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Barack Obama Unveils Manufacturing Agenda at Macomb
College
Sen. John Edwards endorses Obama during joint appearance
in Grand Rapids
Story and Photos by HB Meeks
WARREN,
MI—Senator Barack Obama today visited Macomb County College to
unveil his manufacturing agenda. Among other measures, Obama
stated his
plan will create a $150 billion Clean Technologies Deployment
Venture Capital Fund, promote advanced vehicle technology and
incentivize production of fuel-efficient vehicles, convert
manufacturing centers into clean technology leaders through
start-up funding, and create a $60 billion infrastructure fund
to rebuild our highways, bridges, ports, and transit systems.
Senator Obama toured the Chrysler Stamping Plant in Sterling
Heights during Wednesday's campaign swing through Michigan.
He is scheduled to hold a rally later Wednesday night in
Grand Rapids.
Prior to MCC event, he met with students and workers. He was
introduced before his speech at Macomb Community College by
Roy Gross, a 48-year-old truck driver who transports new
cars to the showroom.
“It’s time to recapture the spirit of innovation that has
always fueled America’s economic success,” Senator Obama
said. “It’s time we had an economy that was driven not just
by foreign debt, but by the power of America’s imagination.
It’s time to tap the ingenuity of engineers and
entrepreneurs, policy experts and working folks to meet the
challenges of our time. That’s what this election is all
about. So while this is a moment of challenge, it’s also a
moment of opportunity. And the question you’ll face in
November is which candidate can lead America to seize it.”
Obama’s manufacturing agenda plans to revitalize the
manufacturing sector and address the challenges of energy
independence and a crumbling infrastructure. His plans
include creating a $150 billion Clean Technologies
Deployment Venture Capital Fund to advance clean energy and
create green manufacturing jobs in the United States. He
also wants to see research and develop advanced vehicle
technology, and provide incentives for domestic auto makers
to retool their plants and build these new fuel-efficient
vehicles.
He also told supporters that he wants to create a $60
billion infrastructure fund to rebuild highways, bridges,
roads, ports, air, and train systems, lower transportation
costs for manufacturers and spur job growth in
manufacturing. The audience responded positively to his idea
to reform America’s trade policies to ensure that workers
can compete on a level playing field and to create good jobs
at home.

Remarks of Senator Barack Obama
Macomb Community College
Warren, Michigan
Wednesday, May 14, 2008
Earlier today, I went for a tour of the Chrysler stamping
plant in Sterling Heights, and I listened to folks tell me
about how hard it is to get by in this economy. And the
record oil prices mean that it’s even harder for automakers
and autoworkers – especially at a time when they’re
struggling to meet the demands of a 21st Century economy.
Since the beginning of this year, thousands of Chrysler
workers have lost their jobs. The entire industry has shed
300,000 jobs in the past eight years – about a third of
which were lost in Michigan. That’s hundreds of thousands of
workers who will no longer be able to count on a paycheck to
pay the rising costs of health care and college; gas and
groceries. And those who are lucky enough to avoid getting
laid off are still feeling the pressures of restructuring.
Not too far from here, at American Axle, UAW members have
gone on strike to fight for good wages, and good benefits,
and a decent standard of living. These are things that all
hardworking families should expect and that UAW members
deserve, and we stand in solidarity with the folks on the
picket lines, and the families impacted by this strike.
Their struggle is part of a larger struggle that’s being
waged not just in Michigan, but all across the country. It’s
a struggle to ensure that we have good manufacturing jobs so
American workers can raise a family, have health care when
they need it, put their children through college, and retire
with dignity and security. They’re common hopes, modest
dreams, but they’re slipping out of reach for too many
families.
Now, a big part of the reason autoworkers are struggling on
the factory floor is because of decisions that were made in
the boardroom. Rather than invest in the fuel-efficient cars
of the future, auto executives invested in the SUVs and
large trucks that may have helped meet a rising demand, but
that essentially guaranteed that they would be outpaced by
foreign competitors and that the industry’s long-term
problems would be harder to solve.
But American automakers have been showing leadership in
recent years. Ford has now tied Toyota in the quality of the
cars they’re making, and they’re spending more on R&D than
nearly any other company in the world. Chrysler is working
to develop a system that integrates electric motors with a
fixed-gear transmission. And GM is releasing an average of
one new hybrid model every three months for the next two
years. So we’re certainly taking steps in the right
direction.
But we must do more. And when I’m President, we will. We
won’t just support the autoworkers in Michigan who built the
auto industry, and keep it strong in good times and bad. And
we won’t just revive and strengthen our automakers. We’ll
revive and strengthen all of American manufacturing. These
have been a disastrous eight years for our manufacturers.
We’ve lost nearly 4 million good-paying jobs, including
hundreds of thousands in Michigan, and more than 36,000
manufacturers have closed their doors. We can’t afford to
continue down this path. Manufacturing supports one in six
American jobs – jobs that pay more and offer better benefits
than other jobs – and we all have a stake in saving them.
It’s time to recapture the spirit of innovation that has
always fueled America’s economic success. It’s time we had
an economy that was driven not just by foreign debt, but by
the power of America’s imagination. It’s time to tap the
ingenuity of engineers and entrepreneurs, policy experts and
working folks to meet the challenges of our time.
That’s what this election is all about. So while this is a
moment of challenge, it’s also a moment of opportunity. And
the question you’ll face in November is which candidate can
lead America to seize it.
Now, when John McCain came to Michigan in January and said
that we couldn’t bring all these jobs back to America, he
was right. But where he’s wrong is in suggesting that
there’s nothing we can do to replace those jobs or create
new ones. Where he’s wrong is in not offering new solutions
or economic policies that are different from what George
Bush has given us for eight long years. That’s wrong. That’s
giving up. And that’s not what this country is about.
I won’t stand here and tell you that we’ll be able to stop
every job from going overseas or bring every job back. But I
will tell you that we can end the Bush-McCain policy of
giving tax breaks to companies that ship our jobs overseas,
and we can start giving those tax breaks to companies that
create good-paying jobs right here in America. Instead of
opposing job training similar to what’s being offered at
M-Tech, like John McCain has, we can make sure every
American has the skills to compete in the global economy. We
don’t have to stand idly by while foreign competitors
outpace us in making the cars of the future. I’m running for
President to make sure that the cars of the future are made
where they’ve always been made – right here in Michigan.
Because the fight for American manufacturing is the fight
for America’s future – and I believe that’s a fight this
country will win.
And so today, I’m announcing a manufacturing agenda that
will lift up hardworking families, strengthen innovative
companies, and foster our common prosperity. The first part
of this agenda is investing in clean energy – because that
isn’t just how we’ll get gas prices under control, combat
climate change, and free ourselves from the tyranny of oil;
it’s also how we’ll expand American manufacturing, create
quality jobs, and grow our economy.
That’s why I’ll invest $150 billion over the next ten years
in the green energy sector. This will create up to five
million new green jobs – and those are jobs that pay well
and can’t be outsourced. And I’ll be a President who finally
keeps the promise that’s made year after year after year by
providing domestic automakers with the funding they need to
retool their factories and make fuel-efficient and
alternative fuel cars. My own state of Illinois is home to
the oldest, continually operating Ford assembly plant
outside Michigan, so I understand why it’s so important to
bring our auto industry into the 21st Century. And that’s
what we’ll do when I’m President.
Here’s what else we’ll do. We’ll invest $10 billion a year
in creating a Clean Technologies Deployment Venture Capital
Fund that will meet a critical need. Today, 85% of North
America’s automotive research is done right here in
Michigan. But too often, breakthrough technologies that are
invented in America end up getting built overseas because of
the cost of getting these new technologies commercialized.
This government-backed fund will help solve this problem by
creating an initiative right here in Michigan that will
accelerate the development and deployment of cutting-edge
vehicle technologies. To take one example, this fund will
help American companies build batteries for plug-in hybrid
vehicles so we don’t have to buy them from abroad. That’s
how we’ll make sure American automakers continue to lead the
world, and that’s how we’ll make sure that American
manufacturers don’t just survive, but actually thrive in
this century.
The second part of my agenda is making sure that
manufacturers are getting the support they need from
Washington. Here in Michigan, you’ve got the Michigan 21st
Century Jobs Fund, a state initiative to help businesses
with the most innovative proposals create new products and
jobs in this state. I believe that’s an approach we need to
replicate across the country. And that’s what I’ll do as
President by creating an Advanced Manufacturing Fund that
will invest in innovation and job creation in places that
have been hard hit by the decline in manufacturing.
We’ll also make the research and development tax credit
permanent so we can encourage companies to do their research
and create jobs right here in America. And we’ll stop
slashing funding for the Manufacturing Extension
Partnership, and start doubling it. This program helped
create and protect over 50,000 jobs in 2006 alone, and has
been proven to increase the productivity of small and
midsize manufacturers by up to 16%. That’s the kind of smart
investment that will help us rebuild American manufacturing
and make America more competitive.
The third thing we’ll do is invest in America’s long-term
competitiveness by putting a college degree within reach for
all Americans and by helping community colleges like Macomb
develop associate degree programs in green technology to
help make sure the next generation of workers have the
skills they need to build the cars of the future. And we’ll
finally solve our health care crisis once and for all. This
is a crisis that’s not only leaving 47 million Americans
without health insurance and millions more struggling to pay
rising costs. It’s also hampering our economic
competitiveness. We’ve all heard how health care accounts
for about $1500 of every car that’s made in America.
We have to change that. That’s why unlike John McCain, I
have a universal health care plan. It’s a plan that will cut
health care costs by up to $2500 per family per year and
reduce costs for business and their workers by picking up
the tab for some of the most expensive illnesses and
conditions. And we’re not going to do it twenty years from
now, or ten years from now – we’re going to do it by the end
of my first term as President of the United States.
Finally, if we want to fight for manufacturers here at home,
we have to fight for them around the world. Now, I believe
in trade, but I also believe that for America to compete and
win in the global economy, trade has to work for all
Americans. That means making sure that our workers are
competing on a level playing field, and that countries like
China aren’t breaking the rules and putting American workers
at a disadvantage. Fighting for our workers isn’t bad for
business; it’s good for our economy. And it’s how we’ll make
sure that the costs and benefits of our global economy are
being shared more fairly.
So the American people will have a clear choice in November
when I’m the nominee – it’s a choice between more of the
same failed Bush policies that have done nothing but harm to
American manufacturing over the last eight years; and real
change that will help write a new chapter in the story of
American manufacturing. For the sake of our families, our
economy, and our leadership in the world, we have to renew
the promise of American manufacturing.
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