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Barack Obama Weekly Address - 15 November 2008

From Wikisource
Rise to the Moment
by Barack Obama
285828Rise to the MomentBarack Obama

THE PRESIDENT-ELECT: Today, the leaders of the G20 nations, a group that includes the world’s largest economies, are gathering in Washington to seek solutions to the ongoing turmoil in our financial markets. I’m glad President Bush has initiated this process, because our global economic crisis requires a coordinated global response.

And yet, as we act in concert with other nations, we must also act immediately here at home to address America’s own economic crisis. This week, amid continued volatility in our markets, we learned that unemployment insurance claims rose to their highest levels since September 11th, 2001. We’ve lost for ten straight months – nearly 1.2-million jobs this year – any of them in our struggling auto industry.

And millions of our fellow citizens lie awake each night, wondering how they’re going to pay their bills, stay in their homes, and save for retirement. Make no mistake: this is the greatest economic challenge of our times. And while the road ahead will be long, and the work will be hard, I know that we can steer ourselves out of this crisis. Because here in America, we always rise to the moment, no matter how hard, and I am more hopeful than ever that America will rise once again.

But we must act right now. Next week, Congress will meet to address the spreading impact of the economic crisis. I urge them to pass, at least, a down-payment on a rescue plan that will create new jobs, relieve the squeeze on families, and help get the economy growing again. In particular, we cannot afford to delay providing help for the more than one million Americans who will have exhausted their unemployment insurance by the end of this year.

If Congress does not pass an immediate plan that gives the economy the boost it needs, I will make it my first order of business as President. Even as we dig ourselves out of this recession, we must also recognize that, out of this economic crisis, comes an opportunity to create new jobs, strengthen our middle class, and keep our economy competitive in the 21st Century. And that starts with the kind of long-term investments that we’ve neglected for too long. That means putting two-million Americans to work rebuilding our crumbling roads, bridges and schools.

It means investing $150-billion to build an American Green Energy economy that will create five-million new jobs, while freeing our nation from the tyranny of foreign oil and saving our planet for our children. It means making health care affordable for anyone who has it, accessible for anyone who wants it, and reducing costs for small businesses. And it also means giving every children the world-class education they need to compete with any worker in anywhere in the world.

Doing all this will require not just new policies, but a new spirit of service and sacrifice, where each of us resolves to pitch in, and work harder, and look after not only ourselves, but each other. If this financial crisis has taught us anything, it’s that we cannot have a thriving Wall Street while Main Street suffers. In this country, we rise or fall as one nation – as one people. And that’s how we will meet the challenges of this time: together.

Thank you.

This work is in the public domain in the United States because it is a work of the United States federal government (see 17 U.S.C. 105).

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