| OBAMA'S RESPONSE TO OPEN LETTER |
By TOM TROY BLADE POLITICS WRITER
In a response to an open letter on Page One of Sunday’s Blade, Sen. Barack Obama said that “America’s very promise is that in this country, opportunity is open to anyone who’s willing to work for it.”
The response was not a simple yes or no to The Blade’s question, posed by John Robinson Block, co-publisher and editor-in-chief: “Do all Americans who want to work have the right to a job where they live?”
But it seemed to agree in principle.
Mr. Block’s question was based on an idea advanced more than a half-century ago by a President who took office during painful economic times, Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
Mr. Roosevelt said in his 1944 State of the Union address to Congress, after the Great Depression had ended, that the nation needed a “Second Bill of Rights,” an economic bill of rights.
In his response to The Blade’s question, Mr. Obama said, “President Roosevelt’s leadership showed how Americans can overcome incredible challenges - in peacetime and in wartime - when we start believing in ourselves and each other again.”
He vowed to focus on bringing jobs back to Ohio and America, rebuilding and strengthening the middle class.
Indeed, a staple line in Mr. Obama’s speeches recently is “there is nothing more fundamental than a job.”
He cited the auto manufacturing aspect of Toledo’s economy as an example of how his program to focus on alternative fuels and technologies can create a turn-around.
“Toledo is at the cutting edge of this effort, with some of the leading manufacturers of solar panels in the country, fueled by a strong research program at the University of Toledo,” he said.
Mr. Obama said America’s promise includes access to a job that “lets you live out your dreams for your family;” “the guarantee of health care you can afford and education that helps your kids compete,” and “if you serve in the uniform of this great country, you receive the care and benefits you deserve.”
He ended by saying Washington has responsibilities, corporations have responsibilities not just to the bottom line but to their workers, and citizens have a responsibility to themselves and each other.
In response to a called-out question as Mr. Obama entered the lodge at Maumee Bay State Park, he said, ““I agree that everyone who is willing and able to work should be able to find a job that pays a living wage.”
Mr. Obama and many of his top advisors will be staying through Wednesday in the Toledo area to prepare for his debate against Republican presidential nominee Sen. John McCain on Wednesday.
Contact Tom Troy at 419-724-6058 or tomtroy@theblade.com. |
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