[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: William J. Clinton (1998, Book II)]
[October 29, 1998]
[Pages 1913-1916]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks at a Florida Democratic Party Dinner in Palm Beach
October 29, 1998

    The President. Thank you very much. The first thing I have to say is 
that Meyer Berman asked me to make a public service announcement--
[laughter]--that in the interest of enlightened citizenship, he has for 
everyone here a copy of James Carville's latest book. [Laughter]
    Let me, first of all, say to Danny and to Eva, thank you for 
bringing us into your beautiful home, for the wonderful dinner, for the 
music on the balcony. I thank all the people who served us tonight. I 
think they did a great job, and I think we ought to give them a round of 
applause.
    I thank you and Meyer for cochairing this event. I thank all of you 
for coming, some of you my good friends from all around America. I'd 
like to say to all the public servants who are here a special word of 
appreciation. Florida has been, I think, particularly blessed to be well 
served. I want to thank Lawton Chiles for being a great United States 
Senator and a great Governor and a great partner for me and a great 
friend.
    Congressman Alcee Hastings, thank you for your support and your 
friendship. Congressman Peter Deutsch and Lori; Congressman Rob Wexler 
and his wife, Laurie, thank you for being here. Senator Daryl Jones and 
State Representative Elaine Bloom, thank you for being here. This State 
needs good leadership.
    I'd like to also say, back when I decided to run for President in 
1991--I think I mentioned Senator Graham, did I? Where is he? He's here 
somewhere. I want to tell you, Senator Graham and I used to be seat 
mates. He taught me how to be a Governor. So I served with Bob Graham 
and Lawton Chiles, and I finally figured out how do the job. And that's 
really a big reason I got to be President.
    But I want to come back to 1991, but I want to say that I think both 
of them would say that we really enjoyed being Governors. And I was so 
afraid that Bob Graham wouldn't run for reelection this year. And he's 
so desperately needed in the Senate, because when you get to be the 
Governor of a place like Florida, and there is so much to be done, and 
it's so exciting, and it's so vibrant, and things are changing so fast, 
and then you go to Washington, and you see there is so much to be done--
[laughter]--and there are so many challenges, and it's so exciting, but 
nobody really wants to do it, or at least a lot of people would rather 
posture and position and sling words back and forth instead of actually 
rolling up their sleeves and doing it. That's why Lawton left the Senate 
and came back to Florida.

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    And yet I don't think it is wrong to say that that's really what 
America needs at every level, which brings me back to Buddy and Anne. 
When I wanted to run for President in 1991, really only my wife and my 
mother thought I had a chance to win--[laughter]--and apparently a few 
people in the Republican Party. [Laughter] But I came down here, and I 
knew--actually the first big test of a Presidential campaign is now in 
Florida. It's the straw poll conducted at the December State convention 
in Florida. Elaine remembers all the sort of traipsing around. And there 
were people in Florida who started with me in 1991 who have been my 
friends ever since.
    But Buddy MacKay stood up for me and stood by me and was with me 
every step of the way. Now, one of the things I think you want in a 
Governor is somebody with a lot of foresight. And it looks to me like he 
qualifies just on that ground alone. [Laughter] He joined my mother and 
my wife in thinking I had a chance to win, and I think that's a big 
quality. [Laughter]
    But let me say in all seriousness, I know this man very, very well. 
I admire him and his wife very much. And I made a--I sometimes--I guess 
because I'm not running again I can say things that are sort of 
impolitic, so I'll say something that's impolitic. It is not rational 
that he would be behind in the polls at all because he and Lawton Chiles 
have done a good job together as partners. And this is a better, 
stronger State than it was 8 years ago. The economy is stronger. The 
education initiatives are stronger. There's been an aggressive effort to 
grow the economy and preserve the environment. We're working together on 
the Everglades, trying to figure out what to do there to keep this thing 
going. And I can just go through issue after issue after issue.
    And so I will ask everybody I talk to about Buddy's race, because--
my staff makes fun of me because I've just been obsessed with this. I 
don't have any hard feelings about Mr. Bush. I just want him to be 
elected Governor because I think he's got the best program and the best 
record, and I think he'll be the best Governor for Florida. That's what 
I think. I have no negative feelings.
    And as I get older, I'm sensitive to this. There's always going to 
be one candidate who will be younger and the other one will be a little 
older. And one candidate will have a little more money and the other one 
won't. And sometimes one candidate comes from a more famous family than 
the other one.
    But let me ask you a question, all of you here that know Buddy 
MacKay. If he wins this election on Tuesday, do you have any doubt that 
he will be reelected 4 years from now? No, you don't, do you? Why? 
Because you know that he'd be a great Governor. Now, if you believe 
that, then you need to do what you can. You owe it to yourselves to go 
out and make sure he wins on Tuesday. You owe it to yourselves, to the 
future of this State. This is a very good man with an extraordinary 
record of service who will do this State proud. And you have big, big, 
big challenges here that require a serious, consistent, sustained 
response.
    The education issue is one. Bob and Rob and Peter and I, we just 
worked like crazy, and we all stayed together, and we got enough money 
in this last budget to make a big downpayment on putting 100,000 more 
teachers in the schools, focused in the early grades so that when we get 
it all done we can take the average class size nationwide down to 18 in 
the first three grades. Very important.
    But we can give you all that money in Florida, and you won't be able 
to take advantage of it. Why? Because in places as big as Tampa and as 
small as Jupiter and all places in between, everybody is in trailers 
already. So where are you going to put the teachers? We have to build 
more classrooms.
    So no matter what we do, even if in this election I get enough help 
because the voters elect a few more Democrats to give a little more 
balance in the Congress, which I hope they will, and we pass our class 
size initiative, it will support what Florida has to do, but it won't 
supplant it, because you're growing so fast. So it's a huge deal. This 
is a big issue. If one candidate is committed to smaller classes and 
more classrooms and more teachers and building up the system, and the 
other isn't, that's a massive issue.
    I'll just give you one other issue. We've got 160 million Americans 
in managed care plans. And we were talking around our table tonight 
about John Glenn being 77 and how we're all living longer. I certainly 
hope that's true. And I said that I was just reading that if a person 
lives to be 65 in America, then a man at 65 has a life expectancy of 81; 
a woman has a life expectancy of 85. And the fastest growing

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group of people in America, percentage-wise, as all Floridians probably 
know, are people over 85. And we were talking about Strom Thurmond, who 
is 96, who came to see me last week. And we were joking about that. He 
wanted to jog with me, but I couldn't keep up with him. [Laughter]
    This is a huge issue. And more and more senior care will be in 
managed care. Now, I supported the managed care movement when I ran for 
President, and I did when I presented health care plans to the Congress, 
because when I became President--a lot of people have forgotten this; 
you talked about inflation being down--health care costs were going up 
at 3 times the rate of inflation. It was unsustainable. It was going to 
bankrupt every business, every State government, the Federal budget. 
Lawton and Bob and I, we talked about it a lot. It was unsustainable. We 
had to do something to manage the system better, but no system can be 
managed in a way that destroys the purpose for which it's set up in the 
first place.
    And so we have this Patients' Bill of Rights in Washington. And you 
want to--Buddy wants to do a version of it here, which simply says some 
pretty basic things. If you're in a health care plan and your doctor 
says you need to see a specialist, you ought to be able to do it. If 
you're in a big city and you get in an accident, the ambulance ought to 
take you to the nearest emergency room, not one that's 20 miles away 
because it happens to be covered. If you're in the middle of a 
treatment, chemotherapy, or pregnancy, or any other sustained treatment, 
and your employer changes your health insurance provider, you ought to 
be able to keep that doctor until you finish your treatment. And, big 
issue, you should be able to keep your medical records private. That's 
all that does.
    So if one party in Washington or in Florida is for it and the other 
is not, that's a huge difference that will affect the lives, the texture 
of life for millions and millions of people. This is not some casual 
passing thing. I could go on and on and on.
    So I wanted to be here tonight because I am grateful to the Florida 
public servants who served with me, to Lawton Chiles and to Bob Graham, 
who I've known now for three decades, I guess, not for 30 years, but 
parts of three decades; to these two fine young Congressmen that I think 
have such a brilliant future; to my long-time friend, Congressman 
Hastings, who I'm trying to take dressing lessons from--[laughter]--I 
love that blue suit--and who has really been a champion for what is 
right in Washington in so many ways that I'm very grateful for. And I 
wanted to be here for Buddy MacKay.
    I just want to say one last thing. So many of you have been very 
nice to me tonight. You've talked about what happened at the Wye 
Plantation, and then you said something about me going without sleep. 
That's true. I was up for 39 hours at the end of those peace talks, and 
I never did that in college. [Laughter] And now I know why. [Laughter] 
Because I'm not over it yet.
    But I would like to--a lot of you here have been heavily involved in 
Israel and many of you even with the Arabs and the Middle East, and you 
have a vested--you've got a real oar in the water. You have very 
sophisticated knowledge of this. But what I want to ask is, just as 
Americans, why did you and why did other people feel so good when that 
was announced? What was it about that that everybody feel so good?
    Audience member. Hope.
    The President. Hope, yes. You said, oh, my God, here are these two 
guys; they've been dumping all over each other. They all have got 
problems at home; they're going to get grief because they did this. Both 
of them are going to be in greater--everybody who understands it knows 
that they're both in greater physical danger because they made this 
deal. And here are these guys that can hardly bear to speak to each 
other, and they get up on this high dive, and they hold hands, and they 
jump off together. And it made us all feel more alive. We felt bigger--
the possibility that things can change, and the possibility that people 
can be reconciled to one another after all the scars and all the 
injuries and all the wrongdoing and all the disappointments, that there 
can be both progress and community.
    Why did we all love it when old John Glenn went up in the spaceship 
today? Because it was about possibility. It was about, oh, my God, the 
guy's 77 years old, and he still looks good in his clothes. [Laughter] 
He can lift weights, and he's sharp as a tack, and he's doing great. 
Gosh, maybe I can be like that. Maybe we can all change the way we are. 
Maybe we can push back the frontiers of possibility not just in space

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but here on Earth. And so it made us feel bigger.
    What I'm trying to say to you is I've done nearly everything--or at 
least made real progress on nearly everything I told the American people 
I'd try to do when I ran in 1992. We haven't made health care available 
and affordable for all Americans yet. Every other major commitment I 
made, we've made real progress on. But the one thing I have not been 
able to do is to make Washington a less partisan, less negative place. I 
have--Lord knows, I have tried.
    And one of the things that I hope will happen in this election 
season is that people will say, ``Never mind who's got the most money on 
the ads and all this; I am going to choose a course for the future of my 
country that reflects the same aspirations and the same values that I 
felt when I was cheering for Netanyahu and Arafat, when I was cheering 
for John Glenn. But I believe that what that represents ought to be 
something that is a part of my everyday life as an American, as a 
Floridian, as a citizen, in my business, in my work, in my family, in 
everything, but especially in our public life.'' That is what I want. 
And I am trying so hard to make that argument to the American people.
    And when you get right down to it, the investment you made tonight 
is going to give the people here in Florida who are working for our 
candidates and our causes and our issues the power to get more people to 
do that on Tuesday.
    I told everybody, if you like what I did in the Middle East peace 
talks, keep in mind I am a hired hand. I was elected to do that by you. 
Everything that I did, if I had any role in it that was positive, I did 
through the direct authority of the people of the United States who 
voted on election day in 1996.
    If you liked what happened when John Glenn went up in space, keep in 
mind that is the product of a democratic government. That shuttle could 
not have gone up today but for the votes in the Congress to keep the 
space program alive and to ratify its direction, which means that, in a 
profound sense, if you supported someone who supported the space 
program, your hand was on John Glenn's shoulder when he lifted off 
today.
    If you voted for me and the direction I wanted to take in the Middle 
East peace, you were standing there when we announced the agreement at 
Wye. You have to see it this way.
    I do not want to finish my term without knowing that we have not 
only helped the American people to become more reconciled to one another 
across racial and other lines that divide us but also without knowing 
that we have made our best efforts to have our political leaders in 
Washington behave the way most citizens behave in America every day. The 
only way you can get that done is to show up and elect people like Buddy 
MacKay next Tuesday.
    Thank you, and God bless you.

Note: The President spoke at 8:55 p.m. at a private residence. In his 
remarks, he referred to Meyer Berman, sole proprietor, M.A. Berman & 
Co.; dinner hosts Danny and Eva Abraham; Gov. Lawton Chiles and State 
Senator Daryl L. Jones of Florida; Representative Peter Deutsch's wife, 
Lori; Democratic gubernatorial candidate Lt. Gov. Buddy MacKay of 
Florida and his wife, Anne; Republican gubernatorial candidate Jeb Bush; 
Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu of Israel; and Chairman Yasser Arafat 
of the Palestinian Authority.