[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: William J. Clinton (1993, Book I)]
[May 12, 1993]
[Pages 644-648]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks at the Democratic National Committee Presidential Gala in New 
York City
May 12, 1993

    Thank you very much. To Bruce and to Lew, and to all of you, I've 
had a wonderful time tonight. These lights are so bright. I only know 
half the people I've shaken hands with. It has been a wonderful time. I 
want to thank all the people who made this dinner possible, and I want 
to thank the wonderful entertainment. The choir was terrific. The group 
doing all the wonderful old songs from Dionne Warwick in the sixties 
were magnificent.
    I was delighted to see Barry Manilow again in such wonderful voice, 
and grateful for his many contributions to our common efforts. I 
appreciated Phil Hartman saying he voted for me, but it's not quite 
enough for all the abuse I've put up with in advance. [Laughter] And I 
want to say to my friend, Whoopi Goldberg: Mayor Dinkins has a telephone 
call for you over here if you will go over and get it. [Laughter]
    Ladies and gentlemen, all of you who made this night possible--Lew 
and Bruce, Bob Rose and the other committee members, Bob Barrie, Bill 
Boardman, Paul Montrone, George Norcross, Felix Rohatyn, Ann Sheffer, 
John Sweeney, and Steve Swid, thank you all. Thank you, Roy Furman. 
Thank you, David Wilhelm.
    A lot of you were here with me a long time ago. I remember once, 
more than a year ago, when I came to New York and there were hundreds of 
people here in a hotel for a fundraiser for me. I was dropping like a 
rock in New Hampshire. All those experts said I was dead. I hear their 
call again. [Laughter] People who couldn't see the long road and didn't 
want to think of the fight as something that was bigger than any person 
were all preoccupied. And I just couldn't believe all these folks were 
even showing up for a dinner in New York. It was so dark in the 
campaign, I thought, well, people will go ahead and send their checks 
and then stay home. I imagined going into this vast ballroom and making 
a speech to eight people.
    And I was feeling pretty sorry for myself, frankly. And I told this 
story many times, but a man stopped me in the hall who was working at 
the hotel and said that he was a Greek immi-


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grant and he was going to vote for me because his son asked him to--was 
only 10 years old--that if I got elected, he wanted me to do something 
for his son. He said, ``Where I come from, we were poor but we were 
free. Here, I make more money, but my boy's not free. He can't go across 
the street and play in the park without accompaniment from me. He can't 
even go to his school safely without my going with him. And I want you 
to work to help make my boy free.'' And it made me remember what 
politics was all about. I don't even remember what I said that night, 
but I know all of a sudden I had forgotten about me and started thinking 
about the rest of America. And I think that is what we ought to think 
about tonight.
    When we talk about a program, it only counts if there are people 
behind it. New York City, for all of the problems you may think you 
have, has registered the first decline in the crime rate in 36 years, 
because you did something about community policing. So we know now that 
there is a strategy which can make people freer. That's what personal 
safety is. And there is no excuse for not doing something about it. And 
that's what politics is about: focusing on the dreams and hopes and 
fears and needs of people. Sometimes I think that when we have these 
wonderful dinners, which are delightful to me, I've gotten to see some 
of you that I haven't even seen since the election, just to say a simple 
thank you to you. Remember, we all did it so that we can make a 
difference in people's lives.
    I want to say a special word of tribute here with all the people 
from New York and New Jersey and Connecticut, and my friend Mayor 
Rendell and others here from Pennsylvania, and there's even a handful of 
folks here from my home State. They were the ones who were clapping when 
Lew Katz gave his Arkansas pander, which I appreciate. I want to say a 
special word about one person who is here. I want to congratulate my 
friend Jim Florio on winning the John F. Kennedy Profiles in Courage 
Award, for facing the financial problems of his State, for facing the 
educational problems of his State and, yes, for being willing to stand 
up for the police officers and the people of his cities and State who 
wanted to be safe from crime, standing up to the gun lobby, and being 
for safe streets. That's why he got the award, doing real things, even 
if they weren't so hot in the polls at the time.
    Now our country is being called upon together to try to do the 
things that we just talked about in the campaign. Governor Mario Cuomo 
said again today when he introduced me at the Cooper Union that we 
campaign in poetry, but we must govern in prose. It's another way of 
saying, and a more eloquent way of saying, it's a lot easier to talk 
about change than it is to do it. I was overwhelmed today to have the 
opportunity to speak on the same spot where Abraham Lincoln spoke at the 
Cooper Union in 1860. And I went back and read large portions of Mr. 
Lincoln's speech. He came to the Cooper Union and catapulted himself 
into the nomination of the Republican Party, into the Presidency, and 
into the history and hearts of America. He did it by saying this is a 
difficult time, we have to ask hard questions and give strong answers. 
He said that we could not allow slavery to continue to expand; and that 
if we did, it would destroy the United States. He said in many other 
places that if the house is divided against itself, it could not stand.
    Lincoln went on to become President, and he expanded his vision, and 
he eventually signed the Emancipation Proclamation abolishing slavery. 
In the White House we have a painting called ``Waiting for the Hour,'' 
of black slaves watching a clock at 5 minutes to 12, waiting for the 
stroke of midnight, January 1st, 1863, for the Emancipation Proclamation 
to become effective. Several times a week, often late at night, I go 
alone into the room where Lincoln signed that proclamation, and I 
remembered what the Presidency is really for: to help the American 
people move forward.
    It is for us now to put this house in order. And the beginning is to 
stop denying our problems and to accept some common responsibility for 
solving them. The first thing we have to do is to prove that the 
Government can be trusted with your money by passing a budget that will 
bring the deficit down. Look what has happened. Look what has happened 
just since the election, because finally the country has an 
administration trying to do that: long-term interest rates going down 
very low, 20-year low; billions of dollars, tens of billions being 
recycled into this economy, giving people the opportunity to make new 
starts. We have got to do that.
    We also have to deal with this health care crisis. You know, so many 
of you said nice things about Hillary tonight, and I want to say I 
appreciate it, because about every third day she stops speaking to me 
because I asked her to run the

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health care project. [Laughter] It is the most complex, the most 
daunting task in our domestic life. But it is also perhaps the most 
urgent.
    If we cannot give working families the security of knowing they're 
not going to lose their health care, if we can't give businesses the 
security of knowing that health care doesn't have to go up at 2 or 3 
times the rate of inflation, if we can't provide coverage to the 35 
million Americans which don't have it, if we can't face the crises of 
AIDS and the lack of health care in rural areas and big cities, and if 
we can't invest in research in those things that we have not come to 
grips with in health care, what can we do as a country? Every other 
nation has done a better job of many of these things than we do, and so 
we must.
    They say, well, you should only do one thing at a time. ``You can't 
walk and chew gum at the same time in Washington,'' that's what they 
say. But I say we will do one thing at a time, but we have to honestly 
put it all out there. If you want to bring the deficit down, you have to 
do health care. The only purpose of bringing the deficit down is to make 
the economy healthy. You have to invest in new technologies and give 
people incentives to create opportunity for others. It is not so simple 
as to say, well, just think about this and let another idea cross your 
mind a year or two from now. We have got to be about the business of 
rebuilding America. And we can do that if we keep our eyes on the whole 
picture: bring the debt down, invest in our future, deal with the health 
care crisis, deal with the special problems of special people in special 
areas that have been left out and left behind. I believe we can do these 
things.
    I also have to tell you here at this magnificent fundraiser tonight 
that I am so humbled that so many of you have helped me for so long and 
asked for nothing in return, and others have done it in spite of the 
fact that many of the changes that I have advocated are not in your 
personal, immediate, short-term interest. You ought to be proud of that, 
because I'm proud of you.
    One of the problems that has just killed this country is that all of 
us have had our blinders on and we've been able to see about 6 inches in 
front of our eyes. And all of Washington for too long has been dominated 
by that: 80,000 lobbyists, because of the absence of a compelling 
national public vision, each picking apart the public interest. Now I 
think we have to follow through also on our commitment to political 
reform, to campaign finance reform, to lower the cost of campaigns, 
reduce the influence of PAC's, and open the airwaves to challengers. 
It'll also be nicer for you if you could only go to one dinner a year 
instead of four or five. It's a good thing. We should do it.
    I also believe that we have to continue on this whole reform track. 
We passed a modified line-item veto in the House of Representatives. The 
Senate ought to pass it and let the President take the heat for 
controlling unnecessary spending. We ought to continue to work to open 
up the political process. Hallelujah, the gridlock was broken yesterday, 
and the United States Congress passed the motor voter bill to open up 
the political process to young people all across the country.
    These are things that can make a difference. We have to begin to 
think about America in terms of what's in it for all of us together so 
that we can move forward together. Let me just mention one or two things 
tonight. A couple of days ago I was in Cleveland, and on the way out of 
town, I went by a little pierogi place started by a wonderful young 
woman who wanted to start her own restaurant, couldn't get a bank loan. 
She came from a big Polish family, so she just took the Cleveland phone 
book and called hundreds of people with Polish surnames and asked them 
to invest in her business until she got 80 folks who'd give her $3,000 
apiece, and she's doing real well now. They're the kind of people that 
we ought to be fighting for.
    When I got to another one of my meetings, I saw a woman who had six 
children and was supporting these children all by herself, making a 
handsome salary that she had to give up because one of her children was 
so desperately ill the only way she could afford the child's health care 
was to become eligible for Government assistance, because we don't have 
a health care system. And she was there in my speech with her beloved 
child and their $100,000-a-month medical bills. They're the people who 
are worth fighting for.
    I received a letter yesterday from a wonderful young man and his 
wife who became friends of mine in New Hampshire and had a desperately 
ill child who had troubles at birth. And he lost his health insurance 
and he had to choose between working and not working to get on public 
assistance, and he struggled on. And

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the letter says that he just had to file for bankruptcy, but he hasn't 
given up on himself or his family or his country, and he wants me to 
keep fighting to make the economy better. That's what this whole effort 
is all about. There are real people and lives and dramas worthy of the 
greatest admiration behind so many stories in this room, so many stories 
in this country.
    I ask you for your continued support. I ask you to support the 
suggestion I made today that we're going to put all this money we're 
trying to raise into a deficit-reduction trust and say to the American 
people, every dollar of the tax will go to reduce the debt, and none of 
the taxes will be raised without the spending cuts. Tell the Congress 
that we ought to do it, instead of just fooling around with it and 
talking about it.
    But I ask you, finally, to remember that the atmosphere in which we 
labor, you and I, is still heavily laden with cynicism and skepticism. 
People have been disappointed on and off for 20 years. I was looking the 
other night at a little bit of history, an account of the Kennedy 
administration, reminding me that when President Kennedy was elected, 
the same sort of time, the same sort of moment, except that over 70 
percent of the American people, when he went in, believed that leaders 
told the truth to the American people and believed they could trust 
their leaders to do the right thing. We don't have that today. One of 
the things that those of you who had some personal contact and personal 
involvement in this administration can do is to help to restore the 
sense of faith that the American people used to take for granted.
    We simply can never succeed, ever, if every step along the way is 
burdened with people who are denying their own responsibility, waiting 
for someone to deliver them while making no effort, waiting for someone 
else to blame, letting the spite that comes out of every conflict 
overcome the larger vision and purposes that we are about. I am telling 
you, if we could do one thing tonight that would guarantee the success 
of everything else we're going to do, it would be all of us in our own 
way to walk out of here and say, let's try to put aside all of our 
differences and think about how we can lift up the people of this 
country. Let us, for a few months, suspend all of our cynicism and 
instead put our faith in the process that took us to the polls last 
November. Let us try to bring out the best in one another even in the 
most heated debates in the Congress.
    I worry from time to time only about one thing, and that is that the 
people who have to make these decisions will not feel the energy of the 
American people desperately saying, ``Change, have the courage to 
change. Challenge me, bring out the best in me. Do not give in to the 
pressures and the temptations of the moment but go forward to a better 
life.''
    I ask all of you, too, to remember that I'm going to get up every 
day and go to work and work hard. Some days I work smarter than other 
days, but every day I'll work hard. I ask you to remember that one of 
the great challenges of being President is to try to devote enough time 
and attention to the job to get the job done and save enough time to 
stay among the people, selling what you've done and listening and making 
the proper adjustment when there is something more you need to learn.
    I asked so many of you back during the election not to take the 
election as the end but the beginning of this enterprise. And so I 
invite you again to be a part of this great enterprise, with your ideas 
as well as your spirit. We've got 4 years of work to do. We can move 
this country forward in great ways and in profound ways that will 
benefit millions, indeed all, of the people of this country. But it's 
going to take every last good idea, and every last ounce of will and 
vision, and every ounce of courage and faith.
    You have to be a part of that. I want you to leave here tonight 
knowing that I still want that just as badly as I did in the election. I 
did not run for this job to move into the White House, as great an honor 
as that is. I did not run for this job even to have the enormous 
privilege of standing on Harry Truman's balcony and looking at the 
statue of Thomas Jefferson every night. I ran for it to be faithful to 
the tradition they established by making your life better, and you have 
to help me do that.
    Thank you and God bless you all.

Note: The President spoke at 9:35 p.m. at the Lincoln Center for the 
Performing Arts. In his remarks he referred to event chairmen Bruce 
Ratner, Lewis Katz, and Bob Rose; event cochairmen Bob Barrie, Bill 
Boardman, and Roy Furman, also Democratic National Committee finance 
chairman; event vice chairmen Paul Montrone, George Norcross, Felix 
Rohatyn, Ann Sheffer,

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John Sweeney, and Steve Swid; Democratic National Committee chairman 
David Wilhelm; Edward Rendell, Mayor of Philadelphia and honorary 
chairman of the event; and Gov. Jim Florio of New Jersey.