[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: WILLIAM J. CLINTON (1999, Book II)]
[November 30, 1999]
[Pages 2177-2180]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks at a Southwest Voter Registration and Education Project 
Reception in Beverly Hills
November 30, 1999

    Thank you very much, Antonio. I 
am delighted to be here. I know that all of you have come in support of 
the Southwest Voter Education Project. But I want to thank especially my 
good friend Gloria Molina; and Henry 
Cisneros; Assembly Speaker Villaraigosa--I 
see him over there; we've been making the rounds tonight--Congressman 
Becerra; and I think Lydia 
Camarillo, our DNC CEO, is here. I know this 
is a nonpartisan event, but I wanted to acknowledge her presence there. 
Thank you, Lydia.
    I have known about the Southwest Voter Education Project a long 
time, from the beginning. And one of the great honors I had as President 
was to award the Medal of Freedom to Willie Velasquez posthumously in 
1995. The Southwest Voter Education Project has now registered, I 
believe, over 2 million Latino voters and well over 2,000 voter 
education drives.
    And what I would--I just want to say a couple of things briefly 
tonight. Yesterday I signed the budget that we passed in the Congress 
right before they went home, the first budget of the 21st century. It 
contained the second year's funding for our Hispanic education project, 
which is designed to reduce the gap in high school graduation rates 
between Hispanics and other children and to increase the college going 
rate. And I just give you that as one little example, although it is a 
very big thing--I think this is going to have a huge impact over the

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years if we keep doing it--of why it is so important for people to be 
registered and to vote.
    I was thinking tonight about the meetings I've had with the Hispanic 
caucus. And Congressman Torres, we miss you. 
I'm glad to see you. Thank you for everything.
    But what I was thinking about is, two things are certain. One is 
that the number of Hispanic Members of Congress will grow. The second, 
maybe more important, is the number of Latino voters in other districts 
will grow. And I honestly believe that the willingness of people to 
register and to vote will have a profoundly significant impact on sort 
of the shape of American politics, on our immigration policies, on our 
education policies, on our economic policies, on the nature of our trade 
policies, and I could go on and on and on.
    I have seen, just in the last two election cycles the profound 
difference it makes in terms of who shows up to vote. In 1998 the 
overall percentage of Americans voting was not that different from 1994, 
but the composition of those who voted was very different. And very 
often 4 or 5 percent of the people, whether they stay or go, will 
reflect the sort of accumulated feelings of maybe 60 or 70 percent of 
the American electorate. And whether they do or not, I can promise you, 
will affect the whole sweep of policy. I'm very conscious of this now. 
And I just want to mention one or two issues.
    It has been, for me, an enormous privilege to serve as President 
these last 7 years. I have had a great deal of help from the most 
diverse group of Americans ever to serve an administration, including 
former HUD Secretary Cisneros. And I am 
very grateful that we have now the results that we have. We've got--in 
February we'll have the longest peacetime expansion in our history. We 
have already nearly 20 million new jobs. We have the lowest unemployment 
in 30 years, the lowest welfare rolls in 30 years, the lowest poverty 
rates in 30 years. We have the lowest crime rate in 25 years, the lowest 
Hispanic and African-American unemployment rates ever recorded, the 
lowest African-American poverty rate ever recorded, the lowest Hispanic 
poverty rate in a generation, the lowest poverty rate among single-
parent households in 40 years, the lowest unemployment among women in 40 
years. What I want to ask you is, what do you mean to do with this? What 
do you mean to do with this?
    I had--I see my sister-in-law, Molly, over 
there. We just had my big, extended family and Hillary's family were all 
together for Thanksgiving. And we gathered up at Camp David, and then we 
had some of our friends come in from the area. And I had a bunch of 
little kids there. And this 6-year-old boy looked at me a couple days 
ago, and he said, ``How old are you?'' [Laughter] And I said, ``I'm 
53.'' He said, ``That's a lot.'' [Laughter] And I regretted to say I had 
to agree with him; it was a lot.
    In my lifetime--and that's a lot--our country has never had this 
level of economic prosperity, social progress, and national confidence, 
and at the same time been free of external threats and internal crises, 
so that we are essentially free to face our big challenges and build the 
future of our dreams for our children.
    So the real question is not whether we are going to change, because 
the world is changing at such a rapid rate that that's not an option. 
The real question is, how will we change, and what will we do with this 
chance of a lifetime?
    I hope we will use it to meet the big challenges of the future. But 
I'll bet you every adult in this room can remember at least one, and 
maybe more, times in your personal life, your family life, or your work 
life when you made a big mistake because things were going well. When 
you should have been thinking about the long term, you got diverted, 
distracted, divided, and the moment was lost.
    Now in my lifetime, we have never had a moment like this. We need to 
use it to give all of our children a world-class education. We need to 
use it to dramatically reduce poverty among our children and to bring 
economic opportunity to people and places that have been left out of 
this remarkable recovery. We need to use it to deal with the challenge 
of the aging of America and take Social Security out beyond the life of 
the baby boom generation and extend the life of Medicare and give 
prescription drug coverage to 75 percent of our seniors who can't afford 
the medicine they need today.
    We need to use it to prove we can grow the economy and improve the 
environment. We need to use it to pass the Patients' Bill of Rights and 
extend health care coverage to people who don't have it--these big 
challenges that we can meet.
    But if I had one wish, if somebody said to me, ``Well, you don't 
have another year. I'm sorry, you have to go tomorrow, but we'll let

[[Page 2179]]

you be the genie, and you can have one wish.'' I would wish to make 
America truly one America. Because if you look at what is bedeviling the 
world today--and this is where you come in--isn't it interesting that as 
you think about the future--somebody sent me an article today on the 
future of the Internet and how it wouldn't be long before everybody 
would be connected to the Internet without needing a personal computer. 
We'll have these little pads that a lot of you already have, and you'll 
get it on your telephone; you'll get it in your television; everybody 
will know everything and all the time. It will be unbelievable.
    We are unraveling the mysteries of the human genome. We're about to 
discover what is in those black holes in outer space. I mean, it's 
unbelievable all this stuff we're going to know. And yet, we are most 
bedeviled in the world by the oldest problem of human society. We still 
are kind of afraid of people who are different from us. They're 
different races, different religions; they're gay; they're this; they're 
that, the other.
    And in America you can see it when a Jewish community center gets 
shot up, Filipino postman gets murdered, African-American basketball 
coach gets killed, and then a young Korean Christian gets killed walking 
out of his church by a guy that just murdered the African-American 
basketball coach. James Byrd gets dragged to death in Texas; Matthew 
Shepard gets stretched over a rack in Wyoming. These things happen. Why? 
Because if you are afraid of people who are different from you, it's a 
short step to hating them. Then it's a short step to dehumanizing them. 
Then it's a short step to justifying violence. And all around the world 
what has bedeviled the world? Ireland, the Middle East, the Balkans, 
Bosnia and Kosovo, the African tribal wars. It's just fascinating to me 
that we're on the verge of a new millennium with all this modern stuff 
out there, but our biggest problem is the oldest problem of human 
society.
    So the reason it's important that you understand that your vote is 
your voice, is that you help to guarantee every time you empower people 
that their voices will be heard and that we will somehow understand that 
we're not just supposed to tolerate each other; we're supposed to 
celebrate our differences; not tolerate--that's not good enough--
celebrate our differences, not because they are the most important thing 
about us, but because they make life more interesting without letting us 
forget our common humanity.
    And that is the only thing that makes democracy the best of all 
systems of government. If everybody participates, you have a high chance 
that we come to the right conclusion. And it is profoundly important. I 
just was thinking, I'm so grateful that we have made these huge steps 
forward in the Irish peace process. I'm very grateful for the progress 
we are making in the Middle East.
    I was just in Kosovo with all those schoolchildren that got to go 
home because the United States and our NATO Allies stuck up for them and 
said they couldn't be wiped out just because of their religion or their 
ethnic background. But I know that if we want to continue to do good 
around the world, we have to be good at home. This Irish agreement, it's 
wonderful. How many people died to get there? And the Middle East, we've 
got a lot of hard decisions to make, but they're not hard when compared 
with the alternative.
    And so I say to all of you, we have a chance to escape that and to 
meet these huge challenges when we've got more resources and more 
confidence and more evidence that we can make progress than any time in 
my lifetime. But we can only do it if we do it together.
    You know, I just came from this gun violence group meeting. And I 
told them that the big fight we had over the Brady bill, the assault 
weapons ban, all these things, they really were sort of whole different 
views of the world about what is the nature of freedom, what is the 
nature of society, what is the nature of our responsibilities to one 
another. You know, to me, I came from a hunting culture, but it was a 
no-brainer to me that we ought to be for the Brady bill and the assault 
weapons ban, because I thought that a modest amount of inconvenience on 
the part of 95 or 99 percent of the people to find the 1 percent of the 
people who had no business with assault weapons, had no business with 
handguns, who were criminals, had other problems in their background. To 
me, that made me more free, not less free, because I think mutuality is 
important, the media. And you believed that.
    And there is no group of Americans that has a bigger stake in our 
getting this right than Hispanic-Americans, the fastest growing 
minority, people who have known all the prejudice and all the promise of 
America, both, people

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who now are setting all kinds of records in new business growth and 
achievements in every area of our national life, but because we still 
have such a large group of first-generation immigrants, also have the 
highest high school dropout rates, the highest education problems.
     Listen, we can get all this right--we can get all this right--if 
everybody has a voice that is heard. That is why what you are doing is 
so profoundly important.
    Thank you very much.

Note: The President spoke at 10 p.m. at the Grand Havana Room. In his 
remarks, he referred to State Assembly Speaker Antonio R. Villaraigosa; 
Los Angeles County Supervisor Gloria Molina; and Lydia Camarillo, 
executive director, Southwest Voter Registration and Education Project.