Private Residence
Chicago, Illinois
7:30 P.M. CST
THE PRESIDENT: It is wonderful to be back home! (Applause.) It is great to see so many friends that I haven’t seen in too long — and some folks who visited me in my new residence. But let me begin by just thanking Fred for opening up this extraordinary home to us. (Applause.) And thank everybody else who helped put this together. I particularly want to thank Sonia and Eric for all that they did — (Applause.)
I want to acknowledge some outstanding public servants who are here — my former seat mate in Springfield, the Attorney General of Illinois — (applause.) My former teacher of the ways of the Senate and one of the finest public servants that we know — Dick Durbin. (Applause.) The outstanding governor of Illinois, Pat Quinn, is in the house. (Applause.) And finally, we have sort of a carpetbagger here — (laughter) — I just love her so whenever I have an excuse to see her I’m happy, and she is a fellow Midwesterner, the Senator from Missouri — Claire McCaskill. (Applause.)
So I’m going to make my opening remarks very, very brief because, Fred and I were talking, particularly a crowd like this that knows me, I want to spend as much time as possible answering questions.
I was talking about a meeting I had this morning with companies from all across the country, some of them very large corporations — Intel and Siemens; some medium-sized companies and some very small companies. The common theme was that they were all insourcing. They were bringing jobs back to America. Many of them had located plants in China, located plants in Mexico, and because of the extraordinary growth in productivity in the United States over the last several years, because wages are going up pretty rapidly in places like China, because of energy costs and transportation costs and a whole range of other factors, we’re getting to this point where when you account for everything, that America is fully competitive in manufacturing and more than competitive in services with any other country in the world. Those are a good news story.
But I asked them, what is it that’s going to make the biggest difference in accelerating this trend so you start seeing more and more companies decide let’s move back into the United States — let’s move our plants back? And some of them mentioned education. They said the single most important reason for us to move back here is because they’re more highly skilled workers here, and as long as we’re investing in K through 12 and our community colleges, and have enough engineers and scientists, then that’s going to be a reason for us to locate here.
And a number of them said the fact that we’ve got the most innovative research taking place in the United States, that’s what’s going to make a difference. And another one said, well, logistically — I think this was maybe Otis Elevators — he said it’s kind of hard to move elevators around — (laughter) — and so making sure we’ve got the best infrastructure in the world is going to be what is the determining factor in whether or not we locate a plant here in the United States.
And as I listened to each one of these companies I was reminded that everything we’ve done over the last three years — but more importantly, everything we have to do over the next five years — has to be designed to making sure that this economy is once again one that is built on a solid foundation, one that is not done with bubbles, one that is not based on simply shuffling paper, but one that’s based on making things and selling things and one in which everybody — business, workers, communities — all feel invested in each other.
And that’s what we’ve been trying to do over the last three years as we’ve dug ourselves out of the worst recession since the Great Depression. That’s why it’s been so important for us to invest in education like never before, and that’s why it’s been so important for us to make sure — with the help of folks like Claire and Dick — that we continue to invest in research. That’s why we pushed so hard to make sure that we’re rebuilding not just our roads and our bridges but also high-speed rail lines and a faster Internet all across the country.
And I make this point because as important as 2008 was, I actually think 2012 is more important, because what we’re seeing developing, what we’re seeing over the last two years but I think what we’re going to see this year in a pretty decisive way is a decision about contrasting visions about where the country should go.
You’ve got one theory that says if we slash our education, our research and our infrastructure budgets, and weaken our social safety net, and make sure that unions aren’t out there operating, and we essentially eliminate EPA — and I’m not exaggerating — there are candidates and members of Congress who’ve called for that — that somehow we’re going to be able to win this competition in the 21st century. And that’s one vision, and it is being starkly stated.
And I have a different vision. Most of the people in this room have a fundamentally different vision about how this country was formed. Our vision is based on the notion that everybody deserves a fair shot, everybody has to do their fair share, and everybody has got to play by the same set of rules and America succeeds best when we’re all in it together, we’re all rising together. And that big, inclusive, generous, bold, ambitious vision of America is what’s at stake, is what we’re fighting for.
But I guess in these initial remarks what I just want to say is that many of you got involved in my campaign back in 2008, many of you got involved in my Senate campaign back in 2004, some of you got involved in my state Senate campaign back in — (laughter) — I don’t remember when that was. (Laughter.) I think that the reason we were successful was not because I was a flawless candidate or I ran a flawless campaign, but it was because together we were able to give voice to this shared vision of what America should be. And I want you to know that I have kept faith with that vision all these years and that’s not wavered.
And whether it’s making a decision about getting all of our troops out of Iraq, or it was making a decision about ending “don’t ask, don’t tell,” or it was making a decision about expanding Pell grants so more people have access to college, or it’s trying to present a balanced approach to deficit reduction, what animates me continues to be the same vision that you guys helped me realize way back when.
This will be my last campaign. A friend of many of us, Ab Mikva, used to say that being friends with a politician is like permanently having a child in college. (Laughter.) Every year there’s another tuition check. (Laughter.) But I’m finally graduating. (Laughter.) And I’m confident that as difficult as these last three years have been, as challenging as they’ve been — not so much for me but for Americans all across the country who lost their jobs or have seen their home values decline or been worrying about their retirement and their 401Ks — I absolutely believe that the American people still have confidence and faith in this country and there’s a core decency and strength and resilience to be tapped, and that most of the time the better angels of our nature win out. I think that’s what’s going to happen this time as well. But we’re going to have to work hard to get it done.