[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: WILLIAM J. CLINTON (1999, Book II)]
[August 7, 1999]
[Pages 1402-1404]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks at a Gore 2000 Reception in Little 
Rock
August 7, 1999

    Thank you very much, ladies and gentlemen. Thanks for being here, 
and thanks for being in such a good humor. My remarks tonight could be 
summed up in two phrases: Thank you for everything; here's Al. 
[Laughter]
    I want to begin by saying to Mark Pryor 
how much I appreciate his taking on this responsibility for the Vice 
President. I once did the same thing in the same job for President 
Carter, and I hope you have the same result.
    I want to thank Blanche Lincoln 
for being here, for her support of our administration and of the Vice 
President, but most of all, for the people of this wonderful State of 
ours. It really is true that--you know, when Blanche decides that she 
wants something for Arkansas, you can let her wear you out, exhaust you, 
break you down until you're prostrate on the floor, and

[[Page 1403]]

you'll do it, or you just go on and do it anyway. Those are really the 
only two alternatives.
    I want to thank Congressman Berry and 
Congressman Snyder for representing you so well 
and being such steadfast allies. I thank them. I thank the members of 
the Congressional Black Caucus who have joined us here today from other 
States in the South. And I thank Senator Bumpers and Senator Pryor for coming. 
I miss them.
    You know, Dale called me last week and told 
me a joke--[laughter]--and it isn't repeatable from this podium. 
[Laughter] But it was just like old times. And I was kind of feeling low 
when he did it; I worked for another 3 or 4 hours in a fabulous frame of 
mind after he did that. Now I've got to try to give the rest of this 
introduction without thinking about the punch line and laughing in the 
middle. [Laughter]
    I want to say just about three things tonight. The first thing I 
want to say is this. Yesterday, before I left Washington, we announced 
that the country has now produced more than 19 million jobs since I 
became President, as part of the longest peacetime expansion in history, 
which has given us the highest homeownership, the lowest minority 
unemployment in history, a 30-year low in unemployment, a 32-year low in 
welfare rolls, a 26-year low in the crime rate.
    The air and the water is cleaner; the food is safer; 90 percent of 
our children are immunized against serious childhood diseases for the 
first time. Because of the HOPE scholarship, virtually every kid in this 
country can get a $1,500 tax credit to pay for tuition to go to college. 
A hundred thousand young people have served their country in AmeriCorps 
in 4 years. It took the Peace Corps 20 years to reach that milestone. We 
have been a force for peace from Bosnia and Kosovo to Northern Ireland 
to the Middle East.
    And what I want you to know is I could not have achieved any of 
those things without the leadership and the support and the aggressive 
efforts of Vice President Al Gore.
    In 1993, when all the Republicans said that the country would go 
down the drain if Bill Clinton's idea of economics--which was to return 
to basic arithmetic instead of smoke and mirrors--took off, he cast the 
deciding vote on the economic plan. And the rest is history. We went 
from the biggest deficit to the biggest surplus in the history of the 
country.
    We made a decision that we wanted to do something to try to bring 
economic opportunity to people in places who had been left behind with 
the empowerment zone program, the enterprise community program. He 
personally ran it, and it's been a terrific success. And a lot of you 
know that I was in the Mississippi Delta region of our State this week, 
and in the Delta and on Indian reservations and Appalachia a couple of 
weeks ago, trying to take nationally the approach pioneered by Al Gore, 
proving that we can bring opportunity to poor people who want jobs in 
this country.
    Everybody in Arkansas ought to be concerned about whether we can get 
computers into all of our schools and hook them all up by the year 2000. 
And one of the things that we don't want to do is to go into the 21st 
century with a big digital divide between the rich and the poor. Al Gore 
led the fight to make sure that the Federal Government required all the 
schools in this country to have affordable rates so that every classroom 
in the poorest schools in America can be hooked up to the Internet. He 
did that, and he deserves credit for it.
    And there are so many more things that I can hardly list them all. 
But just let me say one thing. The management of our national security 
and for our foreign relations is very important. He has handled very 
important, complicated, difficult aspects of our relationships with 
Russia. He has dealt with any number of other countries. He played a 
major role in the decisions we made when they were not popular to 
liberate Bosnia and Kosovo from ethnic cleansing, to free the people of 
Haiti from a military dictatorship, to push ahead with our support for 
the peace process in the Middle East and Northern Ireland, to stand up 
to terrorists around the world and organize the world against it. In 
short, to prepare for the world we are living in.
    People can say many things about these last 6\1/2\ years. Historians 
may have their different evaluations. There is one thing, I will make 
you a prediction, that there will not be a single voice of dissent on: 
Al Gore has been the single most influential, effective, powerful, 
important Vice President in the history of the United States of America.
    Now, the second thing I want to tell you is this: He understands 
what the purpose of this election is. He understands it's a job 
interview. He wants you to hire him, and he's gone

[[Page 1404]]

to the trouble of telling you what he'll do if you give him the job.
    Now, that may sound laughable to you. I think one of the reasons 
we've enjoyed the success we have is that I was forced to think through 
in advance what I'd do if I got the job, and I told the American people 
in greater detail than anyone ever had. Then when I asked Al to join me, 
we revised--we sat down together, and we went over every plan, and we 
revised it, and we put it out again.
    And now that he's running, he's told you what his economic policy 
will be, what his anticrime policy will be, how he wants to use faith-
based groups in communities to help solve social problems, how he wants 
to go out and do dramatic new things with medical research, to cure 
cancer and other things, and exactly how he proposes to do it.
    And here's why that's important. Our generation--our generation, the 
baby boomers--have got an opportunity, because of the work we've done 
the last 6\1/2\ years, to save Social Security, to save Medicare and 
provide a prescription drug benefit, and to do it in a way so that when 
we retire, our kids don't have to support us and undermine their ability 
to raise our grandchildren. We have the opportunity to invest in the 
education of all of our children, so that we'll have world-class 
opportunities for the poor, the rich, the in-between of all races and 
backgrounds, so that our country will be strong. And we have the 
opportunity to get this country out of debt for the first time since 
1835.
    Now, what I want you to understand is, we're living in a dynamic 
time. We're still embracing change. Our administration is the force for 
positive change. This is not going to be change versus the status quo 
election. This election is about what kind of change do you want; and do 
you want to build on what's worked and go beyond it, or do you want to 
go back to the ways that got us in the ditch in the first place? That's 
what the issue is. And you don't have to guess with Al Gore, not only 
because of his record, but because he's given you a roadmap.
    And the third thing I want to tell you is this: I have been with 
this man in every conceivable kind of circumstance, good and bad, 
personal and political. We have talked about our children. We have 
talked about our parents and their deaths. We have talked about every 
conceivable subject, personal and political. I know him as few people 
do. He is a good person. He is a decent person. He is a strong person. 
If everything was on the line and I had to pick an American to make a 
decision that I knew would be good for my country when my daughter is my 
age, I would pick Al Gore, and so should you.
    Ladies and gentlemen, Vice President Al Gore.

Note: The President spoke at 8:03 p.m. in Hall Two at the State House 
Convention Center. In his remarks, he referred to State Attorney General 
Mark L. Pryor; and former Senators Dale Bumpers and David H. Pryor. The 
transcript released by the Office of the Press Secretary also included 
the remarks of Vice President Al Gore.