[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: WILLIAM J. CLINTON (2000, Book I)]
[March 13, 2000]
[Pages 455-459]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks at a Democratic National Committee Dinner in Lincolnwood, 
Illinois
March 13, 2000

    Thank you very much. Mike, I loved that 
introduction, but it sounds suspiciously like a eulogy, you know? 
[Laughter]
    I was in Cleveland today, before I came here, and I reminded the 
crowd there that the last time I had come to Cleveland was to say 
goodbye to former Representative Lou Stokes, 
who was retiring from the Congress. And we went to an elementary school 
in his district where there were a lot of young AmeriCorps volunteers, 
like the ones who met me in Chicago tonight when I got off the plane. 
And they were serving in their communities, helping kids. They were 
teaching all these kids at this school to learn to read and kind of 
navigate their way in the world.
    And I got down--I started with the oldest kids, and I got down to 
the 6-year-olds, and I'm shaking hands with all these 6-year-old kids. 
And this little kid looked way up at me, and he said, ``Are you really 
the President?'' [Laughter] And I said, ``Yes, I am.'' He said, ``But 
you're not dead yet.'' [Laughter] And I realized that for him, 
Presidents were George Washington and Abraham Lincoln, and a part of the 
job description was you had to be deceased. And when people talk about 
me the way Mike did, I have to pinch myself and 
say, ``I'm still here.'' [Laughter] But I loved it.
    I want to thank Mike and Pat for having us in their beautiful home, and I want to 
thank them. And Jim, thank you for the work you 
did on this event tonight. And so many of you have been so good to me 
and to the Democratic Party. My friend Ed Rendell--I asked him to take this part-time job when he retired as 
mayor of Philadelphia, and he's wearing himself out at it. And thank 
you, Senator Durbin, for being here. Yes, 
he's doing a great job. Give him a hand. [Applause] I want to thank Lou 
Weisbach and Joe Cari for the work they're doing to help our party. And thank 
you all for coming.
    I know we're going to have a little time for questions when I 
finish, so I'll try to be brief. But I want to say a few things. First 
of all, I am profoundly grateful to the people of Chicago and the people 
of Illinois for the support that they have given to me and Hillary and 
Al and Tipper Gore, starting in December of '91, when I began my 
campaign here in earnest, through the Democratic primary in '92, through 
two great elections and all of Illinois' electoral votes. And I am very 
grateful.
    Secondly, I want to thank you, those of you, a large number of you 
in this room, who have already helped my wife in her quest to join Dick Durbin in the U.S. Senate. I thank you for that.
    Thirdly, I want to thank Mike Cherry for all 
those ties. [Laughter] That would be--that's a good reason--if I could 
run for a third term, I would, just to get 4 more years of ties from 
Mike Cherry. I was--one wag that works in the White House asked me the 
other day, he said, ``What are you going to do when you're not President 
anymore and you'll have to start buying your own ties? You'll be 
bankrupt in no time, you know.'' He's spoiled me.
    The second thing I want to say to you is that what Mike said about 
the progress that our country has made over the last 7 years is very 
important to me. But it really only matters insofar as it's evidence of 
what we can and should do in the future. After all, that's what you 
hired me to do. And I ran for President because I thought Washington was 
off on the wrong track, and they were just up there fighting with each 
other and divided among themselves, and the way people even talked about 
issues and politics and real life in Washington bore no relationship to 
what I had tried to do for many years as Governor of my own State.
    So I thank you for that. But the important thing is the future. Some 
of you heard me tell this story, but I used to go out to the State

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Fair in Arkansas every year on a day I'd have Governor's Day, and I'd 
just sit there and meet with whoever showed up. In 1990--1989, late 
'89--I was trying to decide whether to run for a fifth term as Governor 
in 1990. And this old boy in overalls showed up, about 70 years old, and 
he said, ``Well, Bill, are you going to run again?'' And I said, ``Well, 
I don't know. If I do, will you vote for me?'' He said, ``I guess so; I 
always have.'' And I said, ``Well, aren't you sick of me after all these 
years?'' And he said, ``No, I'm not, but everybody else I know is.'' 
[Laughter] I said, ``But don't you think I've done a good job?'' He 
said, ``Well, sure you have, but that's what we pay you to do.'' He 
said, ``You collect a paycheck every 2 weeks.'' It was a healthy little 
reminder that elections are always about tomorrow. That's why we're 
still around here after over 200 years.
    And I have tried to give this country a relentless focus on the 
future and a way of getting there together. I believe everybody matters; 
everyone should have a chance. I believe everyone has a responsible role 
to play. I believe we all do better when we help each other. Simple 
ideas, and the country is better off than it was 7 years ago. And for 
that I'm grateful.
    But we've got a lot of work to do this year. We've got a profoundly 
important vote on whether to approve China's entry to the World Trade 
Organization and acquire massive access to their markets, which we don't 
have now. We're trying to raise the minimum wage for workers that are 
still working 40 hours a week and living on the edge of poverty. We're 
trying to get tax deductibility to middle class parents for the cost of 
college tuition.
    We're trying to get seniors on Medicare the option of buying 
prescription drug coverage, when we know three out of five seniors in 
this country, in spite of all our work, still can't afford the medicine 
they need. We're trying to get a tax break for people who take care of 
their elderly or disabled relatives at home, because it's such an 
expensive but lonely choice, and I think they need our help.
    We're trying to modernize our schools by repairing and building 
thousands of them and making sure they're all hooked up to the Internet 
and giving all the troubled kids in this country access to after-school 
programs. We've got a big agenda. And it's very important that we 
continue to build on the work of the last 7 years in this year, to keep 
moving relentlessly forward.
    And the last thing I'd like to say about all this is it's also very 
important that we make the right decisions in this election year. 
Several of you mentioned today the almost incredible attack that the 
leader of the NRA leveled on me, saying that 
I actually wanted a bunch of these kids to die so we'd have a reason to 
inconvenience gun owners. And you know, I don't want to get into a big 
personal shouting match about a comment that is clearly ridiculous. What 
I want you to understand is, there will be a lot of shouting and name-
calling and elbowing in this election. There always is. But what I want 
you to understand is that underneath all that shouting and name-calling, 
notwithstanding what Mayor Rendell said, I don't think it's necessary to 
believe that Governor Bush is a bad human 
being to believe he shouldn't be President. I don't believe it's 
necessary to believe that the Republicans in the House and Senate are 
bad people to believe that they shouldn't be in the majority.
    And I have to tell you, my experience in politics--I'm not running 
for anything. I'm just telling you, I've been in this business a long 
time. Most of the people that I have known in both parties worked harder 
than they got credit for and were more honest than people believed they 
were and did the best they could, day-in, day-out.
    This election is about people who honestly have different views 
about the way to the future. And what I hope you'll tell people is, it's 
not like we don't have a test here. We tested their way, and we tested 
our way. And now you've got a choice, because in the election of 2000, 
the Vice President says we ought to keep paying down the debt; save 
enough money to save Social Security and Medicare, so when the baby 
boomers retire they don't bankrupt their kids and their ability to raise 
their grandkids; and give the rest of it, after we invest in education 
and health care, to the taxpayers in a tax cut we can afford.
    And Governor Bush says we ought to have one even bigger than the one 
I vetoed last year, which means we can't guarantee the security of 
Social Security and Medicare or invest in education, or if we try to, 
we're going to go back to running big deficits.
    Now, we tried it their way, and we tried it our way. And you have to 
decide whether you

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think it was better in '91 and '92, or it was better in '99 and 2000. 
But you don't have to think they're bad people. This is an honest 
difference of opinion.
    We believe that it is not unbearable to ask legitimate hunters and 
sports people in this country to agree that all handguns ought to have 
child trigger locks; that the Brady background checks we do at gun shows 
ought to be done--I mean, at gun stores ought to be done at gun shows 
and urban flea markets; that since we banned assault weapons, we 
shouldn't let people get around it by importing these big ammunition 
clips. And they disagree. It's an honest disagreement. I think we're 
right and they're wrong. We've got a 25-year low in crime rate, 30-year 
low in the gun death rate; half a million felons, fugitives, and 
stalkers haven't gotten handguns because we started doing these 
background checks. And we have to choose.
    You know, I believe we ought to provide more health insurance for 
lower income working people and their kids. I think it would be good for 
the hospitals, too, that are strapped for money. And we have a proposal 
on that. I believe we can grow the economy and improve the environment, 
and so does our Vice President.
    I think experience matters, and there's no question, even the people 
that don't agree with anything I've done and don't agree with anything 
he's done will admit that Al Gore has been the most influential Vice 
President in the history, that's had the biggest impact over the largest 
number of issues, in the history of the Republic. Now, that's a fact. 
That's not something to debate. And I guess it's self-serving for me to 
say because the President has to okay that. But I never could figure out 
why Presidents would want Vice Presidents if they didn't want to put 
them to work; never made any sense to me. [Laughter] And I could never 
figure out why anybody would want to be Vice President if they didn't 
want to get up and go to work every day. And fortunately, I found a 
fellow workaholic who did a fabulous job.
    You know, Dick Durbin--I believe he 
did the right thing to try to protect our children from the dangers of 
tobacco. I think he did the right thing--and to protect them from guns. 
Now, I believe--and I could go on and on and on. So what I want to say 
to you is, I hope that even though--I think I've done a pretty good job 
of bringing this country together, not such a good job of bringing 
Washington together. That may be something beyond human powers. 
[Laughter]
    But I hope that we Democrats this year will go out there and run an 
aggressive campaign, not shy from debates, don't mind a fight, but make 
it about the American people. You know, voters are not stupid. They 
know, when politicians are throwing off on each other, they're trying to 
help themselves; they're not interested in them. But when they're 
fighting about issues, they can relate to that, because that has to do 
with how the rest of us live.
    And when people ask you why you came tonight, say, ``Look, I came 
because the country's better off than it was 7 years ago. They had some 
good ideas, and they turned out to be right. I came because I support 
what we're trying to do this year. And I came because this is a big, big 
election.''
    And let me just close with this thought. I have spent a lot of time 
trying to build what I call one America, to bring people together across 
racial and ethnic and religious lines, fight against hate crimes and 
fight for the ``Employment Non-Discrimination Act,'' and to be a force 
for reconciling conflicts around the world.
    And if God came to me tonight and said, ``Well, I'm sorry, you can't 
finish your term. You've got to finish tomorrow. You're history. And I'm 
no genie, I'm not going to give you three wishes, but I'll give you 
one,'' I would wish for America to be one nation, one united country, 
where people celebrated our differences but revered our common humanity 
even more, because I don't think we'll be able to do good around the 
world unless we are good at home.
    And that goes to our political differences as well. I had more fun 
in the State of the Union watching the Republicans and the Democrats 
when I told them that according to all the research, we were all 
genetically 99.9 percent the same. [Laughter] And I could tell they both 
were grievously discomfited by that statistic. [Laughter] But it's true.
    I've now got this--last year one of the great experiences I had was 
Neil Armstrong came to see me with two of his 
astronaut partners to celebrate the 30th anniversary of the Moon 
landing. And he brought me this vacuum-packed Moon rock, which I now 
have on the table right in front of the chairs in the Oval Office. You 
know when you all see the pictures of the Oval

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Office on television? There's two chairs and two couches, this big 
table. Well, you notice the next time you see it on television, there's 
this vacuum-packed Moon rock. And when people come in and they talk and 
they get real angry--like, we had this conference on gun safety the 
other day, and they got all agitated because I was pushing them to do 
this bill. And they get angry and mad; I stop everybody, and I say, 
``Chill out. Look at that rock. You see that rock? That rock is 3.6 
billion years old. We are all just passing through, and we need to do 
the best we can right now.'' I want this campaign to be vigorous and 
hard-fought, but it ought to be a happy time. But you ought to be dead 
serious about it.
    The only other point I want to make is one that's kind of heavy on 
me now because a week ago yesterday I got to go to Selma and march 
across the Edmund Pettus Bridge for the 35th anniversary of Bloody 
Sunday, when John Lewis and Hosea 
Williams and others were beaten badly trying 
to march to Montgomery to campaign for voting rights. As a southerner, 
it was one of the great moments of my life, with John Lewis, who's one of my true heroes. But here's what I want to 
say to you about it.
    I've been thinking a lot about the sixties lately, because in 
February we had the longest economic expansion in history. Now, before 
we broke the record, the record was held by the decade of the sixties, 
1961 through 1969. And I see a lot of young people here tonight. I was a 
high school senior in 1964, in the middle of this vast expansion, and we 
thought the economy would have high growth, low unemployment, low 
inflation forever. And when I graduated from high school, the country 
was getting over the grief of President Kennedy and honored that 
President Johnson was trying to pass all the civil rights legislation 
through Congress. And we thought all of our racial problems would be 
fixed by laws passed through Congress. And we thought we would win the 
cold war against communism without having the country divided. That's 
what we thought was going to happen. And we were all very--not just the 
kids, like me, the grownups--we just took it for granted, this is what 
was going to happen.
    A year later, Selma occurred. And whites and blacks died in the 
sixties, just 35 years ago, for the right to vote. A year later, '66, we 
had riots in the streets. Then in 1968, when I was a senior in college, 
Robert Kennedy was killed 2 days before I graduated. Martin Luther King 
was killed 2 months before I graduated. Nine weeks before I graduated, 
Lyndon Johnson said he couldn't run for President again. The country was 
split right down the middle over the Vietnam war.
    A few weeks later, Mr. Nixon was elected President on a divisive 
campaign, that he represented the Silent Majority, which meant the rest 
of us were in the loud minority. And it was a campaign of ``us'' against 
``them''--were you an ``us'' or ``them''? And we've been ``us-ing'' and 
``them-ing'' ever since. And then a few weeks after that, this vaunted 
economic expansion came to an end, and it was over.
    And what I want all of you to say--a lot of you brought your 
children here tonight. Forget about me being President; as an American 
citizen, I have waited 35 years for my country to be in a position to 
build the future of our dreams for our children together--35 years. And 
I thought about it walking over that bridge and having John Lewis tell me what it was like when he finally realized he was 
going to get his brains beat out. And I thought about how easily things 
can change and how easily we can be lulled into a sense of complacency.
    I've worked as hard as I could for 7 years to turn this country 
around. I'm proud of what's happened. But believe me, nothing has 
happened that can hold a candle to what we could do together now that we 
have good basic conditions. What has happened is nothing compared to 
what we can do.
    And that's what I want you to think about. America is always about 
tomorrow. And those of you who have been blessed enough in this life and 
this economy to be able to afford to come to this dinner tonight--I'm 
glad; I like that. But you wouldn't be here, you'd be at somebody else's 
dinner if you didn't also think that the people that served your food 
ought to make a decent living and ought to be able to have health care 
and their kids ought to be able to go to good schools and that we're all 
going to do better if we go forward together. If you didn't believe 
that, you'd be at somebody else's dinner tonight.
    So I'm telling you, I'm glad you're here. I thank you for helping 
our party. I thank you, those of you who have helped Hillary, those of you who have helped the Vice 
President. I thank you for all that. But 
the fight is still ahead of us. And don't forget this. America is

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always about tomorrow. And I watched it once before in my lifetime; it 
can get away from you before you know it. This is a solemn 
responsibility we have and an enormous chance. Let's make the most of 
it.
    Thank you, and God bless you.

Note: The President spoke at 9:45 p.m. at a private residence. In his 
remarks, he referred to dinner hosts Mike and Pat Cherry and cohost Jim 
Levin, president, JHL Enterprises; Edward G. Rendell, general chair, and 
Joseph A. Cari, Jr., finance cochair, Democratic National Committee; Lou 
Weisbach, chief executive officer, HA-LO Industries, Inc.; Apollo 11 
astronauts Neil Armstrong, Edwin (Buzz) Aldrin, and Michael Collins; 
civil rights activist Hosea Williams; Gov. George W. Bush of Texas; and 
Wayne LaPierre, executive vice president, National Rifle Association.