[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: William J. Clinton (1996, Book II)]
[August 31, 1996]
[Pages 1439-1440]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



[[Page 1439]]


Remarks in Mayfield, Kentucky
August 31, 1996

    The President. Good morning. Thank you. Thank you so much. First of 
all, I want to thank Governor Patton and Senator Ford for making us feel 
so very welcome in Kentucky, and my former colleague Governor Martha 
Layne Collins, with whom I served, and all the other Kentuckians that 
are traveling with us. I want to thank them.
    Mr. Mayor, I'm delighted to be in your city. And I'm glad to know 
that I'm the first President to come here. The others didn't know what 
they were missing. I'm glad to see you.
    I'm delighted to see you all here. I thank you especially for 
bringing the children. It is for them that this election is being 
fought, for them and the values that have made our country great and the 
future that they deserve. I said on Thursday night that I wanted to ask 
the American people to join with me in building a bridge to the 21st 
century that we can all walk across. Will you help us build that bridge? 
[Applause]
    We have to build a bridge with the world's best education system for 
all our people, whether they live in poor inner cities, small rural 
communities, or the wealthiest places in America. If you help us for 4 
more years, one of the things we intend to do is to make sure that every 
classroom in America, including right here in Mayfield, not only has the 
computers our students need and the teachers have the training they need 
but that they are hooked up to the information superhighway so our 
children have the same information, the same learning resources wherever 
they live for the first time in the history of America. Will you help us 
build that kind of a bridge?
    Audience members. Yes!
    The President. I want to make sure that we truly have education for 
a lifetime in America. I want the first 2 years of college in the next 4 
years to become just as universal as a high school education is today, 
with tax credits for the first 2 years in any community college in the 
country. Will you help us do that and build that kind of bridge? 
[Applause]
    I want to establish a ``GI bill'' for American workers so that 
whenever a person who's a breadwinner loses a job or is grossly 
underemployed, they can get a skill grant from the Government and take 
it to the nearest community college or other training facility so that 
no matter how old you are, if you need new training to get a better job 
or to keep the job you have and to keep supporting your family, you'll 
have it from your Government. Will you help us build that kind of a 
bridge to the future? [Applause]
    You know, in just the last couple of weeks, as the election has 
gotten closer, a lot of the things we Democrats have tried to do for the 
last 4 years have finally gotten through this Congress. We raised the 
minimum wage for 10 million working Americans. We made 25 million 
Americans, including, I might say, some families we've met alongside the 
road here when we started this bus trip in Missouri and Illinois and 
coming into Kentucky and going on to Tennessee--we've met some people 
alongside the road that have been helped by the Kennedy-Kassebaum bill 
that says that you don't lose your health insurance anymore just because 
somebody in your family has been sick or you have to change jobs--25 
million Americans.
    Now we need to say a big part of a strong family is keeping working 
people's health care. In our balanced budget plan we provide assistance 
to help unemployed families keep their health insurance for their kids 
for 6 months. That's the next thing we need to do. Will you help us do 
that in the next 4 years? [Applause]
    We want to build a bridge to the 21st century with a strong economy. 
That means we have to keep bringing down the deficit. Now, our friends 
in the other party, they made a big thing of that, but now they don't 
think it's so important. But it is important. It's important in 
Mayfield. Why? Not only because you don't want to saddle your kids with 
debt but because if we turn away from our plan to balance the budget, it 
means that interest rates will go up, interest rates on your home 
mortgage, your car payment, your credit card payments, interest rates 
for the businesses you want to borrow money and hire people and give 
their employees a raise. So we can't afford to do that.
    My plan will balance the budget. It will give tax cuts to families: 
for children under the age

[[Page 1440]]

of 13, a $500 credit; for a $1,500 credit to go to the first 2 years of 
college; a $10,000 tax deduction for the cost of college tuition; an IRA 
you can withdraw from without penalty to buy a first home, to meet a 
medical emergency, or to pay for education. But it's all paid for; we 
can still balance the budget without cutting Medicare, Medicaid, 
education, the environment, without raiding the pension funds of our 
workers. We can do these things. That's the right way to balance the 
budget.
    Now, our friends in the opposition will say, ``We're going to give 
you more money.'' And that's true, they do offer more money in their tax 
cut. They offer it to people like me who don't need it. They offer it 
without being able to pay for it, and they know--I wish you hadn't said 
``amen'' when I said I didn't need it. [Laughter] But it's true.
    And what's going to happen? If they had their plan, what would they 
do? They'd cut Medicare, Medicaid, education, and the environment, more 
than they did in that budget I vetoed. That would divide us and weaken 
our progress. And they still wouldn't be able to pay for it, which means 
a higher deficit, higher interest rates, and a slower economy. Do we 
want to make that same old mistake all over again?
    Audience members. No-o-o!
    The President. We want to build a new bridge to the 21st century, 
and that's what we're going to do. Folks, I want us to build that bridge 
by working together. I want us to build that bridge by saying 
everybody's got a place. We worked very hard, for example, to help our 
bigger businesses sell their products abroad. I was proud just a few 
days ago at our convention when an autoworker from Toledo, Ohio, working 
in a plant that was opened in 1910, got up and said that he was making 
Jeeps and they were selling 41,000 overseas, and we were number one 
again, and 700 people like him had jobs. I was proud of that.
    But we also have to have small businesses in places like Mayfield. 
I'm proud of the fact that we have made every small business in the 
country eligible for a tax cut if they invest more in their businesses, 
increasing their annual writeoff from $10,000 to $25,000 a year. I'm 
proud of the fact that in that minimum wage bill we made it possible for 
small businesses--made it much easier to take out retirement plans for 
the owners and employees and then for the employees to keep those 
retirement savings when they move from job to job. People that work for 
small businesses ought to be able to have a secure retirement, too, and 
so should people who change jobs. I'm proud of that.
    Let me say this: We have to build a bridge to the 21st century where 
people can succeed at work and at home, can be good parents, most of 
all. That does mean health care. It does mean retirement security. It 
does mean higher wages and better jobs. It also means things like the 
family and medical leave law, the first bill I signed as President. 
Twelve million American families got to take a little time off from work 
without losing their job when a baby was born or a parent was sick. I 
want to expand that to say that parents ought to go to their parent-
teacher conferences and their regular doctor's appointments. I want to 
expand that to say that when a parent earns overtime, the parent should 
be able to decide to take the overtime in pay or in time with their 
kids, depending on what they need for the family.
    And I'm very proud of the fact that in that minimum wage law we also 
gave a $5,000 tax credit to families who will adopt children, and more 
if the children have disabilities. There are tens of thousands of 
children out there that need a home with stable parents, and I hope more 
people will take advantage of this.
    That's the kind of bridge I want to build to the future. Will you 
help us build that bridge? [Applause] It starts in the Mayfields all 
over America. It starts in the places the politicians don't visit. It 
starts with the values and the work and the family that you're building.
    I love these signs. Hillary and Tipper and Al and I are delighted to 
be here. We ask for your help, your prayers, your support for 68 more 
days and for 4 years beyond. We can build that bridge to the 21st 
century wide enough for all of us to walk across.
    Thank you, and God bless you.

Note: The President spoke at 10:10 a.m. In his remarks, he referred to 
Gov. Paul E. Patton of Kentucky and Mayor Arthur Byrn of Mayfield.