Alliance for American Manufacturing
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
April 14, 2008
Being here in Pennsylvania with the primary coming up, I
know that politics is what's on a lot of people's minds. But as I look out at
this crowd, I also know that being here isn't just about politics for me. It's
personal. Because it reminds me why I entered public service in the first
place.
As some of you might know, after college, I went to work as
a community organizer for a group of churches on the South Side of Chicago. The
job was to help lift communities that had been devastated when the local steel
plants fell on hard times. Thousands of folks had been laid off and some plants
were closing down. And I can still remember the first time I saw a shuttered
steel mill.
It was late in the afternoon and I took a drive with another
organizer over to the old Wisconsin Steel plant on the southeast side of
Chicago. Some of you may know it. And as we drove up, I saw a sight that's
probably familiar to some of you. I saw a plant that was empty and rusty. And
behind a chain-link fence, I saw weeds sprouting up through the concrete, and
an old mangy cat running around. And I thought about all the good jobs it used
to provide, and all the kids who used to work there in the summer to make some
extra money for college.
What I came to understand was that when a plant shuts down,
it's not just the workers who pay a price, it's the whole community. I saw
folks who felt like their government wasn't looking out for them and who had
given up hope. So I worked with unions and the city government, and we brought
the community together to fight for its common future. We gave job-training to
the jobless and hope to the hopeless, and block by block, we helped turn those
neighborhoods around.
More than twenty years later, as I've traveled across
Pennsylvania, and West Virginia, and Ohio, and all across this country, I'm
still seeing too many places where plants have closed down and where folks are
feeling like they're not getting a fair shot at life, like their dreams are
slipping further out of reach. And that's partly because of the same kinds of
global economic pressures that led steel plants in Chicago to close down in the
1980s.
But it's also because George Bush has pursued policies that
don't work for working Americans. In recent years, we've seen more than 3
million high-quality manufacturing jobs disappear, and more than 40,000
factories close down. And more often than not, the few jobs that are being
created pay less than the ones we're losing and come without health insurance
or a pension, which makes it even harder for families to feel secure about
their future.
But we also know this is a problem that goes beyond the
failures of George Bush - because for decades, through both Democratic and
Republican administrations, we've seen the number of American-owned steel companies
dwindle down. For decades, our economic policies have been written to pump up a
corporate bottom line, rather than promote what's right, without any
consideration for the burden we all bear when workers are abused or the
environment is destroyed.
It's an outrage, but it's not an accident - because
corporate lobbyists in Washington are writing our laws and putting their
clients' interests ahead of what's fair for the American people. The men and
women you represent haven't been getting a seat at the table when trade
agreements are being negotiated, or tax policies are being written, or health
care and pension laws are being designed because the special interests have
bought every chair.
That's not the America I believe in. That's not the America
you believe in. And that's why when I'm President, we'll make sure Washington
serves nobody's interests but the people's.
You know, there's been a lot of talk in this campaign lately
about who's "in touch" with the workers of Pennsylvania. Senator
Clinton and Senator McCain are singing from the same hymn book, saying that I'm
"out of touch" - an "elitist" - because I said a lot of
folks are bitter about their economic circumstances.
Now it may be that I chose my words badly. It wasn't the
first time and it won't be the last. But when I hear my opponents, both of whom
have spent decades in Washington, saying I'm out of touch, it's time to cut
through their rhetoric and look at the reality.
After all, you've heard this kind of rhetoric before. Around
election time, the candidates can't do enough for you. They'll "promise
you anything, give you a long list of proposals and even come around, with TV
crews in tow, to throw back a shot and a beer.
But if those same candidates are taking millions of dollars
in contributions from the PACs and lobbyists, ask yourself, who are they going
to be toasting once the election is over?
I'm the only candidate who doesn't take money from corporate
PACs and lobbyists, and I'm here to tell you that you can count on me to stand
up for you after this election, just as I've been standing up for workers all
my life. That's why I'm running for President of the United States.
Senator Clinton and Senator McCain question my respect for
the workers of Pennsylvania. Well, let me tell you how I believe you
demonstrate your respect. You do it by telling the truth and keeping your word,
so folks can know that where you stand today is where you'll stand tomorrow.
The truth is, trade is here to stay. We live in a global
economy. For America's future to be as bright as our past, we have to compete.
We have to win.
Not every job that has left is coming back. And not every
job lost is due to trade -automation has made plants more efficient so they can
make the same amount of steel with few workers. These are the realities.
I also don't oppose all trade deals. I voted for two of them
because they have the worker and environmental agreements I believe in. Some of
you disagreed with me on this but I did what I thought was right.
That's the truth. But let me tell you what else I believe
in:
For America to win, American workers have to win, too. If
CEO pay keeps rising, while the standard of living for their workers continues
to decline, that's not a win for America.
That's why I opposed NAFTA, it's why I opposed CAFTA, and
it's why I said any trade agreement I would support had to contain real,
enforceable standards for workers.
That's why I believe the Permanent Normalized Trade agreement
with China didn't do enough to ensure fairness and compliance.
Now, you can have a debate about whether my position is
right or wrong. But here's what you can't do. You can't spend the better part
of two decades campaigning for NAFTA and PNTR for China, and then come here to
Pennsylvania, and tell the steelworkers you've been with them all along. You
can't say you are opposed to the Colombia Trade deal, while your key strategist
is working for the Colombian government to get the deal passed.
That's not respect. That's just more of the same old
Washington politics. And we can't afford more of the same.
We need real change, and that's what I'm offering. I'm
offering a new, more transparent and more inclusive path on trade so we can
help promote an integrated global economy where the costs and benefits are
distributed more equitably. And it starts with a principle I've always believed
in - that trade should work for all Americans.
That's why we need to finally confront the issue of trade
with China. As I've said before, America and the world can benefit from trade
with China. But trade with China will only be good for you if China itself
plays by the rules and acts as a positive force for balanced world growth.
Seeing the living standards of the Chinese people improve is
a good thing - good because we want a stable China, and good because China can
be a powerful market for American exports. But too often, China has been
competing in ways that are tilting the playing field.
It's not just that China is following the path taken by so
many other countries before it, and dumping goods into our market while not
opening their own markets, something I've spoken out against. It's not just
that they're violating intellectual property rights. They're also grossly
undervaluing their currency, and giving their goods yet another unfair
advantage. Each year they've had the chance, the Bush administration has failed
to do anything about this. That's unacceptable. That's why I co-sponsored the
Currency Exchange Rate Oversight Reform Act. And that's why as President, I'll
use all the diplomatic avenues open to me to insist that China stop
manipulating its currency.
We also have to make sure that whatever goods we're
importing are safe for our families. We all saw the harm that was caused by
lead toys from China that were reaching our store shelves. A few months ago,
when I called for a ban on any toys that have more than a trace amount of lead,
an official at China's foreign ministry said I was being "unobjective,
unreasonable, and unfair." But I don't think protecting our children is
"unreasonable" - I think it's our obligation as parents and as
Americans.
When it comes to trade, there's no one-size-fits-all
approach. If countries are committed to reciprocity, if they are abiding by
basic rules of the road, then we should welcome trade. Many poor countries need
access to our markets and pose no threat to our workers.
But what all trade agreements I negotiate as President will
have in common is that they'll all put American workers first. We won't ignore
violence against union organizers in Colombia, or the non-tariff barriers that
keep U.S. cars out of South Korea.
And we won't just negotiate fair trade agreements, we'll
make sure they're being fully enforced. George Bush has been far too slow to
press American rights. That's an outrage. When our trading partners sign an
agreement with the Obama administration, you can trust that we'll hold them to
it.
Now, if we're serious about standing up for American workers
around the world, we also have to fight for you here at home. That means
passing universal health care and making sure every American has insurance you
can take with you even if you lose your job, and that a college degree is
within reach, even if you're not rich - because all our children should have
the skills to compete in the global economy.
And it also means protecting the rights of our workers. It's
time we had a President who didn't choke saying the word "union." We
need to strengthen our unions by letting them do what they do best - organize
our workers. If a majority of workers want a union, they should get a union, no
matter whether they're full-time, or part-time, or contract workers. And that
is why I will fight for and why I intend to sign the Employee Free Choice Act
when it lands on my desk in the White House.
Here's what else I'll do: we'll pass the Patriot Employer
Act that I've been working on since I got to the Senate - so we can stop giving
tax breaks to companies that ship jobs overseas, and start giving them to
companies that create good jobs with decent wages here in America.
And to those who think that the decline in American
manufacturing is inevitable; or that manufacturing has no place in a 21st century
economy; we say right here and right now that the fight for manufacturing's
future is the fight for America's future. And that's why we'll modernize our
steel industry, strengthen our entire domestic manufacturing base, and open as
many markets as we can to American manufactured goods when I'm President.
We'll also make necessary long-term investments in
job-growth. Back in the 1950's, Americans were put to work building the
Interstate Highway system and that helped expand the middle class in this country.
We need to show the same kind of leadership today. That's why I've called for a
National Infrastructure Reinvestment Bank that will invest $60 billion over ten
years and generate millions of new jobs. We can't keep standing by while our
roads and bridges and airports crumble and decay. We can't keep running our
economy on debt. For our economy, our safety, and our workers, we have to
rebuild America.
And we need to invest in green technology. We can't keep
sending billions of dollars to foreign nations because of our addiction to oil.
We should be investing in American companies that invest in
American-manufactured solar panels and windmills, and in clean coal technology.
That's why I've proposed investing $150 billion over the next ten years in the
green energy sector. This will create up to five million new American jobs -
and those are jobs that pay well and can't be outsourced. That's a promise that
we are making not just to this generation of Americans, but to the next
generation of Americans. And that's why this will be a priority in my
administration.
Now, I know some will say we can't afford all this. But let
me just say this - if we can spend $10 billion a month rebuilding Iraq, we can
spend $15 billion a year in our own country to put Americans back to work and
strengthen the long-term competitiveness of our economy.
So make no mistake - the American people have a choice in
this election. We can talk about our economic problems with trade all we want,
but unless we change the broken system in Washington, nothing else is going to
change. We can talk all we want about respecting workers and their way of life,
but unless we have a President you can trust to listen and put working
Americans first, nothing is really going to change.
And you can trust me. Because politics didn't lead me to
working folks; working folks led me to politics. I was standing with American
workers on the streets of Chicago twenty years ago, and the reason I'm here
today is because I don't want to wake up one day many years from now and see
that our companies are still getting hurt because foreign governments are still
bending or breaking the rules, or that we're still standing idly by while
American jobs get shipped overseas, or that we still haven't made the
investments in infrastructure and in training our workers that we desperately
need.
The reason I'm here today is because I know what it's like
to go to college on student loans, and see a mother get sick and worry that
maybe she can't pay the bills. I know what it's like to have to scratch and
work and claw to build a better life for your family. And I don't want to wake
up many years from now and find that the American dream is still out of reach
for too many Americans.
The reason I'm here today is because I believe that if we
can just put an end to the politics of division and distraction, and reclaim
that sense that we all have a stake in each other, that we rise and fall as one
nation; if we can just unite this country around a common purpose - black,
white, Hispanic, Asian, and Native American; labor and management; Democrats,
Republicans, and Independents - there's no obstacle we cannot overcome, no
destiny we cannot fulfill.
That's the fundamental truth I learned on the streets of Chicago. That's the idea at the heart of your Alliance for Manufacturing. And that's the opportunity we have in this election. There is a moment in the life of every generation where that spirit of unity and hopefulness has to come through if we're going to make our mark on history. This is our moment. This is our time. And if you will march with me, and organize with me, if you vote for me, then I promise you this: We will not just win this Democratic Nomination, we will win the general election and then together - you and I - we're going to change this country, and we're going to change this world. Thank you.