[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: George H. W. Bush (1992-1993, Book II)]
[September 7, 1992]
[Pages 1492-1496]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks at the Republican Party Labor Day Picnic in Waukesha, Wisconsin
September 7, 1992

    Thank you so much. What a marvelous turnout. Waukesha knows how to 
do it. Thank you all very much. Barbara and I are delighted to be here. 
May I thank our great United States Senator Bob Kasten and say how lucky 
we are to have him and Eva in Washington, DC, two of the best. Please 
get out there and work hard in November. We've got to get more like him 
in the Senate. Of course, you heard from one of the great Governors in 
this country, Tommy Thompson, your own. I salute him and Sue Ann. I 
don't believe I've got a better supporter out there than Tommy Thompson.
    May I greet Jim Sensenbrenner. If we had more like him in the 
Congress you wouldn't have everybody yelling, ``Clean House.'' He's 
right. Most of them are wrong. We do need to clean House. That brings me 
to Joe Cook. I'd like to see him elected to the Congress. And then of 
course, John MacIver, an old friend who has been in these political 
trenches with me and Tommy and Bob Kasten for a long time; we salute 
him. Here's a guy who rolls up his sleeves, like so many of you, and 
just goes to work for what he believes. It's a great part of American 
politics. I salute him and every other volunteer out there doing the 
Lord's work. We are going to win because of all of you.
    Barbara and I started this morning up at the Mackinac Bridge in 
Michigan. With us

[[Page 1493]]

today, incidentally, is Michigan's Governor John Engler over there, 
another great Republican, John. We had a brisk 50-minute walk across 
that magnificent Mackinac Bridge. So when we say it's great to be at a 
picnic, we know what we're talking about. It's nice to be here, no more 
walks.
    Now, this Labor Day we gather at a triumphant moment in history. I 
can stand before you this morning and can say something no other 
President could ever say: The cold war is over, and freedom finished 
first.
    But America is not a nation that brags, not a nation that looks 
behind. We are loyal only to the future. So this Labor Day we must 
rededicate ourselves to the future of all who punch the time clock, pay 
the bills, sweat it out at tax time. Our number one priority must be to 
build economic security for the working men and women of this great 
country of ours.
    Today is the kickoff day for these campaigns. I think the American 
people feel this one has been going on about 10 months too long, and so 
do I. But nevertheless, this is the official kickoff day. My opponent 
will kick off his campaign with a message of fear, telling us that our 
country is in decline. But I ask you to look beneath the rhetoric and 
look at the facts.
    Governor Clinton will tell you that we're a nation in decline, 
slipping past Germany, headed south toward Sri Lanka, to use his words. 
Wrong, absolutely wrong, Governor Clinton. The world's most productive 
workers are not in Germany. They are not in Japan. They are right here 
in the United States of America, a lot of them right here today in 
Wisconsin.
    Governor Clinton will tell you that American wages are slipping. And 
he doesn't mention that since 1985, our workers have earned bigger 
paychecks and benefits than any other workers in the world. I want to 
see them even better. Governor Clinton says that people are working 
harder for less. He won't mention that adjusted personal income is 
higher than it was 4 years ago. That's because inflation, the thief of 
the middle class, has been securely locked away.
    Now, does this mean all is fine in America? Of course not. But at a 
time of uncertainty, a time of wrenching global challenge, Governor 
Clinton wants to scare American workers so that he can slip into office 
with the failed tax-and-spend policies of the past. Last night, I don't 
know if any of you heard that Tom Brokaw show, but last night the 
Governor appeared on the Brokaw show, and the first words out of his 
mouth were, ``I have advocated a tax increase.'' Well, Governor, that is 
the wrong prescription for America.
    He offers a treasure trove of new Government programs that will cost 
at least $220 billion more of your money. I say you already give too 
much to the tax man. He wants to raise taxes by $150 billion just to 
start; that's just for openers. I want to cut them and get the economy 
started in high gear.
    You heard what Bob Kasten said; he's right. We've been trying to get 
through this gridlocked Congress some incentives that he and I believe 
in, locked because of the old thinking of the Democratic leadership 
that's been in power for 38 years.
    So as this campaign gets into full swing, I make one promise. I will 
talk about real ideas: of making health care available to the poorest of 
the poor, controlling what you pay when you go to a doctor; about 
reforming welfare; giving our kids what they deserve, the world's very 
best schools. My policies will strengthen the most important institution 
in our Nation, and I am talking about the American family. The liberals 
are trying to back us away from discussing how to strengthen the family, 
and we are going to stay with it. America knows that the family is 
slipping, and we want to help strengthen it by child care and by support 
for these school choice and whatever it is, welfare reform. So let's 
keep talking about what America needs: strengthening the American 
family.
    But today, as Governor Thompson said, I want to talk about another 
roadblock in the way of you and your families' economic security: our 
crazy, out-of-control legal system. Don't just ask me about what's wrong 
with our legal system. Check the opinion of that famous enforcer of 
American justice. I'm not talking about Oliver Wendell Holmes or John 
Marshall. I mean

[[Page 1494]]

someone even more famous than that, Hulk Hogan. My grandkids tell me 
that in his movie last year, Hulk Hogan was confronted with the 
predictable crop of bad guys, only the bad guys refused to fight. 
Instead they said, ``This is the nineties; we're not going to fight you. 
We are going to sue you.'' [Laughter]
    Well, I believe that one statement sums up a lot of what is wrong in 
America today. You pick up the newspaper, and the stories roll on out at 
you. Like the story, true story, about a basketball referee who made a 
controversial call at the buzzer of a Purdue-Iowa basketball game. 
Purdue won, and an Iowa souvenir company was suddenly left with a lot of 
victory souvenirs that weren't in all that much demand. So what did the 
company do? They sued the referee. Sound crazy? Well, it took 2 years 
and a lot of money before the case was dismissed by the State supreme 
court.
    Now, understand, law is a noble and honorable profession; but most 
good lawyers will tell you that the system is out of control. In the 
past 20 years, the number of civil lawsuits filed in Federal courts has 
more than doubled. Today the average case takes almost a year to be 
resolved, and in the past year alone the number of cases were pending 
for 3 years increased by nearly 15 percent. That means you can file a 
suit, have time to enroll in a law school, study 3 years, graduate, pass 
the bar, and then represent yourself on the court the day the decision 
is handed down. Now, come on.
    The NAM, the National Association of Manufacturers, has just 
finished looking at what this litigation explosion costs our economy. 
According to a soon-to-be-released study, American consumers and 
companies will spend up to $200 billion on legal services this year, 
$200 billion. American businesses now spend more on insurance and legal 
fees than on training and preparing our workers for the new economy. And 
that is crazy. As a nation, I believe it's high time that we started 
suing each other less and caring for each other more. I have proposed a 
comprehensive plan to reform our civil justice system.
    And we must reform our product liability laws. These laws allow 
people to be compensated for harm caused by a defective product. People 
ought to receive fair compensation when a product is defective and they 
get hurt. But like so much of our civil justice system, product 
liability has careened out of control.
    Let me give you just one example. The Will-Burt Corporation of 
Orville, Ohio, stopped making parts for ladders and scaffolds and 
aircraft because they couldn't afford the liability insurance. That was 
bad news for the company's owners, but worse news for the 80 employees, 
all of whom got pink slips.
    Here is the problem. The product liability laws vary from State to 
State, and the rules have encouraged these crazy lawsuits and outrageous 
awards. And the cost of insurance keeps going right out through the 
roof, keeps skyrocketing. Big deal, right? So companies have to pay 
extra for a few lawyers. But it's not just companies who foot the bill; 
we all pay higher prices for everything from medicine to stepladders. We 
never get to see a lot of good products because companies are afraid of 
excessive lawsuits.
    Get this. Almost half of all the money paid out in these kinds of 
cases goes not to the injured party, but to the lawyers. I don't want to 
see only lawyers getting rich; I want to see American workers getting 
rich. And that's the problem. Our product liability system is killing 
our economic competitiveness, costing Americans secure jobs that you 
deserve. Our liability costs are many times greater than in Japan and in 
Europe. Every dollar we spend all around the courtroom is a dollar we 
won't spending on training, education, research, investment. It could be 
the difference between no jobs for our kids and good jobs for our kids.
    Now, we have to do something about this. Luckily, your great Senator 
Bob Kasten understands this. He has been fighting to 
change the system. And he has put forth a plan, which I am for, working 
with him on, to speed the legal process, settle more cases out of court, 
and bring some rationality to the product liability system. Once again, 
a Wisconsin man is in the lead. Our plan is proconsumer, probusiness, 
prosafety, and

[[Page 1495]]

projobs. The day my pen signs Senator Kasten's bill is the day we stop 
undermining the American worker that we salute today on Labor Day.
    So why then, if we have all these problems, do we face this crisis? 
Bob Kasten will tell you in three words, the gridlocked Congress. And 
that's why I'm here today.
    Forty-four years ago next month, another incumbent President came 
through Waukesha. His name was Harry S Truman. Now, I admit it; Harry 
and I don't have everything in common. He believed in bigger Government; 
I don't share that view. But quite frankly, I voted against Truman that 
year. But still there are some similarities between us.
    I've just read that fascinating book, this big, fat book on Truman, 
a marvelous biography. Harry Truman ran a small business. He knew what 
it was to meet a payroll, to work for a living in the private sector. 
And so do I. Harry Truman wanted to join the military and fight for his 
country. So do I, and I did. Harry Truman ran as an underdog, just as I 
am. And he liked it, and so do I. Harry Truman admitted when he made a 
mistake. And God knows I've done the same thing, and I've admitted it.
    But most of all, Harry Truman was frustrated by what he called the 
do-nothing Congress. Listen to Truman's very own words from right here 
in this very town 44 years ago: ``When I say do-nothing, I mean they''--
meaning Congress--``have done nothing for the people. They have not 
listened to the people's demands.''
    Now, the gridlocked Congress hasn't listened to people either. One 
example: I favor a balanced budget amendment. So do you. The Congressman 
from this very district sponsored the balanced budget amendment and then 
turned around and voted against his own amendment on the House floor. 
That's what I mean when I say ``gridlocked Congress.'' Clean House.
    For years, Americans have complained about this crazy legal system, 
but once again the gridlocked Congress has refused to act on my reforms, 
or on Bob Kasten's reforms. Later this week, we finally get a Senate 
vote on the product liability reform. My message to the gridlocked 
Congress today is simple: Either fix our legal system, stop undermining 
our workers, or we're going to take a broom and do some spring cleaning 
in November, because we are going to clean House.
    Send me some good leaders who will listen to the people, the way 
this Senator does. Elect Joe Cook to the House of Representatives. Help 
clean House. That's the message. They talk about change, change the one 
institution that hasn't budged for 38 years. Change the House.
    Well, we're going to clean House, not just so companies spend less 
time paying lawyers, more time creating jobs, not just so moms and dads 
can coach Little League without fear of some crazy lawsuit. We're going 
to clean House so we bring down health care costs, so we improve our 
schools, we take back our streets from the criminals, and we start 
backing up our law enforcement officials more and more.
    Now before I finish, it's worth mentioning that while I'm in 
Waukesha this morning, my opponent, guess where he is, he's in Harry 
Truman's hometown of Independence, Missouri. So let's just have some 
plain speaking about Bill Clinton, Governor Bill Clinton, and Harry 
Truman.
    Harry Truman never engaged in double-speak. He told people the 
truth, not merely what they wanted to hear. Compare that to Governor 
Clinton's position on reforming our legal system. The head of the 
lawyers, the head of the trial lawyers in Arkansas, Trial Lawyers 
Association, said Governor Clinton has, and I quote, ``always done what 
is right for the trial lawyers.'' I bet Harry Truman would have done 
what is right for the American people, not for the trial lawyers.
    Whether it was the Soviet blockade of Berlin or the invasion of 
Korea, Harry Truman never flinched from the tough decision. Now, 
contrast that with Governor Clinton's waffling and wavering about 
whether he would have followed my lead and stood up to Saddam Hussein 
and his naked aggression.
    Harry Truman prided himself on his own military service, and he 
frequently visited veterans associations and spoke with great pride 
about his service to his country.
    Last but not least, Harry Truman be-

[[Page 1496]]

lieved America could not turn our back on the rest of the world, even 
despite the challenges here at home. Governor Clinton virtually ignores 
foreign policy and flirts with the dangerous idea of sticking America's 
head in the protectionist sands.
    Harry Truman said, ``The buck stops here.'' On issue after issue, 
Governor Clinton says, ``First, let's blame George Bush,'' and then, 
``I'll get back to you later with an answer.'' I'll tell you, if the 
buck stops there, then Governor Clinton is offering devalued currency.
    Harry Truman was a man of decisiveness, not equivocation. He'd find 
little in common with Governor Clinton, a man who hedges or ducks on 
almost every tough issue, a man who seems to feel strongly on both sides 
of almost every issue that are before this great Nation. I found out 
something in the Oval Office: You can't have it both ways. You've got to 
call it as you see it. You have to make the tough decision and then pay 
the consequences or get the credit. But you can't be on every side of 
every issue, waffling around, and call that leadership. That is not 
leadership.
    You know, many people thought Harry Truman would lose in 1948. But 
he said what was on his mind. He didn't worry about the press. And he 
never lost faith in the United States of America.
    I stand before you with the same passion and that same faith. I will 
talk about ideas for the next 57 days, ideas that matter, ideas that can 
deal with the real challenges facing this country, ideas that won't make 
everyone happy but that will be right for the United States of America.
    And like Harry Truman, I believe a new age of America beckons and 
that we can reap the benefits. With your help, come November we will 
match our global victory with economic security here at home.
    Thank you all for being here. And may God bless the United States of 
America on this very, very special day. Thank you all.

                    Note: The President spoke at 10:16 a.m. at the 
                        Waukesha County Exposition Grounds. In his 
                        remarks, he referred to John MacIver, Wisconsin 
                        Bush-Quayle campaign chairman.