[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: William J. Clinton (1998, Book II)]
[July 15, 1998]
[Pages 1240-1242]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks at an Empowerment Zone Reception
July 15, 1998

    Thank you so much. Welcome to the White House. Thank you for the 
good work you've been doing. I want to thank all the people who are 
responsible for this reception. I thank my Cabinet members and the 
Members of Congress for coming. I welcome all of you here, including the 
many, many elected officials, and especially Mayor Corradini. We wish 
her well as she assumes the helm of the U.S. Conference of Mayors. I'd 
like to thank the Marine Band for playing for you. They just celebrated 
their 200th birthday last weekend. As far as I know, there are no 
members of the original band still playing--[laughter]--but they have a 
magnificent sense of tradition.
    I am so happy to have you here, to look out and see all of you, 
because you are the living embodiment of the political philosophy I have 
sought to bring alive in this country. You are the living embodiment of 
how I believe
Washington, DC, should work: putting progress and people over 
partisanship, community over division, tomorrow's hopes over yesterday's 
fears.
    I cannot thank the Vice President enough for shepherding this 
community empowerment process these last several years from what was 
just a gleam in our eyes over one of our weekly lunches to this vast 
array of Americans. And if you look around this crowd, if this isn't one 
America for the 21st century, I don't know what is. I thank you.
    I want you to take away from here, in addition to all the practical 
things you've learned and the sense of enthusiasm and positive outlook 
you have, a couple of very brief points. So I want to repeat briefly 
some of the things the Vice President said, because we still need your 
help.
    You know, when we came here, we had a philosophy of Government that 
we thought was

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appropriate to the 1990's and beyond. We wanted to get beyond what I 
thought was a completely sterile debate in Washington about whether 
Government could solve all the problems or Government was the source of 
all the problems. We thought our job was to empower people, to be a 
catalyst, to be a partner, to give people the tools to solve their own 
problems and make the most of their own lives and build strong personal 
lives, strong families, strong neighborhoods, strong communities. You 
have been the instrument of that, and many of you were just doing that 
anyway. We have tried to be good partners to you, and you have certainly 
been all we could ever have asked for.
    If anybody had told me in 1993 when I took the oath of office as 
President and began to implement the ideas that we ran on, that in less 
than 6 years we'd have over 16 million jobs, the lowest unemployment 
rate in 28 years, the lowest crime rate in 25 years, the lowest 
percentage of our people on welfare at 29 years, the first balanced 
budget and surplus in 29 years, the lowest inflation rate in 32 years, 
the highest homeownership in history, millions of people taking 
advantage of the family leave law, getting pensions they couldn't get 
before, 5 million more kids getting health insurance, the highest 
immunization rates of children in our history, opening the doors of 
college to all Americans through the HOPE scholarship--and we do all 
that with the smallest Federal Government in 35 years--I would say, I'll 
take that, and be grateful for America.
    But I have been urging the American people and urging this Congress 
to use these good times, not simply to enjoy them but to see them as the 
solemn responsibility to our children and grandchildren to take on the 
larger challenges that we face moving into the 21st century. And you 
know what they are as well as I do. You know we still have a lot of work 
to do to make the world a place of peace and freedom and prosperity. 
That's why I went to China to do my best to make a constructive 
partnership with the people of the world's most populous nation.
    You know we still have work to do to give this country the world's 
best system of elementary and secondary education. We've got the best 
college system in the world, but everybody knows we can't stop until our 
children, from the first day of school, know that their schools are the 
best in the world.
    You know we've still got work to do to prove that we can deal with 
these enormous environmental challenges we have, from brownfields in the 
cities to still work we need to do with clean water, to saving our 
oceans, to dealing with the challenge of climate change. And I take it, 
after having the 5 hottest years in the last 600 years in the 1990's, no 
one seriously quarrels with the idea that the Vice President was right 
years ago when he told us that global warming was real, and we have to 
find a way to grow the economy and preserve our environment.
    And in spite of this great, wonderful crowd, we still have work to 
do to prove that we can all live together, across the lines of race and 
religion and other differences that divide us, because what we share in 
common is more important. That's what you live. You live that philosophy 
every day in your communities, and we need our political leaders to be 
as good as you are. And if America is going to lead the world to a 
better place, America has to always be striving to be better, to really, 
truly be one America where everybody has a chance and everybody has a 
role to play.
    We have to save Social Security and Medicare for the 21st century so 
that when the baby boomers like me retire, we've got a decent 
retirement, but we don't bankrupt our children and our grandchildren. No 
person in the baby boom generation I have ever talked to--without regard 
to their income, their race, or what they did for a living--did not want 
desperately to make the changes now that have to be made so that when we 
retire, we do not impose an unconscionable burden on the future 
generations. We have to work on that. And we can do it if we do it 
together in a fair and decent and honorable way.
    And I would say the last big challenge we face is the one that 
you're here working on. Yes, we have the best economy in a generation, 
maybe the best economy we have ever had. But there's still a lot of 
farming communities that don't know it. I got a letter from a farmer in 
North Dakota today who said that Arkansas is not the only town with a 
place called Hope. But there's not much of it left in Hope, North 
Dakota, because of the problems they face. And I saw the pictures of his 
little town, and it looked like so many towns in my home State back in 
the eighties.
    There are a lot of Native American tribes represented here, and a 
lot of them still don't

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have the jobs they need, the education they need, the support they need. 
There are a lot of urban neighborhoods represented here, where the 
unemployment rate is still too high, the crime rate is still too high, 
and the children still don't have enough hope for the future.
    And so I say to you, we want to be good partners. But to do it, you 
have to help us convince the Congress to put progress and people over 
partisanship.
    We need another round of empowerment zones in this 1999 budget. 
Secretary Cuomo has got a budget that would provide for another 180,000 
units of affordable housing, 50,000 housing vouchers for people moving 
from welfare to work, hundreds of millions of dollars for economic 
development in our most distressed communities.
    We have an education empowerment zones initiative that deserves to 
pass so that we'll have more places like Chicago, which now has the 
sixth biggest school district in the country in summer school, which now 
is feeding tens of thousands of kids three square meals a day. We need 
to pass our initiative to help more communities provide after-school 
programs for kids to keep them out of trouble and to keep them learning. 
We have a lot to do.
    We still have brownfields to clean up. We still have toxic waste 
dumps to clean up. We still have work to do. We want to expand the 
Community Development Financial Institution so we can make more of those 
microcredit loans. We made 2 million of those microcredit loans with 
American tax dollars in Africa and Latin America and Asia last year. If 
they work there, 2 million loans like that could revolutionize inner-
city America, could revolutionize the Native American communities, could 
revolutionize a lot of small, rural communities in this country. We can 
do it, and we need your help to do it.
    So I say to you, we need these things. And finally, all of you 
deserve a full and fair count of the American people in the 2000 census 
so you're not shortchanged just because you don't have the political 
power that money brings. You represent people in this country, and 
you're entitled to your fair share of our future. When you think about 
how far we've come and you know how far you could take your communities, 
when you think about how desperately America needs every child, every 
mind, every able-bodied adult at work, every person with a new idea with 
a chance to start a business--if you really believe in the American 
community, it must mean that every American should be part of a strong 
and growing and thriving and united community.
    So I say to you, I'm happy you're here. I'm proud of your success. I 
am so grateful that I had a chance to be President during these last 6 
years. But we need to bear down and do more so that when we are all done 
we can look back and say, we built our bridge; we prepared our country; 
we went into the 21st century with everybody making the trip.
    Thank you, and God bless you.

Note: The President spoke at 7:27 p.m. on the South Lawn at the White 
House. In his remarks, he referred to Mayor Deedee Corradini of Salt 
Lake City, UT.