At
a speech in Philadelphia on Monday, Hillary Clinton made the case to
millennial voters that they have the most at stake in this election, and
that she is the candidate who will work with them to make an impact on
the causes and issues they care about most. This generation is the most
diverse, open and connected generation of our lifetime, Clinton said,
and they inspire and challenge us to be better. Clinton said she is
inspired by the determination of Americans millennials who exemplify
that our country is better than Donald Trump: undocumented immigrant
Astrid Silva, ice cream entrepreneur Michael “Mikey” Cole and gun safety
advocate Erica Smegielski. Clinton said, “That’s the spirit that makes
this country great – we might get knocked down, but we get right back up
again. We refuse to quit, no matter what. That’s the spirit we need in
this election.”
Clinton also reiterated her determination to not
only make the case against Donald Trump, but to earn millennials’ votes.
Clinton will do so by demonstrating her desire to ensure every child
has a champion and all families can realize the American Dream. Clinton
said, “I can’t promise you’ll agree with me all the time. But I can
promise you this: No one will work harder to make your life better. I’ll
never stop, no matter how tough it gets. And I’m determined to do a
better job explaining the values that drive me and my vision for the
future. Because that’s what you deserve from anyone running for
President.”
Hillary for America has recently ramped up efforts to
engage millennial voters through a stretch of events with surrogates
like President Obama, First Lady Michelle Obama, Senator Elizabeth
Warren and Senator Bernie Sanders. The campaign has also brought on
board staff at headquarters and in states to mobilize millennial voters. Clinton’s remarks, as transcribed, are below:
“Thank
you. Thank you, Temple! I am so delighted to be here with all of you. I
saw how much fun President Obama had last week and – I wanted to be
here in Philadelphia.
Before I begin with my remarks, I do want to
say how proud I am of our brave first responders working to keep us
safe after the attacks of the last weekend in New York, New Jersey and
Minnesota. There are now reports of a suspect in custody, but we must
remain vigilant. This is a fast-moving situation and a sobering reminder
that we need steady leadership in a dangerous world.
I’m here to
talk about a number of the issues that are part of this election but
really, much more than that, they are part of our future – the kind of
country we want to have, the kind of people we want to be and,
particularly, what kind of opportunities we should be providing for the
young people of America. I have a proud Owl on my staff, Jamira Burley. A
Philadelphia native who became an activist working to end the epidemic
of gun violence right here in Philadelphia. She loves Temple and we love
her. And I also want to thank Lauren for that introduction.
Jamira
and Lauren are two examples of why I do have so much faith in our
future. Your generation is the most inclusive, progressive and
entrepreneurial that we’ve ever seen. And as you heard, when Lauren was
in college, she saw challenges facing students of color, but there was
no NAACP chapter to support them and promote diversity and inclusion on
campus – so she started one. And Lauren remains committed and engaged,
working with an organization called Generation Progress, because she
understands that active citizenship is a lifelong job and the call to
service never fades.
Now, I know that with so much negativity out
there, it is really easy to get cynical – especially about our politics.
I remember wrestling with that challenge when I was a student during
the Vietnam War. It can be tempting to think that no one will tell you
the truth and nothing’s ever going to change. But you’re here today
because you refuse to accept cynicism. You know that the next 50 days
will shape the next 50 years. And you see how much needs fixing in our
country, from the soaring cost of college to the scourge of systemic
racism to the threat from climate change – but you also know the only
way we can meet those challenges is if we meet them together.
You’re
here today because you believe we can do just that. You want something
to vote for, not just against. Optimism, not resentment. Answers, not
anger. Ideas, not insults. Bridges, not walls. You’re also here because
you know this election isn’t a reality TV show. It shouldn’t be about
birth certificates or name-calling or stunts to get onto cable news.
This
election comes down to a choice between two very different visions for
America. I believe it’s wrong to tear each down. We should be lifting
each other up. It’s wrong to let income inequality get even worse. We
have to make the economy work for everyone, not just those at the top.
And it’s wrong to put a loose cannon in charge who could start another
war. We should work with our allies to keep us safe.
It comes down
to this: Are we going to pit Americans against each other and deepen
the divides in this country, or are we going to be, as I know we can,
stronger together?
I know what I believe, and I’m going to close
my campaign the same way I started my career – fighting for kids and
young people and families. That has been the cause of my life. And it
will be the passion of my presidency, and I hope you’ll join me. We
can’t get distracted when the media or my opponent turns this election
into a circus. My husband has a saying about that. He calls it majoring
in the minors – getting so wrapped up in stuff that doesn’t matter, you
forget what’s really important to your future and to the future of this
country.
Take the challenges facing young Americans today. First
of all, if you’re willing to work hard, you should be able to find a
good job that pays well and lets you do what you love and make your mark
in the world. But that’s been out of reach for too many young people –
trying to find your footing in the wake of the worst economic crisis
since the Great Depression. That’s why Tim Kaine and I have a plan to
work with both parties and make a historic investment in good new jobs.
We can create millions of jobs and make life a lot better by doing
things like connecting every household to broadband by 2020; installing
half a billion solar panels; building a cleaner, more resilient electric
grid with enough renewable energy to power every home in the country.
Next,
getting an education should give you a boost, not hold you back. But as
you know better than most, tuition keeps going through the roof and
debt keeps piling up. I understand that Temple was founded to
democratize, diversify and widen the reach of higher education. That is
still a vital goal.
So I worked with Bernie Sanders on a plan. We
came up with a plan that makes public college tuition-free for working
families and debt-free for everyone. And if you already have debt, we
will help you refinance it and pay it back as a percentage of your
income so you’re never on the hook for more than you can afford. You can
actually see how much you and your family can save under our plan by
looking at the College Calculator at hillaryclinton.com.
And
here’s something we don’t talk about enough: a four-year degree should
not be the only path to a good job in America. People should be able to
learn a skill, practice a trade, and making a good living because of
that. So we’re offering new tax credits to encourage companies to offer
paid apprenticeships that let you earn while you learn and do more to
dignify skills across the board – for welders, machinists, health
technicians, coders, and so many other fields.
Another challenge I
hear about all the time is from new parents about how hard it is to
balance the demands of work and family in today’s economy. Families look
different today than they did decades ago, I think we can all agree.
Most need two incomes just to get by. And many people now change jobs
frequently and have wildly unpredictable schedules, or they have to
cobble together part-time work, all without the basic supports available
to parents in nearly every other advanced country.
That’s why Tim
Kaine and I have a plan to help working families with quality,
affordable childcare, preschool and paid family leave. We fundamentally
believe – the more we can strengthen families, the stronger we will be
as a nation.
Everywhere I go, young people also share their
concerns about the divisiveness and discrimination we see in America
today. You aren’t – and you shouldn’t be – satisfied with the progress
we’ve made. You should keep wanting to right wrongs and fight for
justice and dignify for all. We see, as Lauren said, too many young
black men and women made to feel like their lives are disposable; too
many immigrants living in fear of deportation; too many young LGBT
Americans bullied; too many young women and men sexually assaulted on
campus or in the military or at home. And more than previous
generations, you understand that all these challenges are intersecting,
and we must take them on together.
But you also see a Republican
nominee for president who incites hatred and violence like we’ve never
seen before in any campaign. Hate speech being normalized. The dog
whistles are out in the open. And yet, despite this, I remain convinced
America’s best days are ahead of us. In large part, that’s because of
the inspiring young people I meet every day.
I’m inspired by
Astrid. I met her in Las Vegas last summer. She was brought to this
country from Mexico at the age of four with nothing but a doll, a cross,
and the dress she was wearing. Now she’s in her twenties and advocating
for the rights of undocumented Americans and comprehensive immigration
reform. We should all join her in this.
I’m inspired by Mikey, who
I met in New York. Mikey spent six months in prison for a low-level
drug offense. After he got out, Mikey discovered just how hard it is for
people who’ve done their time to find good jobs and opportunities. But
he persisted, and he managed to start his own ice cream shop in New York
– and I can recommend, it’s delicious. We have to do more to help
others get that second chance, including by banning the box and
reforming our criminal justice system.
I’m inspired by Erica, one
of the bravest young women I’ve ever met. Her mother, Dawn, was the
principal of Sandy Hook School who died trying to protect her students.
Erica was devastated. But then, she made it her mission to advocate for
commonsense gun safety reforms. It’s been painful for her – a lot of
hate has come her way and the gun lobby is so powerful – but Erica won’t
give up. As she said, ‘What if everyone who faced tough odds said, it’s
hard, so I’m going to walk away? That’s not the type of world I want to
live in.’
That’s the spirit that makes this country great – we
might get knocked down, but we get right back up again. And we refuse to
quit, no matter what. And that’s the spirit we need in this election
too.
Now, I know that with Washington paralyzed by big money and
partisanship, the gap between the change we want and the progress that
politics should deliver can look like a chasm. I also know that even if
you’re totally opposed to Donald Trump, you may still have some
questions about me. I get that. And I want to do my best to answer those
questions.
When it comes to public service, the ‘service’ part
has always easier for me than the ‘public’ part. I will never be the
showman my opponent is – and you know what, that’s okay with me. And
it’s also true I do spend a lot of time on the details of policy, like
the precise interest rate on your student loans, right down to the
decimal. But that’s because it’s not a detail for you. It’s a big deal.
And it should be a big deal to your president.
So here’s what I
ask any voter who is still undecided: Give us both a fair hearing. Hold
us accountable for our ideas, both of us. I can’t promise you’ll agree
with me all the time, but I can promise you this: No one will work
harder to make your life better. I will never stop, no matter how tough
it gets. In fact, you can read about what Tim and I want to do. We’re
not keeping it a secret. We’ve got a book called ‘Stronger Together.’
But
let me tell you a little bit about the values that drive me and my
vision for the future because you deserve that from anyone from anyone
running for president. I want to share with you the stories of three women who at pivotal moments changed my life and set me on a course of social justice, activism, and public service.
The first woman is
my mother. Her name was Dorothy, and she was abandoned by her parents as
a young girl. She ended up out on her own at 14, working as a
housemaid. When I learned about this many years later, I asked how she
managed to grow up into a warm, loving person and not become bitter and
broken. And here’s what she said, one word: ‘kindness.’ She was saved by
the kindness of others. Like the teacher who saw she had nothing to eat
at lunch and brought extra food to share. The lesson she passed on to
me was simple but powerful: No one gets through life alone. We have to
look out for each other and lift each other up. She made sure I learned
the words of one of the creeds of our Methodist faith: Do all the good
you can for all the people you can in all the ways you can as long as
ever you can.
That mission guides me still today. When I stumble,
it helps pick me up, because there’s always more good to do and more
people to help if we keep our eyes open, especially kids.
When I
met a terrified little girl in Nevada who burst into tears because she
worried her parents would be deported, it hit me right in the gut. I
knew how hard-working her parents were. I knew the sacrifices they were
making so that she could have a better life. When I met a little boy in
Flint, Michigan who got sick from drinking water poisoned with lead, it
just made me so angry and determined to work even harder. Every one of
our children deserves the chance to share in the promise of America.
The
second woman I want to tell you about is Marian Wright Edelman. She was
a lawyer for the NAACP in Mississippi, first African American woman to
pass the Mississippi bar. She was an ally of Dr. King and Robert
Kennedy, and the founder of the Children’s Defense Fund, an altogether
remarkable person. One day during my first semester in law school, I saw
a flyer – we used to have those, flyers on a campus bulletin board. And
Marian was coming to give a lecture. I made sure to be there, and what I
heard was captivating. Marian talked about creating a Head Start
program in Mississippi and using her legal education to make life better
for poor children and families. Something just clicked in my brain. I
began to see how I could translate the commitment to helping others I’d
learned from my mother, my church, into real social change. I went up to
her and I said, ‘Could I work for you this summer?’ She said, ‘Sure,
but I can’t pay you.’ I said, ‘Well, I am paying my way through law
school, so I have to get paid.’ She said, ‘Well, if you can figure out
how to get paid, you can have a job.’ So I figured out how to get a
grant to get paid and went to work for her.
After graduation, I
could have followed my classmates to a high-powered law firm, but I went
to work for Marian at the Children’s Defense Fund instead. She sent me
door to door in New Bedford, Massachusetts on behalf of children with
disabilities who were denied the chance to go to school back then. And I
remember meeting a young girl in a wheelchair on the small back porch
of her house. She told me how badly she wanted an education, but it just
didn’t seem possible. My heart went out to her and I wanted to help.
But it became clear to me that simply caring is not enough. That
wouldn’t force the public school to build more wheelchair ramps or put
more resources into special education. I learned that to drive real
progress, you have to change both hearts and laws. So we gathered
evidence. We built a coalition. And our work helped convince Congress to
ensure access to education for all students with disabilities. And that
experience turned me into a lifelong advocate for children and
families.
I went to South Carolina to investigate the plight of
12- and 13-year-old boys imprisoned alongside grown men who had
committed serious felonies. In Alabama I helped expose the racism of
segregated academies. In Arkansas I ran a legal aid clinic that provided
representation to poor families and prison inmates who could not afford
it. When Bill was elected President, a lot of people were surprised,
and even threatened, by the idea of an activist as First Lady. But I
wasn’t about to quit then, either. I fought for universal health care,
and ended up working with Republicans and Democrats in Congress to
create the Children’s Health Insurance Program, which covers eight
million kids today.
The third woman who changed my life was named
Sophia, the 17-year-old captain of a high school basketball team in New
York City. It was the late 1990s, and Democrats in New York were urging
me to run for the Senate, and I kept telling them no. After all, no
First Lady had ever done anything like that. I myself hadn’t run for
anything since student council. I’d always been an advocate, not a
politician. But then one day I visited that school in New York for an
event with young women athletes with Billie Jean King. Hanging above our
heads was a big banner that said, ‘Dare to compete.’ Before my speech,
Sophia introduced me. She was tall, and as we shook hands, she bent over
and whispered in my ear, ‘Dare to compete, Mrs. Clinton. Dare to
compete.’ Once again, something just clicked. For years I had been
telling young women to step up. Participate. Go for what you believe in.
Could it be I was afraid to do something I had urge so many others to
do?
Well, it was a difficult transition, becoming a candidate for
the first time back in that New York Senate race. Even all these years
later, I confess I don’t enjoy doing some of the things that come
naturally to most politicians, like talking about myself. But I took
that leap then for the same reason I’m running now, to even the odds for
those who’ve got the odds stacked against them, especially children and
families. And I’ve learned that in a democracy, if you want to help the
greatest number of people, you have to push for reform from both the
outside in and the inside out. We need activists and advocates,
entrepreneurs and innovators, teachers and mentors, people who change
lives every day in a million quiet ways. We also need strong, principled
leaders who can win votes, write laws, allocate resources, and do the
slow, hard business of governing.
Now, of course, politics can be
discouraging. This election in particularly can be downright depressing
sometimes. But it matters. It really does. It matters for our families,
our communities, and our country and the world. Our most cherished
values are at stake. Every election is important, from school board to
state senate to president. But this time is different. We are facing a
candidate with a long history of racial discrimination in his
businesses, who retweets white supremacists, who led the birther
movement to delegitimize our first black President, and he’s still lying
about it today. He refuses to apologize to President Obama, his family,
and the American people. We have to stand up to this hate. We cannot
let it go on.
And when we do that, we send a clear message:
America is better than this. America is better than Donald Trump. Just
as important, we have a chance to make real progress together in our
country. I need you. I need you as partners, not just for winning this
election, but for driving real change over the next four years. The
fights ahead of us are bigger than one election, one president, or even
one generation. It’s going to take all of us working side-by-side to
build the kind of future we want. That’s why, if I’m in the White House,
young people will always have a seat at any table where any decision is
being made.
So if you believe diversity is America’s strength,
not America’s burden, join us. If you believe the minimum wage should be
a living wage and no one working full-time should have to raise their
children in poverty, join us. If you believe that climate change is real
and that we can save our planet while creating millions of good-paying
clean energy jobs, join us. If you believe that every man, woman, and
child in America has the right to affordable, quality health care, join
us. If you believe we should finally guarantee equal pay for women, join
us.
And here’s how you can join us. Go to iwillvote.com and
register today. Register your friends. Register everyone you know. This
is going to be close. We need everyone off the sidelines. Not voting is
not an option. That just plays into Trump’s hands. It really does. Text
‘join,’ j-o-i-n, to 47246 right now, or go to hillaryclinton.com and
sign up to volunteer. I understand here at Temple you’re already
organizing campaign tailgates at every football game and having a lot of
fun doing it. We have 50 days, 50 days, to reach everybody we possibly
can, to not only win an election – that’s just the first step – then to
keep the progress going, go even further, make it absolutely clear that
we’re going to shape a future that represents the best of who we are. So
talk to your classmates. Talk to your neighbors. Help us stand up for
our best values and reject prejudice and paranoia.
You know, I
mentioned my mother and the kindness she experienced. Her life was so
neglected that when she went to work as that housekeeper/babysitter at
the age of 14, it was the first time she ever saw a family that loved
each other, where the parents loved their children, cared for them,
planned for them, where she learned the lessons that enabled her to be
such an extraordinary mother to me and my brothers. Everything I’ve
learned in my life convinces me that love trumps hate.
So please
join us in working together. There’s no doubt in my mind that young
people have more at stake in this election than any other age group. And
when you turn out and vote this fall, we will be sending a message much
larger than even the outcome. We will say we can build a future where
all our children have the opportunity to live up to their God-given
potential, no matter who they are, where they’re from, what they look
like, or who they love. That’s the America we believe in. That’s the
America worth fighting for. That’s what we’ve got to do to stand
together. We are stronger together, and let’s make sure love trumps
hate. Thank you all!”