[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: William J. Clinton (1996, Book I)]
[June 20, 1996]
[Pages 932-937]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks at the Women's Legal Defense Fund Luncheon
June 20, 1996

    Thank you very much. If I had any sense, I would quit while I'm 
ahead. [Laughter]
    Thank you for that wonderful warm welcome. I thank those here at the 
head table for their work, Ellen Malcolm and Pauline Schneider. John 
Bryan, thanks for sitting up here with me and upholding gender equality. 
[Laughter] I appreciate that. And thank you for proving as, I believe, 
one of America's truly outstanding chief executive officers, that it is 
possible to do well and to do good in one's life. Thank you for what you 
have done. [Applause] Thank you.
    And thank you, Judy Lichtman. You know, she was saying all that 
about constancy and always being there. And the truth is, I just could 
never bear to disappoint her. [Laughter] You are a remarkable national 
treasure for what you have done here, and we are very grateful to you. 
Thank you. Thank you.
    You were kind enough to mention the women who hold prominent 
positions in our administration and who fill the judgeships of this 
country, and the U.S. attorneys positions and others. There are two who 
came with me today who have a lot to do with the work we do on women's 
issues, and I would like to acknowledge them in particular, Alexis 
Herman and Betsy Myers. I thank them for what they have done in--
[applause].
    I note with some satisfaction and pride that in the last 2 years you 
have had the Vice President speak here, and then you had Hillary speak 
here. And I am glad you finally got around

[[Page 933]]

to me. [Laughter] I appreciate being given the chance to come.
    I also appreciate, and I know Congresswoman Jane Harman, who's here 
with me, appreciates what you said about the Congress and the budget. 
John heard me say this yesterday, but about 10 days ago or so I was at 
one of these fundraisers, you know, that you do a lot of at this time of 
year. And there was a gentleman there at the fundraiser who had brought 
his son. His son was his companion at the fundraiser. And this young man 
was 10 years old. I asked him after this interchange how old he was 
because he was so amazing. This young man comes up to me, shakes my 
hand, says, ``You know, Mr. President,'' he said, ``I imagine it's 
difficult for you to hear a funny joke that you can actually retell in 
public, isn't it?'' [Laughter] A 10-year-old boy. And I said, ``Well, 
now that you mention it, it kind of is. When I was a Governor, I used to 
keep people laughing all the time. Then they told me it wasn't 
Presidential.''
    And he said, ``Well, I heard one that I think you can use. I think 
it's appropriate.'' [Laughter] I said, ``All right, what is it?'' He 
said, ``Well, you should tell people that your being President with this 
Congress is sort of like a man standing in a cemetery. There are a lot 
of people under you, but nobody's listening.'' [Laughter] In case you'd 
like to meet that young man, he's now the youngest member of the White 
House speechwriting staff--[laughter]--and intending to support his 
parents in their old age.
    I am very honored to be here, especially on your 25th anniversary, 
to thank you more than anything else for the work that you have done for 
opportunities for women, for stronger families, and a brighter future 
for America. As many of you have heard me say so many times, I am 
convinced that we are moving into an age of enormous possibility for our 
people as we move from the industrial age to the information age, as we 
leave the cold war behind for a new global society that is full of its 
own problems but still provides people more opportunities to live out 
their dreams in different ways than any previous period in human 
history.
    I ran for President because I wanted to move our country into the 
21st century, meeting the challenges of this new era, protecting our 
values, and guaranteeing that every American who would be responsible 
should have the chance to pursue opportunities that would give every 
person, without regard to their race, their gender, their background, 
the chance to live out their dreams, because I wanted to see this 
country coming together instead of being divided. And I was very tired, 
and I'm even more tired today, of seeing the political process used to 
take this incredible kaleidoscopic, diverse society to divide the 
American people when we ought to be working for ways to unite the 
American people, and because I felt very strongly that our country at 
the end of the cold war could not revert to its historic impulse to 
withdraw into our borders, that this is a time when we have to stay 
involved in the world, when only America can be the world's greatest 
source of inspiration for peace and freedom and for prosperity.
    So those were the things that I wanted to do when I ran for this 
job, that I was determined to do when I got this job. And you have 
helped in that mission. You know, preserving the basic values of America 
and making us live up to them, that's really what the Women's Legal 
Defense Fund is all about. The opportunity for people to live out their 
own personal dreams and to build strong families and forge strong 
communities, that's really what the Women's Legal Defense Fund is all 
about.
    We are still working on those things, and we are still bedeviled by 
some old problems. Yesterday, you may have seen in the press reports, I 
spent a lot of time working with Governors and other officials to try to 
come up with even more effective strategies to not only find the people 
who are burning these religious institutions--most of them African-
American churches, at least one of them a mosque and, I might add, some 
white churches that have burned in our country in the last 18 months. 
There has been a big upsurge in overall burnings of religious 
institutions in the last 18 months. But we were also searching for ways 
to reach the heart of America to prevent these things from occurring, 
because they are a stark reminder that while we value religious liberty 
more deeply than any other nation in human history, the demons that 
haunt the human spirit in every land are not absent from America. And 
you have to stamp them out whenever they rear their ugly head.
    I will always be very grateful, as Judy said, that the first law I 
signed was the family and medical leave law. And I wanted it so badly. 
And some of you may remember, it was a hotly debated issue in the 1992 
campaign because

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Congress had already passed it, and it had been vetoed once, maybe even 
twice, I can't remember. But the thing that struck me about it is that 
it was the symbol of the kind of country we should be trying to build. I 
am the son and the grandson of working women. I never thought there was 
anything abnormal about it. But I also know that the most important job 
any man or woman has is doing a good job of raising the children that 
they're fortunate enough to bring into this world.
    And it seems to me that if you look at the pattern of work and 
childrearing and the tensions between them and the troubles so many 
people still have finding adequate child care and the difficulties so 
many people still have earning a decent living, an adequate living to 
raise their children, and still have time left over to spend time with 
their children, one of the central goals of America in the 21st century 
should be to enable people to succeed at work and at home. If we have to 
choose one or the other, we're going to be in trouble. We know now that 
our economy needs all these people in the work force. We know that most 
families, even two-parent families, need both incomes to have a good, 
stable life. How can we even imagine a world with even more rapid 
changes and more unforeseen challenges that doesn't have systems in 
America for people succeeding at home and at work? If we have to give up 
succeeding at work to raise our children, our economy will surely 
suffer. If we have to give up successfully raising our children just to 
make a living, well, the money won't be worth it.
    The family and medical leave law puts this country on record as 
saying our national goal is to enable people to be good parents and 
successful at work. And I'm proud to say that a recent bipartisan panel 
concluded that just since the law has been in effect, 12 million 
American workers have been able to take time off when they had a birth 
in the family or a sick child or a sick parent without losing their 
jobs. Almost 90 percent of the businesses that were surveyed said that 
complying with the law costs them little or nothing. This has been good 
for families and good for America.
    The other day we had a very impressive group of people in the White 
House, the children who were the designated representatives of the 
Children's Miracle telethon in each of the States, children who had been 
desperately ill in children's hospitals, and they and their parents came 
to the White House. And I went downstairs to shake hands with all of 
them. And before I got out of the room, two of the parents spontaneously 
had come up to me and said, ``We would never have made it if it hadn't 
been for the family leave law. I got to keep my job and try to help take 
care of my child. I don't know what this country was like before it.''
    And I can say to you it's amazing to me there are still people who 
say that we shouldn't have passed it. There are still people stubbornly 
saying, ``Oh, there must be some way around this.'' There is no way 
around it. Our goal should be success at home; success at work. And 
that's what it's all about. And if it hadn't been for the Women's Legal 
Defense Fund, it might not be the law of the land. You were there a long 
time before I had a chance to sign it, and I thank you for that.
    I've sought for other ways to give women and particularly families 
more power, more control. It is true that I have fought to protect the 
right to choose and reproductive rights. We also have dramatically 
expanded what I call the family tax credit, the earned-income tax 
credit, so that as we go forward today it's worth about $1,000 to every 
family in the country with an income of $28,000 or less with children in 
the home. Our goal is to say if we're going to preach at people to work, 
the tax system should not put them in poverty if they have children at 
home. If you work full time and you have children at home, the tax 
system should lift you out of poverty, not push you down into it. That's 
what the earned-income tax credit's all about, and I'm very proud of it. 
And I have opposed vociferously the attempts in the last year and a half 
to cut back on it in ways that would, in effect, raise taxes on the 
hardest pressed working families in this country. That is wrong. Success 
at home; success at work; don't let the Government get in the way of 
that. The Government should be helping that.
    We also have tried to give parents more control in helping to raise 
their children. That's really what the crusade we've been on trying to 
restrict advertising of tobacco products to children is about. And it's 
what the V-chip was all about. And I applaud the entertainment industry 
for their willingness to develop these rating systems on television. I 
don't believe in censorship; I just believe parents ought to have some 
ability to raise their kids and to try to

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expose them to things in the appropriate way at the appropriate time.
    This is the thing that I think all of you--I think it would be 
helpful to all of us if we began to think in these terms. We don't have 
a person to waste. We need everybody's ability. We need people to have a 
chance to grow up and have good schools and a clean environment and safe 
streets and also strong families. And when I think--when I imagine what 
the world is going to be like 10 or 15 years from now, I know that there 
will be millions of people working 10 years from now in jobs that have 
not even been created yet. Some of them we can't even imagine.
    And it will be a very exciting time if we have a system by which we 
can work with other freedom-loving people to fight back the security 
threats we face from terrorism and biological and chemical weapons and 
things like that and if we have a structure of community and family here 
at home that enables us to give people the chance to be successful at 
home and successful at work and children the chance to have safe streets 
and good schools and a clean environment. If we can do that, if we can 
set up that framework, there are no guarantees in life, but at least 
people will have the opportunities they need.
    One other thing I want to say about that is that that means that 
this country must say that the level of crime and violence we have is 
simply unacceptable, and it is not unavoidable. We can do something 
about it.
    You know, when we passed the crime bill in 1994, it embodied the 
central commitments I made to the American people when I ran for 
President. We also passed the Brady bill then. I said, ``I want the 
Brady bill. I want the assault weapons ban. I want 100,000 police on the 
street. I want `three strikes and you're out' for serious offenders, but 
I want funds going to communities to give young people the chance to say 
yes to something, to stay out of trouble before they get into trouble.'' 
That's what I think we ought to do.
    And I have spent years and years going around visiting people in law 
enforcement and looking at these programs and trying to learn what 
works--first, of course, in my own State and then, when I began to 
travel some, around the country. And I was convinced that we can bring 
the crime rate down. I'd seen it happen in various communities simply by 
implementing these strategies. And there were those who said that the 
crime bill was a fraud and a fake and wouldn't have any impact. Well, I 
can tell you that it's 1996 now, and we're almost halfway home on 
putting those 100,000 police on the street. We're ahead of schedule. We 
are under budget.
    We have passed the assault weapons ban. And there haven't been any 
hunters and sports men or women lose their weapons and their bullets and 
all that. It was all a big smokescreen. Everybody who wants to go deer 
hunting is still doing it. [Laughter] But I'll tell you something, there 
are 60,000--let me say it again--60,000 felons, fugitives, and stalkers 
who have not been able to buy handguns because of the Brady bill's 
checking period.
    Now the Supreme Court has agreed to review a case over the 
constitutionality of requiring local law enforcement officials to help 
make sure that a person buying a handgun is legally entitled to do so. 
Well, I just want to make clear I am going to do everything in my power 
to keep the Brady bill the law of the land. It's keeping people alive. 
It's a good thing. Convicted felons and fugitives and people who are a 
threat to the community or to their own spouses and children should not 
be out there, if we can keep them legally from having the handguns by a 
simple waiting period so that we can check whether they should have it 
or not. Every law enforcement organization in this country has endorsed 
the Brady bill. And we dare not walk away from it. It is keeping people 
alive.
    And let me point out now, the crime rate in this country is going 
down this year. It is going to be the 4th year in a row that it's gone 
down. It's because people all over this country now have figured out 
community policing works, because prevention strategies work, because 
this whole approach works. There's more to do. We need to ban these cop-
killer bullets so our police are not at risk when they're out there. But 
this is working. And the point I want to make to you is that we can make 
a difference here. We can make a difference here. Don't let anybody tell 
you that America is just an inherently violent country, and we have to 
tolerate this level of violence. It is simply not true. We can do 
better.
    There's more to do in a lot of other ways. I thank you for support 
of the minimum wage. Ten million people depend on it, and we need

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to raise it. I'm rather tired of being told that the only people that 
get the minimum wage are middle and upper middle class teenagers who are 
living at home with their parents who don't need it. Sixty percent of 
the people on the minimum wage are women workers. Many of them have 
children they're trying to support on the minimum wage.
    We have to help people adjust to the changes in the new economy. 
That's why I, even though--and I appreciate what Judy said about health 
care, and I thank--so many of you helped Hillary when we committed the 
unpardonable sin of trying to give every American health care that they 
could afford. [Laughter] And somehow I don't think God's going to hold 
it against us when our final accounting comes.
    But we ought to pass the Kennedy-Kassebaum bill, and we ought to do 
it now. We ought to do it in an uncluttered fashion. And we ought to 
quite fooling around with it. It's time to stop holding these good 
legislative measures. That bill passed 100 to zero in the Senate. And it 
is now being held hostage to controversial measures inessential to the 
fundamental purpose of the Kennedy-Kassebaum bill. We should pass it 
now. People should not lose their health care because somebody in their 
family has been sick or because they have to change jobs. That is wrong, 
and we can change it and we should do it.
    We ought to guarantee that whenever someone loses a job or they're 
grossly underemployed and they need more training, they qualify for 
Federal help. I believe they should get a voucher they can take to their 
local community college. That's the ``GI bill'' for American men and 
women workers. That has been tied up in the Congress over an ideological 
argument, extraneous to the merits, for a year. It is time to pass that.
    The Congress has a package of pension reform legislation which would 
make it much easier for small businesses and self-employed people to 
take out pensions and then to carry it with them from job to job without 
ever losing their coverage. That sounds like a simple thing if you 
happen to work for the Government and you've got a good retirement 
program or you're fortunate enough to be in a big company with a good 
retirement program. But it is a huge deal to American men and women who 
do not have access to this. And as far as I know, there is no opposition 
in the Congress to this package of pension reform legislation. We ought 
to pass it, get out there, tell people you can at least save for your 
retirement, and you won't lose it if you lose your job for a while or 
you have to change jobs. These are important measures that need to pass.
    And I believe that while we dare not get into some flagrant tax-
cutting war until we finish the work of balancing the budget, we should 
give families a deduction for the cost of college tuition and a tax 
credit so that everybody who wants to can go to at least 2 years of 
education after high school, to make community college, 14 years of 
education, not 12, the rule in America. We need it. It would help the 
American economy. It would lift the incomes of millions of working 
women.
    I also want to say that we have more to do in the area of public 
safety, especially on the issue of domestic violence. A lot of you were 
particularly active when we were working for the crime bill in passing 
the violence against women provisions and setting up the domestic 
violence operation in the Justice Department which Bonnie Campbell is 
doing such a good job of heading. And I thank you for that. But there is 
more to be done there. Violence against women is certainly no stranger 
in this country. It is an unwelcome intruder. And it is not a family 
problem, and it is not a woman problem, and let me say it is most 
assuredly not just a poor person's problem. This is an American problem 
that we have to face.
    In September Federal prosecutors used that law to ensure that a man 
convicted of severe violence against his wife was sentenced to life in 
prison. The Violence Against Women Act says that victims of domestic 
violence should be able to seek relief in Federal court for a violation 
of their civil rights, and yesterday a Federal judge upheld that 
provision of the law as well.
    Last February we launched a 24-hour, 7-day, toll-free hotline so 
that women in trouble can find out how to get emergency help, find 
shelter, or report abuse to the authority. To date, the hotline has 
responded to over 20,000 calls from women all across this country. 
Again, that's just the first 3 months; we don't have the latest up-to-
date. But think of that; a lot of those people never would have even 
called for help before. And I'll get in my plug; the number is 1-800-
799-SAFE. And I want people to keep using that number. We are working 
those cases and helping people.

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    Today we are taking the next step. I am proud to announce that our 
Justice Department is awarding over $46 million to help 336 different 
communities in America to fight domestic violence through the community 
policing program. The police departments who will be receiving these 
grants have well-established community policing programs, strong 
relationships with local providers of services to victims. We're 
coupling the power of the police forces rooted in the community with the 
experience of people who have been fighting domestic violence for a long 
time.
    And again I say, this will work. I was in San Diego recently, and 
let me just give you one example. Their police department has one of the 
largest domestic violence networks in America. They formed it in 1992, 
and since then, domestic violence homicides have been cut by 50 percent. 
You must believe we can do something about these problems, otherwise all 
these things just become words. I'm telling you, you can make a 
difference if we do the right things and we do them together. The San 
Diego police department is getting a grant today that they will use to 
start an information network with the local YWCA to give victims and 
service providers and police officers one-stop access to all the 
available help in the area, to bring the domestic violence rate in San 
Diego down even more, and to help victims as they work to take control 
of their lives back.
    As I said when I announced the hotline, you know, if it just saves 
one life it's worth it. But it's not enough. We have to keep doing this 
until this is the exception, not the rule. We have to keep working on 
all these problems until crime is the exception, not the rule. We will 
never rid the country of crime. We will never have no domestic violence. 
But you know what the test is? The test will be when you can go home at 
night, turn on the evening news, and if the lead story is a crime story, 
if the lead story is a domestic violence story, you are surprised 
instead of numb to it. That is the test. And we have to keep going until 
you are surprised again.
    So I will close by echoing Judy's wonderful remarks. As you 
celebrate 25 years of progress in the lives of women and strength for 
the women and families of this country, I ask you to rededicate 
yourselves to the work yet to be done. I ask you to see this as an 
unfinished journey. I ask you to celebrate your achievements as evidence 
that you can make a difference.
    Sometimes I think that when we think about our thorniest problems, 
our biggest difficulty is that we tend to get so weighed down by them we 
think that we can't change the fundamental fabric of this society. Two 
hundred twenty years-plus of American experience gives the lie to that 
cynicism. You can make things better. You can make progress. We can make 
a difference. You have a great 25 years, and you have got an agenda that 
will fill up the next few years. I ask you to embrace it with vigor and 
good humor and determination and courage, and we will prevail.
    Thank you, and God bless you all.

Note: The President spoke at 12:55 p.m. at the Washington Hilton Hotel. 
In his remarks, he referred to Ellen Malcolm, president, EMILY's List; 
Pauline Schneider, vice chair, and Judy Lichtman, president, Women's 
Legal Defense Fund; and John Bryan, chief executive officer, Sarah Lee 
Corp.