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American bipartisan politics can be saved -- here's how

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    Imagine that you're a member of Congress.
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    You've worked very hard.
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    You've knocked on thousands of doors,
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    sweating and shivering
    depending on the season.
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    You've made hundreds,
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    maybe thousands of phone calls
    to people you don't even know,
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    asking for their support,
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    begging for their money.
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    And now you've got one of these.
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    It's hanging on a door in Washington, DC.
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    It says you're a member of Congress,
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    that you represent
    the people of your state.
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    Now, imagine you're a Conservative
    member of Congress.
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    For some of you here
    in Boston, Massachusetts,
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    that's going to take
    a powerful imagination, all right?
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    (Laughter)
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    But imagine with me
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    that you're a Conservative
    member of Congress.
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    You grew up on Milton Friedman.
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    You love his free markets,
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    free enterprise
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    and free trade.
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    You've watched Ronald Reagan's
    farewell address over and over,
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    and you cry ever time --
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    (Laughter)
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    he gets to the part about
    the shining city on the hill,
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    and how if the city had to have walls,
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    the walls had doors --
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    doors to let in those yearning
    to breathe free.
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    You get goosebumps when you think
    of him telling Mr. Gorbachev
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    to tear down his wall.
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    You're a Conservative member of Congress,
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    and you agree with President
    John F. Kennedy
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    that America is an exceptional place.
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    For inspiration,
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    you go to YouTube and you watch
    his speech at Rice University,
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    September of 1962.
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    "The Moonshot Speech."
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    And you're amazed
    that he admits in that speech --
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    a speech of 17 minutes of pure
    American exceptionalism --
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    that some of the materials
    needed for the spacecraft
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    hadn't been invented yet.
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    No matter.
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    We're going to the moon
    before the decade is out.
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    You agree with him
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    that the vows of this nation
    can be fulfilled
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    only if we in this nation are first
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    and therefore we intend to be first.
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    You've taken as your own
    the affect that he so embodied.
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    That when leaders are optimistic,
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    they're saying they believe
    in the people they represent.
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    You're a Conservative member of Congress,
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    and you believe
    in the precautionary principle.
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    You believe in data-driven analysis.
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    You know that climate change is real
    and human-caused,
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    and you see in climate change
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    a silent and slow-moving Sputnik moment.
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    One that calls for
    the greatness of your nation
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    as much as the original Sputnik moment.
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    You are a Conservative member of Congress.
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    You high-five the memory of Jack Kemp,
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    and believe with him
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    that the test of conservatism is that
    it works for everyone,
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    regardless of skincolor.
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    You're appalled by the alt-right.
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    You want them to have nothing to do
    with your brand, your party, your legacy.
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    You utterly reject them.
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    You --
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    (Applause)
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    You're a Conservative member of Congress.
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    You rise with compassion to protect
    the lives of the unborn,
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    but otherwise you think
    the bedroom of consenting adults
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    is a rather strange place
    for the government to be.
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    You are a Conservative member of Congress.
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    With John Adams,
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    you fear the mob.
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    Because you know as he knew
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    that a mob is not able to protect liberty,
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    not even its own.
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    And you're amazed at the wisdrom
    that he and other framers had
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    in establishing a slow,
    deliberative governing process --
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    an inherently conservative
    governing process.
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    It would serve a country.
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    It would grow far greater
    than they could ever imagine.
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    You are a Conservative member of Congress.
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    You fear the fire of populist nationalism,
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    because you know
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    that those who play
    with fire can't control it.
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    You see their pitchforks and torches,
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    and you know they're not
    good building tools.
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    The pitchforks and torches can tear down
    and burn up but they can't build up.
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    They can't build up the institutions
    and the communities so necessary
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    to a stable and prosperous country.
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    You're a Conservative member of Congress,
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    and you fear the next
    county party convention.
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    You so wish for your party to be
    the grand opportunity party,
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    not the grumpy old party.
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    (Laughter)
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    You know that they want
    to hear from you some old [salve]
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    about how a secret Muslim, non-American
    socialist took over in the White House
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    and destroyed the country,
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    and you know that none of that's true.
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    (Applause)
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    You know that they want to hear your say
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    that you're OK with insults,
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    OK with "Lock her up" chants
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    and OK with policy pronouncements
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    with all the sincerity and thoughtfulness
    that 140 characters can muster.
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    You are a Conservative member of Congress.
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    You realize that many in your party
    look to some good old days
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    that you know never existed.
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    They hold on, for example,
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    to the fossils that fueled
    the last century of growth,
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    but you know that better, cleaner
    more abundant fuels await us,
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    and you know that that abundance
    can lead the world to more energy,
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    more mobility
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    and more freedom.
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    You're a Conservative member of Congress.
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    You realize that many in your party
    pine for the '50s and the '60s
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    because those were, after all,
    the good old days.
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    But you know that the Cuyahoga River
    was on fire back then.
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    You know that in Pittsburgh,
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    street lights came on at noon
    because of the soot in the air.
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    The schools were segregated,
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    neighborhoods redlined,
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    that communism threatened freedom,
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    and if you got cancer,
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    you weren't likely to fight for long.
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    You're a Conservative member of Congress
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    and you want to sound like JFK at Rice,
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    where JFK said, "It's understandable
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    why some would have us stay where we are
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    a little bit longer,
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    to wait and to rest."
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    But everything within you says with him,
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    this city of Houston,
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    this state of Texas,
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    this country of the United States
    was not built by those who waited
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    and rested and wished to look behind them.
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    You are ready to lead.
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    You are ready to prove
    the power of free enterprise
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    to solve challenges like climate change.
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    You are ready to lead.
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    So I've got a suggestion for you then:
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    lead ...
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    now.
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    Step out,
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    step up.
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    You know, we ask America's best
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    to die on literal hills
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    in places like Iraq and Afghanistan.
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    Is it too much to ask you
    to die a figurative death
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    on a political hill in Washington, DC?
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    You know, at the end
    of your time in Washington,
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    they're going to take
    this plaque off the door.
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    They're going to hand it to you;
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    you're going to go home with it.
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    Can you imagine the emptiness
    of knowing that you stood for nothing,
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    that you risk nothing,
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    that all you did was follow fearful people
    to where they were already going
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    rather than trying to lead
    them to a better place?
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    If you're not willing
    to lose your seat in Congress,
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    there's really very little
    reason to be there.
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    (Applause)
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    So here's the thing:
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    it's not too late.
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    There's still time to lead.
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    Speak out,
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    speak up,
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    call lunacy what it is:
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    lunacy.
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    Tell the American people
    that we still have moonshots in us.
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    Tell the folks at the county
    party convention,
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    "You bet free enterprise
    can solve climate change."
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    Tell them that Milton Friedman
    would say to tax pollution
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    rather than profits.
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    Tell them that it's OK --
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    no, it's a good thing
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    that Progressives would agree.
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    Tell them the very good news
    that we can bring America together
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    to solve these challenges
    and to lead the world.
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    Tell them that free enterprise
    can do these things.
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    Tell them that America
    must stop the dividing,
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    and must start the uniting.
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    Tell them.
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    Play your part before it's too late.
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    (Applause)
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    Thank you very much.
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    (Applause)
Title:
American bipartisan politics can be saved -- here's how
Speaker:
Bob Inglis
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
10:48

English subtitles

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