[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: WILLIAM J. CLINTON (2000, Book I)]
[May 25, 2000]
[Pages 1021-1025]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks on Proposed Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Legislation and 
an Exchange With Reporters
May 25, 2000

    The President.  Thank you very much. Senator Daschle, Congressman Gephardt, Members of the House and Senate leadership, and Secretary 
Shalala. Let me say how much I appreciated 
the meeting we had this morning and how much I support the agenda they 
outlined. I'd like to say a few words about it, myself. But before I do, 
I'd like to put it into some larger context of our overall strategy.
    We just have some new evidence that our long-term strategy of fiscal 
discipline, investing in our people, and expanding opportunities for 
American markets' products around the world is working. Revised GDP 
figures released today confirm that our economy grew at 5.4 percent in 
the first quarter and that business investment soared by 25 percent. 
This strategy has now given us over 7 years of growth and investment, 
the longest economic expansion in history. We ought to stay on the path 
that got us here and continue to invest in our people and their future, 
as our leaders have outlined today.
    Last month--I want to emphasize this--just last month the 
distinguished investment firm in New York of Goldman-Sachs estimated 
that that turnaround from record deficits to record surpluses has kept 
interest rates 2 full percentage points lower than they would have been 
without this strategy. Therefore, if we turn away from it and go back to 
the deficits, we can expect a corresponding rise in interest rates. A 2 
percent cut in interest rates on home mortgages, car loans, college 
loans, credit card bills, has been an enormous, effective tax cut to the 
American people and has done a great deal to strengthen our economy.
    That's why we feel so strongly that we should use this moment of 
unprecedented prosperity to lengthen the life and modernize Medicare 
with a prescription drug benefit, to strengthen Social Security, to 
invest in key priorities, especially education, to have a tax cut we can 
afford, and keep paying that debt down to keep those interest rates 
down.
    Now, as you've heard already, we mostly discussed providing 
prescription drugs for America's seniors in that meeting. I want to 
thank these leaders for standing with us on this important issue. This 
is a show of unity and a demonstration of resolve. There is no reason 
that Congress cannot take the necessary steps to ensure that every older 
American has access to the lifesaving, life-enhancing prescription drugs 
they need.
    Now, just a few weeks ago Senator Daschle and Congressman Gephardt 
came here to announce that the Democrats were united in a single 
strategy to provide these prescription

[[Page 1022]]

drugs. Today they will be joined by leading architects and backers of 
the plan--all these people behind me who have worked on the details. So 
we now know exactly how we would do this. We know we can afford it, and 
we think the time to act is now. I'll just say this one more time. If we 
were creating Medicare today, there is no way in the wide world we 
wouldn't provide prescription drugs.
    Some of you were with me last Sunday afternoon when I went up to 
Hyde Park. Then I landed in the Poughkeepsie airport. There were 
probably 300 people there, so I had an impromptu town meeting. I went 
down and shook hands with everybody and just sat there and visited with 
them. And the only issue that was mentioned to me more than once--
spontaneously--over and over and over again, was this prescription drug 
issue. It is a big issue, and it's a big hole in America's social safety 
net. It is totally voluntary, it is driven by the market, and we ought 
to do it.
    We're talking more than three in five of our seniors, who are like 
the Lachnits Tom 
talked about. They may be a particularly egregious case, but over 60 
percent of our seniors don't have affordable prescription drug coverage.
    Now, I think that the case has been made. I don't know how in the 
world we can deny the fact that with the funds we have, with the evident 
obligations we have, with the fact that anybody who lives to be 65 in 
America today has a life expectancy of 82 or 83 years--and that is only 
going to increase, and therefore their need for life-enhancing and life-
preserving prescription drugs will only increase--this is the best 
chance we will ever have to address this. And we have to do it.
    Now, the budget I presented to Congress will continue our efforts to 
pay off the debt in 13 years. It will make Medicare more competitive, as 
many in this group have urged. But it will also provide this kind of 
voluntary prescription drug coverage.
    Now, last month--or earlier this month--the Republican leaders in 
the House did put forth the plan that had the stated goal of providing 
affordable prescription drugs for seniors, but the policy falls far 
short of the promise. Suggesting a private insurance benefit that 
insurers themselves say they will not offer--and no one will buy if they 
did offer it, because it would be too expensive--is an empty promise. 
Limiting direct financial assistance for prescription drugs to seniors 
below the $12,500 income will leave out over half, including 
the Lachnits. 
Their drug bills alone, if my math is right, are $16,800 a year, and 
that's about what their income is. They wouldn't get a nickel under the 
Republican plan. That's not right, and we can do better.
    So we're here to say we have a full-time obligation to deal with the 
big opportunities and the big challenges of this country, and Congress 
should feel that obligation, even when they go into recess. There is no 
heavier evidence of that today than the need to provide voluntary, 
affordable prescription drug coverage.
    Let me say there are many other priorities, and I want to just 
mention them. The announcement we had on new markets a couple of days 
ago ought to give some impetus to raising the minimum wage, passing 
commonsense gun legislation, expanding health insurance for the parents 
of poor children, passing a strong, enforceable Patients' Bill of 
Rights. And I hope that we will see more action in all these areas.
    Now, today the House and Senate conferees are meeting again on the 
Patients' Bill of Rights. Again, this is like the prescription drugs. 
This ought not to be a bill that's held up by interest groups; it ought 
to be a bill that is passed in the public interest. That's our 
commitment, and you will see it nowhere more intensely than our efforts 
to get this prescription drug coverage in the closing days of this 
Congress.
    Thank you very much.

New Markets Initiative/Working With Congress

    Q.  Mr. President, since you mentioned the new markets initiative, 
some Republicans say that that was the product of intense private 
negotiations between your staff and Hill Republicans, and there were 
substantial differences when those debates began. There were no public 
podium events dealing with new markets. And yet they say there have been 
numerous public podium events on these issues--prescription drugs and 
HMO--but no intense private negotiations. Can you tell us why, sir, you 
and your staff have tried to use the podium more than intense 
negotiations?
    The President.  No, I'm more than willing to engage in private 
negotiations, but I don't think that's a fair representation of exactly 
how these issues developed. We did have some interest on the part of 
some Republicans with new markets--I know some of you have to go vote, 
so

[[Page 1023]]

as long as you don't say they're abandoning me on the--[laughter]--on 
the Patients' Bill of Rights, I'm going to give the Senators who have to 
leave a pass.
    We did have a lot of interest on the front end in that, and I made 
some calls around myself. But I have actually tried--I have actually had 
several private conversations on these issues, and I will continue to do 
it. I think--I believe we could pass the Patients' Bill of Rights. We 
already passed a strong bill through the House with virtually 100 
percent of our caucus and a pretty good group of Republican votes with 
us. We're having trouble in the Senate, manifest in the conference 
committee, because some of the interest groups are still fighting what I 
think everybody who's looked at this believes is necessary to make a 
good bill.
    But I'm trying to negotiate on that. I had a private meeting on the 
gun safety legislation. I've had several conversations about that. I 
will--I'm willing to do anything to resolve these things. But what we 
can't do here is to--let me just say what the difference is in blunt 
terms.
    There is no great, powerful special interest out there trying to 
beat the new markets legislation. And therefore, what we had was 
people--Washington was able to work the way it ought to work, because 
all we had were our philosophical differences. But we had a common goal. 
So we agreed in the best tradition of the Founding Fathers to let the 
Republicans try their ideas in 40 of their enterprise areas--whatever 
the proper name is--renewal community areas, and 40 for our empowerment 
zones. We agreed to provide for poor areas all over the country--
including those that aren't here, in either one of those two groups--
these special incentives of the new markets.
    It was a wonderful example. And if all we ever had to do was 
reconcile our philosophical differences, we could pass all kinds of 
bills up here. But when you have an independent, powerful interest group 
that won't let them go, then we can have all the private talks that we 
want until we're blue in the face; it's still hard to work it through. I 
haven't given up. But if you want to know the difference in new markets 
and those things, it's not that we haven't had private talks; it's that 
there's no overwhelming interest group trying to beat this thing.

Support for Democratic Party/Legislative Agenda

    Q.  Mr. President, the labor unions are threatening to withhold 
support from Democrats, including Vice President Gore, who opposed them 
on the China trade deal. Do you think those are empty threats?
    The President.  Oh, I think--no. I don't know. You'll have to ask 
them about that. What I think is that there's much more that unites us 
than divides us. And I think that as far as I know, there are no 
divisive issues out there that have remotely the power that the issues 
we talked about today do, particularly the prescription drugs and the 
Patients' Bill of Rights and these other issues we're talking about.
    So I think what we need to do is play it straight, put our issues 
before the American people, and let everybody decide who they're going 
to be for. But I think that you'll see a very united Democratic Party in 
the fall, and I'll think you'll see a united Republican Party. I think 
we'll--and we'll take our debate to the American people, and we'll see 
what happens.
    Q.  May I follow up on that, sir?
    Q. ----you talk about the differences, the interest groups. There 
are only 24 legislative days left. Realistically, sir, how can we expect 
to get this done, and do you think we'll accomplish any of these things 
you just itemized for us?
    The President.  Oh, I think the only time that the power of the 
interest groups fade here is when the majority believes--if the interest 
groups are involved--is when the majority believes that the public 
interest is so intense that action has to be taken. And I think there's 
a fair chance that will happen on one or two of these issues. And there 
are some people in their party who really would like to work with us on 
these, and I think we'll just keep working at it and see.
    You just never--look, for the last 5 years, we've surprised 
everybody, including ourselves, a time or two, and really had 
breakthroughs and gotten stuff done. I'm here opening--asking for 
cooperation, and I think that I speak for our leaders and our Members--
we're interested in doing something, so we're willing to do what we can 
to do our part on that.
    Yes.

[[Page 1024]]

Peruvian Elections

    Q.  Mr. President, you've been a great proponent of democracy, 
especially in Latin America. Peru is going to supposedly hold elections 
on Sunday. An OAS mission is there. There are a lot of problems. There 
have been a lot of criticism from your own government toward the 
Peruvian elections. What do you say at this moment?
    The President.  I think what I should say at this moment is that, 
first, obviously it's troubling that one of the candidates said he didn't really want to participate on the 
runoff election; and secondly, I think we should wait until we get a 
report from the people that are monitoring the elections, and then I'll 
have more to say about it.
    Yes.

Permanent Normal Trade Relations With China

    Q.  Mr. President, a followup on the China trade matter. What can 
you say to American workers in industries that will continue to lose 
jobs to China, perhaps in spite of the pact, but who will continue to 
lose jobs to China and elsewhere, and in particular, the textile 
industry workers, who feel they're the sacrificial lambs of the trade 
pacts you've worked out?
    The President.  The first and most important thing is that nothing 
in this legislation, in this debate, proposed to close our markets to 
imports that are coming in from China or anywhere else, so that there 
was nothing in this vote that would have affected them one way or the 
other.
    And if you look at--what we have to do is to hold as many jobs as we 
can by doing whatever we can to support the industries that are 
competitive. And if people lose their jobs, we believe--all of us 
believe we ought to spend more money more quickly to retrain our workers 
and to get more investment into areas that lose them.
    One of the things that I think that will be most helpful with this 
new markets initiative is, we'll be able to say to investors all across 
America, if a plant closes down, for example, in a rural area, ``Hey, 
now if you go back and invest and give these people another job, we'll 
give you a 30 percent tax credit to do it. If you have to borrow money, 
we'll guarantee two-thirds of the money you borrow, and you get lower 
interest rates.'' And if we have an adequate, intense, immediate effort 
to retrain people, and we have that, I think that the dislocation 
periods will be shorter, and their ability to get good jobs if plants 
close will be greater.
    But there was nothing in this bill--what this bill did was to lower 
tariffs for other products, so it will save other manufacturing jobs. 
And it didn't--no one has suggested raising any barriers.
    We've got to do a better job in our country of making sure that we 
shorten the period of dislocation and increase the likelihood that 
people get a job as good or better than the one they lost. And that's 
what we're working on. All of us have worked on that for 7 years, and 
we're making some progress there.

Working With Congress

    Q.  Mr. President, as a followup to my first question, are you 
saying on the prescription drug and HMO issue that there are no 
philosophical differences from Republicans, and they're simply beholden 
to special interests?
    The President.  No, no, no, no, no, no. There are genuine 
philosophical differences. I would never say that. No. What I said is, 
when all we have are philosophical differences, we have an easier time 
of working through them and accommodating them, as we did on new 
markets, than we do if there are both philosophical differences and very 
powerful interest group resistance.
    Oh, no, I would never say--no, they have honest philosophical 
differences on these things. But you asked me why we couldn't work them 
through, and I don't think it's lack of private meetings. I think it's 
philosophical differences plus an interest group anchor.

Death of American Journalist in Sierra Leone

    Q.  Mr. President, Kurt Schork, the American journalist killed in 
Sierra Leone yesterday--do you have any thoughts on that and ideas on 
its significance?
    The President.  First of all, I knew that journalist over 30 years 
ago; we were in Oxford together. And I'm very sad today. He was a good 
man, and if you look at all the many posts that he occupied, he was a 
brave man. He went to a lot of places, a lot of the troubled and 
dangerous places of the world, to bring the news to people. And I am 
very sad about it.
    But let me say, in a larger sense, I think it shows how important it 
is for the United

[[Page 1025]]

Nations missions to succeed. I appreciate very much the willingness of 
the Nigerians to go back in there, and we are aggressively committed to 
providing the support necessary to take the Nigerians and other troops 
into Sierra Leone and to support the United Nations mission in other 
ways and to contribute our share and maybe a little over that to try to 
stabilize the situation.
    I think that it's obvious that the RUF have--these are just the last 
in a long line of their victims, many of whom are innocent children who 
had their limbs chopped off. And they had a chance to participate in a 
peace process which was more than generous to them in terms of giving 
them an opportunity to walk away from what they had done, and they 
didn't take it. And I think the United Nations mission has to prevail. I 
will do everything I can to support it.
    Thank you.

 Note: The President spoke at 10:52 a.m. in the Rose Garden at the White 
House. In his remarks, he referred to Medicare recipients Ronald and 
Eunice Lachnit; and Peruvian Presidential candidate Alejandro Toledo. 
The President also referred to RUF, the Revolutionary United Front. A 
reporter referred to OAS, the Organization of American States.