[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: William J. Clinton (1996, Book II)]
[August 27, 1996]
[Pages 1388-1391]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



[[Page 1388]]


Remarks in Pontiac, Michigan
August 27, 1996

    The President. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. First of all, let me 
say it is wonderful to be in Pontiac. I am sorry that it's been since 
Harry Truman came here in 1948 since a President has been here. But I'm 
glad to be following in Harry Truman's footsteps with you today. 
[Applause] Thank you.
    Let me begin by saying a thank you to Jay and to Jenna for their 
work in AmeriCorps, for the example they set for our young people, and 
for their proof that our young people still care about others and want 
our country to be a stronger, better, brighter place.
    Thank you, Mayor Moore, for your enthusiastic welcome and for your 
leadership. I want to thank all the community leaders, all the school 
leaders, all the ministers, all the other folks from Pontiac who are 
here who've made us feel so welcome. Thank you, my good friend Rosa 
Parks, for being here with us and for inspiring so many people.
    Thank you, Congressman Kildee, for standing up for America and 
standing up for the people of this district and standing against what 
they tried to do in that budget last year when we made our veto stick. 
Thank you, Senator Levin. Thank you for all your many fights on behalf 
of the people of Michigan and the people of the United States. I hope 
you all will send Carl Levin and Dale Kildee back to the United States 
Congress.
    I want to thank all the fine people from Michigan who came with me, 
including your former Governor, Jim Blanchard, and your former Senator, 
Don Riegle, and a whole bunch of other folks who came here with us.
    And I'd like to thank my friend Vinnie Johnson for being the emcee. 
I've never seen him emcee anything, and I was wondering if he had as 
many moves up here as he did on the basketball court. [Laughter] Did he 
do well?
    I want to thank Alice Moore for singing the national anthem; the 
Anointed Voices of Praise; the GANG--God's Anointed Next Generation; the 
Pontiac High School Band; the Pontiac Northern High School Band; the 
fellow that played the saxophone, Randy Scott. Thank you all. Thank you.
    Ladies and gentlemen, I'm taking this train through the heartland of 
America. We've been in West Virginia and Kentucky, all through Ohio and 
now into Michigan. And I'm doing it for two reasons: First, selfishly, 
at this, the beginning of what will be my last campaign, to go to 
Chicago to once again accept the nomination of my party for President, I 
wanted to go through America's heartland. I wanted to look into the 
faces, into the eyes, and into the hearts of the people I have been 
working and fighting for for 4 years to make America a better place. And 
second, I wanted you to see that not only is this train on the right 
track, America is on the right track for the 21st century.
    I'm proud of our convention in Chicago. I wish Hillary and Chelsea 
were with me. They started out with me, but Hillary had to go home to 
Chicago, and she's going to speak tonight. I hope you'll go home and 
watch it and give her a cheer. And our daughter stayed with me a little 
while longer, but she left me this morning in Toledo because she wanted 
to hear Mom give her speech, so that's where they are.
    But we've had a wonderful time on this trip. You heard the mayor say 
we started the morning in Toledo. Last night an autoworker from Toledo 
was one of the American citizens speaking at the opening of the 
Democratic Convention. And he was speaking there because the work we 
have done with the auto industry to open new markets abroad helped to 
put 700 jobs in the oldest automobile plant in America, in Toledo, Ohio, 
built in 1910--an automobile plant since 1910. That 1910 auto plant is 
exporting over 41,000 Jeeps overseas this year, selling our cars.
    And let me tell you why it happened. It happened because the UAW and 
the management have a partnership. It happened because they're working 
together. It happened because 70 percent of the people in that plant are 
getting continuing education, and they made so much money for Chrysler 
last year, the workers got an average bonus of $8,000. Now, why? Because 
that's a company that believes that if they make money, the workers 
ought to have their fair share. That's good for America. It's right for 
America. But guess what? It turned out to be

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good for the company. For the first time in 20 years, it is the United 
States that is making and selling the largest number of automobiles of 
any country in the world.
    Then we went on to Wyandotte, and there we gathered in front of a 
beautiful old library, about 100 years old, and a huge crowd turned out. 
And I was introduced by two really young people--not grown young people, 
I mean young people--about 8 years old, maybe 7. And we built them 
little platforms, and they stood up in front of the library and they 
read the end of that wonderful little children's book, ``The Little 
Engine That Could.'' Do you know that story? The little engine had only 
been used for switching cars. The little engine had never been over the 
mountain. But the toys couldn't get to the boys and girls unless the 
little engine went over the mountain for the only time in its life. And 
the little engine kept saying ``I think I can. I think I can.'' I still 
remember reading that book to Chelsea over and over and over again. 
[Laughter] But you know what? The message gets through. And that's a 
message every child in America, without regard to race or income or 
background, ought to have, because they can if we give them a chance. 
They can if we give them a chance.
    And there in Wyandotte we made a commitment, a commitment to make 
sure that if this administration is returned, we are going to put out 
30,000 tutors; we're going to mobilize a million volunteers. We're going 
to ask AmeriCorps to take as its main charge teaching children to read 
so that by the year 2000, every boy and girl in the third grade in 
America will be able to read well on their own.
    And then we went to Royal Oak. I didn't see the royal oak, but I saw 
the biggest crowd of folks I ever saw in a long time. And there the 
National Association of Police Officers endorsed Bill Clinton and Al 
Gore in the Presidential election, because for 4 years in a row the 
crime rate has been coming down in America because we're putting 100,000 
police on the street, because we did pass the Brady bill--and according 
to Mrs. Brady last night at our convention, 100,000 felons, fugitives, 
and stalkers have not been able to get guns, but no hunter has lost a 
gun since we did that--and because we have to keep working until all of 
our children are free and safe.
    I met one young woman police officer up on that platform who was in 
the D.A.R.E. program. Chelsea still talks about her fifth-grade D.A.R.E. 
officer. One of the things that we did that I was so proud of was to 
pass the safe and drug-free schools law, to give our communities the 
resources to send people into these schools when the children are young 
and try to help them stay off drugs in the first place. It's one thing 
that isn't going so well in this country; teenage drug use is going up. 
But when the Congress tried to cut the safe and drug-free schools 
program, I said, ``No, we've got a problem. We need to do more of 
that.'' We turned it around, and we're going forward. And they stayed 
with us.
    So it's been a wonderful day. And it's real nice now. I look around 
here, I look in this audience, and I see what makes America great. I 
want to lead this country into the 21st century with the American dream 
alive for every person in America. I believe that we ought to have a 
country where everybody has a chance to live up to their God-given 
abilities, everyone has a chance to live out their dreams. To do it we 
have to have opportunity for everybody, responsibility from everybody, 
and we have to recognize that we are all one country, in spite of all of 
our differences, and we better get used to it and like it and go forward 
together.
    That's what AmeriCorps is about. That's what this Golden Opportunity 
Club is about. That's what these Scout leaders and the Scouts are all 
about.
    Audience member. The cheerleaders!
    The President. The cheerleaders. Look at the little kids. Give them 
a hand there. [Applause] And where are our veterans' leaders? We've got 
some veterans over here somewhere. Thank you. And here's what this is 
about.
    Audience members. Teachers!
    The President. I'm coming to you. [Laughter] Oh, no, no, no. I'm 
coming to you. I've got a special thing to say about you.
    So here's what I want you to think about. I want all of you to think 
in your own mind: What do I want my country to look like when we start 
this new century? What do I want my country to look like when my 
children are my age? What kind of legacy do I want to leave to my 
grandchildren? If we have more opportunity, more responsibility, and 
we're one American community, there is no stopping this country. Our 
best days are ahead. That's what I've been working on.

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    Number one, I knew when I became President we had to get that 
deficit down to get interest rates down to put people back to work. Now 
we've got over 10 million new jobs, and we're just getting warmed up. We 
brought the deficit down 4 years in a row for the first time in a 
President's administration since before the Civil War. We would have a 
surplus today in our budget--a surplus--if it weren't for the interest 
we have to pay on the debt run up in the 12 years before I showed up. 
But I'm working on it, and I want you to let me finish the job. I want 
you to let me finish the job. And we did this, and we're going to 
balance that budget without cutting education, cutting environmental 
protection, and breaking the backs of Medicare and Medicaid.
    And we have to make sure that ordinary Americans can benefit from 
this economy. We have got to do that. We had a good week for ordinary 
Americans last week. We raised the minimum wage for 10 million workers. 
The same bill contained a tax cut for small businesses, who create most 
of our jobs, so they can invest more in their businesses, and made it 
easier for them to take out pensions for themselves and their workers 
and for the workers in small businesses to keep those pensions when they 
change jobs. That was a good thing.
    The same bill gave a $5,000 tax credit to adults who will adopt 
children, and even more if the children have disabilities. And it 
removed the barriers to cross-racial adoption. There's a lot of kids out 
there that need a happy home. That was a good thing to do, that we did.
    And the Congress passed the Kassebaum-Kennedy bill that your two 
Members here had been working for for a long time. It says to 25 million 
Americans, just because somebody in your family has been sick, they 
can't take your insurance away from you anymore. It says you don't lose 
your insurance when you change jobs. This is a good thing.
    But we have to do more. We have to do more. We ought now to say just 
because you can't lose your insurance doesn't mean you can pay for it. 
We ought to help families that are unemployed keep their health 
insurance for 6 months. I'm for that. I want to help people who have 
someone in their family with Alzheimer's and they're trying to care for 
them, get a little respite care. That's in my balanced budget plan, too, 
so they can keep their families and take care of them. We have to do 
more. And I want you to believe that we can do these things.
    The most important thing we have to do is to make sure every child 
in this country and every adult in this country can get the education 
they need. And I want to say to you--I don't know about the rest of you, 
but I wouldn't be standing up here if it weren't for my teachers, the 
people that believed in me. And I know that not every school is perfect 
and not every class is successful, but we've still got a public 
education system that is doing its best to take everybody that comes in 
the door and give all those kids a chance. And some of these teachers 
are laboring under great difficulties. And so I say to you, we need to 
make a commitment that we're going to do what we can to take 
responsibility for our schools and lift up the people that are trying to 
make them work, not get out here and bash them day-in and day-out. We 
need to be lifting them up.
    I want to see--I want to see every classroom in this country, every 
single one, in 4 years not only have the computers they need, not only 
have teachers trained in the computers, but I want every single 
classroom hooked up to the worldwide information superhighway--everyone.
    Now, consider what this means. This could mean that for the first 
time in the history of the United States ever, children in the poorest 
urban classrooms, children in the most remote hill or hollow of 
Appalachia, would have access to the same information in the same time 
at the same quality as the children in the wealthiest, best financed 
schools in the United States of America. It has never happened before. 
Then we'll see what happens on those test scores. Then we'll see what 
happens.
    I want to see an America where every young person can go to college 
and every adult can go to college. Four years from now, I want 2 years 
of education after high school, the equivalent of a community college 
diploma, to be just as universal as a high school diploma is today. And 
I want to give you a tax credit to pay for those 2 years and a deduction 
for all college costs to up to $10,000 a year of tuition. That's a tax 
cut. That's a tax cut we can pay for and a tax cut that will pay for 
itself many times over. We need to do that.
    Well, there's a lot more I'd like to tell you, but you get the idea. 
We've got 10 million more jobs, 1\1/2\ million fewer people on welfare.

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Twelve million people took advantage of the family and medical leave law 
and didn't lose their jobs, and that's a good thing for America. We've 
got 4\1/2\ million new homeowners, 10 million American families who 
refinanced their homes at lower interest rates, 50 million Americans 
breathing cleaner air. We cleaned up more toxic waste dumps in 3 years 
than the previous administrations did in 12. You get the picture. You 
get the picture?
    Audience members. Yes!
    The President. We're on the right track. We're moving in the right 
direction. We've got 10 million people with a minimum wage increase. But 
we've got to do it.
    Will you help us stay on the right track?
    Audience members. Yes!
    The President. Will you help us all the way to November?
    Audience members. Yes!
    The President. Will you stay with us all the way to 2000?
    Audience members. Yes!
    The President. Will you stand with the children in your community?
    Audience members. Yes!
    The President. Thank you, and God bless you.

Note: The President spoke at 7:37 p.m. on the rear platform of the 21st 
Century Express at the Amtrak station. In his remarks, he referred to 
Jay LeBlanc and Jenna Blahunka, AmeriCorps volunteers; Mayor Walter 
Moore of Pontiac; and civil rights activist Rosa Parks.