Sen Hillary Clinton Kentucky Victory Speech

Sen Hillary Clinton Kentucky Victory Speech

Sen. Hillary Clinton won by a substantial margin in Kentucky.  When the results finished coming in, Clinton had won by a 35% margin.  Clinton received 250 thousand more votes then Sen. Obama.  While the results were still coming in, Sen Clinton gave the following speech in Louisville, KY.

HILLARY CLINTON: Thank you, Kentucky. Thank you very, very much.

You know, I am so grateful for this victory, and I am so appreciative, because tonight I’m thinking about why we’re all here. And it’s not just to win a primary or even just to win an election.

What propels us is the struggle to realize America’s promise: a nation where every child can achieve his or her God-given potential, where every man and woman has a fair chance, where we fulfill… (APPLAUSE)

… where we fulfill the ideals our founders pledged their lives to defend and our nation was born to uphold.

I want to say a special word this evening about someone who has spent his whole life dedicated to realizing the promise of America. (APPLAUSE)

Senator Ted Kennedy…(APPLAUSE)

… is one of the greatest progressive leaders in our party’s history and one of the most effective senators in our country’s history. He’s my friend, and he’s my inspiration. More than that, he is a hero to millions of Americans whose lives he has fought to better.

I’m proud to have stood side-by-side with Ted Kennedy to increase the minimum wage, to extend health insurance to millions of children, to help stop insurance companies from discriminating against the sick.

But the privileges that I have had and so many others have had, because of the battles we have fought side-by-side with him are just a mere handful of what he has done during his entire public service, five extraordinary decades devoted to America.

And as a lifelong champion for social justice and equality, his work has made the path easier for me, for Senator Obama, and for countless others. He’s been with us for our fights, and we’re with him now in his. (APPLAUSE)

And I know he’s going to fight with all of his legendary might, supported by his wonderful wife, Vicky, and his entire family against this latest challenge. And we wish him well and send our thoughts and prayers to him. (APPLAUSE)

Tonight, we’ve achieved an important victory. (APPLAUSE)

It’s not just Kentucky bluegrass that’s music to my ears. It’s the sound of your overwhelming vote of confidence, even in the face of some pretty tough odds.

Some have said your votes didn’t matter, that this campaign was over, that allowing everyone to vote and every vote to count would somehow be a mistake. But that didn’t stop you. You’ve never given up on me, because you know I’ll never give up on you. (APPLAUSE)

This is one of the closest races for a party’s nomination in modern history. We’re winning the popular vote, and I’m more determined(APPLAUSE)  more determined than ever to see that every vote is cast and every ballot counted. I commend Senator Obama and his supporters. And while we continue to go toe-to-toe for this nomination, we do see eye-to-eye when it comes to uniting our party to elect a Democratic president in the fall. But I need your help. Your support has made the difference between victory and defeat. Though we have been outspent massively, your support has helped us make our case on the air and on the ground, and your help will keep us going. We’ve made it this far together, so please go to HillaryClinton.com and together we will make history. And I can’t do it without you. Now, you know that the stakes are high. After all this country has been through the past seven years, we have to get this right. We have to select a nominee who is best positioned to win in November. AUDIENCE: Hillary! Hillary! Hillary! Hillary! Hillary! Hillary! Hillary! Hillary!

CLINTON: And someone who is best prepared to address the enormous challenges facing our country in these difficult times. That’s what this election is all about. Now, I’m told that more people have voted for me than for anyone who’s ever run for the Democratic nomination. That’s more than 17 million votes. Now, why? Why do millions keep turning out to vote in the face of naysayers and skeptics? Because you know that our political process is more than candidates running or the pundits chattering or the ads blaring. It’s about the path we choose as a nation and whether or not we will solve our toughest problems, whether or not we will have a president who will rebuild the economy, end the war in Iraq, restore our leadership in the world, and stand up for you every single day.

And, you know, the people I meet along the campaign trail don’t always make the headlines: the nurses and teachers, the truckers and soldiers, the waitresses and firefighters, the police officers and coal miners, the college students and line workers, the men and women who get up every single day, work hard to make a difference for their families, the people struggling to make ends meet, to find a good job, to pay the bills, to have a shot at the American dream.

For too long, too many Americans have felt invisible in their own country. Well, you’ve never been invisible to me. I’ve been fighting for you my entire life.  And I want you to remember we are in this race because we believe that every single American deserves quality, affordable health care, no exceptions, no one left out. We are in this race because we believe everyone deserves a shot at the American dream, the opportunity to work hard at a good job to get ahead, to save for college, for a home, for retirement, to fill the gas tank, and buy the groceries with a little left at the end of each month to build a better life for you and your children.

We are in this race because we believe this new century poses new challenges to meet and new opportunities to seize, if we only had a president ready, willing, and able to lead  and turn the climate crisis into an energy revolution and create millions of new jobs, to turn the risks of the new global economy into the rewards of new prosperity shared by all of our people.

We are in this race because we believe it will take a commander- in-chief with the strength and knowledge to end the war in Iraq, safely and quickly, and a president with experience, representing the people of the United States in more than 80 countries, to restore our leadership and moral authority in the world. And, yes, we are in this race because we believe America is worth fighting for. This continues to be a tough fight, and I have fought it the only way I know how: with determination, by never giving up and never giving in.

I have done it — I have done it not because I’ve wanted to demonstrate my toughness, but because I believe passionately that, for the sake of our country, the Democrats must take back the White House and end Republican rule. This country needs our combination of strength and compassion to help people struggling with their bills, living the hard reality of everyday life, in need of our leadership on issues from health care to energy to Social Security. That’s why I’m still running, and that’s why you’re still voting.

And I’m going on now to campaign in Montana, South Dakota, and Puerto Rico. And I’m going to keep standing up for the voters of Florida and Michigan. Democrats in those two states cast 2.3 million votes, and they deserve to have those votes counted. And that’s why I’m going to keep making our case until we have a nominee, whoever she may be.

Now, it’s especially sweet tonight because Kentucky has a knack for picking presidents. This state delivered two terms to a president named Clinton. And it’s often been said, as Kentucky goes, so goes the nation. Neither Senator Obama nor I has won the 2,210 delegates required to secure the nomination. And because this race is so close, still separated by less than 200 delegates out of more than 4,400, neither Senator Obama nor I will have reached that magic number when the voting ends on June the 3rd. And so our party will have a tough choice to make. Who’s ready to lead our party at the top of our ticket?

Who is ready to defeat Senator McCain in the swing states and among swing voters? Who’s ready to rebuild the economy and the war in Iraq and protect our national security as commander-in-chief? Who is ready on day one to lead? You know, there are so many Kentuckians that I want to thank. I am so honored by your support and hospitality to me, to Bill, and to Chelsea.

And I want to thank Jerry and Charlotte Lundergan and my entire Kentucky steering committee, including former Governors Wendell Ford, Julian Carroll, John Y. Brown, Martha Layne Collins, and Paul Patton. I want to thank Speaker Jody Richards and his wife, Neva, former Attorney General Greg Stumbo, Majority Leader Rocky Adkins, and Tina Ward-Pugh, and  Terry McBrayer, Jo Etta Wickliffe, and Moretta Bosley. And I want to thank my friends in labor for standing by us every step of the way.

I am grateful to the Kentucky Veterans for Hillary and honored by your support and your service. I want to thank my chairman, Terry McAuliffe, and my family. I am so grateful to the outstanding staff, volunteers and supporters in Kentucky and in Oregon and across America who have worked so hard.

Now, I have one more request to all of my supporters tonight. To the people I’ve met along the campaign trail, to everyone who has knocked on doors, and volunteered, and put up signs, and donated to this campaign: Keep working, keep fighting, keep standing up for what you believe is right  because that is exactly what I’m going to do. People ask me all the time, “How do you keep going?” Well, it is you who keep me going. And tonight I’m thinking about all of the women I’ve met who were born before women could vote. Just this week, I met 89-year-old Emma Hollis  an African-American woman. She has seen so many barriers crumble and fall in her lifetime, but she’s not finished yet. She’s been volunteering out of our campaign office in Covington to help our campaign break the highest and hardest glass ceiling in the land.

I’m thinking about Andrea Spiegel (ph), a strong and composed young woman, 20 years old, who drove across Kentucky to meet me. Her husband, Justin, is deployed in Afghanistan. And she told me how important it is that we have a president who will always stand up for our veterans. And I’m honored by her support and by her family’s service and sacrifice.

And I’m thinking, again, about Dalton Hatfield, the 11-year-old from Kentucky who sold his bike and his video games to raise money to support my campaign. And then he asked others to give, too, and he was able to really give me a boost. And this week, I finally had the chance to meet him in Crestenberg (ph) and to say  Dalton, thank you so much. The $422 you raised helped carry the day in Kentucky.

That’s why I’m in this race: to fight for your future. And that’s why, whatever happens, I’ll work as hard as I can to elect a Democratic president this fall. You know, the state motto of Kentucky is, “United we stand, divided we fall,” words that have a special place in our history. They inspire American revolutionaries to unite the colonies, to defy an empire, and create a new nation, to invent a new form of government, of the people, by the people, and for the people, and they bound our nation together in service and sacrifice, even in our darkest hours.

We will come together as a party, united by common values and common cause, united in service of the hopes and dreams that know no boundaries of race or creed, gender or geography. And when we do, there will be no stopping us. We won’t just unite our party. We will unite our country and make sure America’s best years are still ahead of us.

Thank you. And God bless you, and God bless America. Source Clinton Campaign

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