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  • The President: Hey!

  • (applause)

  • The President: Thank you so much.

  • Mr. Speaker, Mr. President, members of the General Assembly,

  • my fellow Illinoisans: It's actually

  • kind of fun to start a speech like that twice

  • in one month.

  • (laughter)

  • What an incredible privilege it is to address this chamber.

  • And to Governor Rauner, Senator Durbin,

  • members of Congress, Speaker Madigan,

  • Former Governor Pat Quinn, Mayor Langfelder and the

  • people of Springfield -- thank you for such a warm

  • welcome as I come back home.

  • (applause)

  • Thank you.

  • Thank you so much.

  • Thank you.

  • It's good to be home.

  • (applause)

  • Thank you, guys.

  • Thank you.

  • Thank you.

  • (applause)

  • It is great to see so many old friends like

  • John Cullerton and Emil Jones.

  • I miss you guys.

  • Audience Member: Miss you!

  • (laughter)

  • The President: It's great to be in the State Capitol.

  • Being here today calls to mind the first time I spoke

  • on the Senate floor, almost 20 years ago.

  • And I was passionate, idealistic,

  • ready to make a difference.

  • Just to stand in that magnificent chamber was

  • enough to fill me up with a heightened sense of purpose.

  • And I probably needed a little dose of reality when

  • I first arrived.

  • So one day, I rose to speak about a bill.

  • And I thought I'd made some compelling points,

  • with irrefutable logic.

  • (laughter)

  • And I was about to sit down, feeling pretty good about

  • myself, when Pate Philip sauntered over to my desk.

  • Now, there are some young people here,

  • so for those of you who don't remember,

  • Pate Philip was the Senate Majority Leader at the time.

  • He was a Marine, and big shock of white hair,

  • chomped on a cigar; was so politically incorrect that

  • you don't even know how to describe it.

  • (laughter)

  • But he always treated me well.

  • And he came by and he slapped me on the back,

  • he said, "Kid, that was a pretty good speech.

  • In fact, I think you changed a lot of minds.

  • But you didn't change any votes."

  • (laughter)

  • Then he singled, and they gaveled,

  • and we got blown out.

  • (laughter)

  • So that was my first lesson in humility.

  • The next came when I presented my own first bill.

  • It was a simple piece of legislation that would make

  • it a lot easier for Illinois manufacturers to hire

  • graduating community college students.

  • I didn't know any serious opposition,

  • so I asked for a vote.

  • And what I got was a good hazing.

  • I assume that this custom still exists.

  • (applause and laughter)

  • So a senior colleague put the vote on hold to ask,

  • "Could you correctly pronounce your name for me?

  • I'm having a little trouble with it."

  • "Obama," I said.

  • "Is that Irish?"

  • he asked.

  • (laughter)

  • And being in my early 30s at the time,

  • I was a little cocky -- I said,

  • "It will be when I run countywide."

  • (laughter)

  • "That was a good joke," he said, but he wasn't amused.

  • "This bill is still going to die."

  • And he went on to complain that my predecessor's name

  • was easier to pronounce than mine,

  • that I didn't have cookies at my desk like she did,

  • how would I ever expect to get any votes without having

  • cookies on my desk.

  • "I definitely urge a no vote," he said,

  • "whatever your name is."

  • (laughter)

  • And for the next several minutes,

  • the Senate debated on whether I should add an

  • apostrophe to my name for the Irish,

  • or whether the fact that "Obama" ends in a vowel

  • meant I actually belonged to the Italians --

  • (laughter)

  • -- and just how many trees had had to die to print this

  • terrible, miserable bill, anyway.

  • And I was chastened.

  • And I said, "If I survive this event,

  • I will be eternally grateful and consider this a

  • highlight of my legal and legislative career."

  • And I asked for a vote.

  • And initially the tote board showed that it was going

  • down, but at the last minute it flipped and my bill passed.

  • But I was duly reminded that I was a freshman

  • in the minority.

  • And I want to thank all my former colleagues in both

  • chambers for not letting me forget it.

  • To be a rookie in the minority party, as I was,

  • is not much fun in any legislature.

  • We were called "mushrooms" -- because we were kept in

  • the dark and fed a lot of manure.

  • (laughter)

  • But one benefit of being in such a position -- not being

  • invited into the meetings where the big deals were

  • being made -- is that I had a lot of time

  • to get to know my colleagues.

  • And many of us were away from our families,

  • and so we became friends.

  • We went to fish fries together.

  • We'd go to union halls.

  • We'd play in golf scrambles.

  • We had a great bipartisan poker game

  • at the Illinois Manufacturer's Association.

  • Boro Relijie would host, and folks like Dave Luechtefeld

  • and Terry Link, others would join in.

  • We'd eat downstairs -- and I can't say

  • I miss the horseshoes.

  • (laughter)

  • But away from the glare of TV, or the tweets,

  • or the GIFs of today's media,

  • what we discovered was that despite our surface

  • differences -- Democrats and Republicans,

  • downstate hog farmers, inner-city African

  • Americans, suburban businesspeople,

  • Latinos from Pilsen or Little Village -- despite

  • those differences, we actually had a lot in common.

  • We cared about our communities.

  • We cared about our families.

  • We cared about America.

  • We fought hard for our positions.

  • I don't want to be nostalgic here -- we voted against

  • each other all the time.

  • And party lines held most of the time.

  • But those relationships, that trust we'd built meant

  • that we came at each debate assuming the best in one

  • another and not the worst.

  • I was reminiscing with Christine Radogno -- we came

  • in in the same class.

  • And we were on opposite sides of most issues,

  • but I always trusted her and believed that she

  • was a good person.

  • And if we had a bill that we might be able to work

  • together on, it was a pleasure to work with her on.

  • Or Dave Syverson, who -- we worked together

  • on the Public Health and Welfare Committee,

  • and we got some important work done that made a

  • difference in people's lives.

  • And we didn't call each other idiots or fascists who

  • were trying to destroy America.

  • Because then we'd have to explain why we were playing

  • poker or having a drink with an idiot or a fascist who

  • was trying to destroy America.

  • (laughter)

  • And that respect gave us room for progress.

  • And after I'd served here for six years,

  • my party finally gained the majority.

  • Emil Jones became the President of the Senate.

  • And by then, I had made some friends across the aisle --

  • like Kirk Dillard, who I believe is here today,

  • and we were able to pass the first serious ethics reform

  • in 25 years.

  • And working closely with law enforcement,

  • who knew by then that we cared about cops and

  • sheriffs and prosecutors.

  • And working with folks like John Cullerton,

  • we passed Illinois' first racial profiling law,

  • which was good for police officers

  • and minority communities.

  • And because someone like my friend, John Bouman,

  • who worked at the Shriver Center on Poverty Law,

  • helped us build coalitions across the state,

  • including with business, and was able to then reach out

  • to Republicans, we were able to increase tax credits for

  • the working poor and expand health insurance

  • to children in need.

  • And we wouldn't bend on our most deeply held principles,

  • but we were willing to forge compromises in pursuit

  • of a larger goal.

  • We were practical when we needed to be.

  • We could fight like heck on one issue and then shake

  • hands on the next.

  • Somebody like Jesse White was able to travel around

  • the state and people didn't even know what party he was

  • necessarily from because he brought so much joy with the

  • tumblers and the work that they were doing.

  • So I want you to know that this is why I've always

  • believed so deeply in a better kind of politics,

  • in part because of what I learned here

  • in this legislature.

  • Because of what I learned traveling across the state,

  • visiting some of your districts,

  • before I was running statewide,

  • before I was a

  • U.S. senator; learning all the corners of this state --

  • this most-representative of states.

  • A state of small towns and rich farmland,

  • and the world's greatest city.

  • A microcosm of America, where Democrats and

  • Republicans and independents,

  • and good people of every ethnicity and every faith

  • shared certain bedrock values.

  • I just saw a story the other day showing that if you rank

  • all 50 states across categories like education

  • levels and household incomes,

  • and race and religion, the one state that most closely

  • mirrors America as a whole is Illinois, this state.

  • And I learned by talking to your constituents that if

  • you were willing to listen, it was possible to bridge a

  • lot of differences.

  • I learned that most Americans aren't following

  • the ins and outs of the legislature carefully,

  • but they instinctively know that issues are more

  • complicated than rehearsed sound bites;

  • that they play differently in different parts of the

  • state and in the country.

  • They understand the difference between realism

  • and idealism; the difference between responsibility

  • and recklessness.

  • They had the maturity to know what can and cannot be

  • compromised, and to admit the possibility that the

  • other side just might have a point.

  • And it convinced me that if we just approached our

  • national politics the same way the American people

  • approach their daily lives -- at the workplace,

  • at the Little League game; at church or the synagogue

  • -- with common sense, and a commitment to fair play and

  • basic courtesy, that there is no problem that we

  • couldn't solve together.

  • And that was the vision that guided me when I first ran

  • for the United States Senate.

  • That's the vision I shared when I said we are more than

  • just a collection of red states and blue states,

  • but we are the United States of America.

  • And that vision is why, nine years ago today,

  • on the steps of the Old State Capitol just a few

  • blocks from here, I announced my candidacy

  • for President.

  • Now, over these nine years, I want you to know my faith

  • in the generosity and the fundamental goodness of the

  • American people has been rewarded and affirmed over

  • and over and over again.

  • I've seen it in the determination of autoworkers

  • who had been laid off but were sure that they could

  • once again be part of a great,

  • iconic Americans industry.

  • I've seen it in the single mom who goes back to school

  • even as she's working and looking after her kids

  • because she wants a better life

  • for that next generation.

  • I've seen it the vision and risk-taking

  • of small businessmen.

  • I've seen it time and time again in the courage

  • of our troops.

  • But it's been noted often by pundits that the tone of our

  • politics hasn't gotten better since I was

  • inaugurated, in fact it's gotten worse;

  • that there's still this yawning gap between the

  • magnitude of our challenges and the smallness

  • of our politics.

  • Which is why, in my final State of the Union address,

  • and in the one before that, I had to acknowledge that

  • one of my few regrets is my inability to reduce the

  • polarization and meanness in our politics.

  • I was able to be part of that here and yet couldn't

  • translate it the way I wanted to into our politics

  • in Washington.

  • And people ask me why I've devoted so much time

  • to this topic.

  • And I tell them it's not just because I'm President,

  • and the polarization and the gridlock are frustrating to me.

  • The fact is we've gotten a heck of a lot done these

  • past seven years, despite the gridlock.

  • We saved the economy from a depression.

  • We brought back an auto industry from the brink

  • of collapse.

  • We helped our businesses create 14 million new jobs

  • over the past six years.

  • We cut the unemployment rate from 10 percent

  • to 4.9 percent.

  • We covered nearly 18 million more Americans

  • with health insurance.

  • We ignited a clean energy revolution.

  • We got bin Laden.

  • We brought the vast majority of our troops home to

  • their families.

  • (applause)

  • We got a lot done.

  • We're still getting a lot done.

  • And our political system helped make these things

  • possible, and the list could go on.

  • There's no doubt America is better off today than

  • when I took office.

  • (applause)

  • I didn't want this to be a State of Union speech where

  • we have the standing up and the sitting down.

  • (laughter)

  • Come on, guys, you know better than that.

  • (laughter and applause)

  • No, no, no, I've got a serious point to make here.

  • I've got a serious point to make here because this is

  • part of the issue, right?

  • We have an importation of our politics nationally,

  • and on cable and talk radio, and it seeps

  • into everything.

  • The point I'm trying to make is I care about fixing our

  • politics not only because I'm the President today,

  • or because some of my initiatives have been

  • blocked by Congress -- that happens to every President,

  • happens to every governor, happens to everybody who

  • participates -- anybody who participates in a democracy.

  • You're not going to get 100 percent of what you want

  • all the time.

  • The reason this is important to me is,

  • next year I'll still hold the most important title of

  • all, and that's the title of citizen.

  • And as an American citizen, I understand that our

  • progress is not inevitable -- our progress has never

  • been inevitable.

  • It must be fought for, and won by all of us,

  • with the kind of patriotism that our fellow Illinoisan,

  • Adlai Stevenson, once described not as a "short,

  • frenzied outburst of emotion,

  • but the tranquil and steady dedication of a lifetime."

  • It requires citizenship and a sense that we are one.

  • And today that kind of citizenship is threatened by

  • a poisonous political climate that pushes people

  • away from participating in our public life.

  • It turns folks off.

  • It discourages them, makes them cynical.

  • And when that happens, more powerful and extreme voices

  • fill the void.

  • When that happens, progress stalls.

  • And that's how we end up with only a handful of

  • lobbyists setting the agenda.

  • That's how we end up with policies that are detached

  • from what working families face every day.

  • That's how we end up with the well-connected who

  • publicly demand that government stay out of their

  • business but then whisper in its ear

  • for special treatment.

  • That's how our political system gets consumed by

  • small things when we are a people that are called to do

  • great things -- to give everybody a shot in a

  • changing economy; to keep America safe and strong in

  • an uncertain world; to repair our climate before it

  • threatens everything we leave for our kids.

  • So that's what's on my mind as I come back

  • to Illinois today.

  • This is what will be a focus of mine over the course of

  • this year and beyond: What can we do, all of us,

  • together, to try to make our politics better?

  • And I speak to both sides on this.

  • As all of you know, it could be better,

  • and all of you would feel prouder of the work you do

  • if it was better.

  • So, first, let's put to rest a couple of myths

  • about our politics.

  • One is the myth that the problems

  • with our politics are new.

  • They are not.

  • American politics has never been particularly gentle or

  • high-minded -- especially not during times

  • of great change.

  • As I mentioned when I visited a mosque in Maryland

  • last week, Thomas Jefferson's opponent tried

  • to stir things up by suggesting he was a Muslim.

  • So I'm in good company.

  • (laughter)

  • But that's nothing compared to the newspaper which

  • warned that if Jefferson were elected, "murder,

  • robbery, rape, adultery, and incest will be openly

  • taught and practiced."

  • (laughter)

  • His Vice President, Aaron Burr,

  • literally killed Alexander Hamilton in a duel.

  • (laughter)

  • I don't even want to tell you what Andrew Jackson's

  • opponents said about his mamma.

  • (laughter)

  • Lincoln, himself, was routinely called "weak,

  • wishy-washy," a "yahoo," "an unshapely man, "

  • "the obscene ape of Illinois," and,

  • my favorite -- a "facetious pettifogger."

  • I don't know what that means --

  • (laughter)

  • --but it sounds insulting.

  • So, comparatively speaking, today is not that bad -- as

  • long as you've got a thick skin.

  • (laughter)

  • As Harold Washington once said: "Politics ain't beanbag."

  • It's tough.

  • And that's okay.

  • There's also the notion sometimes that our politics

  • are broken because politicians are

  • significantly more corrupt or beholden to big money

  • than they used to be.

  • There's no doubt that lobbyists still have easier

  • access to the halls of power than the average American.

  • There's a lot of work that we need to do to make sure

  • that the system works for ordinary people and not just

  • the well-connected.

  • That's true at the federal level;

  • that's true at the state level.

  • Folks aren't entirely wrong when they feel as if the

  • system too often is rigged and does not address

  • their interests.

  • But, relative to the past, listen,

  • I'm confident we've got enough rules and checks to

  • prevent anyone in my Cabinet from siphoning whiskey tax

  • revenue into their own pockets like

  • President Grant's administration did.

  • Until FDR went after the ward bosses of Tammany Hall,

  • they controlled judges and politicians as they pleased

  • -- patronage, bribery, and money laundering.

  • It's not as easy as it was to whip up tens of thousands

  • of phantom votes, whether in Chicago or South Texas.

  • From the Teapot Dome to Watergate,

  • history tells us we should always be vigilant and

  • demand that our public servants follow

  • the highest ethical standards.

  • But the truth is that the kind of corruption that is

  • blatant, of the sort that we saw in the past,

  • is much less likely in today's politics.

  • And the Justice Department and the media work hard to

  • keep it that way.

  • And that's a very good thing.

  • So we don't want to romanticize the past and

  • think somehow it's a difference in the people

  • being elected.

  • And it also isn't true that today's issues are

  • inherently more polarizing than the past.

  • I remember, we endured four years of Civil War that

  • resulted in hundreds of thousands of dead Americans.

  • This country was divided on a fundamental question.

  • Before Pearl Harbor, entering into World War II

  • was a highly charged debate.

  • The fault lines of Vietnam, the culture wars of the '60s

  • -- they still echo into our politics a half-century later.

  • We've been arguing since our founding over the proper

  • size and role of government; the meaning of individual

  • freedom and equality; over war and peace,

  • and the best way to give all of our citizens opportunity.

  • And these are important debates that everybody

  • should join, with all the rigor that

  • a free people require.

  • My point is, the problem is not that politicians are

  • worse, the problem is not that the issues are tougher.

  • And so it's important for us to understand that the

  • situation we find ourselves in today is not somehow

  • unique or hopeless.

  • We've always gone through periods when our democracy

  • seems stuck.

  • And when that happens, we have to find a new way

  • of doing business.

  • We're in one of those moments.

  • We've got to build a better politics -- one that's less

  • of a spectacle and more of a battle of ideas;

  • one that's less of a business and more of a

  • mission; one that understands the success of

  • the American experiment rests on our willingness to

  • engage all our citizens in this work.

  • And that starts by acknowledging that we do

  • have a problem.

  • And we all know it.

  • What's different today is the nature and the extent of

  • the polarization.

  • How ideologically divided the parties are is brought

  • about by some of the same long-term trends in our

  • politics and our culture.

  • The parties themselves have become more homogenous

  • than ever.

  • A great sorting has taken place that drove Southern

  • conservatives out of the Democratic Party,

  • Northern moderates out of the Republican Party,

  • so you don't have within each party as much diversity

  • of views.

  • And you've got a fractured media.

  • Some folks watch FOX News; some folks read

  • the Huffington Post.

  • And very often, what's profitable is the most

  • sensational conflict and the most incendiary sound bites.

  • And we can choose our own facts.

  • We don't have a common basis for what's true and what's not.

  • I mean, if I listened to some of these conservative

  • pundits, I wouldn't vote for me either.

  • I sound like a scary guy.

  • (laughter)

  • You've got advocacy groups that, frankly,

  • sometimes benefit from keeping their members

  • agitated as much as possible,

  • assured of the righteousness of their cause.

  • Unlimited dark money -- money that nobody knows

  • where it's coming from, who's paying

  • -- drowns out ordinary voices.

  • And far too many of us surrender our voices

  • entirely by choosing not to vote.

  • And this polarization is pervasive and it seeps into

  • our society to the point where surveys even suggest

  • that many Americans wouldn't want their kids to date

  • someone from another political party.

  • Now, some of us don't want our kids dating, period.

  • But that's a losing battle.

  • (laughter)

  • But this isn't just an abstract problem for

  • political scientists.

  • This has real impact on whether or not we can get

  • things done together.

  • This has a real impact on whether families are able to

  • support themselves, or whether the homeless are

  • getting shelter on a cold day.

  • It makes a difference as to the quality of the education

  • that kids are getting.

  • This is not an abstraction.

  • But so often, these debates, particularly in Washington

  • but increasingly in state legislatures,

  • become abstractions.

  • It's as if there are no people involved,

  • it's just cardboard cutouts and caricatures

  • of positions.

  • It encourages the kind of ideological fealty that

  • rejects any compromise as a form of weakness.

  • And in a big, complicated democracy like ours,

  • if we can't compromise, by definition,

  • we can't govern ourselves.

  • Look, I am a progressive Democrat.

  • I am proud of that.

  • I make no bones about it.

  • (applause)

  • I'm going to make another point here.

  • I believe that people should have access to health care.

  • I believe they should have access

  • to a good public education.

  • I believe that workers deserve a higher minimum wage.

  • I believe that collective bargaining is critical to

  • the prospects of the middle class,

  • and that pensions are vital to retirement,

  • as long as they're funded responsibly.

  • (applause)

  • Hold on a second.

  • Hold on a second.

  • (applause)

  • Sit down, Democrats.

  • Sit down.

  • Sit down -- just for a second.

  • I appreciate that, but I want to make this larger point.

  • (laughter)

  • I believe we're judged by how we care for the poor

  • and the vulnerable.

  • I believe that in order to live up to our ideals,

  • we have to continually fight discrimination in all its forms.

  • (applause)

  • I believe in science, and the science behind things

  • like climate change, and that a transition to cleaner

  • sources of energy will help preserve the planet

  • for future generations.

  • (applause)

  • I believe in a tough, smart foreign policy that says

  • America will never hesitate to protect our people and

  • our allies, but that we should use every element of

  • our power and never rush to war.

  • Those are the things I believe.

  • But here's the point I want to make.

  • I believe that there are a lot of Republicans who share

  • many of these same values, even though they may

  • disagree with me on the means to achieve them.

  • I think sometimes my Republican colleagues make

  • constructive points about outdated regulations that

  • may need to be changed, or programs that even though

  • well-intended, didn't always work the way they

  • were supposed to.

  • And where I've got an opportunity to find some

  • common ground, that doesn't make me a sellout

  • to my own party.

  • (applause)

  • That applies --

  • (laughter)

  • -- well, we'll talk later, Duncan.

  • (applause)

  • This is what happens, everybody starts cherry-picking.

  • (laughter)

  • One thing I've learned is folks don't change.

  • (laughter)

  • So trying to find common ground doesn't make me less

  • of a Democrat or less of a progressive.

  • It means I'm trying to get stuff done.

  • And the same applies to a Republican who,

  • heaven forbid, might agree with me on a particular

  • issue -- or if I said America is great,

  • decided to stand during a State of Union.

  • It's not a controversial proposition.

  • (laughter)

  • You're not going to get in trouble.

  • (applause)

  • But the fact that that's hard to do is a testament to

  • how difficult our politics has become.

  • Because folks are worried, well,

  • I'm going to get yelled at by you,

  • or this blogger is going to write that,

  • or this talk show host is going to talk about me,

  • and suddenly I've got to challenger,

  • and calling me a RINO or a not a real progressive.

  • So when I hear voices in either party boast of their

  • refusal to compromise as an accomplishment in and of

  • itself, I'm not impressed.

  • All that does is prevent what most Americans would

  • consider actual accomplishments -- like

  • fixing roads, educating kids, passing budgets,

  • cleaning our environment, making our streets safe.

  • (applause)

  • It cuts both ways, guys.

  • See, suddenly everybody is standing.

  • This is fascinating to watch.

  • (laughter)

  • The point is, it cuts both ways.

  • Our Founders trusted us with the keys to this system

  • of self-government.

  • Our politics is the place where we try to make this

  • incredible machinery work; where we come together to

  • settle our differences and solve big problems,

  • do big things together that we could not possibly

  • do alone.

  • And our Founders anchored all this in a visionary

  • Constitution that separates power and demands

  • compromise, precisely to prevent one party,

  • or one wing of a party, or one faction,

  • or some powerful interests from getting 100 percent

  • of its way.

  • So when either side makes blanket promises to their

  • base that it can't possibly meet -- tax cuts without

  • cuts to services -- "everything will be fine,

  • but we won't spend any money" -- war without shared

  • sacrifice -- "we're going to be tough, but don't worry,

  • it will be fine" -- union bashing or corporate bashing

  • without acknowledging that both workers and businesses

  • make our economy run -- that kind of politics means that

  • the supporters will be perennially disappointed.

  • It only adds to folks' sense that the system is rigged.

  • It's one of the reasons why we see these big electoral

  • swings every few years.

  • It's why people are so cynical.

  • Now, I don't pretend to have all the answers to this.

  • These trends will not change overnight.

  • If I did, I would have already done them through an

  • executive action.

  • (laughter and applause)

  • That was just a joke, guys.

  • Relax.

  • (laughter)

  • A sense of humor is also helpful.

  • But I do want to offer some steps that we can take that

  • I believe would help reform our institutions and move

  • our system in a way that helps reflect our better selves.

  • And these aren't particularly original,

  • but I just want to go ahead and mention them.

  • First is to take, or at least reduce,

  • some of the corrosive influence of money

  • in our politics.

  • (applause)

  • Now, this year, just over 150 families -- 150 families

  • -- have spent as much on the presidential race as the

  • rest of America combined.

  • Today, a couple of billionaires in one state

  • can push their agenda, dump dark money into every state

  • -- nobody knows where it's coming from -- mostly used

  • on these dark ads, everybody is kind of dark and the

  • worst picture possible.

  • (laughter)

  • And there's some ominous voice talking about how

  • they're destroying the country.

  • And they spend this money based on some ideological

  • preference that really is disconnected to the

  • realities of how people live.

  • They're not that concerned about the particulars of

  • what's happening in a union hall in Galesburg,

  • and what folks are going through trying to find a job.

  • They're not particularly familiar with what's

  • happening at a VFW post.

  • (phone rings)

  • Somebody's phone is on.

  • (laughter)

  • In Carbondale.

  • They haven't heard personally from farmers

  • outside of the Quads and what they're going through.

  • Those are the voices that should be outweighing a

  • handful of folks with a lot of money.

  • I'm not saying the folks with a lot of money should

  • have no voice; I'm saying they shouldn't be able to

  • drown out everybody else's.

  • And that's why I disagree with

  • the Supreme Court's Citizens United decision.

  • (applause)

  • I don't believe that money is speech,

  • or that political spending should have no limits,

  • or that it shouldn't be disclosed.

  • I still support a constitutional amendment to

  • set reasonable limits on financial influence in

  • America's elections.

  • But amending the Constitution is an extremely

  • challenging and time-consuming process -- as

  • it should be.

  • So we're going to have to come up with more immediate

  • ways to reduce the influence of money in politics.

  • There are a lot of good proposals out there,

  • and we have to work to find ones that can gain some

  • bipartisan support -- because a handful of

  • families and hidden interests shouldn't be able

  • to bankroll elections in the greatest democracy on Earth.

  • The second step towards a better politics is

  • rethinking the way that we draw

  • our congressional districts.

  • (applause)

  • Now, let me point this out -- I want to point this out,

  • because this is another case of cherry-picking here.

  • (laughter)

  • This tends to be popular in states where Democrats have

  • been drawing the lines among Republicans,

  • and less popular among Republicans

  • where they control drawing the lines.

  • (applause)

  • So let's be very clear here -- nobody has got clean

  • hands on this thing.

  • Nobody has got clean hands on this thing.

  • The fact is, today technology allows parties in

  • power to precision-draw constituencies so that the

  • opposition's supporters are packed into as few districts

  • as possible.

  • That's why our districts are shaped like earmuffs

  • or spaghetti.

  • (laughter)

  • It's also how one party can get more seats even when it

  • gets fewer votes.

  • And while this gerrymandering may insulate

  • some incumbents from a serious challenge from the

  • other party, it also means that the main thing those

  • incumbents are worried about are challengers from the

  • most extreme voices in their own party.

  • That's what's happened in Congress.

  • You wonder why Congress doesn't work?

  • The House of Representatives there,

  • there may be a handful -- less than 10 percent -- of

  • districts that are even competitive at this point.

  • So if you're a Republican, all you're worried about is

  • what somebody to your right is saying about you,

  • because you know you're not going to lose

  • a general election.

  • Same is true for a lot of Democrats.

  • So our debates move away from the middle,

  • where most Americans are, towards

  • the far ends of the spectrum.

  • And that polarizes us further.

  • Now, this is something we have the power to fix.

  • And once the next census rolls around and we have the

  • most up-to-date picture of America's population,

  • we should change the way our districts are drawn.

  • In America, politicians should not pick their

  • voters; voters should pick their politicians.

  • (applause)

  • And this needs to be done across the nation,

  • not just in a select few states.

  • It should be done everywhere.

  • (applause)

  • Now, the more Americans use their voice and participate,

  • the less captive our politics will be

  • to narrow constituencies.

  • No matter how much undisclosed money is spent,

  • no matter how many negative ads are run,

  • no matter how unrepresentative a district

  • is drawn, if everybody voted,

  • if a far larger number of people voted,

  • that would overcome in many ways some of these other

  • institutional barriers.

  • It would make our politics better.

  • And that's why a third step towards a better politics is

  • making voting easier, not harder;

  • and modernizing it for the way that we live now.

  • (applause)

  • Now, this shouldn't be controversial, guys.

  • You liked the redistricting thing,

  • but not letting people vote.

  • I should get some applause on that, too.

  • (applause)

  • Listen, three years ago, I set up a bipartisan

  • commission to improve the voting experience

  • in America.

  • It had the election lawyers from my campaign and from

  • Mitt Romney's campaign.

  • They got together outside of the context

  • of immediate politics.

  • And I actually want to thank this assembly for moving to

  • adopt some of its recommendations.

  • Thanks to the good work of my dear friend,

  • Senator Don Harmon, and many of you,

  • there's a new law going into effect this year that will

  • allow Illinoisans to register and vote at the

  • polls on Election Day.

  • (applause)

  • It expands early voting -- something that makes it a

  • lot easier for working folks and busy parents to go vote.

  • Think about it.

  • If you're a single mom, and you've got to take public

  • transportation to punch a clock, work round the clock,

  • get home, cook dinner on a Tuesday in bad weather --

  • that's tough.

  • Why would we want to make it so that she couldn't do it

  • on a Saturday or a Sunday?

  • (applause)

  • How is that advancing our democracy?

  • So this law will make a difference.

  • I'm proud of my home state for helping to lead the way.

  • And we know this works.

  • In 2012 and 2014, the states with the highest voter

  • turnout all had same-day registration.

  • So today, I ask every state in America to join us --

  • reduce these barriers to voting.

  • Make it easier for your constituents to get out

  • and vote.

  • And I'd encourage this assembly to take the next step.

  • Senator Manar and Representative Gabel have

  • bills that would automatically register every

  • eligible citizen to vote when they apply

  • for a driver's license.

  • That will protect the fundamental right of everybody.

  • Democrats, Republicans, independents, seniors,

  • folks with disabilities, the men and women of our

  • military -- it would make sure that it was easier for

  • them to vote and have their vote counted.

  • And as one of your constituents,

  • I think you should pass that legislation right away.

  • (applause)

  • I think the Governor should sign it without delay.

  • (applause)

  • Let's make the Land of Lincoln a leader

  • in voter participation.

  • That's something we should be proud to do.

  • (applause)

  • Let's set the pace -- encourage other states

  • across the country to follow our lead,

  • making automatic voter registration the new norm

  • across America.

  • Now, just during the course of this talk,

  • it's been interesting to watch

  • the dynamics, obviously.

  • (laughter)

  • In part because so much of our politics now is just

  • designed for short-term, tactical gain.

  • If you think that having more voters will hurt you on

  • Election Day, then suddenly you're not interested

  • in participation.

  • And if you think that the gerrymandering is helping

  • you instead of hurting you, then you're not

  • for those proposals.

  • We get trapped in these things.

  • We know better.

  • If we were setting up a set of rules ahead of time,

  • and you didn't know where you stood,

  • which party you were going to be in,

  • if you didn't have all the data and the poll numbers to

  • tell you what's going to give you an edge or not,

  • you'd set up a system that was fair.

  • You'd encourage everybody to be part of it.

  • That's what we learned in our civics books.

  • That's how it should work.

  • The fact that we can't do that,

  • that brings me to my last point, which is,

  • even as we change the way system works,

  • we also have a responsibility to change the

  • way that we, as elected officials and as citizens,

  • work together.

  • Because this democracy only works when we get both right

  • -- when the system is fair, but also when we build a

  • culture that is trying to make it work.

  • Recently, I've been thinking a lot about something a

  • friend of mine, Deval Patrick,

  • once said to his constituents when he was

  • governor of Massachusetts.

  • He said, "Insist from us and from each other a modicum of

  • civility as the condition for serving you."

  • This is what he told voters.

  • "Insist on us having a modicum of civility."

  • I think that's something that all of us,

  • as Americans, have to insist from each other.

  • Our children are watching what we do.

  • They don't just learn it in school,

  • they learn it by watching us -- the way we conduct

  • ourselves, the way we treat each other.

  • If we lie about each other, they learn it's okay to lie.

  • If we make up facts and ignore science,

  • then they just think it's just their opinion that matters.

  • If they see us insulting each other like school kids,

  • then they think, well, I guess that's how people are

  • supposed to behave.

  • The way we respect -- or don't -- each other as

  • citizens will determine whether or not the hard,

  • frustrating, but absolutely necessary work

  • of self-government continues.

  • I've got daughters that are getting older now,

  • and one of the most important things about being

  • a parent I think is them just seeing what you do not

  • when you're out in public, not when you're dealing with

  • somebody important, but just how do you do -- how do you

  • treat people generally.

  • And it makes me much more mindful.

  • I want to live up to their expectations.

  • And in that same way, I want this democracy to live up to

  • the people's expectations.

  • We can't move forward if all we do is tear each other down.

  • And the political incentives,

  • as they are today, too often rewards that kind

  • of behavior.

  • That's what gets attention.

  • So it will require some courage just to act the way

  • our parents taught us to act.

  • It shouldn't, but in this political environment

  • apparently it does.

  • We've got to insist to do better from each other,

  • for each other.

  • Rather than reward those who'd disenfranchise any

  • segment of America, we've got to insist that everybody

  • arm themselves with information, and facts,

  • and that they vote.

  • If 99 percent of us voted, it wouldn't matter how much

  • the 1 percent spends on our elections.

  • (applause)

  • Rather than reward the most extreme voices,

  • or the most divisive language,

  • or who is best at launching schoolyard taunts,

  • we should insist on a higher form of discourse in our

  • common life, one based on empathy and respect,

  • -- which does not mean you abandon principle.

  • It doesn't mean you're not tough.

  • Rather than paint those who disagree with us as

  • motivated by malice, to suggest that any of us lack

  • patriotism -- we can insist, as Lincoln did,

  • that we are not enemies, but friends;

  • that our fellow Americans are not only entitled to a

  • different point of view, but that they love this country

  • as much as we do.

  • Rather than reward a 24/7 media that so often thrives

  • on sensationalism and conflict,

  • we have to stand up and insist, no, reason matters,

  • facts matter; issues are complicated.

  • When folks just make stuff up,

  • they can't go unchallenged.

  • And that's true for Democrats if you hear a

  • Democratic make something up,

  • and that's true for a Republican if you see a

  • Republican cross that line.

  • Rather than accept the notion that compromise is a

  • sellout to one side, we've got to insist on the

  • opposite -- that it can be a genuine victory that means

  • progress for all sides.

  • And rather than preventing our kids from dating people

  • in other parties -- well, I may have issues about

  • dating, generally --

  • (laughter)

  • -- but we can trust that we've raised our kids to do

  • the right thing, and to look at the qualities of people's

  • character, not some label attached to them.

  • And maybe, most of all, whenever someone begins to

  • grow cynical about our politics,

  • or believes that their actions can't make a

  • difference or it's not worth participating in,

  • we've got to insist, even against all evidence to the

  • contrary, that in fact they can make a difference.

  • And in this job of being a citizen of the United States

  • of America, that's a big deal.

  • It's something we should revere and take seriously.

  • Abraham Lincoln wasn't always the giant that we

  • think of today.

  • He lacked formal schooling.

  • His businesses and his law practices often struggled.

  • After just one term in Congress,

  • his opposition to the Mexican-American War damaged

  • his reputation so badly he did not run for reelection.

  • He was denounced as a traitor, a demagogue,

  • an enemy sympathizer.

  • He returned to his law practice and admitted he was

  • losing interest in politics entirely.

  • And then something happened that shook his conscience.

  • Congress effectively overturned the Missouri

  • Compromise, that flawed and fragile law that had

  • prohibited slavery in the North and legalized it in

  • the South, but left the question ultimately unsettled.

  • And stunned by this news, Lincoln said he'd been

  • roused "as he had never been before" over what it meant

  • for America's future.

  • And so, here in Springfield, at the state fair,

  • he got back in the game and he delivered the first of

  • his great anti-slavery speeches

  • to a crowd of thousands.

  • And over the next six years, even as he lost two more

  • political races, his arguments with Douglas and

  • others shaped the national debate.

  • That's when he uttered those brilliant words on the steps

  • of the Old State Capitol that "A house divided

  • against itself cannot stand; "

  • that "this government cannot endure, permanently,

  • half slave and half free."

  • He became the first Republican President,

  • and I believe our greatest President.

  • And through his will and his words and, most of all,

  • his character, he held a nation together and he

  • helped free a people.

  • And those victories did not solve all of our problems.

  • He would be attacked at times for the compromises he

  • was prepared to make by abolitionists and folks

  • from his own side.

  • It would be 100 years more until the law guaranteed

  • African Americans the equal rights

  • that they had been promised.

  • Even 50 years after that, our march is not yet finished.

  • But because Lincoln made that decision not to give

  • up, and not to let other voices speak for him,

  • and because he held in his mind the strength of

  • principle but the vision, the ability to understand

  • those who disagreed with him,

  • and showed them respect even as he fought them -- because

  • of what he set in motion, generations of free men and

  • women of all races and walks of life have had the chance

  • to choose this country's course.

  • What a great gift.

  • What a great legacy he has bestowed up.

  • And that's the thing about America.

  • We are a constant work of progress.

  • And our success has never been certain,

  • none of our journey has been preordained.

  • And there's always been a gap between our highest

  • ideals and the reality that we witness every single day.

  • But what makes us exceptional -- what makes us

  • Americans -- is that we have fought wars,

  • and passed laws, and reformed systems,

  • and organized unions, and staged protests,

  • and launched mighty movements to close that gap,

  • and to bring the promise and the practice of America into

  • closer alignment.

  • We've made the effort to form that "more perfect union."

  • Nine years to the day that I first announced for this

  • office, I still believe in that politics of hope.

  • And for all the challenges of a rapidly changing world,

  • and for all the imperfections of our

  • democracy, the capacity to reach across our differences

  • and choose that kind of politics -- not a cynical

  • politics, not a politics of fear,

  • but that kind of politics -- sustained over the tranquil

  • and steady dedication of a lifetime,

  • that's something that remains entirely up to us.

  • Thank you, Illinois.

  • God bless you.

  • God bless America.

  • (applause)

  • It's good to see all you.

  • I miss you guys.

  • (applause)

  • Thank you.

  • Thank you.

  • (applause)

The President: Hey!

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總統在斯普林菲爾德的伊利諾伊州議會大廈發表講話。 (The President Speaks at the Illinois State Capitol in Springfield)

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    Tom Lion 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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