Former Gov. Tim Pawlenty (R-MN)
"A Time for Truth"
Presidential Campaign Announcement Speech
State of Iowa Historical Building
Des Moines, IA
Monday, May 23, 2011
[As Prepared for Delivery] / C-SPAN video
Thanks,
Mary,
for
your
very
kind words and for your tremendous love and
support. After serving eight years as Minnesota's Governor, I was
very
much looking forward to life with Mary, and our daughters, in the
Midwestern home we love. But with Mary's encouragement and wise
counsel, we came to a different conclusion. And that brings me
here
today with this announcement.
We live in the greatest country the world has ever known. But, as we all know, America is in big trouble, and it won't get fixed if we keep going down the same path. If we want a new and better direction, we need a new and better President.
President Obama's policies have failed. But more than that, he won't even tell us the truth about what it's really going to take to get out of the mess we're in.
I could stand here and tell you that we can solve America's debt crisis and fix our economy without making any tough choices.
But we've heard those kinds of empty promises for the last three years, and we know where they've gotten us. Fluffy promises of hope and change don't buy our groceries, make our mortgage payments, put gas in our cars, or pay for our children’s clothes.
So, in my campaign, I'm going to take a different approach. I am going to tell you the truth. The truth is, Washington's broken.
Our country is going broke, and the pain of the recent recession will pale in comparison to what's coming, if we don't get spending in Washington D.C. under control. President Obama doesn't have an economic plan. He just has a campaign plan. America deserves much better.
Barack Obama promised that spending eight hundred billion dollars on a pork-filled stimulus bill would keep unemployment under eight percent. He promised that bailouts for well-connected businesses were a good deal for the country. He promised that a federal takeover of health care would keep costs under control. And hard as it is to believe, he even promised the deficit would be cut in half in his first term!
But the truth is, since President Obama took office, massive numbers of Americans can't find a job. We're four trillion dollars deeper in debt. And his health care plan is an unmitigated disaster for our country.
We've tried Barack Obama's way . . . and his way has failed. Three years into his term, we're no longer just running out of money. We're running out of time.
It's time for new leadership. It's time for a new approach. And, it's time for America's president - and anyone who wants to be president - to look you in the eye and tell you the truth. So here it is.
Government money isn't "free." You and I either pay for it in taxes, or our children pay for it in debt. The reforms we need are not in the billions, but in the trillions of dollars. And the cuts we need to make - the cuts we must make - can't just be to somebody else's programs.
The changes history is calling on America to make today cannot be shouldered only by people richer than us or poorer than us - but by us, too.
Politicians are often afraid that if they're too honest, they might lose an election. I'm afraid that in 2012, if we're not honest enough, we may lose our country.
If we want to grow our economy, we need to shrink our government. If we want to create jobs, we need to encourage job creators. If we want our children to be free to pursue their dreams, we can't shackle them with our debts.
This is a time for truth.
That's why later this week, I'm going to New York City, to tell Wall Street that if I'm elected, the era of bailouts, handouts, and carve outs will be over. No more subsidies, no more special treatment. No more Fannie and Freddie, no more TARP, and no more "too big to fail."
Success in our economy must once again be determined by the ingenuity of competing businesses and the judgment of the marketplace, period.
There's more.
Tomorrow, I'm going to Florida to tell both young people and seniors the truth that our entitlement programs are on an unsustainable path and that inaction is no longer an option.
Our national debt, combined with Obamacare, have placed Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid in real peril. I'll tell young people the truth that over time and for them only, we're going to gradually raise their Social Security retirement age.
And, I'll also tell the truth to wealthy seniors that we will means test Social Security's annual cost-of-living adjustment.
Medicare must be also be reformed with "pay for performance" incentives that reward good doctors and wise consumers.
And, we need to block grant Medicaid to the states. There, innovative reformers closest to the patients can solve problems and save money.
This week, I'll also be in Washington, D.C., to remind the federal bureaucracy that government exists to serve its citizens, not its employees. The truth is, people getting paid by the taxpayers shouldn't get a better deal than the taxpayers themselves.
That means freezing federal salaries, transitioning federal employee benefits, and downsizing the federal workforce as it retires. It means paying public employees for results, not just seniority - from the Capitol to the classroom, and everywhere in between.
And in the private sector, it means no card check - not now, not ever. It means no more taxpayer bailouts just because you gave lots of money to a campaign. And it especially means the National Labor Relations Board will never again tell an American company where it can and can't do business.
I'm here today to tell Iowans the truth, too.
America is facing a crushing debt crisis the likes of which we've never seen before. We need to cut spending, and we need to cut it…big time. The hard truth is that there are no longer any sacred programs.
The truth about federal energy subsidies, including federal subsidies for ethanol, is that they have to be phased out. We need to do it gradually. We need to do it fairly. But we need to do it.
Now, I'm not some out-of-touch politician. I served two terms as Governor of an ag state. I fully understand and respect the critical role farming plays in our economy and our society. I've strongly supported ethanol in various ways over the years, and I still believe in the promise of renewable fuels - both for our economy and our national security.
But even in Minnesota, when faced with fiscal challenges, we reduced ethanol subsidies. That's where we are now in Washington, but on a much, much larger scale.
It's not only ethanol. We need to change our approach to subsidies in all industries.
It can't be done overnight. The industry has made large investments, and it wouldn't be fair to pull the rug out from under it immediately. But we must face the truth that if we want to invite more competition, more investment, and more innovation into an industry - we need to get government out. We also need the government out of the business of handing out favors and special deals. The free market, not freebies from politicians, should decide a company's success. So, as part of a larger reform, we need to phase out subsidies across all sources of energy and all industries, including ethanol. We simply can't afford them anymore.
Some people will be upset by what I'm saying.
Conventional wisdom says you can't talk about ethanol in Iowa or Social Security in Florida or financial reform on Wall Street.
But someone has to say it. Someone has to finally stand up and level with the American people. Someone has to lead.
When times get tough, there's always a temptation among politicians to try to turn the American people against one-another. Some try to fan the flames of envy and resentment as a way to deflect attention from their own responsibilities.
But that's not good enough. Our problems demand - and our children deserve - much more from us this time.
No president deserves to win an election by dividing the American people - picking winners and losers, protecting his own party's spending and cutting only the other guys'; pitting classes, and ethnicities, and generations against each other.
The truth is, we're all in this together. So we need to work to get out of this mess together.
I'll unite our party and unite our nation, because to solve a fourteen-trillion-dollar problem, we're going to need three hundred million people.
Leadership in a time of crisis isn't about telling people what you think they want to hear, it's about telling the truth.
President Barack Obama refuses to do that. He has a simple and cynical plan: pretend there is no crisis, then attack those of us who are willing to stand up and try to solve it.
In Washington, they call that "smart politics." But I'm not from Washington. I grew up in Minnesota, in the hard-working blue collar town of South Saint Paul.
When I was 16 years old my mom passed away from ovarian cancer. Awhile later, my dad lost his job for a time. In a situation like that, you see some things. You learn some things.
At a young age, I learned the value of leaning into my faith in God, in challenging times and at all times. I saw the value of a loving family that rallied around each other in times of crisis. I learned the value of hard work and the responsibility for doing my part. I learned that education was a ticket to opportunity.
I learned the value of a job and a paycheck. I got a chance to work at a grocery store for about seven years. I was a union member. I was proud to earn some money to help pay for school costs and make ends meet.
The values I learned are America's values. I know the American Dream -- because I've lived it. I am running for President to keep that dream alive.
The first step toward restoring America's promise, is to elect a president who keeps his promises.
How do I know conservative values and principles can rescue our economy and reform our government? Because in Minnesota, for the last eight years, they already have. I love my state but let's face it: it's one of the most liberal states in the union.
Minnesota's big-government legacy presented me with the same type of problems Barack Obama found in the nation's capital. But my approach – and my results – were very different from his.
When I became governor, Minnesota's two-year budget had been increasing an average of 21% for over forty years. During my eight years, that changed dramatically. I passed a budget that actually reduced state spending in real terms for the first time in the 150-year history of Minnesota.
For decades before I was elected, governors tried and failed to get Minnesota out of the top-ten highest taxed states in the country. I actually did it.
Minnesota faced health care costs that were spiraling out of control. Sound familiar? I know how to do health care reform right. I've done it at the state level. No mandates, no takeovers… and it's the opposite of Obamacare.
I took on the public employee unions before it was popular to do it. For example, our government bus drivers had benefits similar to those that are breaking budgets in California, Illinois, and half of Europe. I wanted to bring those benefits in line. The union refused and went on strike. It became one of the longest transit strikes in the history of the country. People picketed my house, the media trashed me, and the buses didn't move. But neither did we. On the 45th day of the strike, the union came back to the table, and taxpayers won. Today, we have a transit system that gives commuters a ride, without taking the taxpayers for a ride.
I stood up to the teachers unions and established one of the first statewide performance pay systems in the country.
And I appointed new conservative justices to the state Supreme Court. They understand that judges are supposed to rule according to the language of the law, not the preferences of their party. You know something about that here in Iowa.
In Minnesota and in Washington, the issues were the same: taxes, spending, health care, unions, and the courts. But in Washington, Barack Obama has consistently stood for higher taxes, more spending, more government, more powerful special interests, and less individual freedom.
In Minnesota, I cut taxes, cut spending, instituted health care choice and performance pay for teachers, reformed our union benefits, and appointed constitutional conservatives to the Supreme Court. That is how you lead a liberal state in a conservative direction.
The problems we face as a nation are severe. But if we could move Minnesota in a common sense, conservative direction, we can do it anywhere -- even in Washington D.C.
It won't be easy, but it's not supposed to be. This is America - we don't do easy.
Valley Forge wasn't easy. Normandy wasn't easy. Winning the Cold War wasn't easy.
If prosperity were easy, everyone around the world would be prosperous.
If security were easy, everyone around the world would be secure.
If freedom were easy, everyone would be free.
They're not. But - Americans are - because our Founders and generations before us chose to be, and insisted, sacrificed - and risked everything - so that we could be.
That's their legacy. Now it's our challenge.
We are up for it.
In 2008, Barack Obama told us he would change America . . . and he has.
In 2012, we will change America again . . . and this time, it will be for the better.
Thank you. God bless you. And God bless the United States of America.
May 23, 2011
CONTACT: Alex Conant
Governor says now is "A Time for Truth"
DES MOINES - Gov. Tim Pawlenty announced today that he is running for President, telling voters at a town hall event in Des Moines, Iowa that "it's time for new leadership, with a new approach."
"The time has come for America’s president – and anyone who wants to be president – to look you in the eye and tell you the truth," Gov. Pawlenty said. "If we don’t change directions in 2012, if we do not move quickly and decisively, if we are not willing to chip in to sacrifice some of our own comfort and convenience for the lives and liberties of our children, it may be too late."
Gov. Pawlenty's official announcement kicks off a week-long, multi-state tour devoted to telling Americans the truth about the challenges facing America, and laying out specific ideas for getting the country back on track. Pawlenty will host a Facebook town hall on Tuesday and deliver remarks at the Cato Institute on Wednesday. He will travel to New Hampshire and New York on Thursday and Friday.
"Tomorrow I’m going to Florida, to look both young people and seniors in the eye and tell them the truth, that our entitlement programs are on an unsustainable path. And that inaction is no longer an option," Pawlenty said in Des Moines. "Conventional wisdom says you can’t talk about ethanol in Iowa or Social Security in Florida or financial reform on Wall Street. But someone has to say it. Someone has to finally stand up and level with the American people. Someone has to lead."
With the nation facing difficult challenges, Governor Pawlenty pointed to his record in Minnesota as evidence that conservative leadership can lead to a brighter future.
"In Minnesota, I cut taxes, cut spending, instituted health care choice and performance pay for teachers, reformed our union benefits, and appointed constitutional conservatives to the Supreme Court," Governor Pawlenty said. "The problems we face as a nation are severe. But if we could move Minnesota in a common sense, conservative direction, we can do it anywhere -- even in Washington D.C."
Governor Pawlenty's announcement comes less than five months after he completed his second term as Governor of Minnesota. First elected governor in 2002, Governor Pawlenty promised to balance budgets without raising taxes — a promise he kept. Instead, he was honest with voters about the choices necessary to restrain out-of-control spending. It wasn't easy: His budget fights led to the first government shutdown in Minnesota's history, a 44-day transit strike, and a record number of vetoes and budget unallotments. His success earned him an A grade in fiscal responsibility from the Cato Institute — one of only four governors to receive the libertarian group's highest ranking.
One of five children, Pawlenty grew up near the stockyards of South St. Paul. His father was a truck driver and his mother passed away when he was young. Pawlenty worked while attending the University of Minnesota, becoming the first in his family to graduate from college. He went on to earn his law degree and become a criminal prosecutor before being elected to the Eagan City Council in 1989, and the Minnesota state House in 1992.
Tim Pawlenty has been married for over 20 years to his wife, Mary, a former district judge. The Pawlentys have two teenage daughters, Anna and Mara, and attend Wooddale Church in Eden Prairie, Minnesota.
May 23, 2011
See below for coverage of the DNC’s video asking “Why?” exactly Tim Pawlenty is running for President since he doesn’t seem to know.
Democratic National Committee releases Pawlenty attack
Politico // Juana Summers
Tim
Pawlenty is in the race, and the Democrats are rolling out the welcome
mat. Ahead of his official announcement Monday afternoon, the
Democratic National Committee released a new video that paints the
former Minnesota governor as in the dark about why he's running for
president. The focus is on a quote taken from a Time Magazine's profile
of Pawlenty out earlier this month to explain his candidacy.
DNC ad attacks Pawlenty as he prepares to made candidacy official
Daily Caller // Alexis Levinson
Tim
Pawlenty will formally announce his candidacy for the Republican
nomination for president Monday afternoon in Iowa, and in preparation,
the Democratic National Committee has prepared an ad attacking Pawlenty
as a candidate who is trying to be everything to everyone, and failing
to be all of those things. The ad — entitled “Why?” — plays on a recent
statement Pawlenty made in an interview with Time magazine. He was
asked “when he first imagined himself worthy of the history books,
ready to send soldiers to their deaths and endure the national stage’s
harsh toll.” “I don’t know,” replied Pawlenty. “I wish I had a good
answer for you on that.” “Why is Tim Pawlenty running for President?”
says the script on the screen, as the type of music that generally
accompanies a clown plays.
CNN // Gabriella Schwarz
Democrats
continued their attacks against Tim Pawlenty with a new video Monday.
On the same day former the Minnesota governor will announce his
candidacy for president, the Democratic National Committee released a
web spot questioning the Republican's intentions. Monday's video
focuses on a quote Pawlenty gave to TIME magazine earlier this year
explaining his run. "I don't know. I wish I had a better answer for
you," the ad reads. "So do we!" In the interview Pawlenty said he first
considered running for president 15 or 20 years ago but he felt obliged
to "go make some money and play hockey and drink beer."
Roll Call // Shira Toeplitz
The
Democratic National Committee went on the offensive Monday against
former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty, just hours before the Republican
was expected to officially kick off his presidential campaign, by
questioning his “rationale” for seeking the White House. “Despite
spending the last two and half years putting aside his duties as
Governor to set up his campaign, Tim Pawlenty doesn’t have a compelling
rationale for his candidacy,” DNC spokesman Hari Sevugan said in a
statement released early Monday. “He can’t run on his record as
Governor, where he cut services, raised taxes and left his state with a
$6 billion deficit and plummeting approval ratings.” The DNC also
posted a video to YouTube attacking Pawlenty’s record.
2012: Daniels is out, T-Paw and Cain are in
MSNBC // Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, and Domenico Montanaro
The
DNC is questioning why Pawlenty’s running at all. Spokesman Hari
Sevugan: “Despite spending the last two and half years putting aside
his duties as Governor to set up his campaign, Tim Pawlenty doesn’t
have a compelling rationale for his candidacy. He can’t run on his
record as Governor, where he cut services, raised taxes and left his
state with a $6 billion deficit and plummeting approval ratings.”
As Tim Pawlenty Steps Into Presidential Race, Democrats Step Up Attacks
ABC News // Michael Falcone & Amy Walter
And
as ABC’s Matthew Jaffe points out, the Democratic National Committee
released a new video this morning arguing that Pawlenty needs to do
more than just say he's in the race -- he needs to explain why. The new
DNC spot makes the case that he can't run on his track record as
governor or as a Tea Party candidate or as a moderate alternative to
the Tea Party. And it concludes by surfacing an answer he gave to Time
Magazine’s Michael Crowley who asked Pawlenty about the moment he
thought he could be president. "I don't know,” Pawlenty said. “I wish I
had a better answer for you.” In their video, the DNC exclaims, “So do
we!” http://bit.ly/jNjASP
Pawlenty announces presidential run in web video
AP // Brian Bakst
Democrats planned to counter Pawlenty's town hall meeting Monday by bringing in Minnesota officials who say he handed off deep budget problems to his successor. The Democratic National Committee didn't let Sunday's video go unanswered. "After running for president for over two years, the question isn't whether Tim Pawlenty is running or not. It's why — a question he has yet to find an answer to," said DNC press secretary Hari Sevugan. He added that Minnesota residents are coping with reduced services and ongoing deficits: "They're scratching their heads, too.PRESS RELEASE from Pawlenty for President
May 24, 2011
Pawlenty’s Bold Announcement
“Kicking off a week of campaigning in the early voting states with an announcement speech in Des Moines, Pawlenty presented himself as a serious candidate for serious times who has the courage to tell Americans the truth about the challenges the country faces.”
http://www.boston.com/news/
“Pawlenty formally entered the race for the Republican presidential nomination Monday with a broadside against President Barack Obama’s leadership and a vow to tell the truth about the nation’s finances, backed up with a pledge to phase out subsidies for ethanol.”
- Jonathan Weisman, The Wall Street Journal
“In an outdoor speech, with the State Capitol in the backdrop, Mr. Pawlenty presented a new policy message here Monday, including challenging the state’s sacred ethanol subsidies. He said the nation’s debt burden meant that all areas – including Iowa’s farmers who have grown accustomed to subsidies – must be reconsidered.”
- Jeff Zeleny, New York Times
http://thecaucus.blogs.
“In announcing his campaign for president in Iowa Monday, former Minnesota governor Tim Pawlenty placed a big bet on boldness.”
http://primary.washingtonpost.
“The real Tim Pawlenty is simply a pleasant and low-key guy—and one who now faces his best shot at breaking out.”
http://online.wsj.com/article/
“After choosing Des Moines as his backdrop for officially announcing he's running for president, Republican Tim Pawlenty pitched himself as a truth-telling straight-talker who would slash spending. That means trimming Social Security spending and gradually eliminating ethanol subsidies, he said.”
http://www.desmoinesregister.
http://www.latimes.com/news/