[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: William J. Clinton (1997, Book II)]
[December 11, 1997]
[Pages 1756-1758]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks at a Democratic National Committee Dinner in Miami
December 11, 1997

    Thank you very much. Thank you very much, Buddy, for giving me the 
chance to come here today to get your campaign kicked off and to replay 
in some small way the great obligation of friendship I feel for you 
for--as I said today at Buddy's fundraiser--for being for me in early--
or late 1991, before the Florida straw poll, before anything happened, 
and when only my mother felt I could be elected President. Buddy was 
there. And I'm glad to be here for him tonight.
    Mayor, thank you so much for what you said and for the vigor and 
youth and energy of your leadership and the enormous promise of your 
future. I've loved being with you today, and I wish you well. And I 
cannot thank Chris and Irene enough. I was looking at this--you know, I 
knew farmers back in Arkansas that didn't have ponds this big--
[laughter]--to feed hundreds of head of cattle. I am so--I love this 
place, and you've made us all feel so much at home. And at the end of a 
very long day, it's wonderful to be here. I'd like to thank Governor 
Romer and Alan Solomont and Dan Dutko for coming down for the Democratic 
Party. I would like to thank not only Chris but also Gene Prescott and 
Mitch Berger for helping us tonight.
    Some of you were at the other place, and I'll try not to give the 
same speech twice--although I am reminded of--maybe that's what I should 
do. One night I was at a concert by Tina Turner, one of my favorite 
political philosophers. [Laughter] And Tina Turner--it was about 10 
years ago; she was just making her big comeback, you know, after she 
told the story about how Ike did her wrong and everything. She had all 
these new songs, and she had that great saxophone player who was a 
bodybuilder and has chains all over his body--if you're a Tina Turner 
fan, you've probably seen him. So anyway, so we had the concert, and she 
sings all these new songs, and they're all real good. And then at the 
end of the concert, the band starts playing the introductory bars to 
``Proud Mary,'' which was her first hit. So she moves up to the 
microphone, and the crowd goes nuts. And they start screaming and 
cheering, and she backs off. And then she taunts them again and moves 
up, and the crowd screams again. And she goes up to the microphone and 
says, ``You know something, I've been singing this song for 25 years, 
but it gets better every time I do it.'' [Laughter] So maybe I should 
just give the same talk. [Laughter]
    Let me say, in 1991, when I decided to leave a job I loved and a 
State I loved and embark on the Presidency, I did it because I was 
afraid our country was moving into a new century and a new era without a 
strategy that would make

[[Page 1757]]

everybody be a part of America and that in the end would not have 
America be as strong as it ought to be. I felt that the political debate 
in Washington was stale and often irrelevant and too infused with an 
impulse to personal destruction. There's still a lot of that there, by 
the way--[laughter]--one reason I kind of hate to go back tonight.
    But the main thing I thought was that we were just thinking in 
yesterday's framework. And I still believe that's what was wrong. And so 
I went to the Democrats in the primary process, and I said, ``Look, I 
want to do something different. I don't want us to abandon our values, 
but I want us to take a new direction based on the time we're living in 
and in the time toward which we're going--a global economy, a global 
society, an information and technology revolution. All the patterns of 
how we live and work and relate to each other and the rest of the world 
is subject to change. I want us to focus on the future, not the past; on 
doing things that help everybody, not just a few people; and on 
promoting unity, not division. There's enough division in this country. 
And I want the Government to be neither the savior nor sit on the 
sidelines but instead to focus on a clear mission which is to create the 
conditions and give people the tools to make the most of their own 
lives.'' And that's what we've been doing for 5 or 6 years now--5 years 
really, since I've been President, and the results have been pretty 
satisfactory.
    And I think when the issue is whether you should support the 
Democratic Party or whether you should support Buddy MacKay or whether 
you should keep helping me and our crowd do what we're trying to do, you 
just need to know that everything that I do and everything I try to see 
that our party stands for, I try to make sure that we're thinking of 
everyone, not just a few; that we're promoting unity, not just division; 
and we're committed to the future, not the past.
    There's still a lot out there to do. I'm glad we've got the lowest 
unemployment rate and the lowest crime rates in 24 years and the biggest 
drop in welfare in history and a gazillion other impressive things I 
could say. We still have to prove that we can grow the economy and do 
what it takes to preserve the planet. We still have to prove that we can 
provide for our parents in terms of health care and retirement, save for 
our own retirement, and preserve Social Security and Medicare in a way 
that doesn't bankrupt our children.
    You know, I'm the oldest of the baby boomers, and I'm increasingly 
mindful of that. I guess I'm what you call near-elderly. [Laughter] And 
when our crowd retires and we all get into the ranks of the retired, 
those of us who get there will have a life expectancy up in the eighties 
somewhere. And there will be only a little more than two people working 
for every one of us that's retired. We have a moral obligation now, 
while I'm still in office, to try to figure out how to preserve Social 
Security, how to preserve Medicare, indeed, how to make sure other 
people who don't have access to retirement that's sufficient to support 
their lifestyle can save more for their own retirement and afford to 
keep getting health care in a way that doesn't bankrupt our kids. Now, 
can we do that? Of course we can. But we have to do it. We still can't 
say with a straight face that every American child, without regard to 
their race, their income, or their station in life, has access to world-
class education. And until we can, we can't secure the future of this 
country.
    Those are just three big issues. If you look around the world, 
there's a lot of fear in America apparently about expanding trade. I 
think it's a mistake; a third of growth comes from selling more things 
to other people. If we've got 4 percent of the world's people and 20 
percent of the world's wealth, we can't keep our income unless we sell 
something to the other 96 percent. On the other hand, you have to be 
sympathetic to American workers who figure that more and more and more 
what they say, feel, or think doesn't matter, that their whole pattern 
of existence can be wiped away in an instant by people who aren't 
accountable to anybody and not loyal to any country. That's the sort of 
negative view of the emerging global economy.
    So what do we have to do? We have to find a way to get the benefits 
of trade and preserve the social compact. We can't protect people from 
economic change, because economic change is bringing a lot of benefit to 
a lot of people. But when people lose and they're still good people and 
they're willing to show up for work in the morning, we need to move more 
quickly to help them get the training they need, the skills they need, 
the future they need.

[[Page 1758]]

    So there's plenty left to do. And that's why you're here, and that's 
why I believe the Democrats are the right party to do it, as I said at 
the earlier event. The two seminal decisions that were taken in 1993 and 
1994 that have had a big impact on this country every day since was, 
first, the economic plan, which got no Republican votes, which had 
reduced the deficit by 92 percent by the time we adopted the balanced 
budget law; and second, the crime bill, which was bitterly opposed by 
the Republicans because the NRA didn't like it because we had the Brady 
bill, the assault weapons ban, 100,000 more police, and preventive 
programs for kids. But those are the strategies that are working in 
community after community after community throughout the country to 
lower the crime rate.
    In the work we're doing with the Republicans when we work together, 
I think our party makes a unique contribution. Most of both caucuses 
voted for the balanced budget. It was a remarkable document. The 
Republicans had a slightly higher percentage of House Members voting for 
it than the Democrats did. The Democrats had a higher percentage of 
Senators voting for the balanced budget than the Republicans did. But 
over two-thirds of both voted for it.
    What did we give to that? First of all, we gave them 92 percent of 
the work. It's a lot easier to balance the budget and spend more money 
if you're almost home. But secondly, we said now is the time to provide 
health insurance to the children of working parents who can't afford it. 
And they said okay, and we did it. And we said now is the time to give 
parents tax credits, not only for their children at home but for the 
cost of college tuition for all 4 years and graduate school and for 
people who lose their own jobs or are underemployed and have to come 
back. So we make a difference. And if you look at those challenges out 
there, they matter.
    The last point I want to make is this--I said this before at the 
other thing, and I want to say this to you--I have taken a lot of good-
natured ribbing and sometimes outright criticism by commentators for 
being a notoriously personal President, for being interested in 
individuals that I know and telling a lot of stories and seeing politics 
with a very human and highly individualized face, even if I'm just 
working a crowd. I have vivid memories of people I have met in crowds 
all my life and the stories they've told.
    But the truth is, a nation is nothing much more or less than the sum 
of its stories. There was a report on one of the television networks the 
other night, a wonderful report about the State of Tennessee reviving 
the art of storytelling. Did any of you see that? They actually are now 
having an annual storytelling contest in Tennessee and bringing in all 
of these people out from the hills and these rural areas and letting 
people tell their stories and letting other people listen to them.
    Mayor Penelas told me the story of his parents tonight, told me how 
much it meant to his mother to come to the Inauguration--he said that 
tonight would be her birthday if she were still with us--talked to me 
about his father. I don't know about you, but I think he does a better 
job as mayor every day because he respects his parents' roots, his 
parents' values, loves them when they're here and when they're gone, and 
they're part of the story of his life.
    Every one of you has got a story to tell. That's what I try to tell 
people that work for me in the White House: Don't forget, every person 
you ever come in contact with has got a story. It deserves to be 
respected, and you can learn something from it. This country is still 
around here after 220 years plus because people got a chance to live 
their dreams, and the stories got better generation after generation. 
And it will be here 220 years from now if we do our job to form a more 
perfect Union, to pull us closer together, and to meet the challenges of 
tomorrow. That is the job of every generation of Americans, but it 
begins by appreciating the absolute integrity of every person's life and 
every person's right to dream and giving everybody that chance at the 
brass ring. That's why I'm still a Democrat and why I expect to die one 
and why I hope between now and then I can convert a lot of others.
    Thank you, and God bless you.

Note: The President spoke at 10:45 p.m. at a private residence. In his 
remarks, he referred to Lt. Gov. Buddy MacKay of Florida; Mayor Alex 
Penelas of Miami-Dade County; Chris Korge, event chair, and his wife, 
Irene, dinner hosts; Gov. Roy Romer of Colorado, national chair, and 
Alan D. Solomont, national finance chair, Democratic National Committee; 
Dan Dutko, chair, Victory Fund; Gene Prescott and Mitchell W. Berger, 
event chairs; and singer Tina Turner.