House Speaker Paul Ryan is warning against watering down the sweeping overhaul of the nation's tax code he laid out a year ago and calling on Washington to enact permanent reforms this year.

Tuesday's speech is intended to mark the start of Ryan's concerted campaign for what an aide called the "crown jewel" of the GOP agenda amid the turmoil engulfing the White House and growing skepticism of lawmakers' ability to reach consensus on the details of a plan.

The speaker, often deemed a policy wonk, did not delve into the weeds or defend the controversial border adjustment tax. Instead, he focused on framing reform as the key to bolstering economic growth and restoring confidence among households and businesses.

"I am here to tell you: We are going to get this done in 2017," Ryan said. "You know why we're going to get this done in 2017? Because we have to get this done in 2017. ... Transformational tax reform can be done, and we are moving ahead. Full speed ahead."

Ryan delivered his remarks in Washington at a conference held by the National Association of Manufacturers. Among the principles he outlined: permanent rather than temporary changes and comprehensive reform for individuals and businesses.

He also pushed for adoption of a territorial tax system for multinational corporations. Currently, the United States is one of only a handful of countries that tax businesses on worldwide earnings once they are brought back into the country — encouraging companies to shift their headquarters and profits overseas.

"We are actually very unique in the world in the way we discourage capital from coming back to America and how we incentivize off-shoring jobs," Ryan said in his prepared speech. "This is not the kind of exceptionalism we should aspire to. … We must think differently, so that once again we make things here and export them around the world."

The tax plan Ryan unveiled a year ago tried to address that problem by allowing companies to deduct the cost of goods made in America. The measure, which became known as the border adjustment tax, would have raised the cost of imports but lowered the cost of exports, and it faced stiff opposition from retailers.

Ryan conceded Tuesday that his plan lacks support within the White House. But he doubled down on the need to move to a territorial system.