2022年银行支行行长竞职演讲稿范文.doc
《2022年银行支行行长竞职演讲稿范文.doc》由会员分享,可在线阅读,更多相关《2022年银行支行行长竞职演讲稿范文.doc(9页珍藏版)》请在淘文阁 - 分享文档赚钱的网站上搜索。
1、此材料由网络搜集而来,如有侵权请告知上传者立即删除。材料共分享,我们负责传递知识。银行支行行长竞职演讲稿范文703?z%座? 0?z%?感? 4?z%厚?264703az%?这? 0%酒? 0ay%?店?0?了?pw%?eV?别对?pw%工?224pw%?。?177502pw%?全1?细?pw%作?0就了pw%?面?0?毅?pw%?丨0?验?pw%?eV?认真pw%?工?221pw%?叨thank you, everybody. (applause.) all right. well, thanks to myfriend, lilly ledbetter, notonly for that
2、introduction but for fighting for asimple principle: equal pay for equalwork. itsnot that complicated. and, lilly, i assure you, you remain the faceof fair pay. (laughter.)people dont want my mug on there. (laughter.) they want your face.as lilly mentioned, she did notset out to be a trailblazer. sh
3、e was just somebody who waswaking up every day,going to work, doing her job the best that she could. and then one day,she finds out, after years,that she earned less than her male colleagues for doing the same job.i want to make that point again. (laughter.) doing the same job. sometimeswhen you - w
4、henwe discuss this issue of fair pay, equal pay for equal work,and the pay gap between men andwomen, youll hear all sorts of excuses about,well, theyre child-bearing, and theyre choosing todo this, and theyre thisand theyre that and the other. she wasdoing the same job - probablydoing better. (laugh
5、ter and applause.) samejob. working just as hard, probablyputting inmore hours. but she wasgetting systematically paid less.and so she set out to make surethis country lived up to its founding, the idea that all of usare createdequal. and when the courts didnt answerher call, congress did.the first
6、time lilly and i stoodtogether in this room was my tenth day in office, and thatswhen we signed thelilly ledbetter fair pay act. (applause.) first bill i signedinto law. and someof the leaders whohelped make that happen are here today, including leader pelosi andsenatormikulski and congresswoman del
7、auro. (applause.) i want to thank allthe members ofcongress and all the state legislators who are here and all the advocates who are here,becauseyou all contributed to that effort. andi want to give a special thanks to the members ofthe national equal pay taskforce, whove done outstanding work to ma
8、ke workplaces acrossamerica morefair.were here because today is equalpay day. (applause.) equal pay day. and its nice to havea day, but its evenbetter to have equal pay. (applause.) and our job is notfinished yet. equalpay day means that a woman has to work about this far intoXX to earn what a man e
9、arned inXX. think about that. a woman has gotto work about three more months in order to get whata man got because shespaid less. thats not fair. thats like adding an extra six miles toamarathon. (laughter.) its not right.audience member: aint right.the president: aint right. (laughter.) its not rig
10、ht and itaint right. (laughter.)america should be a level playingfield, a fair race for everybody - a place where anybodywhos willing to workhard has a chance to get ahead. andrestoring that opportunity for everyamerican - men and women - has to be adriving focus for our country.now, the good news i
11、s today oureconomy is growing; businesses have created almost 9million new jobs over thepast four years. more than 7 millionamericans have signed up forhealth care coverage under the affordable careact. (applause.)thats a good thing, too. i know its equal pay day and not obamacareday - (laughter) -b
12、ut i do want to point out that the affordable care actguarantees free preventive care, likemammograms and contraceptive care, fortens of millions of women, and ends the days whenyou could be charged morejust for being a woman when it comes to your health insurance. (applause.) and thats true for eve
13、rybody. (applause.) thats just one moreplace where thingswere not fair.well talk about drycleanersnext, right - (laughter) - because i know that - i dont knowwhy it costsmore for michelles blouse than my shirt. (laughter.)but weve got to make sure thatamerica works for everybody. anybody who is will
14、ing towork hard, they shouldbe able to get ahead. and weve got tobuild an economy that works foreverybody, not just those at the top. restoring opportunity for all has to be ourpriority. thatswhat america isabout. it doesnt matter where youstarted off, what you look like - you workhard, you take res
15、ponsibility, youmake the effort, you should be able to get ahead.and weve got to fight for anopportunity agenda, which means more good jobs that paygood wages, andtraining americans to make sure that they can fill those jobs, andguaranteeingevery child a world-class education, and making sure the ec
16、onomy rewardshardwork for every single american.and part of that is fighting forfair pay for women - because when women succeed, americasucceeds. (applause.) when women succeed, america succeeds. its true. i believe that. (applause.) its true. its true. its true.now, heres the challenge: today, the
17、average full-time working womanearns just 77 centsfor every dollar a man earns; for african american women,latinas, its even less. and inXX,thats an embarrassment. it iswrong. and this is not just an issue offairness. its also afamily issue andan economic issue, because women make up about half of o
18、ur workforce andtheyreincreasingly the breadwinners for a whole lot of families out there. so when they makeless money, it means lessmoney for gas, less money for groceries, less money for child care, lessmoneyfor college tuition, less money is going into retirement savings.and its all bad for busin
19、ess,because our economy depends on customers out there, andwhen customers haveless money, when hardworking women dont have the resources, thatsaproblem. when businesses lose terrificwomen talent because theyre fed up with unfairpolicies, thats bad forbusiness. they lose out on thecontributions that
20、those women could bemaking. when any of our citizens cant fulfill their potential for reasons thathave nothing to dowith their talent or their character or their work ethic, werenot living up to our founding values.wedont have second-class citizens in this country - and certainly not in theworkplace
21、.so, tomorrow, the senate has thechance to start making this right by passing a bill thatlilly already alludedto - the paycheck fairness act. (applause.) theyve got a chanceto do theright thing. and it would putsensible rules into place, like making sure employees who discusstheirsalaries dont face
22、retaliation by their employers.and heres why this isimportant. there are women here todaywho worked in offices where itwas against the rules for employees to discusssalaries with one another. and becauseof that,they didnt know they were being paid less than men - just like lillydidnt know - for doin
23、g theexact same work. for some, it was years before they found out. and even then, it onlyhappened because amanager accidentally let it slip or, as in lillys case, a sympatheticco-workerquietly passed a note. sheonly found out she earned less than her male colleagues for doing thesame workbecause so
24、mebody left an anonymous note.we cant leave that tochance. and over the course of lillyscareer, she lost more than$200,000 in salary, even more in pension and socialsecurity benefits - both of which arepegged to salary - simply because shewas a woman.and lilly, and some of the otherwomen here, decid
- 配套讲稿:
如PPT文件的首页显示word图标,表示该PPT已包含配套word讲稿。双击word图标可打开word文档。
- 特殊限制:
部分文档作品中含有的国旗、国徽等图片,仅作为作品整体效果示例展示,禁止商用。设计者仅对作品中独创性部分享有著作权。
- 关 键 词:
- 2022 银行 支行 行长 演讲 范文
限制150内