At
a rally in Manchester on Monday, Hillary Clinton contrasted her concern
for the issues that keep working families up at night with Donald
Trump’s disdain for our democratic traditions. Both Democrats and
Republicans, including 150 Republican leaders in New Hampshire, are
uniting to reject Trump’s unprecedented statements: his refusal to
commit to accept the results of the election on November 8th, his
declaration that the mission to displace ISIS from Mosul is a disaster
just as it’s starting and countless statements belittling and demeaning
women. Clinton also highlighted reports today of a suit against Trump’s
New Jersey golf club by a former employee, alleging a hostile workplace
where he experienced both physical and verbal harassment because he is
gay.
Clinton hailed the strong early vote numbers favoring the
Democratic ticket as proof that most Americans believe we are ‘Stronger
Together.’ Our country needs a president ready to deal with our
country’s biggest challenges and build an economy that works for
everyone, not just those at the top Clinton said, adding, “to me, and I
hope to you as well, this is about more than winning an election, it’s
about the kind of country we want for our kids and our grandkids. That’s
what this has to be about. It’s about the lessons we want to pass on to
our sons and our daughters.”
Elizabeth Warren called Donald Trump
unqualified to be president on the basis of both his business record
and his past statements demeaning women and insulting minorities.
Hillary Clinton is the best candidate by far to face down Donald Trump’s
dangerous vision for America, Warren said, adding,”She doesn’t whine.
She doesn’t run to Twitter at 3:00 a.m. to call her opponents losers or
dummies. She doesn’t even cry that the election is rigged. Nope. Hillary
is the kind who just gets up every day and she keeps on fighting –
fighting for children, fighting for women, fighting for families,
fighting for health care, fighting for human rights, fighting for a
level playing field. Hillary fights for us. That’s right.”
Both
Clinton and Warren urged Granite Staters to get out and vote, not only
for Clinton but also for U.S. Senate candidate Maggie Hassan and
Gubernatorial candidate Colin Van Ostern.
Clinton and Warren’s remarks, as transcribed, are below:
HILLARY CLINTON:
“Thank
you – Wow! I don’t know about you, but I could listen to Elizabeth
Warren go on all day! It is so great to be back here in New Hampshire! I
am one of the significant groups of women who went to […] back here.
Oh,
it is so wonderful to be here on this college campus, and to see so
many young people here as Maggie and Elizabeth and I were walking up to
the stage. And a lot of people were hanging out of the windows, and
we’re glad that you’ve got the best view of what we’re doing here. It’s
also exciting to be here with two weeks left because this is the most
consequential election of our lifetime, and to see the energy and
enthusiasm that this crowd displayed – I saw it yesterday in North
Carolina, I saw it the day before in Ohio, it really does demonstrate
that Americans are really looking at what’s at stake and are coming to
the conclusion that we all have to be involved in the remaining days of
the campaign. And that everyone needs to turn out to vote.
In New
Hampshire, you have a lot of reasons to vote – you’ve got great
candidates for Congress, Annie Kuster and Carol Shea Porter, who deserve
your support, and you’ve got a great candidate for governor, Colin Van
Ostern, thank you!
I know that Maggie, Elizabeth and I have been
out here giving the full […], but I hope that you will know what is at
stake in the governor’s race, and in sending these two extraordinary
women to the House, and boy, it is exciting to be here with Maggie and
Elizabeth. They are people who fight for you every single day. I know
these women, and it is a privilege to be on this stage with them.
Now,
Elizabeth Warren has a track record of making it her mission to stand
up to Wall Street. And she is going to make sure that Wall Street never
wrecks Main Street again! But you may not know that she was the person
behind setting up the agency that protects consumers. The Consumer
Financial Protection Bureau, and it was set up to stand against and to
do something about the kinds of fraud and abuse we’ve seen from Wells
Fargo. And they are on the frontlines of returning billions of dollars
to Americans who have been cheated and defrauded by big companies, by
banks and others. In fact, I think it is fair to say some of the best TV
that you can see is on C-SPAN when Elizabeth is going after a bank
executive or regulator. She is refusing to let them off the hook, and
she is not just speaking for herself, is she? She is speaking for every
single American who is frustrated and fed up. And I am so looking
forward to working with her to rewrite the rules of our economy to make
sure we both grow it and make it fairer for every single person working
hard here in America.
I know we are up here without our phones so
we cannot check tweets but – I kind of expect if Donald heard what she
just said, he is tweeting away. She gets under his thin skin like nobody
else. She is calling him out of his mysterious tax returns. She exposes
him for what he is – temperamentally unfit and totally unqualified to
be president of the United States. And Maggie is going to be a great
United States senator for New Hampshire. You do not have to take my word
or Elizabeth’s word. Look at what she has already done. Under Maggie’s
leadership, New Hampshire has the lowest unemployment rate in the entire
country.
During her governorship, it was ranked as the best state
in the country for business, and she has done it the New Hampshire way.
She has brought people together, Democrats and Republicans, and
Independents, and I think she has the biggest legislature, probably in
the world, that she has to deal with. So she has really horned her
skills – listening and trying to work with people, and she has taken
issues that do keep families up at night. From the sky rocketing costs
of college and prescription drugs and helping students to figure out
ways to afford to get their education to helping those suffering from
addiction or mental health or raising wages for hard working families.
What I love about Maggie is that she is independent, she knows how to
find common ground, and how to stand her ground. And that is exactly the
kind of leader we need in the United States Senate.
Because we’ve
got to break through the gridlock and dysfunction that has
unfortunately […] Washington. We have to get back to listening
respectfully. We can disagree without being disagreeable. That is why we
need leaders like Maggie, and unlike her opponent, she has never been
afraid to stand up to Donald Trump.
She knows he should not be a
role model for our kids or anybody else for that matter. So I hope in
these next 14 days, you do everything you can to support her. And I want
to say a word about Colin, who I have also known for a number of years
now. Maggie is leaving some big shoes. She does not look like it, but
she is leaving some big shoes to fill as governor. Colin is the person
for that job. You know as a member of Executive Council, and I remember
this because it took a lot of guts.
He helped lead the fight for
funding Planned Parenthood in New Hampshire against his opponent by the
way, and he has showed that he will stand up for women’s health 100
percent of the time, not just when it is politically convenient. He also
worked with Maggie to cross party lines to help expand Medicaid to more
than 50,000 granted […]
And Colin wants to do more to invest
clean energy like wind and solar to hold down energy costs here in New
Hampshire and to protect the beautiful environment of this state. And he
will fight to put into action the promise of higher education within
reach for more families. So please during these next days, make sure
you’re doing everything you can for Colin, for Carol, and for Annie. Now
did anybody see the last debate? I stood next to Donald Trump in three
debates for four and a half hours proving once again, I have the stamina
to be president. I’ve tried to use the time I had in all three to talk
about what people talk to me about, starting here in New Hampshire and
going across the country, because I take it really seriously.
I
think the problems that keep you up tonight, that stand in the way of
your getting ahead and staying ahead, of providing the best opportunity
of a good middle class job with a rising income for you and your kids,
those are the problems that someone running for president should
actually listen to, pay attention to and come up with solutions for.
So
I do have a lot of plans, I do. And I get criticized for having so many
plans. Tim Kaine and I have actually written a book – oh, there’s one
copy right there! It’s called – oh, another copy! It’s called ‘Stronger
Together,’ and we lay out all of our plans for what we want to do if
we’re so honored as to be president and vice president. And I do have
this old-fashioned idea that if I’m here asking for your vote to be your
president, I should tell you what I’m going to do, and maybe, as I said
yesterday in North Carolina, maybe it’s a bit of a women’s thing
because we make lists. We do, we make lists and we try to write down
what we’re supposed to do and then cross them off as we go through the
day and the week. And so, I want you think about our plans are as our
lists – our lists as a country.
We are going to get our economy
working for everybody, not just those at the top. We are going to make
college affordable. We are going to lower prescription drug costs, and
we’re going to do everything we can to keep faith with what we have said
we’re going to do. What a novel idea! We’re actually going to try to
deliver results for you.
But I got to tell you. During that
debate, Donald said something. Well, he said a lot of things that were
troubling, but he said something truly horrifying. He became the first
person running for president – Republican or Democrat – to refuse to say
that he would respect the results of this election. Now, that is a
direct threat to our democracy. I’m not going to try to call it anything
else because that’s what it is. All this talk about the election being
rigged, trying to stir up people who are supporting him at his rallies,
that is a direct threat to our democracy. And I got to tell you – as
your secretary of state, I went to 112 countries and I went to countries
where people were jailed for being political opponents, where they were
exiled, where they were killed. I take this really seriously.
And
for me, the peaceful transfer of power is one of the things that makes
our country great – something that – something we can’t lose, something
we shouldn’t ever doubt. We cannot give in to cynicism, and I don’t
think we are. I’ll tell you what’s exciting to me is across this
country, at the very moment Donald Trump is making this unprecedented
attack on our fundamental values, our institutions, millions of people
are standing up for democracy, registering, volunteering, voting early.
So
when you get a little discouraged or you get frustrated by what you see
in this campaign, think of this: we have just reached a historic
milestone. More than 200 million Americans are now registered to vote.
And most exciting, that includes more than 50 million young people, the
biggest number ever. Now you only see numbers like this when people are
standing up for what they believe in and I’m proud to see Americans
coming together – Democrats, Republicans and Independents – to reject
hate and division. And we’re seeing that in New Hampshire, too.
We
are more than our disagreements, we Americans. There is so much more
that unites us than divides us. I’m proud to have the support of more
than 150 Republican leaders in this state who put country before party.
But this energy we’re seeing is not just because of what we’re against,
as important as that is, it’s because what we’re for. It’s about
fighting for a future where everyone counts, where everyone has a place,
and no one is left out or left behind.
Because to me, and I hope
to you as well, this is about more than winning an election, it’s about
the kind of country we want for our kids and our grandkids. That’s what
this has to be about. It’s about the lessons we want to pass on to our
sons and our daughters. We believe we should honor the men and women who
fight for our country and that America is safer when we work with our
allies to lead the world with strength and intelligence. Yet my opponent
attacked a grieving Gold Star family whose son died in Iraq. He has no
plan to defeat ISIS. And just last night he tweeted that the new effort
underway to push the terrorists out of the key city of Mosul is already,
and I quote, ‘a total disaster.’ And that our country is, quote,
‘looking so dumb.’ Imagine, imagine, this is a guy who says he knows
more about ISIS than the generals. I don’t think so. He’s basically
declaring defeat before the battle has even started. He’s proving to the
world what it means to have an unqualified commander in chief. It’s not
only wrong, it’s dangerous, and it needs to be repudiated on November
the 8th here in New Hampshire and across America.
But just in case
you think that this is new for Donald, it shouldn’t surprise you or
anybody else, and I’ll tell you why. He has been denigrating America for
decades. It started before he campaigned against me. It started before
President Obama took office. In fact, back in 1987, he spent $100,000 on
an ad in The New York Times criticizing President Reagan. He said, and I
quote, ‘The world is laughing at America.’ Does that sound familiar?
This is someone who roots for failure and takes glee in mocking our
country no matter who our president is. Now that may be who Donald Trump
is, but this election is about who we are. And I want us – I want us to
remember, America is great because America is good, right? And as our
wonderful First Lady Michelle Obama said right here in New Hampshire,
‘When they go, we go high.’
This election poses a very clear
choice on the economy. When the middle class thrives, America thrives.
As Elizabeth said, she is a perfect example of how that works in
America. So am I. So are every one of you here. That’s what I want for
every single person, especially young person, in America. With your
help, we’re going to not only have Elizabeth back in the Senate, but
send Maggie, send Carol, send Annie and then make the biggest investment
in new jobs since World War II.
What does that mean? That means
jobs in infrastructure, our roads, our bridges, our tunnels, our ports,
our mass transit, our water systems. There is a lot of great work to be
done here. And guess what? Those are jobs that can’t be exported.
They’ve got to be done, right here in New Hampshire and across America. I
want us to invest in advanced manufacturing, and there are, I know, a
lot of skeptics about that. They say, ‘Well, we can’t compete in
manufacturing anymore.’ Well, I’ll tell you what. I don’t want us
competing with low wage jobs. I want us competing for the high wage
jobs. Germany is a major exporter of advanced manufacturing products. I
want to compete with Germany and countries like that, precision,
machining, 3D printing.
I want us to invest more in technology,
innovation and research and yes, in clean energy, because we’re going to
make America the clean energy superpower of the 21st century. I think
we can deploy a half a billion more solar panels within the first four
years and enough clean energy to power every home by the end of 10
years. That’s what I want people to be working on and thinking about and
striving to achieve.
And I am really excited about what we can do
to make sure every young American is prepared. I want to start in the
early years of life in early education, universal pre-K. I want kids to
be prepared to succeed. Because we are in a competition, and you know
what? I want us to step up and compete and win. And I want our schools –
I want kids to have good teachers and good schools in every zip code,
and I want to be a good partner with our teachers and our educators here
in New Hampshire. And I want to bring back technical education to high
school. I think we really – we really shut the door on too many young
people who could’ve gotten skills that would’ve given them the chance to
get ahead.
And working with our community colleges, we need to
make sure that every young person and every person coming back to
upgrade or change skills can go to a community college. And yes, we are
going to make four-year college affordable. Just this week, a new report
came out showing that New Hampshire students have very high levels of
debt, and I know Maggie has been fighting that. And she’s had a
moratorium, and she’s done what she could at the state level. But we got
to work together at the national level to make this happen for students
in New Hampshire, families in New Hampshire.
So after our primary
was over – and you know what, I was really proud – I was really proud
of the campaign that Bernie Sanders and I ran. And it was a campaign –
it was a campaign about ideas, not insults. And that’s what campaigns
should be about. And after it was over, Bernie and I got together. We
put our heads together. And we came up with a plan to make public
colleges and universities tuition free for any families making less than
$125,000 a year. And if you make more than that, it will be debt free.
In other words, pay what you can, but let’s not have kids and families
going into debt to get an education. This should be an investment that
we make on behalf of them and our country’s future. And no matter where
you go, to a great school like this, or anywhere else, we will help you
pay down your student debt. We will make is easier, because we a re
going to make it as a percentage of you income, so you will never be on
the hook for more than you can afford. And if your interested to see how
much you and your family can save, you can actually go to
hillaryclinton.com/calculator to see how much you can save under this plan that we are proposing.
Now,
I think in addition to growing the economy, we need to do a lot more on
small business. Two-thirds of new jobs will come from small business so
we are going to be just focused on how we are going to be able to start
and grow your small business. And then we do have to make the economy
fairer, and that starts with raising the national minimum wage, because
if you work full time, I am talking about full time workers, you should
not still be in poverty at the end. Work should provide a ladder of
opportunity for people willing to work for it to climb. Right?
We
are going to guarantee equal pay, we are going to make affordable child
care so nobody pays more than 10 percent of your income for childcare.
We are going to work for paid family leave. Because this is the way
families are today. We are not living in the 1950s. Families are under
new stresses and strains, and I meet so many who are really just at the
edge. They are making all they can make. One parent working full-time,
two parents working full-time, sometimes part-time on top of full-time.
The
other day, Tim Kaine and I were in Pittsburgh. There was a long line of
people, big overflow, which we couldn’t get into the main room where we
were. So, Tim was talking to the families there, and there was a woman
holding her three-year-old child, a daughter, I think. Tim was shaking
hands, and the woman looked and she said, ‘I came here hoping that I
could tell you or Secretary Clinton that I had my baby three years ago,
and the day after, I had my baby, I was fired because I called and ask
if I could have a few weeks because it had been a difficult pregnancy.
But my baby was fine but not all that she needed to be. I got fired.’
And Tim came in, and he is such a wonderful man. What a fine human
being. And he said, ‘To be there are the reasons everyday why I get so
motivated in this election, and I just have another reason.’ He told me
that story. I think your president should care about that. I think your
president should wake up everyday thinking, ‘Okay, how do I help empower
the most people to make the most out of their own lives, how to break
down the barriers that give you the chance to go as far as your hard
work and talent will take you?’ Sometimes people say, ‘How are you going
to get all this done?’ I have proposed plans that do not add a penny to
the debt because I see some of my long time friends who back in the
1992 campaign – where my husband ended up, we had a balance budget and a
surplus, and actually, we were on the way to paying down the national
debt, but here is what happened.
What happened is trickle-down
economics came back. So here is what I am going to do. We are going to
ask the wealthy to finally pay their fair share. We are going to – we
are going to close the loopholes, we are going to end the fact that
millionaires can pay a lower tax rate than a nurse or a teacher or a
police officer. We are going to make big banks pay for the risks they
pose to our economy because Elizabeth is absolutely right. No – no bank
is too big to fail, and no one should be above the law, and we are going
to enforce that and contrast that with Donald Trump. He believes that
if you give trillions and that is trillions with a ‘t’ in tax cuts to
the wealthy millionaires and billionaires and corporations, and
everything will work out.
Well, it will for him. That is trickle
down economics on steroids. And he would wipe away the tough new rules
that President Obama imposed on Wall Street. He would eliminate the
Consumer Protection Financial Bureau that Elizabeth did so much to
create. And you know that was bad enough, but then in the debates, we
learned he hasn’t paid any income tax for years. So he hasn’t paid a
penny to support our military, our veterans, Pell grants for kids to get
an education, health or anything else. And his explanation was he lost a
billion dollars in a year. Now, I’ve pondered this. I’ve really
pondered this. He actually said it made him smart not to pay income
taxes, but how smart are you to lose a billion dollars in a year?
Has
anyone here been to a casino? He lost a billion dollars running
casinos. Who does that? I’ve never heard of anybody. So, we’ve got to
make it clear that Donald is not on the side of America workers or
American families. For all of his talk about putting America first, he
makes his products in at least 12 other countries. He stiffs small
businesses, mom and pop contractors who work for him. My dad was a small
business owner. He worked really hard. I’m just glad he never got a
contract from Donald Trump because it was hard work, and people who do
that work should be rewarded, not taken advantage of.
So we know a
lot about how Donald Trump works, and today, today, we heard yet
another story. It’s about a maintenance worker at one of his golf
courses. This maintenance courses told his co-workers he was gay, and
they started harassing him. They used anti-gay slurs to his face, they
threw rocks and golf balls at him, his supervisor saw it and did
nothing, and it got so bad, he wound up in the hospital. Finally, he
went to the police for help. He couldn’t go back to work because he was
too scared for his safety, and then he was fired by Trump’s golf club.
Now, this is a heart-wrenching story on a lot of levels. For starters,
it’s a painful reminder of the harassment, violence, and discrimination
that too many LGBT Americans still face every day. And it is deeply
disturbing that instead of stepping in to stop the tormentors, Trump’s
golf club turned on the victim for coming forward. If that’s how Donald
Trump runs his business, what does that say about how he would run our
country?
So my friends, there are lots of reasons, so many, to
take this election seriously. But here’s what I want you to know: of
course, I want you to vote for all of us, but more than that, I want you
to vote for yourselves, and for your families, and for your hope for
our future together. Because if you believe women and girls should be
treated with dignity and respect and women should be able to make our
own health care decisions, and marriage equality should be protected,
and that we have to take on the epidemic of substance abuse, disorders,
and addiction. If you believe in a foreign policy where we work with our
allies, not insult them, and achieve common goals towards peace and
prosperity, then you have to vote. All of these issues are on the ballot
this November, and I believe with all of my heart, that we will after
this election, get together to help heal the divides that have sprung up
and are so painful among us.
So please register and vote on the same day. Go to
iwillvote.com to confirm your polling place. Come help us these last two weeks. Go to
hillaryclinton.com,
sign up to volunteer, take out your phone, text ‘JOIN,’ J-O-I-N to
47246 and get everybody you know to come out and vote. I think this
election is going to turn on who is motivated to vote so we need each
and every one of you to do everything you can to make it clear to
everybody you know that our future is at stake. If you ought to be part
of a positive, optimistic, confident, unifying future, please come out
to vote on November 8th here in New Hampshire, and prove once and for
all that love trumps hate. Thank you all!”
ELIZABETH WARREN:
“Whoa.
Hello, New Hampshire. Hello. Oh, man, I love coming to New Hampshire.
You know, this is like getting to hang out with your next door
neighbors. It’s true, it’s true. We’ve got Maura Healey and Katherine
Clark here from Massachusetts. Hanging out with our neighbors. You know,
I’ve been traveling all around the country for Hillary Clinton and for
our Senate candidates. I’ve been to Missouri and Ohio and Wisconsin and
Colorado and Pennsylvania, and I’ve got to say, it is good to be in a
place where I can say, ‘Go Pats.’ Go Pats. All right.
It really is
great to be in New Hampshire. It is great to be in the home state of my
dear friend, and your senior senator, Jeanne Shaheen. It is great to be
in the state that is going to send Carol Shea-Porter and Annie Kuster
to the United States Congress. It is great to be in the state that’s
going to elect Colin Van Ostern as its next governor. It’s great to be
in the state that is going to send Maggie Hassan to the United States
Senate. Yes. Oh, and just one more. It is great to be in the state
that’s going to send Hillary Clinton to the White House. Yes. That’s why
we’re here. [Crowd chants “Hillary.”]
Okay. So I just want to be
official here. I’m with her. Are you with her? Look, we’re here today
with someone who gets up every single day and fights for us. Someone who
has spent her life fighting for children, spent her life fighting for
women, spent her life fighting for families, fighting for healthcare,
fighting for human rights, fighting for a level playing field, fighting
for those who need us most. Hillary Clinton fights for us. It is now
time for us to fight for Hillary.
Now, I want to talk for just a
minute about values. I grew up in a family that didn’t have much. My
daddy sold fencing and carpeting, ended up as a maintenance man. After
he had a heart attack, my mom worked a minimum wage job at Sears to keep
our family above water. All three of my brothers went into the
military. Me, I just wanted to be a teacher. All my life I wanted to be a
teacher. Can we hear it for America’s teachers? Yeah. I had the calling
early on. I used to line up my dollies and teach school. It was tough
being one of my dollies. ‘I don’t think you did your homework last
night.’ It was tough. It was tough.
My parents would have given me
anything they could, but they just didn’t have the money to send me to
college. And the only way I could get to be a teacher is that I ended up
at a commuter college that cost $50 a semester. And it opened a million
doors for me. And the way I see it, I am the daughter of a maintenance
man, who ended up as a United States senator. Hillary Clinton is the
daughter of a factory worker – granddaughter of a factory worker, and
she’s going to be elected president. We believe in that America. That is
the America we fight for.
We believe, but we are worried. Worried
that those opportunities are slipping away. In fact, a lot of America
is worried. Worried and angry. Angry that far too often, Washington
works for those at the top and leaves everyone else behind. For 30 years
now, Republicans have pushed trickle-down economics, and they’ve done
one thing: they’ve helped the rich and powerful get richer and more
powerful. And they’ve stepped on the faces of everyone else who’s trying
to get a fighting chance to succeed. Donald Trump talks a big game
about how the game is rigged. Let’s be clear. Donald Trump is right. The
game is rigged. It’s rigged for guys like Donald Trump.
And I say
it’s time to fight back. Maggie says it’s time to fight back; Hillary
says it’s time to fight back. We start our fight right here on college
campuses. Education builds opportunities, but not if people are getting
crushed by student loan debt. Right now, it’s a one-two punch: the high
cost of college and the high cost of student loans. The federal
government is making billions of dollars in profits off the backs of our
students. It is obscene to make money off people who are trying to get
an education.
But I want to be clear on this. We know where Kelly
Ayotte stands. She voted against refinancing your student loans. And
Donald Trump, we know where he stands too on higher education. Colleges
need more money to bring down the cost of tuition. His plan is to get
rid of all federal student loans, abolish the whole Department of
Education – I think his plan is to set up another fake university, cut
out the middleman, and cheat the students directly himself. That’s why
we fight back. That’s why we fight back.
Look, college alone is
reason enough to get out and vote. It is reason enough to get out and
volunteer. Hillary and Maggie and I are determined to make debt-free
college the law of this land. That’s where we want to go. We are
determined to refinance that $1.3 trillion in student loan debt. Yes.
Help us do that. Help elect Hillary and Maggie, so that we can make
college a pathway of opportunity, not just for rich kids, but for all of
our kids. Yeah.
Look, we want to build an America that’s going to
work. But that isn’t going to happen with Donald Trump. Donald Trump
cheered on the 2008 financial crash so he could scoop up real estate on
the cheap. He stiffed small business owners: plumbers, and painters, and
construction workers when he built his casinos and golf courses. And
Donald Trump disrespects – aggressively disrespects more than half the
human beings in this country. He thinks that because he has money that
he can call women fat pigs and bimbos. He thinks because he is a
celebrity that he can rate women’s bodies from 1 to 10. He thinks that
because he has a mouth full of Tic Tacs that he can force himself on any
woman within groping distance. Well, I’ve got news for you, Donald
Trump. Women have had it with guys like you. And nasty women have really
had it with guys like you. Yeah. Get this, Donald. Nasty women are
tough. Nasty women are smart. And nasty women vote. And on November 8,
we nasty women are going to march our nasty feet to cast our nasty votes
to get you out of our lives forever. Yup. You bet. Yes! For more than a
year, Donald Trump has made headlines almost every day. And where has
Senator Kelly Ayotte been? Donald Trump called Latinos rapists and
murderers. Kelly stuck with him. Trump called African Americans thugs
and Kelly stuck with him. Trump attacked a Gold Star family and Kelly
stuck with him. Trump compared himself to dictators and praised Vladimir
Putin. Kelly stuck with him. Trump even attacked Kelly Ayotte and
called her weak, and Kelly stuck with him. During a debate a couple of
weeks ago when she called Donald Trump a role model for kids, you want
to say – you just can’t believe this.
But now Donald Trump’s not
doing so well, and Kelly is running as fast as she can away from him.
Well, I will say one thing: Donald Trump sure has made Kelly Ayotte
dance. Day one, she loves him. Day two, she hates him. Day three, she’s
back with him. Boy, spins round and round. But one of the things I love
about the people from New Hampshire is that you value guts. You make the
right decision and then you stick with it. Donald Trump has right.
Kelly is weak. And that’s why a tough, smart fighter like your governor,
Maggie Hassan, is going to win on November 8.
Yeah. I love being
here with smart, tough women, with Hillary, with Maggie, with Carol,
with Annie. And with friends of women, Colin.
Just look at
Hillary’s history. She’s been on the receiving end of one terrible
right-wing attack after another for 25 years, but she has never backed
down. She doesn’t whine. She doesn’t run to Twitter at 3:00 a.m. to call
her opponents losers or dummies. She doesn’t even cry that the election
is rigged. Nope. Hillary is the kind who just gets up every day and she
keeps on fighting – fighting for children, fighting for women, fighting
for families, fighting for health care, fighting for human rights,
fighting for a level playing field. Hillary fights for us. That’s right.
All
right. So we’re with her. There are two things we got to do. The first
one: We got to vote. New Hampshire has same-day registration at your
polling locations, so no excuses, anybody. Go to
iwillvote.com.
Make a plan now how you’re going to cast your vote. And cast your vote
for Annie, for Carol, for Colin, for Maggie, and for Hillary. You going
to do that? [Cries of “Yes!”]
Second, do more than vote.
Volunteer. We need you in this. Democracy needs you in this. You can
knock on doors. You can make phone calls. You can monitor the polls.
Lawyers can help us here. Everybody. If you have any time over the next
15 days, please volunteer. You can go to
hillaryclinton.com. You can go to
maggiehassan.com.
And I guarantee we will use your time and we will use it well. Please,
make this investment in democracy. Get out there and volunteer. We need
you on that. Yes.
Okay. So it is so good for all of us to be here.
This is fabulous. The way I see it, what elections are about is they
ultimately come down to our values. It’s not about one person or one
candidate. It’s about a movement. It’s about a strong, powerful movement
to make real change in this country, the kind of change that we make
together. And since we’re here together, let us remind ourselves why we
get up in the morning, why we work hard all day, and why we’re still
working late at night: because of what we believe.
We believe that
every person should be able to get a college education without getting
crushed by student loan debt, and that means refinancing our student
loans and debt-free college. Yes.
We believe that no one should
work full-time and live in poverty. And that’s means raising the minimum
wage, and we will fight for it.
We believe that workers should be
able to organize for better pay, for better working conditions. Unions
built America’s middle class, and unions will rebuild America’s middle
class. Yes.
We believe that after a lifetime of hard work, people
are entitled to retire with dignity. And that means protecting and
expanding Social Security. And we will do it.
You may have heard,
Wells Fargo cheated tens of thousands of people. Giant banks brought
down our economy. Well, we believe in tough rules, real accountability,
and if a CEO breaks the law, they ought to go to jail just like anyone
else. Yeah.
Some beliefs are controversial, so I want to throw
this one out there. We believe in science. We believe that climate
change is real and that we have a moral obligation to protect this Earth
for our children and our grandchildren and our grandchildren’s
grandchildren. Yes.
Boy, and I can’t believe I have to say this in
2016. We believe in equal pay for equal work and a woman’s right to
decisions over her own body. Yes.
We believe that equal means
equal, and that’s true in marriage. It’s true in the workplace. It’s
true for every place. And we will fight for equality for all of our
people.
Donald Trump calls African Americans thugs. He calls
Muslims terrorists. He calls Latinos criminals. He brags about sexually
assaulting women. Well, we believe that racism and sexism and bigotry
have no place in our country. We believe that Black Lives Matter and
that we won’t build Donald Trump’s stupid wall. We believe diversity
makes us strong. Yes. Yes.
You do know I could do this all day? But we got a great speaker here. So I’m going to do one more and then I’m going to quit.
We
believe that millionaires and billionaires and giant corporations
should not be able to buy our elections and our politicians.
Corporations are not people. We will overturn Citizens United and bring
democracy back to the people. Yes.
This is Hillary’s agenda. This
is Maggie’s agenda. This is Colin and Annie and Carol’s agenda. It is a
progressive agenda. It is a New Hampshire agenda. It is an American
agenda. Yes! Hillary is ready to fight for us. Are you ready to fight
for Hillary? Then let’s welcome to the stage Hillary Clinton, our next
president of the United States!”