Campaign Launch Speech
Posted Jan 27 2019 02:57PM PST
Updated Jan 27 2019 04:47PM PST
Transcript from Kamala Harris' presidential campaign kickoff speech in Oakland, California on January 27, 2019.
I am so proud to be a daughter of Oakland, California. And as most of you know, I was born just up the road at Kaiser Hospital. And it was just a few miles away my parents first met as graduate students at UC Berkeley where they were active in the civil rights movement.
They were born half a world apart from each other. My father, Donald, came from Jamaica to study economics. My mother, Shyamala, came from India to study the science of fighting disease.
They came here in pursuit of more than just knowledge. Like so many others, they came in pursuit of a dream. And that dream was a dream for themselves, for me and for my sister Maya.
As children growing up here in the East Bay, we were raised by a community with a deep belief in the promise of our country – and, a deep understanding of the parts of that promise that still remain unfulfilled.
We were raised in a community where we were taught to see a world, beyond just ourselves. To be conscious and compassionate about the struggles of all people.
We were raised to believe public service is a noble cause and the fight for justice is everyone's responsibility.
In fact, my mother used to say "don't sit around and complain about things, do something." Basically I think she was saying. You've got to get up and stand up and don't give up the fight!
And it is this deep-rooted belief that inspired me to become a lawyer and a prosecutor.
It was just a couple blocks from this very spot that nearly 30 years ago as a young district attorney I walked into the courtroom for the very first time and said the five words that would guide my life's work:
"Kamala Harris, for the people."
Now, I knew our criminal justice system was deeply flawed.
But I also knew the profound impact law enforcement has on people's lives, and it's responsibility to give them safety and dignity.
I knew I wanted to protect people.
And I knew that the people in our society who are most often targeted by predators are also most often the voiceless and vulnerable.
And I believed then as I do now, that no one should be left to fight alone.
You see, in our system of justice, we believe that a harm against any one of us is a har against all of us. That's why when we file a case, it's not filed in the name of the victim. It reads, "The People."
This is a point I have often explained to console and counsel survivors of crime, people who faced great harm. Often at the hands of someone they trust – be it a relative or a bank or a big corporation.
I would remind them. You are not invisible. We all stand together.
That's the power of the people.
My whole life, I've only had one client: the people.
Fighting for the people meant fighting on behalf of survivors of sexual assault - a fight not just against predators but a fight against silence and stigma.
For the people meant fighting for a more fair criminal justice system.
At a time when prevention and redemption were not in the vocabulary or mindset of most district attorneys, we created an initiative to get skills and job training instead of jail time for young people arrested for drugs.
For the people meant fighting for middle class families who had been defrauded by banks and were losing their homes by the millions in the Great Recession.
And I'll tell you, sitting across the table from the big banks, I witnessed the arrogance of power. Wealthy bankers accusing innocent homeowners of fault, as if Wall Street's mess was of the people's making.
So we went after the five biggest banks in the United States. We won 20 billion dollars for California homeowners and together we passed the strongest anti-foreclosure law in the United States of America. We did that together.
For the people meant fighting transnational gangs who traffic in drugs and guns and human beings. And I saw their sophistication, their persistence and their ruthlessness.
And folks, on the subject of transnational gangs, let's be perfectly clear: the President's medieval vanity project is not going to stop them.
And in the fight for the people to hold this administration accountable, I have seen the amazing spirit of the American people.
During the health care fight, I saw parents and children with grave illnesses walk the halls of the United States Congress, families who had travelled across the country at incredible sacrifice.
They came to our nation's capital believing that if their stories were heard, and if they were seen, their leaders would do the right thing.
I saw the same thing with our Dreamers. They came by the thousands. By plane, train and automobile. I'm sure they were sleeping ten-deep on someone's living room floor.