[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: William J. Clinton (1994, Book I)]
[May 26, 1994]
[Pages 989-990]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks on Signing the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances Act of 1994
May 26, 1994

    Thank you very much, General Reno, for your leadership on this 
issue. Thank you, Mr. Vice President. Senator Kennedy, Chairman Brooks, 
Congressman Schumer, Congresswoman Schroeder, Congresswoman Morella, 
thank you all for your leadership. I thank the Republicans as well as 
the Democrats in the Congress. I think it is important to point out that 
this bill had bipar-


[[Page 990]]

tisan support. I'd also like to acknowledge the presence here today 
among us of David and Wendy Gunn, the children of Dr. David Gunn from 
Florida. Thank you for coming, and you're welcome here today.
    Enacting this bill to provide freedom of access to clinics has been 
a priority because protecting the freedoms of our citizens is surely 
chief among the responsibilities of the President of the United States. 
This bill is designed to eliminate violence and coercion. It is not a 
strike against the first amendment. Far from it, it ensures that all 
citizens have the opportunity to exercise all their constitutional 
rights, including their privacy rights under the Constitution.
    Our people have genuine and deeply felt differences on the subject 
of abortion, even if abortion is safe, legal, and rare. But we must all 
agree that as a nation we must remain committed to the rule of law. It 
is what keeps us civilized. It is what enables us to live together. It 
protects our liberties as individuals and as a nation. It gives us the 
freedom at election time to try to elect those who agree with us and 
defeat those who don't. It gives us a way to carry on as one nation from 
many people with many different views.
    We simply cannot, we must not continue to allow the attacks, the 
incidents of arson, the campaigns of intimidation upon law-abiding 
citizens that has given rise to this law. No person seeking medical 
care, no physician providing that care should have to endure harassments 
or threats or obstruction or intimidation or even murder from vigilantes 
who take the law into their own hands because they think they know what 
the law ought to be.
    What happened to the father of Wendy and David Gunn should not have 
happened. The shooting attack that wounded Dr. George Tiller in Wichita, 
Kansas, should not have happened. Now with this legislation we will have 
a law with teeth to deal with those who take part in unlawful 
activities, who put themselves above and beyond the law. Because of the 
violence it will curb, the lives and property it will protect, and the 
constitutional rights of women it will uphold, the Freedom of Access to 
Clinic Entrances Act becomes law today.
    Let me say again that the awful circumstances which gave rise to 
this law are the most extreme example of a trend running in this country 
that I think is very bad for us as a democracy. I treasure and would 
fight and indeed die to protect the rights of people to express their 
views on this issue, no matter how different they may be from mine. I 
believe deeply that our country is strengthened by people whose 
religious convictions on this issue may be different from mine or from 
yours. But the implication that people who differ about what rights 
should be accorded to women in our society are somehow enthusiastic 
about abortion is just downright wrong.
    There is so much we have to talk about, so much we could be doing 
together to diffuse the intense anger and animosity and to listen to one 
another, to help the lives of children who have been born, to get them 
into good adoptive homes more quickly, more readily, often across racial 
lines--things that aren't available today. A lot of this could be done.
    But it will never be done if people who think they have a right to 
take the law in their own hands, to misrepresent the positions of their 
opponents, and to wreak violence in this country and verbal extremism, 
and to distort the tenor of public debate have their day. It is time for 
us to turn away from that. All the people in this country without regard 
to their position on abortion, I think, would say that parents have 
fundamental responsibilities to raise their children. The people who 
gave rise to this act denied Dr. David Gunn the right to be a parent 
throughout his lifetime. That was not a pro-life position.
    Let us take the opportunity in signing this not only to speak out 
against the extremism and the vigilante conduct which gave right to this 
law but to ask the American people once again to reach across these 
awful barriers and start listening to each other again and talking with 
each other again and trying to honestly deal with these problems again.
    Thank you very much.

Note: The President spoke at 12:10 p.m. in the Roosevelt Room at the 
White House. In his remarks, he referred to Dr. David Gunn, who was 
killed outside a Pensacola, FL, clinic on March 10, 1993, and Dr. George 
R. Tiller, who was wounded outside a Wichita, KS, clinic on August 19, 
1993. S. 636, approved May 26, was assigned Public Law No. 103-259.