[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: WILLIAM J. CLINTON (1999, Book II)]
[October 21, 1999]
[Pages 1844-1847]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks at a Reception for Senator Edward M. Kennedy
October 21, 1999

    Thank you. Is this a rowdy crowd or what? [Laughter] You know, I'm 
not used to showing up and being the straight man. [Laughter] This is a 
very emotional moment for me. [Laughter] When I was in the 10th grade, 
Ted Kennedy was in the Senate. [Laughter] And when I retire from two 
terms as President, Ted Kennedy will be in the Senate. [Laughter] And I 
resent it. [Laughter]
    I don't know what Patrick's doing 
here. He's supposed to be raising money for House Members. [Laughter] 
You may have cost us four seats tonight, with all this money going here. 
[Laughter] Actually, he got an excused absence from Master 
Gephardt to come here tonight, and I'm 
grateful.
    Let me say a couple of words seriously. I am genuinely honored to be 
here. I love Edward Kennedy. And I am something of a student of the 
history of our country. I just--one of our guests tonight gave me a 
biography of Chester Arthur, because I don't own one. I've got this 
great--I've read all about all of our Presidents; I've studied the 
history of the United States Congress.
    I do believe that any fair reading of that history would say that 
Edward Kennedy was one

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of the four or five most productive, ablest, greatest United States 
Senators that ever served this great Republic of ours.
    And I am grateful for this family's commitment to public service. 
There is no question--I was a Governor for 12 years, and I care a lot 
about these issues that the States deal with. There's no question that 
Kathleen has done more with the 
job of Lieutenant Governor than any person in her position in the United 
States of America and that Maryland was the first State--thanks to her--
to make community service a part of the requirement of being a student 
in the public schools. And that is very, very important.
    And you know, I said I was in the 10th grade when Ted went to the 
Senate. Patrick looks like he's in the 
10th grade--[laughter]--and yet, here he is. You know, he's been here 
3\1/2\ months or something in the Congress, and he's already the head of 
the campaign committee. [Laughter] So I think that there is no limit to 
what he can and will do in the Congress. And you already heard him say 
he's trying to recruit one of his 
brothers--I mean one of Kathleen's 
brothers to run for the Congress in Illinois. So we are grateful for the 
service of this Senator and this family. And, you know, Vicki is my neighbor from Louisiana, so they've shown a 
certain affinity for Southerners. [Laughter]
    I want you to know something else, too, that I'm grateful for. In 
January of 1992 Jackie came to a fundraiser for me when I was running 
fifth in New Hampshire, and reached out to my wife and to my daughter in ways 
that I will never forget. One month after, her son had also come to an 
event for me, when I think I was running sixth in New Hampshire. 
[Laughter] So we've had this marvelous friendship.
    Sargent Shriver was, yesterday, with 
me when we celebrated the fifth anniversary of AmeriCorps. We've had 
150,000 young people in 5 years serve their country in citizen service, 
earned some money to go to college. We've done a lot of things together.
    But the reason that you're here and the reason you ought to be here 
is that a lot of big decisions are going to be made in the next few 
years. And it'll make a big difference if Ted Kennedy is in the Senate. 
We also have a genuine, legitimate chance to be in the congressional 
majority again. And that's very important.
    But I said in '92 if people would vote for me, I would try to 
reinstitute the basic values of opportunity, responsibility, and 
community. I said that we would try some new ideas that would transform 
our country. I said in '96, ``If you'll reelect me, I'll try to build 
this country a bridge to the 21st century.'' I might have said, in 
starker terms, that this country was in tough shape in '92, and drifting 
and divided. A lot of people have forgotten that.
    And I feel that we have sort of turned around, just like a big ship 
in the middle of the ocean, and we're steaming in the right direction. 
Any statistic I could quote--we have the longest peacetime expansion in 
history, 19\1/2\ million new jobs, the highest homeownership ever. And 
just listen--when people ask you why they ought to be for the 
Democrats--we have the lowest unemployment in 29 years, the lowest 
welfare rolls in 30 years, the lowest poverty rate in 20 years, the 
lowest crime rate in 26 years, the lowest murder rate in 31 years, the 
first back-to-back surpluses in 42 years, all with a Government that is 
the smallest it's been since John Kennedy was President in 1962, 37 
years ago. And Ted Kennedy was at the center of every decision that was 
made that made that possible. And you should be proud of that.
    Now, next time you meet somebody that says they're going to vote for 
a Republican for the Congress or the White House, you give them those 
statistics and ask them what their answer is.
    But what I want to tell you is we can build that bridge. But the 
people of this country are going to make some profound decisions. And 
there are profound differences. Are we really going to do what the 
Republicans want and give all the non-Social Security surplus away in a 
tax cut? If they get the White House and Congress, we will.
    Are we going to meet the challenge of the aging of America? The 
number of people over 65 is going to double in 30 years. I hope to live 
to be one of them. [Laughter] We'll have two people working for every 
one person drawing Social Security. We have a chance and an obligation 
to save Social Security, to reform Medicare, to restore some of the cuts 
we put in that were excessive 2 years ago, to add a prescription drug 
benefit, and to take care of the elderly of this country, which all of 
the young people should favor, because it means they won't have to do it 
and they'll have the

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money to raise our grandchildren. It's a big issue.
    Are we going to take seriously our responsibility to the largest and 
most diverse group of students in our history, and modernize their 
schools and connect their classrooms to the Internet, and give them 
teachers so they'll have small classes with well-trained teachers in the 
early grades, and give them the after-school and the summer school 
programs they need? Or are we going to squander that opportunity?
    Are we going to do something, finally, for the people and places 
that have been left behind in this recovery? Yes, we've got the lowest 
poverty rate in 20 years; that's the good news. The bad news is that 
there's still about 20 percent of our kids in poverty and a higher 
percentage of minority children. And we have a chance to bring the 
benefits of enterprise to people who want to work in places left behind. 
Are we going to do it or walk away from it?
    And I hope to persuade Congress that, well, we can do all this and 
still over the next 15 years pay down our debt until we're debt-free for 
the first time since 1835. And I think another one of your nephews, Joe 
Kennedy, used to talk about this when 
he was in Congress: The liberal party ought to be for doing that, 
because it means lower interest rates; more jobs; more investment; 
higher incomes; lower costs for home loans, for student loans, for car 
loans, and for credit cards. It means average people will live better. 
And I think we ought to do it, since we can meet our other 
responsibilities as well.
    These are just some of the big opportunities that are out there that 
we're for. And there are big differences on whether we ought to have a 
Patients' Bill of Rights; big differences on whether we ought to 
continue to have responsible measures to keep guns out of the hands of 
criminals and kids.
    We are 6 months past that Columbine massacre, and we still haven't 
acted to close the gun show loophole. And the same crowd that's blocking 
it said, when we passed the Brady bill in 1993, that the crooks don't 
get their guns at gun shops; they get them at gun shows and flea 
markets; you won't stop anybody with the Brady bill. Well, 400,000 stops 
later, they have quit making that argument, but now they don't want us 
to do a background check where they said the crooks were buying the 
guns.
    And let me tell you something else that you ought to say. I want 
people to use this. This is not just a matter of crime. The accidental 
death rate of children from guns in the United States is 9 times higher 
than the combined death rate of the next 25 biggest industrial countries 
in the world. Let me say that again: 9 times higher than the next 25 
industrial countries combined--together.
    So we've still got a lot of work to do. And I guess what I want to 
tell you is, I'm grateful that I had a chance to serve. I'm not running 
for anything. I'm here--I kind of wish I were, actually, but I'm not. 
[Laughter] And I'm here, I'm here because I care about my country. I 
care about my daughter's world. I care about 
the grandchildren I hope to have someday. And we've turned this country 
around.
    In my lifetime, we have never had a chance like this. When President 
Kennedy and President Johnson served, we had a good economy, but they 
had to deal with the crisis of civil rights and the problems of the cold 
war.
    We have an opportunity not just to eliminate legal discrimination--
which we ought to continue to do with the employment nondiscrimination 
act and all of that--but we have an opportunity to create the world of 
our dreams.
    That's why I was upset about the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, and 
I'm mad that we're not paying our U.N. dues, and why I think we ought to 
pay off the debt of the world's poorest countries: because we can create 
the world of our dreams, at home and beyond our borders. And there is 
nobody better qualified to be the conscience and the heart and the 
tactical leader of that struggle than Senator Kennedy. Nobody. This is a 
big deal.
    So I'm telling you, I want you to feel this. I am grateful for 
having had the chance to serve. I am grateful that all these numbers I 
can reel off, and they sound so good. But the truth is, nobody thinks we 
have given everyone opportunity. No one thinks we have really built one 
America. No one believes this country is a safe as it can be. No one 
believes we've met all our obligations to the environment. No one 
believes that we have met our obligations or seized our opportunities in 
the world toward which we're moving.
    So beyond all the issues, you just have to keep this simple idea in 
mind: This country is in good shape, and it is moving in the right 
direction. And for the only time in my lifetime,

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as a people, we have a chance to shape the future of our dreams. It will 
only happen if we elect the right dreamers.
    Thank you for being here.

Note: The President spoke at 7:52 p.m. in the a private residence. In 
his remarks, he referred to Lt. Gov. Kathleen Kennedy Townsend of 
Maryland; Vicki Kennedy, wife of Senator Edward M. Kennedy; R. Sargent 
Shriver, first Director of the Peace Corps; and former Representative 
Joseph P. Kennedy II.