Global Presidential Primary March 1-8, 2016 INSTRUCTIONS Your Ballot Must Include All the Information Required Below

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Global Presidential Primary March 1-8, 2016 INSTRUCTIONS Your Ballot Must Include All the Information Required Below OFFICIAL BALLOT Global Presidential Primary March 1-8, 2016 INSTRUCTIONS Your ballot must include all the information required below. It must be signed and dated to be valid. Please print clearly in blue or black ink. Emailed or faxed ballots must be received by Democrats Abroad no later than 24:00 CET on March 8, 2016. Mailed ballots must be dated no later than March 8, 2016 and must be received no later than 6:00PM local time on March 13, 2016. Tick one of the following options: Returned by email to [email protected] Returned by fax to +1-888-958-6739 Returned by mail to YOUR PERSONAL DETAILS Full name of voter (required): Membership number (optional): __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ Country of residence / membership (required): Date of birth (required): __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ Email (if any, and required if ballot returned by email): Telephone (if any): __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ Physical address overseas (required, no P.O. boxes): US voting address (exact if known, state required): __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ YOUR VOTE Vote for one candidate only. Please fill in the oval next to the name. For example, John F. Kennedy: Hillary Clinton Roque “Rocky” De La Fuente Martin J. O’Malley Bernie Sanders Uncommitted DECLARATION I do hereby register for this Primary and do certify that I am a US Citizen residing temporarily or permanently outside the United States and that I possess the qualifications required to vote in this Primary in that I will be an eligible voter on November 8, 2016. I am a member of Democrats Abroad. I have the interest, welfare and success of the Democratic Party of the United States and of Democrats Abroad at heart and subscribe to the substance, intent and principles of the Charter and Bylaws of the Democratic Party of the United States and the Charter of Democrats Abroad. I have not participated and will not participate in the delegate selection process (caucus, primary or other method) of any other delegation to the 2016 Democratic National Convention or in the nominating process of any other political party for the corresponding elections, nor voted in any other manner in the Democrats Abroad Prima- ry. By signing below, I attest that all information provided is true and correct. Signature: ______________________________________________ Date: _________________________________ Instructions for Remote Voting in the 2016 Global Presidential Primary of Democrats Abroad Are you eligible to vote in the Global Presidential Primary? To cast a ballot in the Global Presidential Primary, you must: • be a citizen of the United States of America; • reside permanently or temporarily outside the states and territories of the U.S.A.; • be a member of Democrats Abroad and subscribe to principles of the Democratic Party; and • have not voted (nor will vote) in any other 2016 presidential primary or caucus. (You may vote in your home state’s primaries for candidates for the U.S. Senate, U.S. House of Representatives, and where permitted by your local election official, state and local elections and ballot measures.) If you are not yet a member of Democrats Abroad, you must join before completing your ballot. You can join at http://www.DemocratsAbroad.org/join If you are not sure whether you are a member, consult your local leader of Democrats Abroad or try activating your online account at http://www.DemocratsAbroad.org/login If you are unable to activate your account, please fill out the Join form on the website to ensure that you are a member. Step 1: Print Your Ballot To save paper and other costs, print only the first page of this file. You should not return these instructions with your completed ballot. Please print the ballot on a single page. The ballot’s contents will fit on a standard American-size letter or A4 paper. Do not print a smaller image, because that will make your details too difficult to read. If you opted for an auto-filled ballot, please check all parts of the ballot. Be sure that all the required information appears on your ballot. If there are errors, you may cross them out and write the correct information nearby. If you received a ballot on paper by mail, check the accompanying letter for your membership number. You should copy that number to the appropriate part of your blank ballot. Step 2: Fill Out Your Ballot You must provide the following information in a legible manner: • Your full name • Your country of residence (usually the same as your membership country in DA) • Your date of birth (please use the American standard, MM/DD/YYYY) • Email (obligatory unless you do not have one at all; obligatory if you return your ballot by email) • Telephone (obligatory unless you do not have one) • Physical address of your residence outside the United States • U.S. voting address (place of last residence; description allowed if postal address unknown) If you know your Democrats Abroad membership number, please write it in the appropriate space. Having this number will lighten the load of our vote-counters tremendously. You can find your membership number by asking your local leader of Democrats Abroad, or logging into the Democrats Abroad website at http://www.democratsabroad.org and visiting the Account Settings page. Finally, be sure to fill in the oval to the left of your preferred Presidential candidate! The Global Presidential Primary does not allow secret ballots. (For more information on the Democratic Party rules that require a signature and the tradition behind it, please see the short article posted on our website.) Step 3: Sign Your Ballot The Declaration is required by the rules of the Democratic Party. By signing, you declare that you will not vote in another Presidential primary or caucus and that you will not participate in any other Presidential nominating process. You are permitted, and in fact encouraged, to participate in non-Presidential primary elections in your U.S. state of residence, such as primaries for U.S. Senate, U.S. House of Representatives, and where permitted by your local election official, state and local elections and ballot measures. You must sign and date the Declaration in order to complete your ballot, and you must do so by March 8, 2016, the end of the Global Presidential Primary. Step 4: Scan, Fax, or Mail Your Ballot You can return your completed ballot one of three ways: by postal mail, by fax, or by an attachment to an email message. If you choose to return your completed ballot by postal mail, it is your responsibility to use enough postage and follow whatever rules and practices required to ensure the safe delivery of a legible ballot. Ballots received after March 13, 2016 will not be valid. All voters may send completed ballots to: International Chair, Democrats Abroad Stettenerstr. 61 83209 Prien, Germany If you live in a country with an organized committee of Democrats Abroad, you may be able to mail your ballot to an address in your country. Please consult the list of countries below to see whether there is a local address available to you. If you choose to return your ballot by fax, use the telephone number below by 24:00 CET on March 8, 2016. It is not necessary to use a cover page. As with all methods, it is your responsibility to ensure successful delivery. The fax number is a United States telephone number: +1-888-958-6739 If you choose to return your ballot by attaching a file to an email message, you must first create an image file of your ballot. Please check the image before sending, particularly if you use the camera on your phone to create the file. (Full-size scanners produce the best image files.) Then you must compose an email message as follows: To: [email protected] Subject: Ballot delivery, [Your last name] Message: Full name: [Your full name as on your ballot] Country: [Your country of residence] Contact: [Your telephone number or full postal address] Be sure to attach the image file of your ballot before sending the message! You will not receive an error message or automatic response if you fail to include a legible image of your ballot. If you choose to return your ballot by attaching a file to an email message, then you are responsible for ensuring that • the file is in a commonly-used format: pdf, jpg, gif, tiff, or png; • the digital image is completely legible, including its size and resolution; • the email message with attachment is successfully delivered to the appropriate email address by 24:00 CET on March 8, 2016; and • the file and email message are not corrupted and contain no viruses or other malicious code. If there are problems with your email message or the attached file, Democrats Abroad does not have any obligation to contact you and may simply treat the ballot as spoiled. While Democrats Abroad will strive to answer reasonable inquiries, we cannot guarantee a timely response to questions regarding the status of your ballot. Additional Notes After you submit a Remote Ballot, you may not vote in-person at a Voting Center or submit a second Remote Ballot at a later date. You may only vote
Recommended publications
  • Letter to the Democratic National Committee, the DNC Rules Committee, and All Delegates to the Democratic National Convention
    Letter to the Democratic National Committee, the DNC Rules Committee, and all delegates to the Democratic National Convention: The undersigned organizations hope that all Democrats agree that the will of the voters should be decisive in determining the Democratic nominees for the country’s highest offices. We therefore urge the Democratic Party – via action at this month’s Democratic National Convention – to eliminate the concept of so-called “superdelegates.” This change would not impact the ongoing nomination proceedings, but would take effect for all future national nominee selection processes and conventions. The superdelegate system is unrepresentative, contradicts the purported values of the party and its members, and reduces the party’s moral authority. • The system undermines representative democracy and means that the electorate is not necessarily decisive in determining who will be the Democratic nominees for president and vice president and dilutes the voters’ say over the party’s platform and the rules under which it operates. Astonishingly, these unelected delegates have essentially as much weight as do the pledged delegates from the District of Columbia, 4 territories, and 24 states combined. • The system undermines the Democratic Party's commitment to gender equity. While the party’s charter rightfully mandates that equal numbers of pledged delegates be male and female, a near super-majority of superdelegates are men. • The Democratic Party prides itself on its commitment to racial justice and the racial diversity of its ranks. Yet the superdegelates appears to skew the party away from appropriate representation of communities of color: Proportionately, approximately 20% fewer of this year’s superdelegates hail from communities of color than was true of the 2008 and 2012 pledged delegate cohorts, or of the voters who supported President Obama in those years’ general elections.
    [Show full text]
  • The Charter the Bylaws
    THE CHARTER & THE BYLAWS OF THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY OF THE UNITED STATES As Amended by The Democratic National Committee August 25, 2018 CONTENTS CHARTER OF THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY OF THE UNITED STATES 1 PREAMBLE 1 ARTICLE ONE ........................................ The Democratic Party of the United States of America 2 ARTICLE TWO ....................................... National Convention 3 ARTICLE THREE ................................... Democratic National Committee 5 ARTICLE FOUR ..................................... Executive Committee 5 ARTICLE FIVE ....................................... National Chairperson 6 ARTICLE SIX.......................................... Party Conference 6 ARTICLE SEVEN ................................... National Finance Organizations 6 ARTICLE EIGHT..................................... Full Participation 7 ARTICLE NINE ....................................... General Provisions 9 ARTICLE TEN ........................................ Amendments, Bylaws, and Rules 9 RESOLUTION OF ADOPTION BYLAWS Adopted Pursuant to the Charter of the Democratic Party of the United States 11 ARTICLE ONE ........................................ Democratic National Convention 11 ARTICLE TWO ....................................... Democratic National Committee 20 ARTICLE THREE ................................... Executive Committee 22 ARTICLE FOUR ..................................... National Finance Organizations 22 ARTICLE FIVE ....................................... Amendments i CHARTER CHARTER OF THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY OF THE
    [Show full text]
  • Nancy Green Speech February 3 2009
    Nancy Greens Campaign Speech for the election of Chapter Chair of the Berlin Chapter of Democrats Abroad Germany on February 3, 2009 Barack Obama has been elected president …Wow… How did this happen? It was no accident!! Of course there are many factors that lead to the outcome of this historic election … which will be analyzed at the local Stammtisch and by scholars and institutions far into the future. One thing I can say from my perspective here in Berlin is. We had something to do with it. And people like us had something to do with it. From Berlin and Munich, Heidelberg, and Landstuhl, to Rome, Vancouver, London, Madrid, Ukraine, Lebanon and Israel, to Denver…. Democrats all over the world had something to do with the outcome of this election. We also had some help …. George Bush…. Sarah Palin, Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld John McCain… I could go on and on, but I only have 10 minutes… The missteps of the Republican Party are one major factor. Other factors include the Organization of the Democratic Party the Obama Campaign, The leadership of Howard Dean and people like us at the grass-roots. Then there is Barack Obama himself, who has inspired millions. Change has come about because we have had leadership. We are here because we care about our country and, adhering to the basic principles of the Democratic Party, we want to bring about changes in our nation’s policies regarding, to name only some the economy, health care, education, the environment, equal rights, scientific research, support for the arts, foreign policy, Iraq, Quantanemo and Habeus Corpus.
    [Show full text]
  • Carter/Mondale 1980 Re-Election Committee Papers: a Guide to Its Records at the Jimmy Carter Library
    441 Freedom Parkway NE Atlanta, GA 30307 http://www.jimmycarterlibrary.gov Carter/Mondale 1980 Re-Election Committee Papers: A Guide to Its Records at the Jimmy Carter Library Collection Summary Creator: Carter/Mondale 1980 Re-Election Committee. Title: Carter/Mondale 1980 Re-Election Committee Papers Dates: 1977-1980 Quantity: 171 linear feet, 1 linear inch open for research, 391 containers Identification: Accession Number: 80-1 National Archives Identifier: 593160 Scope and Content: This collection contains letters, correspondence, memoranda, handwritten notes, studies, speeches, recommendations, position papers, press releases, briefing books, notebooks, proposals, studies, voter lists, reports, political statements, publications and news clippings. These records document various aspects of President Carter’s 1980 re-election campaign. This includes the formation of political strategy; polling data; legal and procedural issues; administrative items such as finance, fundraising and budget matters; statements on issues; scheduling; speeches; field staff operations in states and regions; polling data; voter lists; public correspondence and materials relating to press issues. Creator Information: Carter/Mondale 1980 Re-Election Committee Restrictions: Restrictions on Access: These papers contain documents restricted in accordance with Executive Order 12958, which governs National Security policies, and material which has been closed in accordance with the donor’s deed of gift. Terms Governing Use and Reproduction: Copyright interest in
    [Show full text]
  • The Visible Primaries
    THE VISI PRIMARIES BLE The Rhodes Cook Letter December 2003 The Rhodes Cook Letter DECEMBER 2003 / VOL. 4, NO. 6 Contents Enter the Voters . 3 Chart: Democratic Success Index. 3 Chart: Republicans Nominate Early Front-Runners, Democrats often Don’t . 4 Map & Chart: 2004 Nominating Season at a Glance . 6 Chart: 2004 Democratic Delegate Selection by Month . 8 Chart: 2000 Democratic and Republican Primary Results. 10 Chart: Iowa, New Hampshire and the Road to Nomination . 12 Map & Chart : A Thumbnail Look at the ‘Kingmakers’ . 13 Chart : Gephardt’s 1988 Presidential Run . 14 Chart : At the End of the Third Quarter: Money and the Polls . 15 Chart: The Ups and Downs of the ‘Invisible Primary’ . 16 Map & Chart: Bush and the Electoral College Map . 18 Looking Back, Looking Ahead . 19 What’s up in 2004 . 19 2003 Gubernatorial Elections: The Constant is Change . 20 Changing Composition of the 108th Congress . 21 Subscription Page . 22 The Rhodes Cook Letter is published by Rhodes Cook. Web: is $99. Make check payable to “The Rhodes Cook Letter” and rhodescook.com. E-mail: [email protected]. Design by send it, along with your e-mail address, to P.O. Box 574, Landslide Design, Rockville, MD. “The Rhodes Cook Letter” is Annandale, VA. 22003. See the last page of this newsletter for published on a bimonthly basis. A subscription for six issues a subscription form. All contents are copyrighted ©2004 Rhodes Cook. Use of the material is welcome with attribution, although the author retains full copyright over the material contained herein. The Rhodes Cook Letter • December 2003 2 Enter the Voters he Democratic presidential nominating campaign is about to move from the political equiva- Tlent of tryouts in New Haven to the make-or-break of Broadway.
    [Show full text]
  • Red and Blue America Redux
    R AMERICAED AND BLUE REDUX The Rhodes Cook Letter October 2003 The Rhodes Cook Letter OCTOBER 2003 / VOL. 4, NO. 5 Contents Bush, The Democrats and ‘Red’ and ‘Blue’ America . 3 Chart: Red & Blue America Summary . 4 Chart: Red & Blue USA ‘02 Results, ‘04 Action . 5 Map & Chart: Bush and the Map, 2000-04 . 8 Chart: The President’s Party at Midterm and Presidential Elections that Follow . 9 Chart & Graph: GOP Gains Separation in ‘02 House Vote . 10 California: The Cornerstone of ‘Blue’ America . 11 Chart : Turnout Comparison: The Recall vs. High Profile Races of ‘02 . 11 Map & Chart: The Recall Vote by County. 12 Chart: Ronnie & Arnold: Boffo Political Debuts . 13 Tentative 2004 Democratic Primary Calendar and Delegate Count . 15 Other 2003 Elections: Gubernatorial, House Candidates at Ballot Box . 16 Changing Composition of the 108th Congress... And Governorships . 17 Subscription Page. 18 Looking Ahead: The next issue in December will focus on the fast-approaching presi- dential nominating season, the state of the Democratic campaign, and the varied terrain of primaries and caucuses the party’s candidates will face. The Rhodes Cook Letter is published by Rhodes Cook. Web: tion for six issues is $99. Make check payable to “The Rhodes rhodescook.com. E-mail: [email protected]. Design by Cook Letter” and send it, along with your e-mail address, to Landslide Design, Rockville, MD. “The Rhodes Cook Letter” is P.O. Box 574, Annandale, VA. 22003. See the last page of this being published on a bimonthly basis in 2003. A subscrip- newsletter for a subscription form.
    [Show full text]
  • The Invisible Primary and the 1996 Presidential Nomination
    The Invisible Primary and the 1996 Presidential Nomination Thomas R. Marshall, University of Texas at Arlington The 1996 presidential nominations process will not begin with the first state primaries and caucuses. By January 1996 the candidates had already spent millions of dollars and thousands of days campaigning during the "in­ visible primary." The 1996 nominations race features several new prac­ tices—such as the front-loading of delegate-selection events, and the re- emergence of Washington insiders as the early GOP leaders. For the first time since 1964 the Democrat Party did not face a spirited nominations race. This article reviews the prenomination season for the 1996 presidential race with evidence available by early January 1996. Public Opinion Public opinion remained relatively stable during the 1995 "invisible primary," just as it typically has in recent presidential contests.1 Heavy spending in key primary and caucus states, debates among the candidates, and the entry and exit of candidates all failed to move public opinion polls during 1995. In the absence of saturation media coverage and media labeling of "winners" and "losers" in the early caucuses and primaries, few dramatic poll shifts appeared. The Republicans Throughout 1995, the Gallup Poll reported only slight changes in the first-choice preferences of self-identified Republicans and independents leaning Republicans. Between April 1995 and January 1996, front-runner Bob Dole’s support varied only from a low of 45 percent to a high of 51 percent. Support for Senator Phil Gramm varied only from a low of seven percent to a high of 13 percent.
    [Show full text]
  • THE RISE of a GLOBAL PARTY? American Party Organizations Abroad
    PARTY POLITICS VOL 9. No.2 pp. 241–255 Copyright © 2003 SAGE Publications London Thousand Oaks New Delhi THE RISE OF A GLOBAL PARTY? American Party Organizations Abroad Taylor Dark III ABSTRACT In discussions of party organization, scholars have generally assumed that such organizations operate exclusively on the domestic level, seeking to alter electoral results by raising votes and money from constituencies at home. This research note shows that this assumption is outdated, because the US Democratic and Republican parties now maintain overseas branches in dozens of different countries. These branches seek through a variety of means to mobilize the votes and financial resources of Americans abroad in an attempt to change domestic political outcomes. An analysis of the rise of these groups demonstrates the value of the concept of globalization in an area where it is usually not considered relevant, and raises new normative and practical questions about how to regulate overseas political activity by US citizens and parties. KEY WORDS American politics globalization party organization One of the oldest and most resilient ways of conceptualizing political party activity has been to divide it into three components: the party in the elec- torate, the party in government and the party as an organization. The last of these components was, of course, defined in reference to the leaders and activists who worked through the party apparatus to gain members, finan- cial contributions and votes on behalf of party nominees. Naturally enough, this activity was assumed to take place entirely within the territorial bound- aries of the country where the party contested elections – American party organizations mobilized within the USA, British parties within Britain, and so on.
    [Show full text]
  • To Assure Pride and Confidence in the Electoral Process
    To Assure Pride and Confidence in the Electoral Process August 2001 The National Commission on Federal Election Reform Organized by Miller Center of Public Affairs, University of Virginia The Century Foundation Supported by The David and Lucile Packard Foundation The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation Miller Center of Public Affairs University of Virginia P.O. Box 400406 2201 Old Ivy Road Charlottesville VA 22904-4406 tel 804-924-7236 fax 804-982-2739 web http://millercenter.virginia.edu The Century Foundation 41 East 70th Street New York NY 10021 tel 212-535-4441 fax 212-879-9190 web http://www.tcf.org www.reformelections.org The Commission Public Hearings Honorary Co-Chairs March 26, 2001 President Gerald R. Ford Citizen Participation President Jimmy Carter The Carter Center Co-Chairs Atlanta, Georgia Robert H. Michel April 12, 2001 Lloyd N. Cutler Election Administration Vice-Chairs The Ronald Reagan Presidential Library Slade Gorton Simi Valley, California Kathleen M. Sullivan May 24, 2001 Commissioners What Does the Law Require? Griffin Bell Lyndon B. Johnson Library and Museum Rudy Boschwitz Austin,Texas John C. Danforth Christopher F. Edley, Jr. June 5, 2001 Hanna Holborn Gray The American and International Experience Colleen C. McAndrews Gerald R. Ford Library Daniel Patrick Moynihan Ann Arbor, Michigan Leon Panetta Deval L. Patrick Diane Ravitch Bill Richardson John Seigenthaler Michael Steele Executive Director Philip D. Zelikow To Assure Pride and Confidence in the Electoral Process August 2001 The National Commission on Federal Election Reform Organized by Miller Center of Public Affairs, University of Virginia The Century Foundation Supported by The David and Lucile Packard Foundation The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation The John S.
    [Show full text]
  • Selecting Representative and Qualified Candidates for President
    Selecting Representative and Qualifed Candidates for President: Proposals to Reform Presidential Primaries Democracy and the Consttuton Clinic Fordham University School of Law Daisy de Wolf, Ben Kremnitzer, Samara Perlman, & Gabriella Weick January 2021 Selecting Representative and Qualifed Candidates for President: Proposals to Reform Presidential Primaries Democracy and the Consttuton Clinic Fordham University School of Law Daisy de Wolf, Ben Kremnitzer, Samara Perlman, & Gabriella Weick January 2021 This report was researched and writen during the 2019-2020 academic year by students in Fordham Law School’s Democracy and the Consttuton Clinic, where students developed non-partsan recommendatons to strengthen the naton’s insttutons and its democracy. The clinic was supervised by Professor and Dean Emeritus John D. Feerick and Visitng Clinical Professor John Rogan. Acknowledgments: We are grateful to the individuals who generously took tme to share their general views and knowledge with us: Robert Bauer, Esq., Professor Monika McDermot, Thomas J. Schwarz, Esq., Representatve Thomas Suozzi, and Jesse Wegman, Esq. This report greatly benefted from Gail McDonald’s research guidance and Flora Donovan’s editng assistance. Judith Rew and Robert Yasharian designed the report. Table of Contents Executve Summary .....................................................................................................................................1 Introducton .....................................................................................................................................................4
    [Show full text]
  • Andrew Coombes I Applied for the Burns Fellowship After a Work
    Andrew Coombes I applied for the Burns Fellowship after a work colleague and Burns alumna spoke in glowing terms about the experience she had had in Berlin a few years previously. Having a long-held interest in the modern history of Germany, I felt that the fellowship programme would present me with an opportunity to explore some stories in depth for Al Jazeera English, my home organisation, while also giving me an insight into how German media operate through my host organisation in Germany. I felt mild trepidation after being accepted to the fellowship - I was concerned that having no German language skills would be a natural impediment to producing material, particularly when working in a German newsroom. I was therefore grateful that the Burns Fellowship offered two weeks of intensive German language training at the Goethe Institute. To those who are wary of applying to the Burns programme due to their lack of German - just apply regardless. I found the tuition offered by the Goethe instrumental in getting a feel for the German language and it also presented me with some useful insights into German society and culture. With umlauts practiced and my pronunciation of ‘entschuldigung’ well-drilled, I turned up early on a warm Monday morning at the Berlin parliamentary bureau of the Rheinische Post, who kindly agreed to be my host for the early part of my placement. A few days prior to the placement I had had a few kolsch beers with Michael Broecker, who leads the bureau, and found him to be approachable, engaged and eager to help in any way that he could.
    [Show full text]
  • DA Platform 2012 Final.0
    Platform 2012 PREAMBLE Democrats Abroad are Americans living in more than 160 countries. We are millions. We are teachers, entrepreneurs, businesspeople, and retirees. We are college students. We are Caucasian, African-American, Latinos, Native American, Asian-Pacific, LGBT, disabled, youths and seniors. We are men and women serving our country, in uniform and as diplomats; in the Peace Corps and as development volunteers. And we are taxpayers, both at home and in our countries of residence. We are voters from every state across America—and the District of Columbia— and we vote with absentee ballots from more than 160 countries around the globe. Yet no matter where we live, as Americans we care deeply about our country. We care about fairness in tax reporting We care about fairness in the visa application process. We care about fairness in Social Security. We care about fairness in elections. We care about fairness in keeping families together. We care about the future of our planet. We care about the future of our children. We care about the future of our elders. We care about the 100%. How America resolves its problems affects each of us as American citizens living in nations around the world. Solutions are not found in filibusters, but in constructive dialogue to resolve pressing issues, both domestic and international. Real solutions are renewable and sustainable. Real solutions are equitable and promote opportunities for all. Real solutions promote peace and security. Real solutions fight corruption. Our strength as a nation depends on upholding our fundamental values so that we can successfully surmount our problems, and contribute to a world that offers the benefits of freedom and cooperation.
    [Show full text]