[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: George H. W. Bush (1992-1993, Book II)]
[September 29, 1992]
[Pages 1690-1693]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks on Arrival in Blountville, Tennessee
September 29, 1992

    The President. You know, Naomi says this is the first time that 
she's introduced a President. But look at it this way, this is the first 
time I've ever been introduced by such a wonderful person, Naomi Judd. 
And I'm just pleased to have her with us on Air Force One.
    You know, lest you didn't know it, we

[[Page 1691]]

have a great Secretary of Education, as Secretary, Lamar Alexander, a 
former Governor of this State. I'm very proud to be with him. And of 
course, my old friend Howard Baker is still beloved not only in 
Tennessee but all across this country as a great leader. And may I 
salute another old friend. If we had more like these three that I'm 
about to introduce, everybody would not be yelling at me, ``Clean 
House!'' because you've got three greats in Jimmy Quillen, in Don 
Sundquist, and Jimmy Duncan right here with us today. Send us more like 
these three, and let's get this country moving again.
    Audience members. Clean the House! Clean the House! Clean the House!
    The President. That's it, we've got to clean it.
    And about these three characters over here, Barbara Bush and I are 
their friends, and we are very proud of that. They don't know how to 
throw horseshoes. We had them at Camp David, and they came in second, 
third, and fourth. [Laughter] But in life they're coming in first 
because of their talent and because of Larry's fighting back. And I'll 
tell you, we are very proud to have the Gatlin Brothers at our side. And 
of course, may I salute Sarah Sellers, our national committeewoman, and 
our great chairman in this State, Tom Hopper. They tell me we are going 
to win Tennessee, and they are absolutely right. I also want to salute 
the Volunteer High School Marching Band. Thank you all for being with 
us.
    This campaign, like every campaign for the Presidency, is about a 
simple question: What kind of America do we want for the young people 
here today? I want an America that remains a military superpower, but is 
the greatest economic superpower on the face of the Earth. We're going 
to make it even better.
    You know, I have spelled out a specific agenda for America's 
renewal, a specific comprehensive plan, an integrated agenda to create 
in America the world's first $10 trillion economy. I am proud of 
America's leadership role in ending the cold war, proud of the sons and 
daughters who wowed the world in the sands of Saudi Arabia. The 
Democrats want us to forget it, but we are not. I will continue to thank 
the sons and daughters of Tennessee who served with honor in Desert 
Storm. We're not going to let Bill Clinton forget that this was a proud 
moment in the history of the United States.
    Audience members. Where was Bill? Where was Bill? Where was Bill?
    The President. I don't know where he was. I'll tell you where he was 
on the war. You want me to answer the question? On Desert Storm he was 
on both sides. He was for the people that opposed it, but he was for 
those that supported me. That's a great thing, but you can't do that as 
President of the United States of America. You've got to make the tough 
call.
    But now what we've got to do is work with these great Members of 
Congress, using our experience to lead the way to new markets for 
American products because that is how we're going to create more good 
jobs for people all across the United States of America. You see, small 
business will create two-thirds of the new jobs in the new economy. 
Governor Clinton, well, he promises small business higher taxes and more 
redtape. I promise small business relief from taxation, regulation, and 
litigation.
    You know, we spend almost $200 billion a year on direct costs to 
lawyers. Japan doesn't pay that and neither do the European countries. 
My opponent doesn't think this is a problem. He's in cahoots with the 
trial lawyers, and they spend so much time in court that their favorite 
song is ``A Boy Named Sue.'' [Laughter] But here is my view. We've got 
to take the pressure off doctors who are scared to practice or Little 
League coaches who are afraid to coach. We've got to sue each other less 
in this country and care for each other more.
    I am proud of my record. All the Governor of Arkansas does is go 
around tearing me down, tearing our country down, saying we're less than 
Germany and a little more than Sri Lanka. He ought to open his eyes. We 
are the most respected country on the face of the Earth.
    But if you'll bear with me for just a minute, if he wants to talk 
about the past, fine. But let's take a look at what's going on in 
Arkansas. The people there are decent.

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They are hard-working. They are sound, grassroots people. But there's a 
lot they don't know about their Governor's record and a lot you don't 
know about it. The more you find out about it the more you know that 
Governor Clinton is wrong for President of the United States. He is 
wrong for America.
    Look at the issue of crime. We simply have got to take back our 
streets from the crackheads and the criminals. Candidate Clinton, oh, he 
talks a tough game. But in Arkansas, the average criminal served just 
one-fifth of his sentence, and then he's let back out on the streets. 
Compare that to the Federal prisons for which I am responsible. The 
average inmate there serves 85 percent of his sentence. When it comes to 
crime, I am not much for letting these prisoners out of jail early. If 
you steal a car or you beat up some elderly woman, you ought to go to 
jail. And I say this: You should not be let out until you're eligible 
for a birthday salute from Willard Scott.
    Hey, don't take it from me, though. Listen to those in Arkansas. Ask 
the police over there in Little Rock. The cops who know Bill Clinton 
best have endorsed me as the best candidate for President of the United 
States.
    The same thing on every issue. I think of Howard Baker and the 
others standing here as leaders in fairplay on civil rights matters. 
Governor Clinton says he's for civil rights, but Arkansas doesn't even 
have a basic civil rights law.
    He says he's for the clean environment, but the Institute of 
Southern Studies ranked Arkansas 50th in environmental politics. It's 
the only place where fish teach the young fish to jog instead of swim. 
That's how polluted the rivers are over there. I love fishing. I'm a 
bass fisherman. The fish in Arkansas light up at night because of what 
the chickens are doing to the river.
    Governor Clinton says he's for high-tech. But under Clinton, 
Arkansas has been falling behind in high school. Three out of every four 
Arkansas graduates spend their first year in college relearning what 
they were supposed to learn in high school. That is not fair to those 
young people over across the way.
    Let's take a look at the economy. All we hear from him is how bad 
things are. I know we've been through some tough economic times. But we 
are affected, of course, by the global economic situation. Our 
competitors in Europe would trade places with us in a minute. Yet 
Governor Clinton offers America that European social welfare state 
politics: more Government, more special interest spending, and more 
taxes on the middle class. That is wrong for America.
    If you can take another horror story this early in the morning, let 
me tell you this: He has raised and extended the sales tax, including a 
tax on baby formula, vegetables, and other groceries. He raised the gas 
tax. He raised the mobile home tax. And for those of you ESPN watchers, 
he even taxed cable TV and slapped a tax on beer. How do you like that?
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. Now he says he's seen the light. In this campaign 
he's proposing at least $150 billion, direct proposal, in new taxes, 
plus at least $220 billion in new spending. ``Don't worry,'' he says, 
``I'll get it all from the rich, people making over $200,000 a year, the 
top 2 percent.'' But here's the problem, and here is the truth. To get 
the money that he needs for his plan, the $150 billion that he's already 
promised in new taxes, he would have to get his money not from those 
with over $200,000, but from every individual with taxable income over 
$36,600, and that is not good for America. These people aren't out there 
on the ``Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous.'' They work hard, and they 
deserve a break. That's just the start of his tax campaign against the 
middle class. He will need hundreds of billions of dollars more to pay 
for all these programs he's promised.
    There's an old saying: When you hunt ducks you go where the ducks 
are. Well, he's hunting for ways to pay for all his promises, and he's 
going back to tax the middle class because that's where the bucks are.
    Listen to the news. Don't take my word for it. You 
listen to the newspaper from his own backyard, the Pine Bluff 
Commercial. Here's what they say, ``If Congress followed the example 
that Bill Clinton set as Governor of Arkansas, it would pass a program

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that hit the middle class the hardest.'' I say the middle class has been 
hit hard enough already. The Pine Bluff paper is not bluffing.
    Let me give you one example. Let me just--this is an example. Say 
you're a third-grade teacher with about 22,000 bucks a year in taxable 
income. Governor Clinton could have you fork over another $430 a year to 
the tax man. I say that you ought to be able to use that money to pay 
for your kids' education, pay the mortgage on the house, not send it up 
to the IRS in Washington, DC.
    And Governor Clinton will say, oh, I'm on the side of the middle 
class. But he says then, well, I'm going to have it both ways. Consider 
his principled stand on both sides of the Gulf War--I mentioned that--
when he said, and here's an exact quote, an exact quote, ``I guess I 
would have voted with the majority if it was a close vote, but I agree 
with the arguments the minority made.'' Now, how would that be for a 
Commander in Chief when you've got to stand up against aggression 
halfway around the world?
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. One day Governor Clinton says, ``Well, I'll never run 
for President.'' The next year he announces he's running for President. 
One day he says he's for the North American free trade agreement. Then 
he says, ``Well, I haven't made up my mind yet.'' One day he's for 
raising fuel efficiency standards on cars. And the next day he says, 
``Well, I'm flexible on that one.'' One day he says the middle class 
deserves a tax break. And the next day he's plotting new ways to hit the 
middle class to pay for all his programs.
    If he ever became President of the United States, and he won't, we'd 
have to replace the American eagle with a chameleon. That is not the way 
it works in the Oval Office. You cannot come down on both sides of every 
issue. You have to take your lumps, and you have to take a stand. I 
don't think that we can take a risk on Governor Bill Clinton to be 
President of the United States of America.
    You know, I've made mistakes as President. Different than him, I've 
admitted when I'm wrong. But I believe I've been a good leader, willing 
to make the tough calls. I'm a leader whose ideas are right for America.
    I stand before you today asking for your support so that we can go 
to work with a new Congress to fix the problems that stand in the way of 
this country; so that we can reform our health care system and reinvent, 
as Lamar is so eloquently stating, reinvent our American schools; so we 
can retrain our workers from one generation and create jobs for the 
next; so that we can cut Government spending and cut taxes and get this 
economy moving again; and also, so that we can limit terms for the 
Members of the United States Congress and give Government back to the 
people. Now, this is our agenda.
    If you want one who has a statistic for every problem, go ahead and 
cast your vote for the other guy. But if you're looking for a leader of 
experience, a leader of ideas, a leader who shares your values, a leader 
who understands that America's real strength is not in Government but in 
places like this marvelous town right here today in your great State of 
Tennessee, then I know I can count on your support on November 3d.
    Governor Clinton says that we are a nation in decline, somewhere 
less than Germany and a little better than Sri Lanka. I say we are the 
greatest, freest country on the face of the Earth. Now let's make life 
better for everybody at home by using that same courage and leadership 
we have to change the world.
    Thank you, and may God bless the people of Tennessee and the United 
States of America. Thank you all very, very much. What a wonderful 
rally.

                    Note: The President spoke at 10:17 a.m. at Tri-City 
                        Regional Airport. In his remarks, he referred to 
                        former Senator Howard Baker; entertainers Naomi 
                        Judd and the Gatlin Brothers; and Sarah Sellers, 
                        member, Tennessee State Republican executive 
                        committee.