Hillary Clinton at the Equal Futures Partnership Launch **Video Added**
Remarks at the Equal Futures Partnership Launch
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
InterContinental Hotel
New York City
September 24, 2012
SECRETARY CLINTON:
Thank you for those introductory remarks and for the work that she and
her council are doing. And it’s wonderful to welcome all of you here for
the launch of the Equal Futures Partnership. I’m looking forward to
hearing from the leaders on the platform, who will be making specific
pledges along the lines of what the United States is making, as Valerie
has described.
There are so many people in this room who have
played a major role in the furtherance of economic development for all
people, and in particular for women and girls. And I want to mention
several countries who are represented, who have signed letters of intent
to join the Equal Futures Partnership at our next meeting in April:
Latvia, Thailand, Croatia, Italy, and Belgium.
And I’m grateful to the World Bank for agreeing to host that next meeting, where we can share progress and compare results.
I’m
also pleased that many of us gathered here today were at an event
hosted by UN Women and Michelle Bachelet, who is on the stage with us,
dedicated to increasing women’s political participation worldwide. We
signed a joint declaration affirming the importance of women to
democracy, sustainable development, security, and peace, and I’m pleased
that many of the leaders who signed that declaration are with us.
I
said then that this work, ensuring that women are equal partners, as
they should be, and are free to realize their own God-given potential,
was one of the great pieces of unfinished business of the 21st century. With this Equal Futures Partnership, we are taking an important step toward trying to finish that business.
Through
this initiative, governments from around the world are making concrete
commitments to support women in two key areas: political participation
and economic opportunity. Those are mutually reinforcing, so I’m pleased
we are addressing them together, because we know that when women
participate fully in their governments and economies, they and their
families benefit, but so do their communities, their countries, and even
the world as a whole.
In democracies, all people – women and men –
have an equal voice and an equal vote and an equal chance to run for
office and to serve their fellow citizens. In thriving economies, all
people have an equal opportunity to start a business, own property, earn
a fair wage, and support their families. And in stable and peaceful
societies, all people’s human rights and fundamental freedoms are
respected equally.
So if we want to support strong democracies,
thriving economies, and stable, peaceful societies worldwide, we must
support women and girls. And that means focusing on a wide range of
issues – from working to improve women’s leadership in industries where
they are currently underrepresented, as Australia has pledged to do in
the mining and construction industries, to enforcing and strengthening
laws that guarantee women’s equal political participation, as Senegal
has committed to do, to addressing once and for all the problem of
nationality laws that discriminate against women and leave they and
their families vulnerable to abuse and exploitation.
Now, all the
commitments we are making today are voluntary, so we are called to hold
each other accountable. We need to be transparent about both our
successes and our struggles, so we can learn from one another what works
and what doesn’t. None of us has all the answers, but together we can
make real, measurable progress.
But I hasten to add this cannot be
the work of governments alone. We need the private sector and civil
society to bring their resources, ingenuity, and commitment to the
effort. And I am particularly grateful to the private sector partners
who have joined us today.
You just heard from Valerie about the
commitments the United States is making. Let me mention one additional
initiative. I’m pleased to announce that the State Department and
American University, along with the Organization of Pakistani
Entrepreneurs of North America and our counterparts in Pakistan, are
founding the U.S.-Pakistan Women’s Council to promote economic
opportunities for women in Pakistan. The Council will connect
businesses, universities, and individual donors in both the United
States and Pakistan. And I’m very pleased that Pakistan’s Ambassador to
the United States is here with us today.
There’s really no limit
to what our imaginations can devise as to what we can do in supporting
the Equal Futures Partnership. We know that there is economic data,
health and social science data that demonstrates clearly now is the
time, and investing in women and girls is a smart strategy. As Valerie
said, President Obama is personally committed to this effort. And I’m
very pleased that we have a strong, robust set of initiatives. And I’m
proud to stand with all of you as we launch this new, important global
partnership.
Let me also recognize that there are a number of
other countries in the audience, including the President of Kosovo who
is here, the Prime Minister of Jamaica, foreign ministers, and others.
And we look forward to welcoming them in the future to the Equal Futures
Partnership. So let’s get started.
Let me turn now to His Excellency, Dr. Boni Yayi, the President of the Republic of Benin.