[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: William J. Clinton (1996, Book II)]
[August 30, 1996]
[Pages 1419-1422]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



[[Page 1419]]


Remarks to the Annual General Session of the Democratic National 
Committee in Chicago
August 30, 1996

    Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, you just heard a speech from the 
part of our ticket who got the most sleep last night. [Laughter]
    I asked Al last night, after the convention adjourned and I was just 
drained, you know--and you all were so wonderful to me, and I thank you 
very much--but I said, ``Gosh, I wish tomorrow we were getting up and 
taking the kids to the aquarium and the zoo and just kind of looking 
around Chicago, a wonderful town; I hadn't spent any time here. Why are 
we going out on that bus?'' [Laughter] ``Why are we doing that 
tomorrow?'' Totally deadpan, you know, just like he did in the speech, 
he said in his version of the macarena, you know, that dead stare--
[laughter]--he said, ``Because we do not wish Senator Dole to win the 
election.'' [Laughter] So I said, ``Okay, when I get up tomorrow and my 
back hurts and I'm whining around, you remind me of that so I can be in 
a good humor.'' [Laughter]
    Rabbi, Reverend Barrow, ladies and gentlemen, I just want to echo, 
if I might for a moment, a lot of what has been said and make two brief 
points about our party and our future. First, I want to thank Don Fowler 
for a lifetime of devotion to our party and for doing the hard work--out 
of the limelight and keeps going. I want to thank B.J. Thornberry and 
the staff at the Democratic National Committee who have worked hard to 
bring our party back.
    I thank Chris Dodd for his tirelessness and his eloquence. By the 
time he got through nominating me the other night I felt like a real 
President. [Laughter] I thought it was quite wonderful, and I thank you, 
sir.
    I want to thank Marvin Rosen and Scott Pastrick and all the folks 
that have worked so hard in raising our funds that for a year enabled us 
to be on television debating the different visions of the future that we 
and our opponents have.
    I feel deeply indebted to you, Debra DeLee, and to all the people 
who worked on the Chicago convention--a lot of people left the White 
House, volunteers came from all over the country. They did a wonderful 
job. I said before how very much I appreciate what Mayor Daley and 
Maggie did and the magnificent job that Bill Daley did in mustering a 
broad base of support for the Democratic Convention in Chicago, and I'm 
very grateful to them.
    I'd also like to remind you all that we had a lot of support and 
help from the entire State of Illinois, and I'd like to thank the 
chairman of the Illinois Democratic Party, Gary LaPaille, and all the 
Illinois Democrats for the support they gave us. Thank you, sir. Thank 
you all.
    I thank all the Members of Congress for being here. And all of you--
some of you here--Joel Ferguson I see--were on the train with me. I 
thank you for riding the train. That was one of the great experiences of 
my life, and I think everybody who was on there enjoyed it.
    Reverend Jackson, I thank you for what you said at the convention, 
for what you said about the First Lady, and I thank you for being there 
with your son. You know, I saw Congressman Jackson and his father, and I 
watched them together, and I thought, family values. I thought, family 
values. It was a beautiful thing.
    I thank Mayor Archer for being here and for your great speech, sir, 
and for the example you have set in Detroit. If you can get $2 billion 
of private sector commitments to invest in the inner city of Detroit, we 
can do that everywhere in America, and we can put the people of this 
country back to work and give people a future.
    I don't know if Mayor Brown from San Francisco is still here, but I 
thought he was here before, and I thank him for being here. He was one 
of our most eloquent spokespeople on television. I saw him from time to 
time.
    I wanted to say two things. First of all, I want you to know how I 
felt, not only as a President, as a Democrat but as an American, about 
our convention. I had two responses to it. First of all, our friends in 
the other party, they had a very successful convention in San Diego, but 
there was a difference in theirs and ours, and I was really proud of it. 
We were proud of our platform, proud of our record, proud of all of our 
leaders, and glad to put them before the American people. But more 
importantly, we did not try to hide the fact

[[Page 1420]]

that we have differences but that those differences can be constructive.
    If you're not going to ever have a debate and a difference of 
opinion, what's the purpose of getting together? If we all knew the 
truth, there would be no point in talking. If there was nothing to 
learn, there would be no point in listening.
    And the one thing I have to tell you, over the last 20 years of 
public life, where I've had the opportunity now to work for 20 years on 
the great issues that are still before us today--can you reform 
education so that everyone achieves excellence; can you develop the 
right mix in a criminal justice system so that you not only catch the 
people who should be caught and sent to prison but you actually find a 
way to reduce crime by preventing it in the first place; can you find a 
way to change the dynamics of the welfare system so we end the 30 years 
steadily growing isolation of an economic under class in America--what I 
have learned is that we all need a little humility here. If these things 
were easy, somebody would have done it already.
    That's why I was so upset to hear our teachers condemned at the 
other convention. You know, they ought to try it sometime. They ought to 
try it sometime. Most of our children turn out fine; most of them learn 
a lot; most of them are doing great; a lot of them are doing great 
against all the odds.
    But when we embark on this great enterprise, we should not only have 
confidence and energy, we should have a little humility. And that 
humility should make us welcome the chance together as a party and to 
express our honest differences, and then to explain to the American 
people why we're still Democrats and why we're still moving forward and 
what it is that we agree on, which is what our platform is all about.
    I'd give anything if--I know political platforms are sort of out of 
date--I'd give anything if we could convince 20 or 30 or 40 million 
Americans to read that platform. It's not very long. And it says about 
all we need to say about why we're not a party of the past but a party 
of the future. And I just want you to know I'm proud of you, every one 
of you, and grateful to you.
    And so I ask you to go out to the American people with that sense of 
confidence and hope and also honest humility. We came in here on a 
train. We're going to fly out of here and get on a bus. But by train or 
bus, we're still going to have the same message: We are on the right 
track to the 21st century, and we are going to build that bridge to the 
future, and we're going to do it together.
    And let me just say one or two things. The Vice President went over 
the substantive issues, but if you think about it, we have to keep the 
economy strong, and then we've got to offer educational opportunity to 
everybody if everyone is going to have a chance to participate. That's 
our opportunity agenda, and it's a good one.
    We have to keep the crime rate coming down, but we have to find a 
way to prevent crime in the first place. We have to try to change the 
welfare system with this law, but in order to do it there have to be 
jobs there in the first place. And let me say, I have seen with these 
empowerment zones that if we put a lot more of them out there, we can 
get more investment into our cities.
    I can see with our brownfields initiative--that's a strange word to 
a lot of people--but the truth is we can't invest in a lot of our cities 
because there are environmental problems. If we clean them up, in many 
cases the investments that can be made will be less expensive in some of 
our high unemployment areas; in other areas, we can help in that way. We 
can give employers incentives to hire people on welfare. All those 
welfare checks can now be used to help create jobs in the private 
sector.
    But the thing that I think is most important for us to say is what I 
said last night: Welfare for years has been a political football. 
Everybody had an opinion about it, even people that never talked to 
anybody on welfare, had never been in a welfare office, had never seen 
how any of these programs worked. Their sense was right--their sense was 
right, that somehow we had isolated a group of people in our country 
that we weren't bringing back in. That was true. But a lot of the 
specific things people said about it were dead wrong, starting with the 
fact that most everybody who is trapped in dependence is dying to be 
independent and wants to be out of it.
    Now there is none of that left. No person can fairly argue the 
welfare issue one party against another. No person can fairly say, ``I'm 
a politician. I'm going to get you to vote for me by condemning poor 
people who just want a handout.'' That's over. No one can do that 
anymore. All that stuff that people said just sort

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of on automatic for the last 20 years, it is over now. And if you hear 
anybody saying it now, you can say, ``When's the last time you hired 
somebody? What are you going to do? What is your responsibility? We have 
changed this. Get off the dime. Let's go to work. Let's do this.''
    This is going to be a great opportunity for us to bring that 
message. I know that it was Reverend Jackson who first said to me the 
line I said to America last night, which is that the greatest market for 
our country are all the underemployed and unemployed people in America. 
If you brought investment back into the isolated rural areas and the 
inner cities of America and gave people there the chance to work and 
earn a good living, they would buy more American products than any 
country that we can presently open a market to in the next 2 or 3 years. 
That is the important message here. That's a very important message.
    Now, I leave you with this thought. This is the beginning of the 
campaign, not the end of it. I want to get in there with everyone else 
who said that. I don't know how many sporting events I've watched in my 
lifetime--a golfer I admire blow a several-shot lead--not maybe blow it, 
maybe somebody else just played better that day; a basketball team 20 
points ahead lose the lead in 8 minutes and lose the game. Any contest 
is not over until it's over. And this is a contest, and it's not over. 
It's just starting.
    So I want you to share this message. And I do want you to help us 
register more of our voters, but I want you to help us get the people to 
vote who should. The thing that encouraged me about the train trip was 
that I felt that there's no way that many people could have come out 
with that level of interest, enthusiasm, and commitment unless they felt 
again that there was a connection between what we were doing in 
Washington and how they were living in the heartland. That is the 
connection we have to keep alive. That is the connection that drives 
people to the polls.
    But it is critical that people know that we're building that bridge 
to the 21st century, that we're going to meet our challenges, and we're 
going to protect our values. Our party was founded by Thomas Jefferson. 
I think it's important to note that Thomas Jefferson was succeeded by 
Madison and Monroe, that by the time John Quincy Adams got ready to be 
President, he was not part of the party of his father. Everybody had to 
be part of Jefferson's party. They just had two different factions. Then 
we had Andrew Jackson who was a more populist part of the party that 
Thomas Jefferson had founded.
    I'm making this point for this reason: if this party represents most 
of the people, embodies the values of this country, and is always 
willing to take on the new challenges, we can be the party that we were 
in our beginning. We can be the party that we were for Woodrow Wilson 
and Franklin Roosevelt and Harry Truman. We can be the party that we 
were for John Kennedy and President Johnson. We can be the party we 
started to be with President Carter, and circumstances intervened there. 
We can do that if we have that kind of discipline.
    I was reading that magnificent book about the Lewis and Clark 
expedition and all the people in the other party who were against Thomas 
Jefferson buying the Louisiana Territory. And Thomas Jefferson said, 
``Well, I'm for limited Government but, my goodness, this is America, 
this is our future.'' So he spent the equivalent of one year of the 
Federal budget to buy Louisiana. Can you imagine what they'd do to me in 
Washington if I spent the equivalent of one year of the Federal budget 
on anything? A whole year of the Federal budget he spent to buy 
Louisiana. If he hadn't done it, I wouldn't be here today. [Laughter]
    You think about that. I say that to say we must always keep our eye 
on the future. We should be proud of what we have done. We should be 
proud of what we have done, but we can't undo yesterday. We can be proud 
of our accomplishments, and we have to find a way to let our failures go 
because we can't undo it. And we've got to focus on the future.
    So if you will help me in these next 68 days, we'll take this 
message to the people. Yes, we're on the right track, but we're not 
stopping the train. We're going on. We're building that bridge to the 
21st century. We're building it for all Americans, and we want all 
Americans to join the Democrats and get the job done.
    Thank you, and God bless you.

Note: The President spoke at 10:49 a.m. at the Sheraton Hotel. In his 
remarks, he referred to Rabbi Herman Schaalmau and Rev. Willie Barrow, 
who delivered the invocations; Donald L. Fowler, national chairman, B.J. 
Thornberry, executive director, Senator Christopher J. Dodd, gen-


[[Page 1422]]

eral chairman, Marvin Rosen, national finance chairman, and Scott 
Pastrick, treasurer, Democratic National Committee; Debra DeLee, chief 
executive officer, Democratic National Convention Committee; Joel 
Ferguson, businessman and former Michigan State University trustee; 
civil rights leader Rev. Jesse L. Jackson and his son, Representative 
Jesse Jackson, Jr., of Illinois; Mayor Dennis W. Archer of Detroit, MI; 
and Mayor Willie Brown of San Francisco, CA. A portion of these remarks 
could not be verified because the tape was incomplete.