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Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal provided the Republican response on Tuesday night. |
| By OnMilwaukee.com Staff Writers |
| Published Feb. 24, 2009 at 11:08 p.m. |
|
Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal gave the Republican response to President Obama's speech before a joint session of Congress on Tuesday night. Here is a transcript:
Good evening, and happy Mardi Gras. I'm Bobby Jindal, governor of Louisiana.
Tonight, we've witnessed a great moment in the history of our republic. In the very chamber where Congress once voted to abolish slavery, our first African-American president stepped forward to address the state of our union.
With his speech tonight, the president completed a redemptive journey that took our nation from Independence Hall to Gettysburg to the lunch counter and now finally the Oval Office.
Regardless of party, all Americans are moved by the president's personal story, the son of an American mother and a Kenyan father who grew up to become leader of the free world.
Like the president's father, my own parents came to this country from a distant land. When they arrived in Baton Rouge, my mother was already four-and-a-half-months pregnant. I was what folks in the insurance industry now call a pre-existing condition.
To find work, my dad picked up the yellow pages and started calling local businesses. Even after landing a job, he still couldn't afford to pay for my delivery, so he worked out an installment plan with the doctor. Fortunately for me, he never missed a payment.
As I grew up, my mom and dad taught me the values that attracted them to this country, and they instilled in me an immigrant's wonder at the greatness of America.
As I -- as a child, I remember going to the grocery store with my dad. Growing up in India, he had seen extreme poverty. As we walked through the aisles, looking at the endless variety on the shelves, he would tell me, "Bobby, Americans can do anything."
I still believe that to this day: Americans can do anything. When we pull together, there's no challenge we can't overcome.
As the president made clear this evening, we're now in a time of challenge. Many of you listening tonight have lost jobs; others have seen your college and your retirement savings dwindle. Many of you are worried about losing your health care and your homes. You're looking to your elected leaders in Washington for solutions.
Republicans are ready to work with the new president to provide these solutions. Here in my state of Louisiana, we don't care what party you belong to if you have good ideas to make life better for our people. We need more of that attitude from both Democrats and Republicans in our nation's capital.
All of us want our economy to recover and our nation to prosper. So where we agree, Republicans must be the president's strongest partners. And where we disagree, Republicans have a responsibility to be candid and offer better ideas for a path forward.
Today in Washington, some are promising that government will rescue us from the economic storms raging all around us. Those of us who lived through Hurricane Katrina, we have our doubts.
Let me tell you a story. During Katrina, I visited Sheriff Harry Lee, a Democrat and a good friend of mine. When I walk into his makeshift office, I had never seen him so angry. He was literally yelling into the phone. "Well, I'm the sheriff, and if you don't like it, you can come and arrest me." I asked him, "Sheriff, what's got you so mad?" He told me that he put out a call for volunteers to come with their boats to rescue people who were trapped on their rooftops by the floodwaters. The boats were all lined up and ready to go. And then some bureaucrat showed up and told him they couldn't go out in the water unless they had proof of insurance and registration.
And I told him, "Sheriff, that's ridiculous." Before I knew it, he was yelling in the phone. "Congressman Jindal's here, and he says you can come and arrest him, too." Well, Harry just told those boaters ignore the bureaucrats and go start rescuing people.
There's a lesson in this experience: The strength of America is not found in our government. It is found in the compassionate hearts and the enterprising spirit of our citizens.
We're grateful for the support we've received from across the nation for our ongoing recovery efforts. This spirit got Louisiana through the hurricanes, and this spirit will get our nation through the storms we face today.
To solve our current problems, Washington must lead. But the way to lead is not to raise taxes, not to just put more money and power in the hands of Washington politicians. The way to lead is by empowering you, the American people, because we believe that Americans can do anything.
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6 comments about this article. Post a comment / write a review. |
Posted by sandstorm on Feb. 27, 2009 at 4:14 p.m. (report)
yeah. i think it's odd that the Republican response would be to give a biography of the Loiuisana governor.
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Posted by MKE Luvva on Feb. 25, 2009 at 2:27 p.m. (report)
"Webster's defines 'speech' as ... and, in conclusion, President Obama's state of the union address was an address of contradictions." zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
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Posted by gmwrobel on Feb. 25, 2009 at 12:39 p.m. (report)
did i read it wrong or did he contradict himself? "we need to work together, forget what party you're supposedly part of" then go on to complain about everything the republicans did to help and everything the democrats did to screw things up. way to lead by example buddy.
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Posted by LouManske on Feb. 25, 2009 at 11:05 a.m. (report)
A very odd man and strange choice fot the GOP's "response"
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Posted by llpierce on Feb. 25, 2009 at 8:58 a.m. (report)
From someone who's been voting Democratic the last several years (I'm an Independent, I vote person, not party, btw), Jindal makes some very good points. Personally, we need to stop the "liberals are doing this/conservatives are doing that" (or input any group of your choice) and start working together as Americans to fix what ails this country. It won't be easy and it won't be fast, but if we all pull together, it can be done. I will be the first to denigrate some of the things this country does, but I love America and I want us to be the great country we all know we can be. Instead of fighting among ourselves and pointing out the differences, we need to find our commonalities and work TOGETHER to make this country what we all know it can and should be.
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