Kennedy on campus
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Marisa O’Neil
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy spoke to a packed house at UC Irvine Friday
night about education, health care and the war in Iraq.
The lecture drew what director of UCI’s Center for the Study of
Democracy Russell J. Dalton called the largest crowd ever for the
university’s Peltason Lecture on Democracy series. At least 200
people filled the student center auditorium, and another 500 watched
it on closed circuit television in a second auditorium.
“I want to say this directly to the people in the other room,”
Kennedy said at the start of his speech. “I know what it’s like. As
the ninth member of a large family, at dinner, I was always in the
next room.”
During his speech, the Massachusetts senator spoke out against the
war in Iraq, its rising cost and the continued presence of U.S.
troops there. America, he said, should have garnered more
international support for the effort and should give Iraqis more of a
stake in their own future.
“We should never have gone to Iraq the way we did and for the
reasons that were given,” he said. “Now, 85% of coalition troops are
American, 85% of casualties are American. And $87 billion won’t
change that.”
The reasons given to go into Iraq, he said, were based on what he
called a “selective use of intelligence.”
The $87 billion that President George W. Bush has requested for
the rebuilding of Iraq would be better spent on educational programs
and health care reforms, Kennedy said. He supports a universal health
care program and believes, in the meantime, employers should provide
at least some coverage for workers.
Accessible education should also be a priority, and steps should
be taken to stem rising college tuitions, such as UCI’s recent 19%
hike, he said.
“Just as we made Social Security a promise to every person, we
need to make education security a promise to every person,” he said.
Improving education for younger students should also be a
priority, he said. He cited a closing of the gap for test scores
between minority and white students in Massachusetts, which has
already been using reforms similar to the No Child Left Behind Act,
as proof the program can work on a national scale.
“We know the need is greatest in the poorest communities that
serve the neediest children,” he said. “It’s a national concern.”
There was one issue that Kennedy did skirt -- he made it clear
that he would not field any questions about California Gov.-Elect
Arnold Schwarzenegger. He did, however, say he was happy for his
nephew-in-law.
“I love Arnold,” Kennedy said. “How couldn’t you, when he has you
by your ankles?”
* MARISA O’NEIL covers education and may be reached at (949)
574-4268 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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