[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: George H. W. Bush (1992, Book I)]
[February 24, 1992]
[Pages 297-300]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks to the United States Chamber of Commerce National Action Rally

February 24, 1992
    May I, at the outset of these remarks, thank the colonel and this 
wonderful Marine band. They are sensational. And I think I speak for all 
when we say we've enjoyed the music. Thank you.
    And I want to salute your incoming chairman, Bill Lurton, and your 
president, Dick Lesher, so well-known to everyone and doing a superb job 
for the chamber, and of course, your outgoing chairman, my friend Pete 
Silas.
    Let me tell you something, just a little word about Pete. Last week 
there was a newspaper report that more and more American business 
leaders are hailing this recent and somewhat controversial mission I 
took to Asia, they're hailing it as a success for opening markets, for 
creating more American jobs. But let me say this to all of you in the 
chamber, no one did more to make that mission a success than Pete Silas. 
He gave the trip the same leadership he's given this organization, a 
forceful and effective presentation, taking our case for open markets to 
Japan and Korea. And I am very, very grateful to him. And I can see why 
you entrusted your leadership to him. Pete, thank you very, very much 
for that leadership that makes us so proud.
    Well, today we're noting an anniversary of sorts. One year ago, 
almost to the hour, our troops began punching through Iraqi lines to 
liberate Kuwait. We mobilized our strength and won that war with an all-
volunteer force including tens of thousands of reservists. Many of you 
had to do without key personnel during the Reserve callup. Some of you 
answered the call yourselves. And as your Commander in Chief, I want to 
express deep thanks to our business men and women for playing a proud 
role in America's world leadership. I think it is fitting a year later 
to take note of those historic events.
    But I came here now to ask support on another matter. I need your 
help to meet yet another challenge, renewing the freedom and strength of 
our economy.
    Four weeks ago, I spoke to the Congress and the American people. In 
my State of the Union Message, I announced a set of urgent measures that 
I would take to unshackle our economy. And I asked Congress of the 
United States to do its part and to meet a deadline. Most important, I 
asked Congress to cut the high taxes on job creation and investment and 
to do this by March 20th. Well, my plan will get our economy moving 
again. And we need to liberate private enterprise from a Government 
that's grown too big and spends too much. And we need to do it without 
raising taxes.
    In my State of the Union Address, I instituted a 90-day freeze on 
Federal regulations that affect economic growth, and I asked major 
departments and agencies to carry out an unprecedented top-to-bottom 
review of all existing and proposed regulations. Within those 90 days, 
we will acceler-

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ate new rules that promote business growth and, whenever possible, halt 
those that would impede growth. Already, we've seen results.
    Today, for example, I am announcing major new ground rules for 
regulation of biotechnology. Bill Reilly, the EPA Administrator, I 
understand is with you all today. He'll have a major responsibility for 
making our new rules work to foster economic growth. This is a $4 
billion industry. And it should grow to $50 billion by the end of the 
decade, if we let it. The rewards we will reap include new medicines and 
safer ways to clean up hazardous waste and a revolution in agriculture. 
The United States leads the world in biotechnology. And I intend, 
through sensible regulation and, in some instances, deregulation, to 
keep it just exactly that way.
    We've taken new actions to ease the credit crunch. For example, for 
healthy banks, we've changed overly strict definitions of bank capital, 
creating more access to capital. We're cutting redtape for healthy banks 
and thrifts. In these tough real estate markets, we've issued 
commonsense, realistic valuation guidelines.
    We're making it easier for small businesses to get capital from 
securities markets. We're increasing the maximum for small public 
offerings that get simplified handling by the SEC from $1.5 million, 
raising that to $5 million. We're cutting paperwork, and we're 
simplifying securities registration for small businesses. We've also cut 
the cost of compliance with the payroll tax system. We've cut paperwork 
and increased access for small business to electronic payment systems. 
Instead of heavy-handed enforcement, we're helping small firms meet 
their obligations.
    The few steps that I've just outlined, I know they're technical, but 
these few steps will provide billions of dollars in additional capital 
to the Nation's economy. But we won't stop after 90 days. We'll turn up 
the heat against overregulation, rule by rule and industry by industry.
    We'll take the case to Capitol Hill. For every unreasonable 
regulation we can't change through executive action, we will introduce 
reform legislation, and we will push the Congress to do its job and put 
an end to overregulation. I want the regulators and the Congress to 
remember one thing: If it doesn't make sense, if it hurts the economy, 
don't do it.
    One of my prime responsibilities as President is to open up world 
markets, that's what this trip was about, open up world markets, 
unlocking new opportunities for American workers and businesses. Free 
trade has come under attack these days, and that makes no sense 
whatsoever. Our exports are at record levels, guaranteeing millions of 
American jobs. With your help, we're going to open up the tremendous 
market opportunities of Mexico sooner, not later. With your help, we'll 
win global trade reforms for agriculture, services, and intellectual 
property.
    By protecting our freedoms, by opening markets here and abroad, and 
by pushing the envelope of excellence, I want to improve the quality of 
life for every man, woman, and child in this country. And I mean 
everyone. Some politicians want to divide us, divide us into economic 
classes. They're keen on defining people as poor or rich or middle 
class. They don't bother to ask you how you see yourselves or what your 
aspirations are. The Capitol Hill liberals have already made up their 
minds where everyone fits in some politically correct caste system. 
Well, that's not the way I see America. I don't apply a means test to 
the American dream. I want to increase opportunity for everyone. That's 
what fairness means.
    And once again, I could not have had better allies in my fight than 
the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. Chamber members share a sense of 
responsibility to your families and your firms and your communities and 
your Nation. You take your responsibilities personally, in your homes, 
among your families. You know it's not so important what happens in the 
White House, it's what happens in your house.
     My administration's strategies for fighting drugs and improving our 
schools are sound because they join Government's efforts to the 
responsibilities of parents and families. We know we'll win the battle 
against drugs through the moral grounding that begins and ends in the 
family. We'll renew educa-

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tion by giving parents more freedom and responsibility to choose their 
children's schools, to get involved in their kids' education.
    You carry these values into managing your business, the kind of 
values that say when the company's losing money, the boss doesn't take 
home a seven-figure bonus. Your companies get involved in the community 
because you're good neighbors. Big Government didn't make this country 
great. You did it. Our Nation's strength and generosity flow from 
private enterprise and voluntary initiative. It comes from seeing a 
problem, taking charge, getting involved, and not taking no for an 
answer.
    The Partnership for a Drug-Free America is a brilliant example of 
this. This business group, many of you may participate in it, 
voluntarily produces a million dollars a day in pro bono advertising to 
warn our kids about drugs. And we're making progress in that front. I am 
very pleased that the drug use for these teenagers is substantially 
down.
    Freely undertaken, corporate responsibility is one of the strongest 
fibers in our social fabric. So it's only natural that you should expect 
Government to serve the people responsibly, not to behave as an arrogant 
ruler. On this I faced a big fight. Time and again I fought to get 
Members of Congress to apply to themselves the same laws they impose on 
everyone else, laws on ethics, on equal pay, on civil rights for women 
and minorities. Each time, Congress drags its feet. They're slow 
learners up there on Capitol Hill, but you and I can make them learn. 
And that's just what we must do.
    As you know, and here's where I need you, I've sent the Congress a 
short-term plan to get our economy moving, as well as a longer term 
program for economic growth. I've given Congress a deadline of March 
20th to act on our most urgent needs, to pass this short-term plan. We 
need to lower those sky-high taxes on new jobs and investment, and that 
means that we must cut the tax on capital gains. And we ought to do it 
now.
    We need changes in the alternative minimum tax and a 15-percent 
investment tax allowance to encourage businesses to buy equipment, 
upgrade their plants, and start hiring again. We need new incentives to 
build and buy real estate, through changes in the passive loss rules for 
real estate developers. And we need a $5,000 tax credit for first-time 
homebuyers and penalty-free IRA withdrawals for first-time homebuyers. 
This is not all that controversial. I want to sign these reforms on 
March 20th. And I do need your help working with the United States 
Congress.
    We all know that this is a political year. We know Congress hates to 
make real decisions in election years. But that's why I see this March 
20th deadline as fair and realistic. It gives us a window in which to 
get this plan passed and put it into action, and most economists tell 
you it will stimulate immediately. And it still leaves everyone then 
more than 7 months for this traditional partisan politicking before 
election time.
    Today is the 27th day, the halfway mark of my 52-day deadline for 
action on that economic growth plan. So, it is time for a midterm report 
card. The stark and sorry fact is Congress so far deserves an F; they 
deserve a failing grade.
    The Ways and Means Democrats considered my plan for 2 hours, a hefty 
2 hours. And then, on a straight party line vote, they said no to these 
seven progrowth proposals. They said no to first-time homebuyers. They 
said no to letting people keep more of their capital gains earnings. 
They said no to helping new businesses write off their investment. They 
said no to each one of these vital proposals to create jobs now and get 
this economy moving.
    They said yes, though, to politics as usual. They went behind closed 
doors--you ask your people here in Washington--they went behind closed 
doors to design what they think is clever politics. Now the door is 
opening. And they have proposed a bill that raises taxes and, just as 
incredibly, breaks the budget agreement of a year ago. They not only 
want to take away your income, they want to dream up new ways to spend 
it, to take the restraints off Government spending. Take off those caps. 
Take off the brakes. Take off the spending controls that are so 
essential.
    They want to saddle Americans with a permanent tax hike, all to pay 
for a tempo-

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rary tax cut of 25 cents per person per day. What's worse, some of them 
have a bidding war in mind. To pay for that, they'd have to raise tax 
rates on people making more than $35,000 a year. Any economist will tell 
you that the last thing this economy needs is a tax increase.
    The contrast between my economic growth plan and the Democrats' new 
tax-increase scheme could not be more plain. Our plan will cut taxes on 
investment and job creation for all investors, for all homeowners, for 
all entrepreneurs. And it will do it without increasing the deficit.
    So, to the Congress at this halfway point before the deadline, I'll 
say it again: Pass my plan. Let's get America moving again.
    Come March 20th, if the Democrats send me the message they're 
talking about now, I will send it right back. I will veto it and send it 
back. And I don't want to veto a bad bill; I want to sign a good bill. 
And Congress has a responsibility to give the American people a growth 
bill right now.
    As Pete Silas knows, and a handful of you others old enough to 
remember, my path to office as a Chief Executive of the United States 
began in the world of small business. Fresh out of college, I joined a 
couple of partners and started a little business out in Midland, out in 
west Texas. It was there that I saw firsthand what the chamber does to 
translate business efforts into community achievements. As businessmen 
we knew freedom's benefits would be stronger if we joined hands to meet 
our responsibilities as citizens.
    Those days, Government wasn't quite as big or rapacious. But even 
back then we learned that we had to work together to keep Government 
growth and interference with free enterprise in check. That's what I'm 
asking that we do today, to do it urgently. I have a solid plan to get 
America moving again and keep it strong for the long haul.
    So when you go up to Capitol Hill, give your Congressmen and 
Senators a message from me: Get moving, or get out of the way. Let me 
tell you something, and I say this not out of flattery, but you, you men 
and women in this room, really can make a difference. There's never been 
a more urgent moment to win a victory for jobs for all Americans. We've 
won battles before, and we'll win this one, too. Together we can get our 
country moving swiftly and surely to a better future.
    Thank you all for what you are doing. And may God bless the United 
States of America. Thank you.

                    Note: The President spoke at 10:55 a.m. at DAR 
                        Constitution Hall.