Clinton's Victory Speech
November 5, 1996
Thank you.
My fellow Americans, thank you for being here.
Just four years from now, we will enter a new century of great challenge
and unlimited possibility. Now, we've got a bridge to build and I'm ready
if you are.
Today the American people have spoken. They have affirmed our course.
They have told us to go forward. America has told every one of us -- Democrats,
Republicans and Independents -- loud and clear: it is time to put politics
aside, join together and get the job done for America's future.
In the last four years, we've made remarkable progress. But in our
schools, our families, our workplaces and our communities, our journey
is not done. ...
I would like to say a special word of thanks to Senator Dole and I
ask you join me in applause for his lifetime of service to the United States.
And I thank Jack Kemp for his service to America and his devotion to
the proposition that this a country in which everyone should have a chance
to live free and equal and to have a chance at success.
Let me say, and I had a good visit with Senator Dole not too long before
he went out to speak. I thanked him for his love of our country, for his
years of service.
I applauded the campaign that he fought so bravely to the very last
minute. I thanked him for the work we did together to advance the common
cause of America. And on behalf of all Americans, I wish him well and God
speed.
Four years ago, on these very steps, we set forth on a journey to change
the course of America for the better, to keep the American dream alive
for everyone willing to work for it, to keep America the world's strongest
force for peace and freedom and prosperity, to come together as one American
community.
The time was one of widespread frustration and doubt about our economic
and social problems, about our ability to deal with the vast sweep of change
that was all around us. The scope and pace of those changes were threatening
to many and our values seemed to be under attack on all sides.
But, together, you and I vowed to turn our country around, with a strategy
to meet our challenges and protect our values, opportunity for all, responsibility
from all, an American community of all Americans.
We have worked hard to end the politics of who's to blame and instead
to ask, what are we going to do to make America better.
Tonight, we proclaim that the vital American center is alive and well.
It is a common ground on which we have made our progress. Today, our economy
is stronger, our streets are safer, our environment is cleaner, the world
is more secure and, thank God, our nation is more united ... We must make
our democracy stronger by enacting real, bipartisan campaign finance reform.
Talk is no longer enough. We must act and act now. And the American people
will be watching the leaders of both parties to see who is willing not
just to talk but to act. I am willing to act, and I ask others to join
me.
And we must keep America the world's indispensable nation. Finishing
the unfinished business of the Cold War, meeting the new threats to our
security through terrorism and the proliferation of dangerous weapons,
and seizing these extraordinary opportunities to extend our values of peace
and democracy and prosperity.
Every American here tonight and every American within the sound of
my voice can take pride in the fact that in these last few years for the
first time in all of human history, a majority of the human beings living
on this globe live under democracies where the people rule.
The challenges we face, they're not Democratic or Republican challenges.
They're American challenges. What we know from the budget battles of the
last two years and from the remarkable success of the last few weeks of
this Congress is the lesson we have learned for the last 220 years -- what
we have achieved as Americans of lasting good, we have achieved by working
together. So let me say to the leaders of my Democratic Party and the leaders
of the Republican Party, it is time to put country ahead of party.
We do not know the final outcome of the Congressional elections but
we know this: The races are close. The American people have been closely
divided. The Congress, whatever happens, will be closely divided.
They are sending us a message: Work together. Meet our challenges.
Put aside the politics of division and build America's community, together
...
What we need to do is to do the work of America, the way we seek to
do the work of raising our children and doing our work and supporting our
religious institutions and our community institutions.
If we would simply be Americans, the way we seek to live in all of
our other roles, there is no stopping America. Our best days are still
ahead.
And so, I say, when we look into our hearts and simply ask what is
right for the American people and the future of our children, when we set
aside our differences and build on our shared values of faith and family
and work, when we roll up our sleeves and work together, American always
wins ...
I got here tonight, my fellow Americans, because America gave me a
chance. That is what all the children of America deserve. Our people have
to give them the tools to give them not a guarantee, but that real chance
to live up to their God-given potential.
And I ask you to join me in that commitment. Every child deserves the
main chance that I was given.
And so I say again let us resolve to run our country the way we try
to run our lives. Whether you are the party of Thomas Jefferson or the
party of Abraham Lincoln, whether you're an independent or unaffiliated,
remember that we all belong to the greatest nation in history.
To us, much has been given and much is still expected. We must rise
to the challenge of building that bridge to the 21st century. Tonight is
a night for joy, not just for us here but for all Americans.
For the 53rd time in our history, our people have made their quiet
and deliberate decision. They have come together with their powerful voice
and expressed their will.
Tonight we celebrate the miracle of America. Tomorrow we greet the
dawn and begin our work anew. I am more grateful than I can say. You have
given me an opportunity and a responsibility that comes to few people.
I will do my best, and together we will -- we will build that bridge
to the 21st century. Thank you. Good night, and God bless America. Thank
you.
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