[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: William J. Clinton (1999, Book I)]
[March 12, 1999]
[Pages 364-369]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks at a Dinner for Representative Max Sandlin in Texarkana
March 12, 1999

    Thank you very much, ladies and gentlemen. I'd like to begin just by 
thanking you all for giving me such a wonderful, warm welcome tonight, 
coming up, saying hello, shaking my hand, seeing if I still knew how to 
write my name--[laughter]--taking the pictures. It's wonderful to be 
back here. I have had a lot of incredible times in this community over 
the last 24 years or so. And I've seen a lot of old friends here 
tonight, and I'm delighted to see you.
    I came here for a lot of reasons, but I want to begin by just 
thanking Truman and Anita and the Joyces, the Youngs, the Pattersons, everybody else who had anything to do with this. When I 
was Governor, and when I started running for President, no one but my 
mother thought I could win. [Laughter] Maybe on a good day, Hillary did. 
[Laughter] I don't know if anybody else did. Truman Arnold was there for 
me. The people of Miller and Bowie Counties were there for me. And I 
have never forgotten it, and I never will.
    I was sitting here looking at Truman, you 
know. I just want to tell you it's little things that mean a lot to me. 
I go all over the country, and I do these events. And I'm paying more 
attention to them, I think, than I ever have, maybe because they're not 
for me anymore because I can't run for anything. He thanked more people 
who worked for me who never get acknowledged by anybody, anywhere, 
tonight than anyone in the United States of America ever has at one of 
these events. And I appreciate that. That means a lot.
    I also want to thank Molly Beth Malcolm, even though the Congressman ragged her a little bit for 
agreeing to be head of the Texas Democratic Party. No matter what you 
think, it is

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alive and well, and we have a majority of the House delegation, and I 
hope we increase the numbers next time. And I thank you very much.
    I'd like to thank the people who served the food, the people who 
cooked the food. This is the most I've gotten to eat at one of these 
things in a long time. [Laughter] And the people that let me eat, I 
appreciate that, too, although I really didn't need to. I enjoyed it. 
I'd like to thank the band. They were great.
    You know, I wanted to be here tonight for a number of reasons. You 
know, I came home to Hope today, and we dedicated--we had a formal 
dedication of my--they call it my birthplace. I was actually born in a 
hospital, as near as I remember. [Laughter] But I lived there from the 
time I was born until I was 4 years old. And they restored this 
wonderful old house that was built in 1917, and the last time I saw it 
before they started in 1990, it needed condemning. But the people have 
done a wonderful job. And my kinfolks from all over here have given them 
memorabilia and things, and other people have contributed. A lady came 
from the Midwest today and stood out in that 
cold, driving rain, drove all the way from Iowa, I think, to give them a 
Lionel train, because she read that when I was 4 years old, I had a 
little Lionel train there. And she had one that was made in 1950, and 
she gave it to them. It was a wonderful thing for me. And I came here 
because I wanted to help Max Sandlin. And I'd like to tell you something 
about the connection between the two things.
    As I said, I feel incredibly grateful to have had the chance to be 
President. I'm grateful for the people here who have supported me. I'm 
grateful for the people from Arkansas who went to Washington with me. 
Truman recognized Bob and 
Janis and Nancy Hernreich, and my good friend Mack McLarty's here, and we may have some more Arkansans 
here with me tonight.
    But I want you to know that I hope that the good Lord gives me good 
health for a few more years, and I can spend my time being a citizen, 
trying to help other people I believe in stand up and fight for causes 
that I believe in. And after over 20 years in public life, I am acutely 
mindful of the fact that while every politician would like to have you 
believe that he was born in a log cabin that he made himself--
[laughter]--the truth is that all--any of us, even a President, can hope 
to do, is to be a part of setting a direction of taking the chains off 
people, creating the conditions in which people can make and live their 
own dreams.
    But I'm here for Max, in part, because I think it's not only 
something I want to do, it's something I think would be good for the 
children of this district and this State and this country. I said today 
at the dedication of my birthplace that when I was born in Hope, yea 
long years ago, right at the end of World War II, it wasn't a perfect 
place. It was still segregated, and we had our fair share of flaws in 
that little town. And as Mack McLarty reminded me today on the airplane, 
we even had a gossip or two, God forbid. [Laughter]
    But the children in the blush of optimism and national unity after 
World War II were basically raised to believe at least two things in 
little towns all across America like the one that I came of age in: One 
was to believe they should be personally optimistic, that they should 
have their dreams and live them and believe that they could. And the 
second was to be acutely sensitive to and respectful to other people, to 
never forget that they were part of a community, that the good news was 
they belonged to something bigger than themselves, but they also had a 
responsibility to care for people besides themselves.
    And one of the biggest reasons that I ran for President in 1991 and 
'92 was to give the young people of this generation that feeling back. 
All these young people working for us tonight, you don't have any idea 
what they do when they're not serving you food. But unlike me, they've 
got most of their lives ahead of them. I want them to believe that they 
can live their dreams. I want them to, in fact, have a chance to do it.
    I want them to also believe that in this country that is incredibly 
diverse--I told somebody today the little grade school named after me in 
Hope, Arkansas, now has 27 kids who are first-generation immigrants, 
whose first language is not English. The school district across the 
river, the Potomac River, from Washington, DC, now has children in one 
school district from 180 different national, racial, and ethnic groups. 
We had better remember that we are one community and that if any of us 
hope to do well, we ought to want our neighbors to do well, too. And we 
ought to be willing to go to some trouble to see that they have that 
chance.

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    And so that's what I said today at my little dedication in my home. 
I said I learned that lesson as a little boy in Hope. And if I hadn't 
learned it, we wouldn't be here 50 years later.
    I came here tonight because I like Max Sandlin and because I admire 
him and because he has already had an unusual impact for a person that 
hasn't been in the House any longer than he's been there and shown an 
unusual amount of personal courage and responsibility. And I will just 
give you three examples--[applause]--the other people also like him; 
otherwise my Congressman, former member of my administration, Marion 
Berry, the Congressman from eastern Arkansas, 
would not be down here tonight in the cold and the rain. You don't do 
that just out of some sense of obligation. And there are three reasons.
    Number one, I want you to know he does his work for the district. On 
far more than one occasion, he has personally lobbied me about a 
specific issue relating to this district. That's part of his job. But 
you would be amazed at how many people--so has Marion Berry--[laughter]--but he took me to race 20 years ago, 
so he feels he has a right to. But you would be amazed how many people 
get around the President, and then they say, ``Oh, I'd better not bother 
him with that. He's probably thinking about Kosovo.'' Well, I probably 
am. But the only reason I have a right to think about Kosovo is that 
people from Miller County and Bowie County gave me the vote to put me 
there to do it. And he never forgets that.
    Second thing is, he really, deeply believes in the things we're 
trying to do. You could look at him when he was up here talking; he 
wasn't faking it. He believes we were right to fight those who oppose 
us, to put another 100,000 teachers in the classroom so every child in 
this country has a chance in the early grades to be in a small class 
with a teacher that can give that child individual attention so that all 
our kids learn to read and to speak and to be able to learn for the rest 
of their experience. He really believes that we ought to have a 
Patients' Bill of Rights to protect the patients and the right of 
medical professionals to practice medicine, even as we try to manage the 
health care system.
    We shouldn't manage people's right to a specialist away. We 
shouldn't manage people's right to the nearest emergency room away. We 
shouldn't manage people's right to continue treatment even if their 
employer changes their health care provider in the middle of a pregnancy 
or chemotherapy treatment or something else. He believes that. It's just 
not something he's saying because it happens to sound good this year. 
And he really believes, and this is important, because the Democratic 
Party used to have an image as the party that had promoted the deficits. 
It was never true.
    Even in the 12 years--and remember, I'm not running for anything, so 
I'm entitled--and we've had a pretty good economy, so all I'm asking you 
for is the benefit of the doubt. But I'd like to put this down. Even in 
the 12 years before I became President, when the Democrats had a 
majority in Congress and we quadrupled the debt, the Congress actually 
spent less money than my predecessors asked them to spend. So what I 
wanted to do was to prove that you could be progressive--you could 
believe in community, you could believe in raising the minimum wage, you 
could believe in helping working families with child care, you could 
believe in opening the doors of college with more scholarships and tax 
credits--and first make the economy work by bringing the deficit down, 
balancing the budget, getting interest rates down so people would invest 
their money, run the stock market up, start new businesses, put people 
to work, and raise wages. I thought good economic policy and good social 
policy would go hand in hand. It turned out to be right. Well, I'm only 
going to be there 2 more years. Max Sandlin believes that. He wasn't 
kidding when he said we ought to pay down the debt.
    If I had come to you in 1992 and said, ``Now listen, before I'm 
done, I'll be coming back here telling you we can pay off the national 
debt,'' you'd have said, ``That guy's too unstable to be President.'' 
[Laughter] Wouldn't you? Nobody would have believed that. We just took 
it for granted. You know, the deficit would always go up; crime would go 
up; welfare would go up; the country would grow unequal; working people 
would never be able to get ahead again. It turns out not to be true. If 
you do the right things and work at it, consequences flow from that.
    So I'm telling you, I don't want to give you a whole policy speech 
tonight, but if you watch every elected official in Washington, DC, for 
the next year, there will be a zillion issues. You may think I'm wrong 
about some of them, but some of them will determine how the children

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in this room and their children live, way into the 21st century.
    One is, how are we going to handle the fact that America is aging? 
The Second World War baby boom generation, everybody born from 1946 to 
1964, when we all get into the retirement system, there won't be but two 
people working for every one person drawing Social Security. Even before 
that, within 10 years, because life expectancy is going up and the older 
you get the more you need to have medical treatment, Medicare will run 
out of money under the present system, unless we put some more money in 
it and make some changes.
    Now, that's a high-class problem. The older I get, the higher class 
problem that is. [Laughter] But if you think about it, that's a high-
class problem. It's because of advances in medical science, advances in 
basic health care, things like clean water and immunizations, and 
because people are taking better care of themselves. But it will 
bankrupt the country and the Social Security system unless we make some 
changes.
    So now we've got this chance. Why? Because we've got a surplus and 
because you've got a President who is not running for office and is not 
afraid to tell you a few things you might not like to hear about the 
changes we need to make to make sure this is going to be there 75 years 
from now. And this is not an issue for the elderly. Everybody over 60 in 
this audience, Social Security will be there if you live to be 85. Don't 
worry about it. It's not a problem. It's a problem for people my age and 
the nagging worry we have that if we don't fix Social Security, then our 
children will have to take care of us in a way that undermines their 
ability to take care of our grandchildren. That's what this is about.
    And it's a big issue for America. And it's very easy for politicians 
to get out there and tell you, ``Oh, we'll take care of this down the 
road, and I'm going to give you this surplus back right now in a tax 
cut.'' Well, we ought to have a tax cut this year, but we ought to save 
three-quarters of that surplus until we fix Social Security and 
Medicare. We ought to do that. And we have given the Congress a way to 
do it that will enable us for the next 15 years to buy down the national 
debt while we're making future commitments for Social Security and 
Medicare.
    Now, you know, this is an alien subject in America. We had--as Max 
said, we hadn't balanced the budget in 30 years; now we're talking about 
buying down the debt. But I've been thinking about this.
    I just got back from Central America, one of the places in the world 
we actually have a trade surplus with. That's why I want to help them 
get over the hurricane and because they're our neighbors and our 
friends. A lot of people say, ``I wish we didn't have so much illegal 
immigration.'' Well, a lot of people down there love their children and 
can't make a living for them. That's why they come up here. If we help 
them get over this hurricane and help them make a living down there, 
they'll be good trading partners, and you won't have to worry so much 
about illegal immigration.
    But I got to thinking about it. I'm also trying to do it because 
we're trying to keep the world economy going. But if you talk to any 
farmer that grows crops or raises cattle or hogs, you know this is a 
very tough time to be a farmer. We may have 18 million new jobs; we may 
have the best American economy in history; but you couldn't prove it by 
the grain farmers in the high plains of America. You couldn't prove it 
by most farmers. Now, why is that? A big reason is, half the world's in 
a terrible recession because of the Asian financial crisis and because 
it gave the financial flu to a lot of countries in Latin America, and 
they can't buy our stuff anymore. Now, I've got to worry about how to 
keep this economy going.
    So here's the good news: You can save Social Security and Medicare 
and because we'll be paying down the debt, we'll keep interest rates 
down, and we will be better off if things go bad in the world, and we'll 
do even better if they go well in the world. If you pay this debt down, 
it means business loans will be cheaper; therefore, there will be more 
taken, more businesses started, more jobs created. It means your kids' 
college loan will be cheaper. It means your car payment, your house 
payment, and your credit card payment will be cheaper. It means America 
will grow more. It means when Max Sandlin goes to Congress, every year 
from now on, every year he'll have to take less and less and less money 
off the top to pay interest on the debt.
    When I became President, 14\1/2\ cents of every dollar you pay in 
taxes had to be taken off the top to pay interest on the debt that had 
been accumulated in the 12 previous years before we could invest in 
education, invest in

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highways, invest in the environment, invest in health care, or give you 
a tax cut. In others words, when you hire a Congressman, you're 
basically getting 86 percent of a brain--[laughter]--or a capacity, 
because he can't think about 14 cents; 14 cents, he plunks down off the 
top end. Now, it's not always bad to go into debt. It's not always bad 
for a nation to do it. But it is a terrible thing for a nation to do 
what we did for 12 years and borrow money every year just to keep up 
with current expenses.
    You build a new building in Texarkana, you borrow the money, build 
the building, advertise it, pay the debt off. You're making a long-term 
investment, so you can make a long-term payment on it. But to keep 
borrowing money to go to dinner every night, which is what America did 
for 12 years, is a terrible mistake.
    And I am telling you, we can be out of debt in 17 years. In 15 
years, if you will do this, we will be down to where only 2 cents of 
every dollar you pay in taxes goes to debt service, and the rest can 
then be spent for Social Security or Medicare or education or for a tax 
cut if that's what the people in Congress want then. But let's secure 
the American economy for the long run.
    Let's say--I'm doing my best to help Asia, to help Latin America, to 
ward off wars that can wreck the economy, to keep things going. But we 
have limited control over events beyond our borders. Maybe I'll get this 
done. Believe me, I am trying. But I want America to be as strong as 
possible no matter what. If it rains, I want us to have a good roof up. 
If the Sun shines, I want us to be able to fly higher. This is the right 
thing to do. Max Sandlin believes that. You saw him up here tonight. He 
wasn't just giving a speech; that's what he believes.
    And the third reason I'm for him is that at a time in the last year 
when a lot of people just worried which way the political winds were 
blowing, that guy was telling people to read the Constitution of the 
United States of America.
    And so I thank you for coming here. I thank you for raising all this 
money. I thank you for sending a signal that you understand that good 
civic leadership is important and you'll stay with it. I thank you for 
everything you've done for me in two races for President and times in-
between and many of you for many, many years before.
    But I ask you to think mostly about tomorrow and all the tomorrows 
of the 21st century. I ask you to remember that in a time this dynamic, 
we cannot afford to sit back and rest on our laurels. Yes, we've got a 
great economy. Yes, we've got the lowest crime rate in 30 years. Yes, 
the welfare rolls have been cut in half. Yes, we seem to be making 
advances toward peace and security in the world. But things are changing 
in a hurry out there. We don't control everything. Therefore, it is very 
important, with all this prosperity and all this confidence we have, 
that we act on what we can control, which is what we do and what we care 
about and what kind of dreams we've got for our kids.
    And you know, we're having a good time tonight, and I didn't really 
mean to get this serious, but I don't know if I'll get to talk to you 
again personally before I leave office. And I'm telling you, we've got a 
chance to make the next 100 years better for America than the last 100. 
But it will be a very different world, and it will move in a hurry. And 
we will have to work hard always to ask ourselves: Is what I am going to 
do going to make it easier for every kid to dream big dreams and have a 
chance to live them; and is what I'm going to do going to make it easier 
for us to come together as a community--in our community, in our State, 
in our Nation, and with our friends around the world?
    And I'm telling you, you can boil all this stuff down to that: Are 
we going to make it easier for people to live their dreams? Are we going 
to make it easier and more likely that people will get along together 
and understand that for all of our differences, God made us more in 
common than different? And if the answer to those questions is yes, then 
that's probably the right thing to do. I trust Max Sandlin to find that 
answer.
    Thank you, and God bless you all.

Note: The President spoke at 8:05 p.m. in the Truman Arnold Center at 
Texarkana Community College. In his remarks, he referred to event 
cohosts Truman and Anita Arnold, Gene and Mary Kay Joyce, Damon and 
Doris Ann (D.A.) Young, and Cary and Lois Patterson; Molly Beth Malcolm, 
chair, Texas Democratic Party; Mary Dotson of Oklahoma City, OK, donor 
of a 1949 Lionel model train set to the Clinton Birthplace

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Foundation; Assistant to the President and Director of Personnel Bob 
Nash; and Special Assistant to the President and Records Manager Janis 
F. Kearney.