Congressman Mike Honda, vice chair of the Democratic National Committee and chair of the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus, and California State Controller John Chiang spoke today before the convention in Denver.
Both are mentioned in a story yesterday by Lisa Amin of ABC7 in San Francisco about the prominent AAPI speakers lined up at the Democratic convention. Her story doesn't mention Maya Soetoro-Ng, who spoke yesterday, but the theme of the story is this: the Democratic convention features a number of AAPI speakers; the Republican convention only has one lone AAPI slotted to speak -- Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal.
Rep. Honda's and Controller Chiang's remarks follow.
Below is a transcript of remarks made by California State Controller John Chiang at the convention Tuesday evening, as prepared for delivery:
Four years ago, the son of a Kenyan father and Kansan mother stood before you and delivered an address that lifted our nation's hearts and hopes by reminding us that together we can achieve greatness. As I watched him speak, I couldn't help but think that unlikely as his story may be, it is my story too. It is our story. It is the American story.
On the surface, it could be viewed that Barack Obama's parents had little in common with my parents. His father came from Africa; my parents came from Asia. They spoke different languages. Their paths surely never crossed. Yet our parents had much in common because they were united by the values they taught their sons: that in America, it doesn't matter where you came from, but where you are going. It doesn't matter what your name is, but whether you are willing to work hard to make a name for yourself.
Barack Obama's life reaffirms the American dream, a dream living in the hearts and lives of countless American families from the eastern shores, to the farmlands, to the Rocky Mountains, to my beloved California, and beyond. This is our nation's great promise. But the promise feels harder to reach.
As the Controller of the State of California, my job is to build a brighter fiscal future for my state and her 38 million residents. Like every state, California is struggling with foreclosures, record gas prices and rising unemployment. We are working harder than ever, but still many of us are falling further and further behind.
But we know our future is still golden. We know of a path to the promised land and Barack Obama will lead us there. He understands, as John F. Kennedy said, that "a rising tide lifts all boats." Together we will rise, or together we will fall.
Here in Denver, and all across our country, we choose to rise. Together, we will rise and reject another four years of the same policies that brought us from a decade of economic prosperity to a decade of economic despair. Together, we will rise and overcome the challenges of poverty, access to health care, and energy independence.
Barack Obama will give us the change we need, so that the values of hard work and opportunity that our parents taught us will ring just as loud, clear and true for our children as they did for us. Let those values be our calling. And once again build a country that embraces the great promise of her people.
Thank you and God bless you all.
Below is a transcript of remarks made by Congressman Mike Honda at the convention Tuesday evening, as prepared for delivery:
My name is Mike Honda. I am a proud Sansei Democrat and a Silicon Valley Congressman. But above all, I'm a teacher.
One of my proudest moments was when I received keys to my first classroom. It was high quality public education that allowed this son of strawberry sharecroppers, raised in the Japanese American internment camps of World War II, to grow up to become a Peace Corps volunteer, a Vice Chair of the DNC, and Chair of the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus.
Education is the gateway to the American dream. Barack knows first-hand that immigrant families - Asian, Hispanic, Pacific Islander, African and others - can attain the American dream through a quality, equitable education, and hard work. Barack's story of promise and opportunity proves that education can be the great equalizer. Sadly, over the past eight years, the misguided Bush/McCain priorities have bled our schools' resources dry, shutting down that gateway to success, and hijacking our children's capacity to achieve the American dream.
We are now at a crossroads. We can either continue on a path of failed policies with John McCain, or, for the change we need, we can elect Barack Obama president. America is in dire need of leadership. Barack knows that education leads to innovation, a critical engine of our economy. His ability and his vision will help ensure that everyone has the opportunity to obtain a quality education. Barack will fight for our children's future.
Rather than burning through billions of dollars on failed foreign policies and an open-ended war, Barack knows that the real war to be fought is for the education of our children, the future of America's economic health. He is committed to developing the teachers of tomorrow from among the brightest in our classrooms today and preparing, retaining and rewarding every teacher in America for their service.
In 1965, President Kennedy's call to service led me to build schools in El Salvador. Now, though my hair is gray, I am inspired again. With Barack Obama and Joe Biden as our ticket - yes, there is hope for the change we need!
Thank you, Senator Obama, for unlocking the imagination and idealism of all generations of Americans, including our Asian and Pacific Islander communities. Thank you for inspiring us to be a critical part of your journey to victory this November. And thank you for your commitment to education, for knowing the strength of America's tomorrow lies in the classrooms of today.
Anybody know where the video of both John Chiang and Mike Honda's speeches are?
Posted by: John K. Lin | August 26, 2008 at 11:30 PM
John, there's supposed to be archived videos at http://gallery1.demconvention.com but it looks like they're a little behind in the video postings.
Posted by: Keith Kamisugi | August 26, 2008 at 11:38 PM