[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: William J. Clinton (1996, Book II)]
[August 30, 1996]
[Pages 1430-1432]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks in Cairo, Illinois
August 30, 1996

    The President. Thank you.
    Audience members.   Four more years! Four
more years! Four more years!
    The President. Thank you. Ladies and gentle-

[[Page 1431]]

men, thank you. I want to thank the mayor and everybody who's worked so 
hard to make this day happen. I thank those who sang and performed 
before, especially the Egyptian High School Band--let's give them a hand 
over there--[applause]--the Jerry Ford Combo. I understand Helen Bishaw 
made this wonderful long sign, beautiful sign. Thank you very much.
    Folks, I love to come to southern Illinois. When I was Governor of 
my State, I chaired a study of the lower Mississippi Valley, and I used 
to come to southern Illinois. And I know that Senator Paul Simon's home 
is not far from here. And you know, he's retiring from the Senate, and I 
hope you'll elect Dick Durbin to take his place, because we need him 
desperately there. But Paul Simon has served you and the United States 
with dignity and honor and distinction. And I want him to come up here 
and say just 2 minutes of thanks to you and make a few comments because 
he is retiring after a great career, and you need to express your 
appreciation to him.
    Senator Simon.

[At this point, Senator Paul Simon made brief remarks.]

    The President. Thank you, Senator, and to Congressman Costello, 
Congressman Poshard, all these legislative candidates and university 
officials and others who are up on the stage with me.
    Ladies and gentlemen, I am delighted to be back here. I loved coming 
in on the bus. And I looked at the beanfields and the river bottoms, and 
when I came into town, I felt like I was home. And I saw the big welcome 
on the Laborers Building. It even had a billboard up there. I 
appreciated that. Then their leader was back here saying, ``You know, 
we're closer to Arkansas than Chicago. These people talk like you do. 
You don't have an accent here, Mr. President. You don't have an accent 
here.''
    We have had a wonderful week. I started off on a train going from 
West Virginia to Kentucky to Ohio to Michigan to Indiana to the 
Democratic Convention in Chicago to prove that we're on the right track 
to the 21st century, but also to see people like you who never see a 
President. And then we came back to our bus so we could come down here. 
I learned today that the last Presidents who came to Cairo were Teddy 
Roosevelt in 1907 and William Howard Taft in 1909. I don't know what the 
others were doing, but I'm glad to be back. And it's high time.
    My fellow Americans, last night I had a chance to talk at the 
Democratic Convention about what we were going to do in the next 4 years 
to build that bridge to the 21st century. And tonight I just want to say 
again to you, the choice here is about more than a choice between two 
candidates. It is a choice between the future and the past, a choice 
between a philosophy that we're all in this together--we have an 
obligation to help each other make the most of our own lives--and a 
theory that you're on your own and we hope you do well. It's a choice 
between people who believe, as Al Gore and I do, that we have a 
responsibility to help you make this a strong community and help give 
your children the best lives.
    I was asking here--right just when I was standing here--the 
Congressman said, ``Half of the police department in this town was 
funded by the crime bill.'' I fought hard for it. They fought against 
it. We were right.
    We have invested a lot of money in this area in job retraining. I 
think there ought to be more of it. They think there ought to be less of 
it. That's a clear signal. You cannot expect people to go through the 
changes we have had in the American economy unless we do more, and more 
quickly, to give people immediate access, no matter their age, to 
whatever education and training they need to get a new job and a better 
job. It is critical to our future. I'm told you have the best Job Corps 
retraining center in the country right here. That's the kind of thing we 
need to do for everybody.
    And let me just say, you're going to have some races for the 
legislature here. I want to talk about how all of these races fit 
together. If we're going to build a bridge to the next century, we have 
to keep growing this economy until it reaches every Delta town and every 
inner-city neighborhood in the United States. It's not enough to say 
there are 10 million more jobs. We want to know there's a job for 
everybody that lives in the Mississippi Delta who wants to go to work, 
and a good job.
    Last night I said to the American people--I say to you again here 
tonight--we changed the welfare laws, and we said we're going to have a 
new bargain with people who are poor and out of work and able-bodied 
with little children. We will guarantee health care. We will guarantee 
food. We will guarantee child care.

[[Page 1432]]

But now the income has to come from effort. Well, that's fine. Now, I 
say we have to go out and create the jobs.
    And I outlined a plan last night in Chicago to the American people 
to invest several billion dollars--all of it paid for in my balanced 
budget plan--in poor rural areas and small towns, in our inner cities to 
create jobs, to give incentives to invest in those areas. The best 
untapped market for the United States today is those parts of the United 
States which haven't gotten investment, which haven't fully recovered, 
which need more jobs. That's what we need to do. And we have a strategy 
to do it.
    I want everybody walking across that bridge to the 21st century. I 
don't intend to see the lower Mississippi Valley left behind. I want 
your children to have the best education, your parents to have the best 
jobs, and your people to have the best future. That is my commitment to 
you.
    Let me just say a word about education. Al Gore and I, in the next 4 
years, are committed to seeing that every classroom in America, in the 
remotest mountain village, in the poorest city neighborhood, up and down 
this Delta, every single classroom and library not only has the 
computers they need with the teachers trained to help use them but is 
connected to an information superhighway that will give, for the first 
time in the history of this country, every child, rich or poor, 
immediate access to the highest quality information available on any 
subject, to any child, in any school in the United States or in the 
world. That is worth fighting for.
    We are committed to the right kind of tax cuts for working families: 
a tax cut in the form of a $500 credit for young children; a tax cut in 
the form of a $1,500 credit to make 2 years of education after high 
school as universal in 4 years as a high school education is today. We 
ought to make it possible for every family to go to a community college, 
at least, and have it paid for and not have to worry about it through 
tax cuts. We ought to give every family with a child in college or a 
parent in college a deduction for the cost of tuition up to $10,000 a 
year. We ought to educate America and do it now.
    So I say to you, if you want that kind of future, if you want the 
feeling you have tonight on this beautiful lawn of this magnificent old 
library to carry you through, if you want to feel on election day the 
way the Vice President says and feel that way all through the next 4 
years, you have to help me build that bridge to the 21st century. Will 
you do that?
    Audience members. Yes!
    The President. Will you help us for 68 days to talk to your friends 
and neighbors about going into the future instead of going back? Will 
you do that?
    Audience members. Yes!
    The President. God bless you. Stay with us and we will make the kind 
of future you and your children deserve. Thank you. We're delighted to 
be here.

Note: The President spoke at 7:26 p.m. at the Stafford Public Library. 
In his remarks, he referred to Mayor James Wilson of Cairo.