STATE OF THE CONSERVATIVE
MOVEMENT
2004 CPAC CONVENTION
KEYNOTE ADDRESS
Picture, if
you will, a ship at sea. A proud captain steps into the sunlit deck of a tall
ship plying the open seas of a simpler time. Its sails full and straining in the
wind, its crew are tried and true, its hull, mast and keel are strong but
beneath the waves, almost imperceptibly, the rudder has veered off course and,
in time, the captain and crew will face unexpected peril.
The
conservative movement today is like that tall ship with its proud captain,
strong, accomplished but veering off course into the dangerous and uncharted
waters of big government republicanism.
I'm Mike
Pence and I'm From Indiana.
And I can't
tell you what an honor it is for me and my family to be with you
today.
I feel I
should ask the question of Admiral Stockdale, the question many of you must be
asking, "who am I and why am I here!"
All I can say
is that I am a Christian, a Conservative and a Republican in that order and that
I am deeply humbled to address the most important gathering of conservatives in
America!
I am
especially honored to address the state of the movement before so many who have
done so much for the cause of conservative values.
As we reflect
this morning on battles past and future, the words of David before Goliath come
to mind when he asked his countrymen, "is there not a cause?"
Conservatives
like you gathered here never suffer that question.
Conservatives
know the cause: to "establish justice, ensure domestic tranquility, provide for
the common defense, promote the general welfare, and secure the blessings of
liberty to ourselves and our posterity."
And by the
standards of these fundamental objects of the republic, American conservatives
can take considerable pride in the past three years, that the ship of
conservative Republican government in
Washington
is
strong.
And our
movement is strong.
In promoting
national security, economic prosperity and the sanctity of human life,
conservatives made measurable gains in 2003.
Under the
leadership of President George W. Bush and a Republican Congress, we have
provided for the common defense -which the Federalist reminds us is the first
and most fundamental object of all.
Ours was a
nation under attack as I stood on the east lawn of the Capitol on
September 11,
2001
. I stood beneath a
sky filled with mud brown smoke, people running in every direction...F-16's
going supersonic at treetop level to intercept an inbound menace over
Pennsylvania...and in the midst of the chaos of that time, stood George W. Bush,
his arm draped over the shoulder of a bone-weary fireman, speaking courage
through a bullhorn to a listening nation.
And we saw
those words matched by deeds of equal valor.
These are the
deeds that ousted the Taliban in
Afghanistan
, and have now
defeated and captured the butcher of
Baghdad
.
These are the
deeds that have yielded a safer
America
and a safer world,
visible to all but an angry, frustrated few who remain stubbornly and willfully
blind.
Through it
all, Republicans in Congress and conservatives throughout the land have stood
steadfastly behind our president whose personal courage and bold leadership has
made our families measurably safer.
To provide
for the common defense at home.
And to
project power in the national interest abroad.
Because of
conservatism,
America
is defending freedom
at home and abroad.
And since
conservatives were the margin in the disputed election of 2000, conservatives
can take credit that
America
has this man as our
president "for such a time as this."
At the same
time, we have promoted the general welfare with the only means that ever works -
the means that unleashes the enterprise and initiative of the American
taxpayer. Under the leadership of President Bush and the Republican Congress,
two successive tax cuts have provided the largest tax relief since the days of
Ronald Reagan. Just as they began to do in 1983, the positive results are now
pouring in with each day's economic news. Americans are going back to work.
Businesses are expanding and this president's determination to act on his
conservative Republican principles is the reason for our returning
prosperity.
And on this,
the 31st Anniversary of Roe v. Wade, we can finally progress in
securing the unalienable right to life for millions of unborn
Americans.
Thanks to the
unselfish, unflagging efforts of conservatives who have devoted themselves to
being the voice for the voiceless, we can now point to the first major
legislative victory since the legalization of abortion in 1973.
A Republican
Congress passed a ban of "partial birth abortion" and this Republican president
signed it into law.
Republican
governance, in these respects, has been conservative governance.
And if any of
you believe George W. Bush is not the right man for our country, and not the
right man for conservatives to support, you need look no further than these
victories in national security, economic policy and the sanctity of life to know
that George W. Bush is the right man for America, equal to the times and worthy
of our trust.
But despite
these enormous conservative achievements, there are troubling signs that the
ship of conservative governance is off course.
While Ronald
Reagan said famously, "government is not the solution to our problem, government
is the problem" many Republicans-even many who call themselves conservatives-see
government increasingly as the solution to every social ill and-let us be clear
on this point- this is a historic departure from the limited government
traditions of our party and millions of its most ardent supporters.
And this
shift to faith in government is especially clear to me.
Not because I
am a congressman, but because not long ago, as I watched the children's animated
movie "Ice Age" with my kids I realized...I am the frozen man.
You remember
the frozen man...born in a simpler time, slips into the snow and thaws out years
later in a more sophisticated age.
Well, I first ran for Congress in
1988. An entrenched Democratic majority controlled Congress, frustrating
President Reagan at every turn.
A band of
heroic House conservatives were challenging Speaker Jim Wright and welfare state
politics; a balanced federal budget was as much a fantasy as a Republican
majority in Congress...but some of us believed. We believed we could reduce the
size and scope of government and halt the slow march to socialism embodied in
the welfare state politics of the left.
I lost my bid
in 1988 and again in 1990.
There's a
saying in politics: "When you're out, you're out!"
Well, I was
out for 10 years.
And when I was finally elected to Congress in 2000, I
was like the frozen man...frozen before the revolution, thawed after it was
over...a minuteman who showed up 10 years late!
A decade ago, when I
first ran for Congress, Republicans dreamed of eliminating the federal
Department of Education and returning control of our schools to parents,
communities and states.
Ten years
later, I am thawed out, take my oath of office in the 107th Congress
and join the revolution and they hand me a copy of H.R. 1...One...as in our
Republican Congress' number one priority.
The "No Child
Left Behind Act." The largest expansion of the federal Department of Education
since it was created by President Jimmy Carter.
In the end,
myself and about 30 House conservatives fought against the bill and were soundly
defeated by our own colleagues.
Our Reaganite
beliefs that education was a local function were labeled "far right" by
Republicans and the President signed the bill into law with a smiling Ted
Kennedy at his side.
Conservatives
were told to bear up...that this was the exception, not the rule.
And so,
relieved to have that experience behind me, I anxiously awaited a new H.R. 1 for
a new Congress...an H.R. 1 I could be proud of. And so at the onset of the
108th, I was handed H.R. 1...the number one priority...the Medicare
Prescription Drug Bill.
The largest
new entitlement since 1965!
To the frozen
man it was obvious.
Another
Congress.
Another
H.R.1.
And another
example of the ship of our movement veering off course.
Actually this
bill started out promising. The president asked Congress for a very limited
program...extending existing welfare benefits to seniors just above the poverty
level where most of the one in four seniors without prescription drug coverage
reside.
Many conservatives, me included, were prepared to support this
limited benefit. I told the president we shouldn't make seniors choose between
food, rent and prescription drugs...we were a better country than
that.
But instead of giving the president what he requested, the
Congress...the land of the $400 hammer...set sail to create the largest new
entitlement since 1965...a massive one-size-fits-all entitlement that would
place trillions in obligations on our children and grandchildren without giving
any thought to how we were going to pay for it.
Conservatives in the
House were faced with a difficult choice...oppose the president we love...or
support the expansion of the big government we hate.
Twenty-five rebels
decided to make a stand for the principle of limited government.
When all the
votes were counted, we were one rebel short.
In the end
the bill passed.
The welfare
state expanded.
And the ship
of conservative government veered off course.
But I will
always believe that the stand we took mattered. Even in defeat.
Sometimes a
small group of people can take a stand, be defeated and still make a
difference.
Like in 1836
when less than 200 men fought against thousands of Mexican forces to defend an
ancient Christian mission on the plains of
Texas
.
Though they
died to the last man, the
Texas
volunteers within
those missionary walls exacted such a horrific toll on the Army of Santa Anna,
that his aid, Col. Juan Almonte privately noted, "One more such glorious victory
and we are finished."
And so they
were.
The
inspiration of the men who made their stand at the
Alamo
fueled the victory
that Sam Houston would lead just six weeks later.
"One more
such glorious victory and we are finished."
One more big
government education bill.
One more new
government entitlement.
One more
compromise of who we are as limited government Republicans, and our majority
could be finished.
So then, the
state of the movement:
Strong, on
the advance, but veering off course from our commitment to limited
government.
The time has
come for conservatives to retake the helm of this movement and renew our
commitment to fiscal discipline and to what we know to be true about the nature
of government:
Conservatives
know that government that governs least governs best.
Conservatives
know as government expands, freedom contracts.
Conservatives
know that government should never do for a man what he can and should do for
himself.
And
conservatives know that we never expand the welfare state but that we don't
reduce the freedom of its recipients and all those condemned to pay its price in
confiscated taxes.
And
conservatives know that if you reject these principles of limited government and
urge others to reject them you can be my ally, you can be my friend but you
cannot call yourself a conservative.
As I close I
think about the year ahead.
The
unforeseeable challenges our nation may face.
And I
think of the heroes we will likely bid farewell.
And I think
of Ronald Wilson Reagan.
I met
President Reagan in the summer of 1988.
I was a 29
year-old candidate for Congress and he was winding down a presidency that
changed the world.
It was a
candidate photo-op in the Blue Room of the White House.
I was
determined to say something of meaning to the great man.
After we
exchanged pleasantries, I told him I was grateful for everything he had done for
the country and everything he had done to inspire my generation of Americans to
believe in high ideals.
He seemed
surprised, his cheeks appeared to redden with embarrassment and he said, "Well,
Mike, that's a very nice thing of you to say."
Moments later
in the ballroom he took a minute to respond to my and others' accolades with
characteristic humility and optimism saying:
"Many of you
have thanked me for what I did for
America
but I want you to
know I don't think I did anything for this country-the American people
decided it was time to right
the ship and I was just the
captain they put on the bridge when they did it."
It's time for
conservative Americans to do what Reagan did.
It's time for
conservative Americans to right the ship again.
To celebrate
our great Republican President and Congress that are leading our nation's
progress in national security, economic prosperity and value of human
life.
But also to
see her listing to port...in the direction of big government and set her right
again.
And to know
that this is not a sign of disloyalty but of true loyalty to
principle.
When a ship
is approaching a rocky coast, the life of the ship and its crew depends on the
navigator with his sextant to counsel the captain and crew to steer clear of the
shoals and if need be to forcefully oppose the captain when the fate of the ship
hangs in the balance.
This is our
cause.
To stand with
our captain as he leads us well.
And to right
the ship in that where she is adrift.
And this
cause will prevail.
For the cause
of freedom is not ours but His - "the author and finisher of our
faith."
And I believe
with all my heart that He who set this miracle of democracy on this these
wilderness shores will see our cause through tomorrow as surely as He has seen
it through every yesterday.
Thank you for
all you do to keep the cause of conservative values alive in this shining city
on the hill, this last best hope of earth, these
United States of
America
.
God bless you
and God bless the
USA
.
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