominate a candidate, go forward and beat barack obama. that's what i want to say to you tonight. i think it is so important from where we are. when we come back, we all have to be together. it comes back to ohio.
5:38 am
i want to paint a picture for you, something i am so worried about and i think about a lot. that is november 7. that is the day after the presidential election. can you imagine what it will be like if we wake up on november 7 and we have not won the presidential election? even if we have been successful in the house and the senate, if we have not won the presidential election, what will it feel like that morning? what will the sinking feeling be in your stomach? what will you be thinking about in terms of the future of our country and where we are and what damage this president can do in four more years to our country? i have thought about that a lot. i do not want to have that feeling in my stomach on wednesday, november 7. i know that you do not either. we have to give it everything
5:39 am
that we have for our nominee at the end of the day after our convention. it is critical. i ran for the united states senate. the speaker has said -- i had actually never run before. in new hampshire the attorney general is not an elected position. i was appointed originally by the governor. my first run was the united states senate. i have to tell you, i never thought i was going to run for political office. this is not something in my family because i have a 4-year-old and a 7-year-old. we have a lot going on in our family. small business, my husband served in the military. i saw what was happening in our country, and that is what compelled me to run for the united states senate. just like you -- my husband and i spent so much time in 2009 yelling and our television with
5:40 am
what this president was doing. i just cannot stand it anymore. so i had to get off my couch. [applause] you may be thinking, what am i doing here listening to a senator from new hampshire. i came here tonight -- i cherish my time with my children. i came here tonight because i am is still so worried about our country. we need your help to turn this country around for my children, for your children, for all of us. that is why i am here tonight. i want to have you imagine a different scenario. that is when we wake up on november 7, speaker boehner, leader mitch mcconnell, josh mandel won, and we haqve mitt romney as president.
5:41 am
how happy would we feel? we would feel great. would it matter? let me give you what i think is one of the top examples of why it matters. we cannot hang all of our hopes for obamacare on the united states supreme court. i'm going to lighten it up here a little bit because it has been quite a week on the presidential campaign. when i was doing my research on ohio, i also learned that ohio -- the ohio art company came from here and happens to be the company that thought of the etch a sktech. we have heard a lot about that on the campaign trail this year. i want you to think about why it matters. if we wake up on november 7, we have mitt romney as president,
5:42 am
speaker boehner in the house and we've got senate leader mitch mcconnell. here is why it matters. you may not be able to see this. it says obamacare. that is what this etch a sketch says -- obamacare. here is what will happen when we have mitt romney as the president, speaker boehner in the house and mitch mcconnell leading the senate. [applause] it is all done. no more obamacare. if we lose. if we lose this presidential election, obamacare will be etched in stone.
5:43 am
we cannot allow that to happen for our country. that is why this is just one example. we know all the other examples of how much this matters. think about that. we don't want that etched in stone. we have to win this election. we all have to come together. we have to do everything we can to make sure that we do. this is a huge time for america. let's promise ourselves that we will do everything to win the swing states of ohio and new hampshire. we have less electoral votes at stake in new hampshire, yet we are one of the swing states. i will do everything i can to make sure that i deliver new hampshire for republicans. i know that you will do everything that you can to deliver ohio for the republican presidential win in 2012. let's work as hard as we can for the future of our country. nothing less is at stake.
5:44 am
our children, my children, your children, our grandchildren all depend on it. the greatest country on earth depends on that. so i thank you so much for having me tonight. i thank you for all that you are doing and i know that you are going deliver ohio for republicans. i know that we are going to turn this country around. we can do it. we are in america. there has never been a challenge that we have faced that we have not overcome and the better for at the end of the day. god bless you and may god bless the united states of america. [applause]
5:45 am
>> now mitt romney in appleton, wisconsin delivering a speech that focuses on america's promise. the event took place on the campus of lawrence university. wisconsin holds their presidential primary elections on tuesday and wisconsin will award 42 g.o.p delegates. the remaining 18 go to the state-wide winner. this is just over 30 minutes. [cheers and applause] >> thank you, thank you. good afternoon.
5:46 am
members of the community and distinguished guests. it is my pleasure and honor to welcome you all on behalf of lawrence university. while today's visit certainly marks a significant visit for our school and community, it is not the first time that a major political figure has made a stop at our little college. such events have happened regularly over the years. william howard taft, richard nixon, john f. kennedy, george h. w. bush, and john kerry, to name a few. what is it about this school of 1500 students that provides such a draw for our nation's most prominent political leaders? it is certainly not our rolling mountains or white sand beaches. [laughter] no, time and again we have the opportunity to host these events, and it speaks to something deeper. lawrence university is a place where education and civil discourse are of paramount
5:47 am
importance. whether we agree with a candidate's views it or not, we will be ready to engage in honest and respectful discussion. our liberal arts education has taught us that in order to learn, we must ask questions and listen. today is not the first time, and likely will not be the last that a candidate or leader will choose lawrence as a place to discuss matters of great importance. it is nonetheless a tremendous honor to welcome the governor to our institution. i would like to invite our next speaker to the podium. a wisconsin native serving in his seventh congressional term, representing the first district, our next speaker is the chairman of the house budget committee and senior member of the house ways and means committee. he was named the 2011 human events conservative of the year. at this time, please join me in
5:48 am
welcoming congressman paul ryan. [applause] >> that is right. absolutely. appreciate that. thank you. hey, everyone. how are you? thanks a lot. appreciate it. awesome. thank you, jake. appreciate it. i have not been on this campus since i was a college student, visiting my buddies. it is nice to be back. it has only been a few years since i was here. let me get to the point. wisconsinites, we have a big opportunity ahead of us. we also have a big opportunity ahead of us. wisconsin has been in the epicenter of political discourse for a long time. as a republican, i must tell you, we have not had a relevant republican primary for quite some time. i think it was like 1980.
5:49 am
what i would say is that we in wisconsin have a great opportunity this tuesday. here's our opportunity. our country is on the wrong track. headed in the wrong direction. and it is not the fault of just democrats or republicans. it is where we are. politicians from both political parties have made lots of empty promises to americans that our government cannot keep. what we need now, more than ever is someone to be straight and honest with us. not finger-pointing, but solutions. we want you to fix our problems. turn on the tv, look at what is going on in europe. that kind of fate could await us if we do not fix our country's problems. we have got to address this. that takes courage. it takes principled
5:50 am
leadership. it takes action. i am afraid to say that that is not happening right now with our government. yesterday we passed a budget for the second year in a row to address these challenges head-on. we believe that we have a moral and legal responsibility to get the nation back on track, back on the path to prosperity. keep the promises the government has made to people. especially retirees who have organized their lives around these commitments, but do it in a way to give our kids and grandkids a nation that is free of debt. that is not the path the we are on right now, though. what it will take is leadership. we believe we must offer our fellow citizens, as a wisconsin rep, i feel i must offer the people i work for in the first congressional district a choice. if we do not think things are headed in the right direction,
5:51 am
we owe you a clear choice between two futures. respect the american people and their decision. what kind of country do you want america to be? that is our obligation and opportunity as wisconsinites, this tuesday and this november, to make that decision. when you look at the challenges america has ahead of it, the mountain of debt falling on us, the economic stagnation that is occurring and the lack of answers and solutions coming from some corners of washington, what we need is a leader who sees this moment for what it is. a leader who has the courage of conservative principles and conviction, the integrity and tenacity to do what it takes to get america back on track. in my humble personal opinion, as a guy from janesville, we need mitt romney to be the next
5:52 am
president of the united states of america. [applause] i am excited. i am encouraged. i am enthusiastic. in this man we have a person of conviction, a man with the right kind of experience, the right kind of leader that we are going to need to get this country right and back on track. i want to ask you to join me in welcoming who i hope becomes the next president of the united states, governor mitt romney. [applause] >> thank you. nice work. thank you. thank you. thanks so much. take care. >> thank you. thank you.
5:53 am
congressman, thank you. congressman paul ryan. a man who takes responsibility and is a courageous leader. whether or not you agree with him on every issue, this person has led a clear path for the party and the nation. i appreciate the fact that we have someone from wisconsin who is a real leader in washington and i hope we continue to see his leadership in washington. we need more of that. thank you, congressman. thank you. now, jake's popularity was remarkable. i do not think that either of you or i got the kind of applause that jake got. [laughter] if you can give us a lesson afterwards, jake, i would appreciate it. it is good to be with you today. i appreciate the chance. i am honored to have the privilege here with many members of the student body and faculty here.
5:54 am
it embodies the importance and significance of what is happening in our world right now, happening in america. as you know, in the 22 days, something really quite extraordinary will happen in america. we will have an election. across this country, millions and millions of americans will be able to do something that is really quite amazing. they will choose not only a president, but an entire house of representatives and one-third of the u.s. senate. the entire world will be watching us. by around midnight on november 6, maybe earlier or later, we will know the results of millions of americans exercising their right to vote. in doing so, making such a profound choice that it is difficult for us to grasp. no one can predict the next crisis that the next president will confront, or know what the
5:55 am
world is going to look like at the end of the next president's term. in a world economy where athens, wisconsin and athens, greece are connected, everything is more complex. but i believe that americans face a fundamental choice in this election. a decision that is more important than the candidates or political parties. we should understand we are not just selecting who'll guide us as president, but a choice between two distinct paths and destinies for america. in the days and months ahead, we should ask ourselves fundamental questions about who we are as a nation and who we are becoming. what does it mean to be an american in 2012? what will it mean in 2016 and beyond that? are we keeping faith with the legacy and truss handed to us by prior generations? and what are we going to leave the next generation?
5:56 am
your generation? this campaign, you will hear a deafening cacophony of charges and countercharges and my guess is that by november 6, most of you will be afraid to turn on your television. in the relative quiet before the storm, let's start with basic facts about which there can be no debate. first of all, since president obama became president, over 800,000 americans have lost their jobs. millions of americans spend longer looking for a job than ever before in history. long-term unemployment is the worst it has been since the great depression. over 46 million americans are now living in poverty. more than ever before in history. households with single mothers, over 30% are living in poverty. 46.5 million americans are now on food stamps. another record.
5:57 am
2.8 million homes have been foreclosed on. new business start-ups are at the lowest level in 30 years. over 2000 chrysler and general motors dealerships have been closed. 22 automobile manufacturing plants have been shut down. our yearly budget deficits are huge. our national debt now stands at an all-time high. the president presided over the first $1 trillion deficit in american history. and he has repeated that dreadful distinction for every year he has been in office. for the first time since world war ii, the national debt is greater than the size of the entire united states economy. each american's share of the national death stands at $50,000. president obama did not cause the recession, but he most
5:58 am
certainly failed to lead the recovery. his stimulus protective government did not protect the american people. they have promised to hold unemployment below 8%. they did not. his stimulus was as ineffective as it was expensive. his obama care did not create jobs either. it discouraged small businesses and health companies from hiring new workers. dodd frank hurt the community banks when it came to loaning to small businesses. the two big to fail banks are bigger today than they were before. he also failed on so many of the promises, it is hard to list them all. on the issue of jobs, he failed. but on one goal, he succeeded. to raise energy prices. all in all, president obama prolonged the recession and slowed the recovery.
5:59 am
president obama's economic strategy is a bust. these troubling facts are the president's legacy and are now our shared history. as much as we would like to, we cannot undo what has happened these last three years. for the families that lost their homes, the factories that have been closed, the students that had to drop out of college, those that could never make it to the front door, those are missed opportunities, lost chances that can't be regained. that's why it is important to understand one astonishing fact about this election. president obama thinks he is doing a good job. i am not kidding. he thinks he's doing a great job. and historically great job. according to the president, only lincoln and fdr, and lyndon johnson, have accomplished more. and he did not say that on "saturday night live." how can this be? is it that the president is so is it that the president is so disconnected from what i

151 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on