[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: William J. Clinton (1996, Book II)]
[August 27, 1996]
[Pages 1382-1387]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks in Royal Oak, Michigan
August 27, 1996

    The President. Thank you very much. Thank you.
    Audience members. Four more years! Four more years! Four more years!
    The President. Thank you very much. Thank you so very, very much. 
You have made me feel so welcome. I never dreamed when we came to Royal 
Oak there would be such a vast crowd. I thank you--all the way down 
here, back here behind us. And when Don Johnson was up here talking and 
he said, ``Detroit, which is near here,'' I thought, I bet all the 
people in Royal Oak think of that--Detroit's a town that's near Royal 
Oak. [Laughter] I bet that's what they think.
    Let me begin by thanking my good friend Bob Scully and Don Johnson 
and all the other law enforcement officials who are here and those 
throughout the Nation for their support. I'm very grateful to them, and 
I'm very grateful to them for joining me here today.
    I want to thank Congressman Sandy Levin, your Congressman and a 
great Congressman. I want you to know that he has worked for you, for 
your jobs, for your welfare, for the strength of your communities and 
your values relentlessly. He talks to me all the time, and he wears me 
out until I finally do what he thinks I should do for you. And I hope 
you'll keep him in the Congress.

[[Page 1383]]

    I'd like to thank all the other law enforcement officials who are 
here. I'd like to thank those who performed here, the Kimbal High School 
Madrigal Singers; the Stagecrafters; David Sign; the Detroit Red Wings 
who are here, Kris Draper and Stu Grimson; Jim McClain, the emcee. Thank 
you all very much. I'd like to thank some others who came with me: 
Congressman Dale Kildee, who's over here on my left; Congressman John 
Conyers is here; Attorney General Frank Kelley; former Governor Jim 
Blanchard; Senator Don Riegle.
    I have a lot of other people from Michigan that are traveling with 
me on this train. We're having a good time. I also have with me an old 
friend of mine and one of the great American heroes of the civil rights 
movement, Mrs. Rosa Parks. Please give her a great hand. [Applause] 
Thank you, Rosa. God bless you. Thank you, thank you.
    I'd also like to acknowledge in the audience a very brave lady, the 
mother of another brave woman who was to visit me in the White House 
next week. But Denise Marie Lazar just passed away from Huntington's 
disease. Her mother, Charlene Solo, is here in the audience. I'd like 
for you to give her a hand. [Applause] She's a brave lady, and she's 
done a good job. Charlene, where are you? Thank you.
    Folks, I've had a wonderful day. We've had great crowds from West 
Virginia to Kentucky, all through Ohio and now in Michigan. But I don't 
have any idea how many folks we have here. They're way back down the 
street there, way off down here, way off behind us, and we're glad to 
see you. We're glad to see you.
    I want to say to all of you that I came through here on this train 
for two reasons. First, I wanted to look out into this crowd and see 
your faces. I wanted to see the people that I have worked for for these 
last 4 years, and I wanted you to know I'm still working for you and I'm 
proud to be your President. Secondly, I wanted you to see this train. 
This train is not just on the right track to Chicago; it's on the right 
track to the 21st century, and we're going to keep it there.
    You know, in 1992----

[At this point, an audience member required medical attention.]

    The President.  We need a doctor over here. We've got one here. 
We'll get somebody here in a minute; we've got a doctor with us. We need 
a doctor over here in the crowd. We'll be right there. Let me say--here 
we go; we're getting somebody there right now. There you go. Here's my 
medic; they'll be right there. Done. You all can't do anything about 
that. Let's go on with the program. She's going to do a good job; she's 
terrific.
    Four years ago, when I came to Michigan, I was hoping I'd do pretty 
well here because half the people that lived in Arkansas in the 1950's 
moved to Michigan to get a job. [Laughter] And the dream they had was 
largely fulfilled, the dream of being able to find a good job and 
educate their children and have a secure retirement and build a good 
life and a strong community and a strong country.
    Four years ago, I was afraid that dream was about to be lost. We had 
high unemployment, stagnant wages, no strategy for meeting our 
challenges, and a rising tide of cynicism among our people. Four years 
later it's a lot different. We wouldn't have this crowd here if you were 
cynical today, and we thank you and God bless you.
    Let me also say that the reason I ran for President 4 years ago is 
the reason I seek reelection: I wanted to prepare our country for the 
21st century. I want us to go into that next century, only 4 years away 
now, roaring with the American dream alive for every person, a 
possibility for every person to live up to their God-given abilities, 
for every person to live out their dreams, no matter where they live, 
what they start with, what their racial or their religious background 
is.
    And we have followed a simple strategy: Create more opportunity for 
people, expect more responsibility from our people, and tell everybody 
that we have got to go forward together. We have got to go forward 
together. We know that this country, when we're together, never loses. 
And I don't know how you feel but I look around the world today--I spent 
so much time as your President trying to bring peace to places like 
Bosnia, the Middle East, Northern Ireland, dealing with the slaughters 
in Rwanda and Burundi. Why? Because all over the world there are people 
who insist upon looking down on each other because of their racial, 
their ethnic, their religious, or their tribal differences instead of 
joining together hand in hand to move forward. And whenever I see that 
in America I want to stamp it out. That's why I have done everything I 
could to make us all stand up

[[Page 1384]]

against the church burnings. And whenever a synagogue or a Muslim center 
is defaced, it's wrong.
    We have to fight that. The America I want for our children is one 
that says, we don't care anything else about you if you believe in the 
Constitution, the Bill of Rights, the Declaration of Independence, you 
work hard, pay your taxes, obey the law and believe in our country. 
You're our kind of American, and we're going with you into the 21st 
century.
    Now, this has been a great day for me, and last night was a great 
night when we started our convention. But I want to tell you something 
about our convention last night. We did something that had never been 
done before. We just had citizens talk. We had an autoworker from Toledo 
that I met with again this morning. Toledo--they work--it's the oldest 
auto plant in America--1910--but they're selling Jeeps in Japan with 
right-hand drive. It's a plant where there's a genuine partnership 
between workers and management, where 70 percent of the workers are in 
continuing education programs and they got a $8,000 bonus last year 
because they have people who believe that when a company makes money, 
the workers are entitled to their fair share. And I hope that all of you 
in Michigan are justly proud that for the first time since the 1970's, 
it is the United States that is producing more and selling more 
automobiles than any other country in the entire world.
    We had a police officer named Mike Robbins from Chicago there. I 
don't know if you heard him speak, but I'll never forget when I met him 
and he said, ``I served my country in Vietnam, in Desert Storm, and by 
the grace of God I was never harmed. I came home to serve my country on 
the streets of Chicago, and within 45 seconds I had 9 bullets in my body 
from an assault weapon. And when I heard the President say we all had to 
speak up, I decided if I got out of my hospital bed I was going to do my 
part.'' Mike Robbins is the kind of person I'm fighting for, the kind of 
person we need in uniform today, the kind of person that's giving his 
life for our people.
    There was a young Puerto Rican-American girl, an immigrant to our 
country who dropped out of high school, who spoke. She got in 
AmeriCorps, our national service program. She started helping younger 
children to learn, and she decided she was pretty smart herself, so she 
went back and finished high school. And she's going to a wonderful 
school, Brown University, and she's going to be a doctor and give 
something back to her country because we gave her a chance to earn her 
way through college through national service. There was a retired 
general, who is now the superintendent of schools in Seattle, 
Washington, reminding us that education, too, is part of our national 
security. And of course, there were Jim and Sarah Brady talking about 
the Brady bill, and they were perfectly wonderful.
    And then there was Christopher Reeve and his magnificent 
performance, reminding us that we dare not balance the budget on the 
backs of the American families with handicapped people and we dare not--
dare not--walk away from our obligations to research, to find the 
answers to the medical and scientific mysteries that still confront us. 
And I tell you, I was proud of him, and I was proud of him for saying 
that not everybody who gets hurt like that is an actor with a 
comfortable income. That's why we have to preserve Medicaid for middle 
class families with disabilities who deserve to have that kind of help.
    I say that because, folks, we want our convention to be about you, 
not about us. We want our convention to be about the connection between 
our Nation's leaders and the people who really count, people who live in 
places like Royal Oak, Michigan, all over the United States of America. 
Now, you think about where we are now compared to where we were 4 years 
ago, with opportunity, responsibility, and community; 10 million more 
jobs; a 60 percent reduction in the deficit; 4\1/2\ million new 
homeowners; 10 million homeowners who have refinanced their homes at 
lower interest rates; a couple of million college students eligible for 
lower cost college loans with better repayment terms; 1\1/2\ million 
fewer people on welfare and a 40 percent increase in child support 
payments in the last 4 years; 50 million more Americans breathing 
cleaner air; more toxic waste sites cleaned up in 3 years than in the 
previous 12 years. I am proud of that, and you should be, too.
    But folks, we also want our convention to be about the future, the 
future we have to build together. And I want to talk to you about that 
for a few minutes. We've gotten our economic house in order. We have 
record exports, record small business starts, and we are in good shape 
overall. But you know as well as I do, there are still a lot of people 
working hard who'd

[[Page 1385]]

like a better chance to fully participate in the American dream. There 
are still these kids coming up that we have to get an education. And I 
want to focus on not what we've done the last 4 years but what we're 
going to do for the next four.
    And let me just give you a few examples. Number one--
    Audience members. No scab workers! No scab workers! No scab workers!
    The President. I agree with that.
    Audience members. No scab workers! No scab workers! No scab workers!
    The President. Look, can I say something? Wait a minute. You know I 
agree with that. Get yourself a Congress that agrees with me.
    So I want you to think about this. Number one, we've got to keep 
this economy going. And that means we have to find a way to balance the 
budget and protect Medicare, Medicaid, education, and the environment 
and not raid workers' pension funds and not raise taxes on the lowest 
income working people and all the other things that were in that budget 
I vetoed last year, and I'm glad I did.
    But I want you to listen. We do have to balance the budget. Why? Why 
have we brought this economy back? Because for the first time since 
before the Civil War we brought the deficit down 4 years in a row and 
interest rates have been lower. What happens when interest rates go 
down? Your home mortgage payment, your car payment, your credit card 
payment is lower. More important, a business person can go to the bank, 
borrow money cheaper, and invest to create more jobs and higher incomes 
for the American people.
    So I say to you, I want you to have a tax cut, but I want you to 
have one that we can pay for, balance the budget, and invest in 
education and the environment and Medicare and Medicaid. Because we have 
still--if we blow this deficit up again after getting it down, what will 
happen? Higher car payments, higher home mortgage payments, higher 
credit card payments, fewer jobs, a slower economy. We've got to keep 
this thing going on the right track, folks. We've got to have a tax cut 
that we can afford, that helps families to educate their children, deal 
with their health care problems, get that first-time home, but still 
keeps the economy growing and going.
    The second thing we've got to do is to make sure we do an even 
better job of educating our children and our adults. In the next 4 
years, I intend to spend a great deal of time trying to make sure that 
every single person in this country gets a world-class education. And I 
just--let me mention two or three things.
    Number one, in Wyandotte earlier today, I said that I want us to 
have a national goal that by the year 2000, every single child in 
America in the third grade will be reading well at grade level and not 
be behind. Every one. And we can do that. We can do it.
    Number two, I want us, by the year 2000, to make sure every single 
classroom in America and every library not only has computers, not only 
has teachers qualified to use the computers and teach the kids, but is 
hooked up to the information superhighway so everybody can know 
everything every other class can know. Now, you think about this. You 
think about this. If we can do this, it means in the poorest inner-city 
school, in the most remote rural mountain village, they will have access 
to the same information that people in the wealthiest schools do today. 
We can explode learning in America if we just give everybody the same 
resources.
    Finally, we have to make it possible for everybody to go on after 
high school. And my goal is, by the year 2000, to have the 13th and 14th 
grades, at least 2 years of education after high school, as universal as 
high school is today. How are we going to do it? We're going to do it 
with a tax cut we can afford, a $1,500 refundable tax credit for the 
first 2 years of education after high school, a $10,000 tax deduction 
for all education after high school for middle class families in America 
to get people back in school and pay for their education.
    Folks, we also have to recognize that there are other things to be 
done to help working people constitute their lives strong and good. Last 
week we had a good week for America's families. I signed the bill that 
raised the minimum wage for 10 million Americans. But I want you to know 
what else it did. I want you to know what else it did. It also gave a 
tax break to small businesses that invest more in their business and 
made it easier for small-business people and their employees to take out 
retirement plans and for those folks to keep those retirement plans when 
they change from job to job. Since most people work for small 
businesses, that's important for America. We need for those people to be 
able to have a retirement.

[[Page 1386]]

    And finally, let me tell you what the minimum wage bill did. It also 
gave a $5,000 tax credit to any family that adopts a child, and more if 
they adopt a child that has a disability. And it removed the 
longstanding prejudice against cross-racial adoptions. There are lots of 
kids out there without a home. I think we can give more of them homes 
now. That's pro-family, pro-business, pro-work.
    The other thing that Congress did last week that I especially liked 
was to pass the Kennedy-Kassebaum health reform bill. What it says to 25 
million Americans in this shape, nobody can deny you health insurance 
anymore because somebody in your family has been sick. And if you change 
jobs or you lose your job, they can't automatically take your health 
insurance away from you. That's a great thing. That's a great thing.
    But we have more to do. That's a great first step. That was in the 
health care reform I proposed in '94. I'm so proud of the Congress for 
adopting it. But now we need to recognize that there are still some 
things we have to do. Just because you have a right to keep your health 
insurance doesn't mean you can afford to pay for it.
    The next step is in the balanced budget plan I have presented: Give 
unemployed workers and their families health insurance for 6 months 
after they're unemployed, help them get--[applause]. And then, we have 
to find a way for small-business people to join together in pools and 
buy good insurance policies, like we Federal employees have, at an 
affordable price. And that's the next step. And there was a lady that 
had a sign back there I want to comment on. We also have to find a way 
to provide access to mental health benefits and health insurance. It's a 
very important thing for our country. The Vice President's wonderful 
wife, Tipper Gore, has worked so hard on that. So there is still a lot 
to do.
    We passed the welfare reform bill, but let me tell you something, 
folks, that is the beginning, not the end of this process. The reason I 
signed that bill was, first of all, we've already reduced the welfare 
rolls by a million and a half by putting people in programs to move from 
welfare to work. But we need to do more.
    So when the Congress said, ``Okay, I'll give in''--I had to veto two 
of those bills first--``we'll give people on welfare their health care; 
we'll provide more for child care; we'll make sure the kids have food to 
eat,'' I said, now, we will give what used to be the welfare check to 
the States, the Federal and the State money. But they then have to 
decide how to move people from welfare to work. That's our next 
challenge. We have to get more jobs in the inner cities, more jobs in 
the isolated rural areas. If you're going to tell somebody they have to 
go to work because they're able-bodied, they have to have work to find. 
They have to have a job to go to, and we've got to do that.
    So there's a lot to do. Let me give you another example. We worked 
hard to prove that you could grow the economy and clean up the 
environment, and I believe you can, the toxic waste sites, the clean 
air, the Safe Drinking Water Act. We have adopted a revolutionary 
pesticide protection act so that children's food will be more free of 
dangerous pesticides. We are moving forward. We've changed the meat and 
poultry inspection system of the country for the first time in 70 years, 
and that's important. We have to do more.
    One of the most important things that we're doing that we have to 
continue is the work we began with the auto industry in 1993, in 
partnership to develop a new clean car that can get 3 times the mileage 
of the present cars, clean up the air, and save money for the American 
people and people all over the world.
    So there's lots to do. We want to clean up two-thirds of the toxic 
waste dumps that are still out there. There's lots to do. And I want you 
to support that. We have an interest in America, in a clean economy--I 
mean, a strong economy and a clean environment, and we can do both.
    Audience member. Clean up the--[inaudible].
    The President. You can say that; I can't. [Laughter]
    I just want to mention a couple of other things. These fine police 
officers have been here. In 1994, a lot of the folks that voted with 
them for the Brady bill and the assault weapons ban and the 100,000 
police got beat when they ran for reelection. They got beat in places 
like Michigan and Arkansas because we live in a State--I did and you 
do--where probably nearly half the people have a hunting or a fishing 
license or both. I guess I was 12 years old the first time I picked up a 
.22 and started shooting cans off fence posts. But you know, I couldn't 
figure out what they were all saying back in '94, ``Well, this is a 
terrible thing

[[Page 1387]]

if we check to see if a person's got a criminal record before we give 
them a handgun. This is a terrible thing that we're not going to keep 
peddling these assault weapons that were designed to kill people.'' And 
a lot of folks said to folks in Michigan and Arkansas, ``You're going to 
lose your rifle. Boy, they're coming after you next.'' Let me tell you 
something, folks. We've had two deer seasons since then; not a single 
Michigan or Arkansas hunter has lost the rifle they were hunting with in 
1994. Not a one. Not a one. Not a one.
    But according to what Sarah Brady said last night, 100,000 felons, 
fugitives, and stalkers did lose the right to get a handgun, and we're a 
safer country because of that. I would never knowingly do anything to 
interfere with the right of the American people to hunting and sporting 
use of their weapons. But I'm telling you, folks, a lot of those folks 
who talk about it have never seen the war zone that a lot of American 
children live in. I have looked into the faces of people who live on 
blocks where 13-year-old kids have been shot down on lark drive-by 
shootings. As I said last night, the convention was opened by a man who 
fought in Vietnam without incident and had his body riddled with 9 
bullet holes in 45 seconds.
    So we can find a way to hunt and to fish and to shoot in contests 
and to have a big time and protect people. Surely, we can. I want the 
Congress to ban these cop-killer bullets. They're fighting that, too.

[An audience member required medical attention.]

    The President. We need a doctor. They'll get it. We got it. The 
doctor is already there.
    You know, I have never seen a deer in a bulletproof vest. [Laughter] 
And if they can show me one, I'll reassess my position on this issue. 
But until I find a deer or a duck or a wild turkey wearing a Kevlar 
vest, I'm going to stick with these folks and be for banning those cop-
killer bullets.
    One last thing, I think one of the biggest dilemmas our people face 
today--I look out here and see all of you--need a doctor over there? 
Connie, can we send--we need someone back in the back over here. We'll 
be right there. Just hold up the signs where you are. Somebody hold up 
the sign; we'll send somebody right back there.
    One of the biggest problems people face is trying to balance the 
demands of childrearing and work. I bet there is not a family here that 
can't remember a personal instance where you were torn between the 
demands of your job and the demands of your children. I'll bet you can't 
think--there is not anybody here that hasn't been through that. That's 
why I'm so proud that we passed the family and medical leave law. Twelve 
million Americans got to take some time off from work without losing 
their job.
    One other thing, you know it hasn't hurt the economy. We've got 
10\1/4\ million new jobs and a record number of new small businesses. 
But 12 million families got to be there when the baby was born or the 
parent was sick, without losing their job. And I'd like to see that law 
expanded so that people could have just a little time to make those 
regular doctor's appointments and regular teacher's appointments with 
their kids or their parents.
    I'd like to see the provisions of my balanced budget bill passed so 
that people on Medicare--that ladies can get regular mammograms who are 
Medicare-eligible. I'd like to see people who have someone in their 
families with Alzheimer's they're trying to take care of be able to 
access some respite care. These things will save us money. They will 
make us a more humane country. They will strengthen America's families.
    So I ask you, if you agree we're better off than we were 4 years 
ago, if you agree we've got to keep working until we create opportunity 
for all Americans, make all communities responsible, and go forward 
together, I want to ask you if you will, at least in your mind and 
heart, will you get on this train with me for 70 days and keep us on the 
right track? Will you stay with me to take America into the 21st 
century? Do you believe we can do it?
    Audience members. Yes!
    The President. I know we can.
    Thank you, and God bless you all.

Note: The President spoke at 5:35 p.m. at the intersection of Sixth and 
Center Streets. In his remarks, he referred to Bob Scully, executive 
director, National Association of Police Organizations; Don Johnson, 
president, Detroit Police Officers Association; and Capt. Connie 
Mariano, USN, the President's physician. A portion of these remarks 
could not be verified because the tape was incomplete.