[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: William J. Clinton (1999, Book I)]
[February 25, 1999]
[Pages 265-271]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks at a Democratic Senatorial and Congressional Campaign Committees 
Dinner in San Francisco, California
February 25, 1999

    Thank you. Well, thank you very much. First of all, let me say to 
our host and his family and to all the rest of 
you, I have had a perfectly wonderful time here tonight. And I think 
that's important. I say that because a lot of you go to a lot of these 
events, and I don't know that you always have a perfectly wonderful 
time. [Laughter] But we've had a wonderful time.
    I think all of you know you're here to do something of surpassing 
importance, and I want to say that, as I was looking at the previous 
speakers and those who were introduced who hold public office, I was 
sitting here silently

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thinking to myself, I am very proud to be a member of my political 
party.
    I am the beneficiary, as no one else here is, of all the work that 
these Members of Congress have done. I know things about them all that 
we don't have time even to go through. I've had conversations with 
Senator Baucus about the environment or how we 
ought to relate to Asia over the long run. I've talked to Senator 
Torricelli at all hours of the night, 
usually at my instigation, I might add, about all manner of issues. 
Senator Boxer and I are members of the same 
family in more ways than one, and I was profoundly grateful that the 
people of California reelected her by such a handsome margin. And 
Hillary and I both felt privileged to be able to come out here last year 
and to campaign for her, for Gray 
Davis, for all the Democrats who were elected. 
Congressman Bonior, Congressman 
Miller, Congressman Kennedy--you know, I used to be like Congressman Kennedy, 
too young to hold office, and I looked younger than I was--[laughter]--
but he's a marvelous leader for our Democratic House Campaign 
Committee--Congresswoman Eshoo; Congresswoman 
Lofgren, who was, I must say to all of you, a 
lion on the House Judiciary Committee and a great leader there; 
Congresswoman Woolsey.
    I want to say what Bob Torricelli said about Nancy Pelosi is right. I have been on both sides of issues with 
Nancy Pelosi; there is nothing more humbling than to have her look at 
you and tell you why you're wrong. [Laughter] You know? You just--she 
doesn't have to do like those really conservative Republicans who invoke 
God all the time. She just looks at you, and you know God is on her 
side. [Laughter] She never has to say it, you know. And if she really 
disagrees with you and she gets those--her eyes seem to get bigger and 
bigger and sadder and sadder, and you don't know whether she's going to 
cry or hit you right between the eyes. [Laughter] There are few people 
in public life I admire more for marrying their heart with their mind 
than Nancy Pelosi. You should be very proud of her, and I know you are. 
But she has really done a great job.
    And Dick Gephardt and I, 11 years 
ago, had a dinner in the kitchen of the Governor's mansion composed of 
cold McDonald's french fries, not quite as nice as the one we're having 
tonight. [Laughter] He came to visit me in Arkansas, and Jane was there. Hillary 
was there. We stayed up half the night talking. It was really the first 
time I'd ever had a chance to get to know him. And I can honestly say 
that with every passing week, every passing month, every passing year of 
working with him, my admiration and affection for him has grown.
    And he has done something a lot of people couldn't do. The Democrats 
were in the majority a long time, and I want to talk about how we came 
to be in the minority in a moment. But they were in the majority a long 
time, and psychologically it was very difficult for people who had been 
in the majority a long time to go into the minority. And a lot of 
people, frankly, just got--they just quit. I'll say this for the 
Republicans, they don't quit. Strom Thurmond and Jesse Helms don't quit, 
right? [Laughter] And a lot of our guys, they had a hard time, so they 
just--they resigned. They left their careers.
    And Dick Gephardt realized that 
because he believed, as did I, as did all those in this room tonight, 
that we didn't want America to look like what we thought would happen if 
the ``Contract With America'' prevailed. And we didn't agree with it. 
And we thought that in the end, the American people would support the 
decisions we've made which cost us the Congress in 1994. And so he rose 
to the occasion in a way that I think was awesome, even to people who 
had a lot of confidence in him and admired him. And I can tell you that 
after the next election, when he becomes the Speaker of the House, every 
person in this room will be very proud that you were here tonight and 
that you made a contribution to it. And I thank you.
    Now, when the mayor came in 
tonight, I told him I would be for him or against him, whichever would 
help most in his election. [Laughter] And typically, he asked for one of 
each. [Laughter] But I want to thank the mayor for always making me feel 
at home in San Francisco. I thank Art Torres for 
his leadership of our party. I thank all of you.
    I wish I could think of something to say that you can say to 
somebody else that would spread the word beyond the circle of friends we 
all have. But as I was going through this magnificent home tonight, and 
Bob Torricelli said something that I wish I could have said, because he 
said, ``All of you are here because you believe that your country will 
be better off if you help other people who have things that you already 
have--to acquire things that you already have.''

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    I believe that the things, in this time at least, that distinguish 
our party are things for which this home, this city, and this State are 
metaphors. We don't know who laid this stone in the floor. We don't know 
who did the marbling work on these beautiful columns or who painted the 
walls or put the glass in the ceiling. I don't know who painted that 
wonderful painting of Nijinsky in the other room. But I know one thing: 
Every one of them--we don't know any of them--they had different gifts, 
but they were very special. And we're all better off and enriched 
tonight because they had a chance to manifest their gifts. But we're 
also better off because they had the chance to manifest their gifts 
together. The house was built by the gifts of many people, some of whom 
are completely anonymous. The magnificent furniture, the inlaid work on 
the desk, the things I saw--I don't have any idea, some of those people 
have been dead more than 100 years. But every one of them had a gift, 
and when you put them all together, you have quite a home.
    San Francisco and California, they're places where everybody can 
feel at home, where the diversity, the richness, the texture of what 
will be 21st century America is already evident, and where ideas are 
prized, no matter what their source, and where people don't fear change 
as long as the change occurs in an atmosphere of mutual respect and 
cooperation. That's basically what we think America ought to be like, 
all day, every day.
    When Nancy quoted the prayer of Saint Francis and talked about all 
the places I brought peace to, I thought, there are three places that I 
have made no progress. I've made no progress, although I've tried, in 
trying to get Greece and Turkey to get along. I've made no progress in 
trying to resolve the tensions between India and Pakistan. And I'm not 
sure I've made any progress at all in bringing peace to Washington, DC. 
[Laughter]
    But I will say this: This country knows one thing after 6 years, 
that all the things that used to be said by the other party about the 
Democrats turned out to be wrong. They said we couldn't be trusted to 
govern; we couldn't manage the economy; we couldn't deal with crime or 
welfare or foreign policy or defense. And the country is in a lot better 
shape.
    The interesting thing is that it turns out that if you believe 
everybody has got a gift to give, that the gifts will only manifest 
themselves to the maximum degree if we give them together, and that 
Government ought to be about bringing out the best in people and trying 
new ideas and moving forward, it turns out it works. It works.
    But it wasn't always evident. The reason these Democrats are in the 
minority tonight is because in 1994 it was not evident to the American 
people that the tough votes they cast for the budget bill in '93 and the 
crime bill in '94, the Brady bill, the assault weapons ban, and bringing 
the deficit down and, at the same time, saying we had to increase our 
investment in education--it wasn't apparent in 1994 that the results 
would be what they turned out to be.
    But the American people, if you give them enough time, nearly always 
get it right. That's why we're still around here after more than 200 
years. And in 1998, for the first time since 1822, the party of the 
President in the sixth year of a Presidency won seats in the House of 
Representatives, while being out-spent by $100 million, because of what 
they stood for and because of the record that together we had made and 
the progress the American people have made.
    And I'm not running for anything anymore. I might run for the school 
board some day. [Laughter] I'm here because I believe that what we stand 
for has not only helped America to come to where we are now as compared 
to where the United States and California were in 1991 and 1992 but 
because I believe that now the real question is, what will we do with 
this moment of prosperity and confidence? And I'd like to be pretty 
candid with you tonight and tell you what I have absolute confidence we 
should do and what challenges are out there that I haven't quite figured 
out exactly how to solve yet. But I am sure that having people in the 
majority who believe everyone has a gift, we have to give them together, 
and we ought to be bringing out the best in people in public life, are 
the people that ought to be mapping the path of the 21st century.
    We have to deal now with a surplus. If somebody had told you in 
1992, ``If you vote for Bill Clinton, 6 years later he'll be coming 
back, and they'll have this big fundraiser, and he'll be saying, the 
biggest challenge we've got now is how to deal with the surplus,'' you 
would have said, ``I will not vote for that man. He's nuts.'' [Laughter] 
``He's kidding.'' But let me just ask you to think--yes, America is 
doing

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well; yes, California is doing well. But we have some big challenges. 
And if we expect to win in 2000, we have to show, number one, that in 
the next 2 years we're doing everything we can to fulfill the mandate 
the voters gave us in the '98 election and, secondly, that we are still 
looking to the future.
    We've got to deal with the aging of America, the retirement of the 
baby boomers, the fact that we're all living longer. Our life expectancy 
up over 76 years now. If you live to be 65 in America, your life 
expectancy is over 80 years now, soon to be over 85. In the year 2030 
we'll have twice as many people over 65 as we do today. We'll have only 
two people working for every one person on Social Security.
    The Democratic Party, out of its compassion and its sense of 
obligation across the generations, created Social Security and Medicare, 
and they will both be stressed mightily by the rising cost of health 
care, the fact that we're living longer and using more health resources, 
and the fact that the demographics of the baby boom retirement will put 
great stresses on us. We now project a surplus for the next 25 years. 
There is a way to deal with the aging of America that will use most of 
the surplus to save Social Security and Medicare and pay down the debt.
    We will also have to make reforms in Social Security and Medicare, 
some of which may be somewhat controversial. But if you believe that we 
have to be together, then that's what we've got to do. I was in Tucson 
today, speaking to a big community group, and person after person after 
person came up and told me that they were literally alive because of 
these programs.
    I was introduced by an 82-year-old Chinese-American woman who is, near as I could tell, about 4'8''. She 
made Barbara Boxer look like a basketball player. [Laughter] And she was 
magnificent. She was a community leader in Tucson and was born in 
Tucson--a native of Tucson, Arizona--who talked about being a breast 
cancer survivor and the mammography she got because of Medicare and 
because we had pushed that and changed the system.
    So who do you trust to change this program, and are we going to do 
it, and how are we going to do it and be faithful? We have to do it. And 
we do it not for the people on these programs now--they're going to be 
fine--but so that the baby boomers, like me--and I'm the oldest of the 
baby boomers--do not have to go to bed every night worried that we are 
bankrupting our children and undermining their ability to raise our 
grandchildren.
    And now is the time to think about it--now, years ahead of time, 
when we have the resources, when we have the ability, before the crisis 
arises, before it threatens to weaken the American economy just to find 
some sort of solution. That's the first thing we have to do.
    The second thing we have to do, as others have said, is to 
recognize, frankly, as so many of you have done in many ways, that we 
will never be the country we ought to be in the 21st century until every 
child gets a world-class education. We will never be. And I think that 
means, among other things, continuing our work for better prepared 
teachers, smaller classes, hooking up all the classrooms to the 
Internet. We're up to 50 percent, by the way.
    When the Vice President and I came here for our first NetDay a 
couple of years ago, only about 8 percent of the classrooms in America 
were connected to the Internet. We're up to 50 percent now, and we will 
make our 100 percent goal shortly after the turn of the century. And 
that's a good thing. But we need to build or modernize a lot of schools. 
We've got all these schools where the kids are going to schools in 
housetrailers, or they're going to schools in buildings so old they 
can't even be wired for the Internet. Many of our cities, the average 
age of the school building is 65 years or more. And a lot of those 
buildings are magnificent, but they take some money to modernize and to 
prepare.
    I want to end social promotion, but I don't want to declare the 
children a failure when the system is failing them. Senator 
Boxer's great passion has been getting us more 
after-school programs. We now have in this budget enough money for a 
million children to be in after-school programs in the United States if 
it passes. This is an important thing.
    We have to recognize that there is much more we have to do to 
balance work and family. Today in Arizona, three different people came 
up to me and thanked me for the family and medical leave law, the first 
bill I signed as President. But millions of workers are not covered. 
They ought to be covered.
    We ought to pass the child care initiative Senator Torricelli talked 
about. You'd be amazed how many people are out there struggling to work 
and having so much of their wages eaten up because they cannot afford 
quality child care.

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We've seen the welfare rolls drop in half, but the truth is that there 
are some people who are off the rolls who aren't working, and others who 
would leave the rolls gladly if they could only afford the child care. 
And we have a child care initiative that we ought to pass.
    Balancing work and family will be one of the signal issues of the 
21st century. More and more, two-parent families will be working. More 
and more, single parents will have to work. We owe it to America, those 
of us in positions of responsibility, to lead a country where every 
person who wants to work or has to work and who has children can succeed 
as a parent and a worker. If we ever get in a position where we accept 
the proposition that anybody in this country ought to have to choose, 
then we have lost, because we are diminished by either choice. And yet, 
every day, people do choose. And every day, people who are working who 
have children are making choices sometimes they're not even aware of. 
And it erodes the fabric of our common society, and we have to do a 
better job.
    We have to have a commitment in the 21st century that we manifest 
now to bring this economic recovery to people in places that haven't 
seen it. There are cities in this country now that still have huge 
census tracts with double-digit unemployment, rural areas with double-
digit unemployment, Native American reservations where, even though we 
now have the lowest unemployment rate in the entire industrial world, 
there has been no new investment, and there have been no new jobs.
    I have given the Congress an economic package which will provide 
incentives to create new investments and new markets here at home. We 
ought to do that. Every one of you ought to want every American at least 
to have a chance to participate in this recovery. Now, when our economy 
is the strongest in at least a generation, if we can't bring economic 
opportunity to people who haven't had it now, we will never get around 
to it. If we can't prove that free enterprise can work in places it 
hasn't reached now, we will never be able to prove it. And I hope you 
will support that.
    We talked a little about the remarkable sense of community you have 
here. One of the things that I want to do--and I was met by someone from 
the chamber of commerce at the airport who is an architect, who had a copy of a publication the Vice President put out on our new livability initiative--$1 
billion to help communities deal with traffic problems, the need for 
green space, the need for managed development, $1 billion to set aside 
lands in perpetuity.
    We have gotten ourselves tied in knots too often in our country 
trying to make the choice between our economic growth and the 
preservation of our environment and the quality of life. We have decided 
to try something different--to put some money out there to acquire some 
land that's available on the market and to help communities figure out 
how to grow and preserve green space, how to grow and deal with traffic 
congestion, how to deal with these things. I think this is very 
important.
    So, these are some of the things that are on the agenda for us in 
this year, along with the very important peacemaking work I hope we will 
be continuing to do in the Middle East, in Northern Ireland, in Kosovo, 
and in the places I mentioned where we've had no progress, including 
Washington, DC. [Laughter] There are two challenges I want to ask you to 
think about, because there are people in California that I think are 
uniquely qualified to do it.
    In order to keep the American economy growing over the long run, we 
have got to restore growth to the global economy. For the 6 years I've 
been President, in the first 5 years, 30 percent of our growth came from 
sales of American products overseas. Now, last year, we had very good 
growth, but it didn't come from overseas. We were able to generate 
enough activity within our borders and basically hold our own in our 
sales. But because of the economic downturn in Asia, the terrible 
financial crisis there, and the impact it had in Latin America and the 
slowdown there, we had some real difficulties. Our farmers, our steel 
industry, our aircraft people had some real problems.
    I believe that it is imperative that the United States take the 
lead--and we have been working hard on this for a year--in trying to 
figure out how to create a financial and trade architecture for the 21st 
century that will benefit ordinary people everywhere, that will put a 
human face on the global economy, that will enable people who follow 
responsible policies and honest and open investment practices to 
actually participate, and that will avoid the kind of horrible, wild 
swings we've seen in the last 2 years that turned people who worked for 
a generation to make

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themselves middle-class people in Asia into abject poverty. There were 
Asian cities where doctors and nurses had to start sleeping in the 
hospitals because they lost their homes when this collapse occurred.
    Now, I can't run all their policies. No President could. And some of 
their problems were of their own making. But I want you to know that I 
have gotten in touch with the people that I believe are the best minds 
in the world on this subject. We are working very hard. I am going to 
work very hard for the next year to try to get the countries of the 
world to agree on a framework within which steady, solid growth can 
occur in a way that will benefit Americans but also fulfill our 
responsibility to help others lift themselves out of difficulties. And 
if you have any ideas on that, don't be ashamed to present them to me, 
because I don't think there is a person in the world that has got the 
answer to this issue today.
    The second thing I'd like to ask you to think about is an 
environmental issue, and that's the issue of climate change. There's no 
question in my mind that the world is changing and that the climate is 
warming. I was out on the Monterey Peninsula not very long ago, with Sam 
Farr, and I think George Miller was there. We had this oceans conference. And 
Anna was probably there. We went out on the--
and Barbara was there, I think. We went out on 
Monterey Peninsula, and these graduate students took me out into the 
bay. And we were walking out into the clear water, and this graduate 
student said, ``Mr. President, reach down there and pick up a handful of 
the stones and the marine life.'' And I did. And the graduate student 
pointed to this little elemental form of marine life and said, ``You see 
this? Twenty years ago, you could not find this any further north than 
50 miles south of here. That is how much the water has warmed up in 20 
years''--this small species, moving 50 miles north.
    I've been working real hard--you probably don't know much about 
this--but to avoid an outright salmon war between Washington, Oregon, 
Canada, and Alaska, because all the fish keep moving further north. So 
now, Canada, Washington, Oregon don't have enough, and Alaska's got more 
than they know what to do with, because of the changing nature of the 
climate.
    Yet, oil prices are very low, and it looks like they're going to 
stay low for 2 or 3 years, which makes things like electric cars and 
substitute technologies relatively less economically attractive. And we 
have a majority in the House of Representatives--and Dick 
Gephardt will tell you--that caused this 
administration to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars last year 
appearing before subcommittees to explain why our efforts on climate 
change, which include no regulation and no taxes but tax incentives and 
research and development for new technologies--were not some great 
conspiracy to bankrupt the American economy.
    Now, California is a place that thinks about the future and lives 
with the future and has to live with the constant tension of dealing 
with these things. And you've adopted all of these tough clean air 
standards. So I say to you: I am determined before I leave office to 
build a national consensus to tackle this problem in a consistent, 
disciplined way for the next 10 years, and I believe the technology is 
there to actually promote more economic growth while doing the right 
thing with greenhouse gas emissions and turning this situation around.
    But if you can give me some ideas about that, as well as contribute 
your money to the Democratic majority, I would be grateful. These are 
two great challenges that will shape the way our children will live for 
the next 50 years, and I want your help.
    Now, the last thing I'd like to say is, I thank you for your 
citizenship and your concern, especially now. I think that it's fair to 
say in light of the events of the last 6 years and the election of '94 
and the success that has come to our country that we're all grateful for 
and none of us, including me, can take full responsibility for, the 
American people have the achievement. But I think we really know now 
that it matters if we give everyone a chance to develop his or her gift. 
It matters if we believe we're stronger if we become one community and 
one America.
    It matters if we believe the purpose of politics is to bring out the 
best in people. It matters. That's what this next election is about. 
That's what your contribution is about. Even if we fix Social Security 
and Medicare and do all I want to do in education and bring this 
economic initiative to distressed areas of the country and make peace 
everywhere I'd like to make it, problems will never go away. And the 
world is changing very fast, and no one can foresee all the 
developments.

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    So the best thing to do is pick the right people with the right 
values, the right philosophy, and the right approach. The last 6 years 
entitled the Democratic Party to the benefit of the doubt. And I believe 
that the last 6 years and the debates of the last 6 years put us in a 
position to make a very compelling case that we are now not only the 
party of Jefferson and Jackson, Roosevelt and Kennedy, but the party of 
Abraham Lincoln and Theodore Roosevelt as well. And we need you. We need 
your support.
    So I want you to think about this. This is a long way from November 
of 2000. But it will pass in the flash of an eye. Hillary said the other 
day--we were talking, fixing up a room at the White House--it's part of 
her project to try to leave the house in a lot better shape than we 
found it--and she said--no, it was in good shape when we found it. Don't 
laugh like that. I didn't mean it like that. [Laughter]
    But we wanted to do some things for the house, and we were up 
putzing around, putting stuff around, you know, and she said, ``Can you 
believe we've been here 6 years?'' It doesn't take long to serve a term 
or live a life. And ultimately, we will be judged by what we leave for 
our successors. I think we want to be judged well. I know you can trust 
the people who are here with me tonight to carry on the legacy you 
believe in and to build the kind of America our children deserve. You 
have helped them to do it, and I am very grateful.
    Thank you, and God bless you.

Note: The President spoke at 9:25 p.m. at a private residence. In his 
remarks, he referred to Gov. Gray Davis of California; Jane Gephardt, 
wife of Representative Richard A. Gephardt; Mayor Willie L. Brown, Jr., 
of San Francisco; Art Torres, chair, California State Democratic Party; 
senior citizen Esther Don Tang of Tucson, AZ; and Sylvia P. Kwan, 
member, board of directors, San Francisco Chamber of Commerce.