[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: William J. Clinton (1995, Book I)]
[February 27, 1995]
[Pages 269-270]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks on Signing the Executive Order To Facilitate Payment of Child 
Support and an Exchange With Reporters
February 27, 1995

    The President. I'm glad to be joined here by the members of this 
administration who are active in child support enforcement and by 
advocates of tougher child support enforcement.
    Today the Executive order I have just signed is another important 
step in our efforts to bring the Federal Government in line with the 
basic values of ordinary Americans. People who bear children and bring 
them into this world have an absolute responsibility to do their best to 
take care of them. And any parent who isn't paying child support should 
be required to pay.
    The action I'm taking today builds on the work we've been doing for 
the last 2 years to step up child support enforcement. Just last week, 
the Department of Health and Human Services reported that we collected a 
record $703 million in delinquent child support enforcement in 1993 by 
garnishing income tax returns of parents who failed to pay. That is a 13 
percent increase in child support collection. It helped almost one 
million families.
    The Executive order I just signed will make the Federal Government a 
model employer in the area of child support enforcement. It will make it 
easier for us to find Federal employees who don't meet their obligations 
to their children. It will speed up our ability to garnish wages and 
force them to pay the child support they owe.
    Any parent who is avoiding his or her child support should listen 
carefully: We will find you. We will catch you. We will make you pay.
    Children should not suffer for their parents' mistakes. Too many 
children in this country do suffer because of their parents' 
irresponsible behavior. We can't let them be punished any longer. When 
parents don't provide the child support they owe, their children pay 
forever, and in more ways than financial.
    The toughest enforcement measures ever proposed for child support 
were part of the welfare reform legislation I sent to the Congress last 
year. Our plan said to absent parents, if you're not paying your child 
support, we'll garnish your wages, suspend your license, track you 
across State lines, and if necessary, require you to work off what you 
owe. Child support enforcement is essential to the welfare reform 
effort, and Congress should include these tough child support 
enforcement measures in the proposed welfare reform legislation. We 
should be tough on deadbeat parents, not on innocent children.

[[Page 270]]

    Again, I thank all the people who have helped to put together this 
child support enforcement order. We will proceed to aggressively 
implement it.

Balanced Budget Amendment

    Q. Mr. President, What's your reading on the balanced budget 
amendment in terms of passage?
    The President. I think it's a close vote.
    Q. How close?
    Q. Have you talked to Senator Nunn yet?
    The President. I've talked all the undecided Senators, to the best 
of my knowledge. I've talked to several, anyway.
    Q. You think Nunn will hold out?
    The President. I think I should let him speak for himself.
    Q. What is it going to take to defeat it tomorrow?
    The President. I think it depends upon what those undecided Senators 
believe is the right thing to do.
    Q. Are you going to be meeting with any of them today or tomorrow, 
Mr. President? What will you be doing to try and head this thing on?
    The President. I'm not sure. I've had extensive conversations with 
all of them. I don't know what else I'll be doing.

Chelsea Clinton's Birthday

    Q. How are you going to celebrate Chelsea's birthday? Just a little 
offbeat.
    The President. Well, we're going to have dinner tonight. You know, 
it's a school day. You don't get your birthday off at school. [Laughter]
    Q. You're not going to be a deadbeat father, are you? [Laughter]
    The President. I got up this morning, and we had a nice visit this 
morning for her birthday. But we're going to have--we're going to have a 
dinner. We're going to have a family dinner tonight to celebrate her 
birthday. And then after the press of her school activities clears, 
we'll probably have a little party for her. But she didn't want one 
tonight, so we're just going to have a family dinner.
    Q. Can you raise a teenager in the White House? [Laughter]
    The President. Well, I think she's doing very well. She's doing very 
well.
    Thank you very much.

Lincoln-Douglas Sculpture

    Q. And what are you doing with Lincoln and Douglas on your desk? 
Does that portend something?
    The President. When C-Span came in here and did the interview for 
President's Day, they gave me that. I liked it a lot. And I met the 
people who played Lincoln and Douglas in the Galesburg, Illinois, debate 
when we were out there. I just liked it. I thought it looked good on the 
desk. Besides that, it reminds me that this town has always been about 
argument. [Laughter]
    Thank you.

Note: The President spoke at 9:14 a.m. in the Oval Office at the White 
House. The Executive order is listed in Appendix D at the end of this 
volume.