Reverend Al Sharpton:
2004 Democratic National Convention Address
Thank you.
Tonight, I want to address
my remarks in two parts.
One, I'm honored to address
the delegates here.
Last Friday, I had the
experience in Detroit of hearing President George Bush make
a speech. And in the speech, he aksed [asked] certain
questions. I hope he's watching tonight. I would like to
answer your questions, Mr. President.
To the/our chairman, our
delegates, and all that are assembled, we're honored and
glad to be here tonight.
I'm glad to be joined by
supporters and friends from around the country. I'm glad to
be joined by my family, Kathy, Dominique, who will be 18,
and Ashley.
We are here 282 [228] years
after right here in Boston we fought to establish the
freedoms of America. The first person to die in the
Revolutionary War is buried not far from here, a Black man
from Barbados, named Crispus Attucks.
Forty years ago, in 1964,
Fannie Lou Hamer and the Mississippi Freedom Democratic
Party stood at the Democratic convention in Atlantic City
fighting to preserve voting rights for all America and all
Democrats, regardless of race or gender.
Hamer's stand inspired Dr.
King's march in Selma, which brought about the Voting Rights
Act of 1965.
Twenty years ago, Reverend
Jesse Jackson stood at the Democratic National Convention in
San Francisco, again, appealing to the preserve those
freedoms.
Tonight, we stand with
those freedoms at risk and our security as citizens in
question.
I have come here tonight to
say the only choice we have to preserve our freedom at this
point in history is to elect John Kerry the president of the
United States.
I stood with both John
Kerry and John Edwards over 30 occasions in debates during
the primary season. I not only debated them, I watched them.
I observed their deeds. I looked into their eyes. I am
convinced that they are men who say what they mean and mean
what they say.
I'm also convinced that at
a time when a vicious spirit in the body politic of this
country that attempts to undermine America's freedoms -- our
civil rights, our civil liberties -- we must leave this city
and go forth and organize this nation for victory for our
party and John Kerry and John Edwards in November.
But let me quickly say,
this is not just about winning an election. It's about
preserving the principles on which this very nation was
founded.
Look at the current view of
our nation worldwide as a result of our unilateral foreign
policy. We went from unprecedented international support and
solidarity on September 12th, 2001, to hostility and hatred
as we stand here tonight. We can't survive in the world by
ourselves.
How did we squander this
opportunity to unite the world for democracy and to commit
to the global fight against hunger and disease? We did it
with a go-it-alone foreign policy based on flawed
intelligence. We were told that we were going to Iraq
because there were weapons of mass destruction. We lost
hundreds of soldiers. We spent $200 billion dollars at a
time we had record state deficits. And when it became clear
that there were no weapons, they changed the premise for the
war and said: No, we went because of other reasons.
If I told you tonight to,
"Let's leave the FleetCenter; we're in danger," and when you
get outside, you ask me, "Reverend Al, What is the danger?"
and I say, "It don't matter. We just needed some fresh air,"
I have misled you -- and we were misled.
We -- We are also faced
with the prospect of in the next four years that two or more
Supreme Court Justices' seats will become available. This
year we celebrated the anniversary of Brown versus the Board
of Education.
This court has voted five
to four on critical issues of women's rights and civil
rights. It is frightening to think that the gains of civil
and women rights and those movements in the last century
could be reversed if this administration is in the White
House in these next four years.
I suggest to you tonight
that if George Bush had selected the court in '54, Clarence
Thomas would have never got to law school.
This is not about a Party.
This is about living up to the promise of America. The
promise of America says we will guarantee quality education
for all children and not spend more money on metal detectors
than computers in our schools.
The promise of America
guarantees health care for all of its citizens and doesn't
force seniors to travel to Canada to buy prescription drugs
they can't afford here at home.
The promise of America
provides that those who work in our health care system can
afford to be hospitalized in the very beds they clean up
every day.
The promise of America is
that government does not seek to regulate your behavior in
the bedroom, but to guarantee your right to provide food in
the kitchen.
The issue of government is
not to determine who may sleep together in the bedroom, it's
to help those that might not be eatin' in the kitchen.
The promise of America is
that we stand for human rights, whether it's fighting
against slavery in the Sudan, where right now Joe Madison
and others are fasting, around what is going on in Sudan;
AIDS in Lesotho; a police misconduct in this country.
The promise of America is
one immigration policy for all who seek to enter our shores,
whether they come from Mexico, Haiti, or Canada, there must
be one set of rules for everybody.
We cannot welcome those to
come and then try and act as though any culture will not be
respected or treated inferior. We cannot look at the Latino
community and preach "one language." No one gave them an
English test before they sent them to Iraq to fight for
America.
The promise of America is
that every citizen's vote is counted and protected, and
election schemes do not decide the election.
It, to me, is a glaring
contradiction that we would fight, and rightfully so, to get
the right to vote for the people in the capital of Iraq in
Baghdad, but still don't give the federal right to vote for
the people in the capital of the United States, in
Washington, D.C.
Mr. President, as I close,
Mr. President, I heard you say Friday that you had questions
for voters, particularly African-American voters. And you
aksed [asked] the question: Did the Democratic Party take us
for granted? Well, I have raised questions. But let me
answer your question.
You said the Republican
Party was the party of Lincoln and Frederick Douglass. It is
true that Mr. Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation,
after which there was a commitment to give 40 acres and a
mule.
That's where the argument,
to this day, of reparations starts. We never got the 40
acres. We went all the way to Herbert Hoover, and we never
got the 40 acres.
We didn't get the mule. So
we decided we'd ride this donkey as far as it would take us.
Mr. President, you said
would we have more leverage if both parties got our votes,
but we didn't come this far playing political games. It was
those that earned our vote that got our vote. We got the
Civil Rights Act under a Democrat. We got the Voting Rights
Act under a Democrat. We got the right to organize under
Democrats.
Mr. President, the reason
we are fighting so hard, the reason we took Florida so
seriously, is our right to vote wasn't gained because of our
age. Our vote was soaked in the blood of martyrs, soaked in
the blood of Goodman, Chaney, and Schwerner, soaked in the
blood of four little girls in Birmingham.
This vote is sacred to us.
This vote can't be
bargained away.
This vote can't be given
away.
Mr. President, in all due
respect, Mr. President, read my lips: Our vote is not for
sale.
And there's a whole
generation of young leaders that have come forward across
this country that stand on integrity and stand on their
traditions, those that have emerged with John Kerry and John
Edwards as partners, like Greg Meeks, like Obama Baracka [Barack
Obama], like our voter registration director, Marjorie
Harris, like those that are in the trenches.
And we come with strong
family values. Family values is not just those with two-car
garages and a retirement plan. Retirement plans are good.
But family values also are those who had to make nothing
stretch into something happening, who had to make ends meet.
I was raised by a single
mother who made a way for me. She used to scrub floors as a
domestic worker, put a cleaning rag in her pocketbook, and
ride the subways in Brooklyn so I'd have food on the table.
But she taught me as I
walked her to that subway that life is about not where you
start, but where you're going. That's family values.
And I wanted -- I wanted
somebody in my community -- I wanted to show that example.
As I ran for President, I hoped that one child that come out
of the ghetto like I did, could look at me walk across the
stage with governors and senators and know they didn't have
to be a drug dealer, they didn't have to be a hoodlum, they
didn't have to be a gangster, they could stand up from a
broken home, on welfare, and they could run for President of
the United States.
As you know, I live in New
York. I was there September 11th when that despicable act of
terrorism happened.
Few days after, I left home
-- my family had taken in a young man even who lost his
family. And as they gave comfort to him, I had to do a radio
show that morning. When I got there, my friend James Entome
[sp?] said, "Reverend, we're going to stop at a certain hour
and play a song, synchronized with 900 and 90 other
stations."
I said, "That's fine."
He said, "We're dedicating
it to the victims of 9/11."
I said, "What song are you
playing?"
He said, "We're playing
'America the Beautiful.'"
And the particular station
I was at, they played that rendition song by Ray Charles.
As you know, we lost Ray a
few weeks ago, but I sat there that morning and listened to
Ray sing through those speakers, "Oh beautiful for spacious
skies, for amber waves of grain, for purple mountains'
majesty across the fruited plain."
And it occurred to me as I
heard Ray singing, that Ray wasn't singing about what he
knew, 'cause Ray had been blind since he was a child. He
hadn't seen many purple mountains. He hadn't seen many
fruited plains. He was singing about what he believed to be.
Mr. President, we love
America, not because of all of us have seen the beauty all
the time.
But we believed if we kept
on working, if we kept on marching, if we kept on voting, if
we kept on believing, we would make America beautiful for
everybody.
Starting November, let's
make America beautiful again.