[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: WILLIAM J. CLINTON (2000, Book II)]
[September 11, 2000]
[Pages 1781-1786]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks at a Luncheon for Representative James H. Maloney in Danbury, Connecticut
September 11, 2000

    Thank you. Wow! [Laughter] Well, first of all, that's the best talk 
I ever heard Jim Maloney give. It was amazing. [Laughter] I thought two 
things when he was giving that speech: The first thing I thought is, 
that's the speech everybody ought to be giving around America this

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year; and the second thing I thought is, if he keeps giving that speech, 
this election won't be nearly as close as the last one was, if you guys 
help to get the message out. Thank you.
    Let me say, I'm honored to be here with Jim and Mary and what he referred to as the delegation from his 
family. I thought Lew Wallace gave a 
great speech, too. We ought to give him--[applause]--it was a very good 
speech. Thank you.
    I want to thank your attorney general and my law school classmate 
and friend of 30 years Dick Blumenthal 
for being here, and Secretary of State Susan Bysiewicz and Comptroller Nancy Wyman, 
thank you. Did I say it right?
    And I want to thank the mayor of Danbury 
for making me feel welcome here. Thank you, Gene. Where are you? Thank 
you, Gene Eriquez. And Ed Marcus and John 
Olsen, John Walkovich, I want to thank all them. And I'd also like to, on a 
point of personal privilege, one of the most talented people who ever 
served on my staff and one of the most valuable to me, personally, is a 
young man named Jonathan Prince, who has now 
gone off to do well. But he's from Danbury. He and his parents are here 
today. Jonathan, where are you? Give him a hand. He did a great job. 
He's here somewhere. [Applause] Thank you.
    I also want to thank my longtime friend Mayor Joe Ganim from Bridgeport for coming over here. He and Gene 
and I took a picture together. We took a picture together, and they 
whispered to me that most mayors, unlike Presidents, aren't term-
limited. [Laughter]
    Let me say to all of you, I am having a great day today. I started 
off today, Hillary and I were in Washington at the White House, and we 
went up to Westchester County, where we now make our home. And we did an 
event at a Jewish community center on the Federal Trade Commission 
report today on violence in the media, pointing out that a number of 
entertainment companies--by no means all of them; we don't want to paint 
with too broad a brush--but a number of them actually have been 
advertising these violent movies to the same kids that they say 
shouldn't go see them.
    And Senator Lieberman and Vice 
President Gore talked about it yesterday, and I think Joe is going to 
testify before the Congress sometime this week, in the next few days, 
about it. But we had a wonderful time, talking about the future and the 
challenges that families at work face, and succeeding at work and 
succeeding at raising their children, which is the most important work 
of all.
    And then I came up here to be with you, and I'm going back to New 
York, and we're going to do, I think, three or four more things today. 
[Laughter] And I'm going to--Hillary and I are going to end up tonight 
at a dinner honoring the efforts that we made, along with several others 
in a bipartisan way, to deal with the so-called Nazi gold issues in 
Switzerland and get the wealth returned back to the people who needed 
it. So, it's a great day.
    This is an interesting time in my life. My family has a new 
candidate. My party has a new leader, and I've become the Cheerleader in 
Chief of America. [Laughter] And I like it. [Laughter]
    I guess what I would like to tell you is, as someone who is not 
running for office--for the first time since 1974, I'm not going to be 
on the ballot--I, too, believe what Jim Maloney said. And the most 
important thing to me to try to get across to the American people is, 
yes, we've had a great year. This has been a terrific run. And I'm 
grateful, not just for the economic prosperity but for the greater sense 
of unity that the country has, for the social progress we see in crime 
and welfare and teen pregnancy and a whole lot of other indicators, 
showing our country is coming together, for the change in the American 
political climate now, away from the kind of just dripping venom that 
dominated so many elections of the last 20 years. I'm grateful for all 
that.
    So what I want you to understand and believe is that the best is 
still out there, because we have spent a great deal of time these last 8 
years just trying to turn the country around, to dig it out of a 
mountain of debt, to dig it out so that the interest rates could come 
down and so that people just in their private lives could go about 
making America the success it ought to be, changing the crime policy, 
changing the environmental policy, changing the education policy, 
changing the health care policy. But a lot of the biggest, best things 
are still out there.
    At least in my lifetime, we have never had a period where we had so 
much progress and prosperity with so little internal crisis or external 
threat. I think Jim told me when I came in that Theodore Roosevelt was 
the last President to come to Danbury and spend any time. And

[[Page 1783]]

I like Theodore Roosevelt. [Laughter] If he were alive today, he'd be a 
Democrat, too. [Laughter]
    You know, Roosevelt governed at another magic time. He inherited the 
Presidency as the youngest man ever to be President, when President 
McKinley was assassinated shortly after his reelection in 1900 and was 
inaugurated in 1901, and shortly after that, he was killed. So Teddy 
Roosevelt inherited the Presidency and did, I think, a very good job 
with it, in dealing with a time that is probably more like this time in 
historical terms than any period in the middle, because we were moving 
from an agricultural to an industrial society and we had to redefine our 
sense of national community and what our obligations were to one 
another. How were we going to take in that huge wave of immigrants that 
came into America at the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th 
century; how were we going to deal with this huge influx of people who 
couldn't make a living on the farm anymore but wanted to make a living 
in the factory? But a lot of them were children, and a lot of them were 
working 12 and 14 or 15 hours a day, and there were all kinds of abusive 
conditions there.
    And in the first Roosevelt era, we began to come to grips with our 
responsibilities to immigrant populations living in difficult situations 
in the slums, our responsibilities to end child labor in the most 
abusive labor conditions. And we began to be aware of the capacity of 
the industrial revolution to damage the environment. And Teddy Roosevelt 
became our first great environmental President by meeting the challenges 
of the moment.
    And then when--ironically, there was a brief interruption because 
after he left office, his designated successor, William Howard Taft, was 
elected, the person he wanted to succeed him, but he turned out not to 
be a progressive. So Woodrow Wilson got elected, with a little help from 
Theodore Roosevelt, and we had 8 more years.
    But then what we were trying to do was interrupted by war and then 
by depression and then again by war. And so Franklin Roosevelt had to 
build this sense of unity out of all this adversity. But in a funny 
way--I used to talk to my grandfather all the time about the Depression. 
One thing, it's almost a purging effect, total adversity has on you, 
because you don't--it's not like you have all the options in the world. 
You got up in the morning. You tried to figure out how to keep body and 
soul together, and you know you've got to change something, because if 
you keep on doing the same thing, you'll be in the same hole.
    However, when things are going very well, your opportunity for error 
increases because you have lots of options. And that really is what's 
going on in this election. You've got to decide what you want to do with 
the most truly astonishing moment of prosperity and social progress and 
national security in our lifetime. You have to decide.
    And people ask me all the time, you know, for a year and a half or 2 
years, ``Do you really think that Al Gore 
is going to win?'' And I always said, yes, and I always believed it, 
when the polls weren't nearly as good as they are today, because I knew 
the underlying conditions of the country were good. I knew that he was a 
good man. I knew he had played a terrific role in the building of what 
we have done. But I also knew that he was thinking about what we should 
do in the future. And when he picked Joe Lieberman to be on the ticket with him, it proved that he was 
thinking about what we should do in the future.
    People ask me all the time if I think Hillary is going to win. I tell them, yes. And I do, and I 
always have, but I do for the same reasons.
    But the truth is--I meant precisely what I said when I said, if Jim 
keeps giving that speech and you all keep giving him enough money to 
make sure people hear the message--[laughter]--and make sure people hear 
the message, the race won't be as close as it was last time, because 
that's where America is and where America wants to go.
    But I'm telling you, this is not exactly your standard political 
speech, but the truth is, I've been doing this a long time now--
[laughter]--and I have nearly got the hang of it. [Laughter] And I have 
observed that very often, an election is determined not so much by who 
the two candidates are but by what the people think the election is 
about. Now, I'll get serious a minute.
    If the people believe the election is about how much they can get 
for themselves today, right now, never mind tomorrow and never mind my 
neighbor, we're going to be in a tough fix, folks, and especially if 
they talk nice about it, you know? [Laughter] ``I would like to raise

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the minimum wage, and I would like to have a Patients' Bill of Rights. 
And I know all the seniors need prescription drugs, and half of them 
will be left out if we only take people at 150 percent of the poverty 
line. I'd like to do all that, and I feel really terrible that I can't. 
But I've got to keep dishing out this tax cut money.'' [Laughter]
    Now, you're laughing, but times are good. And a lot of people say, 
``Well, what could be wrong with that? I could use the money.'' So I'm 
telling you--you hear me now--it's good that you gave him a check, but 
it's not enough. You've got 60 days here, and every time you see 
somebody, you need to talk to them about this election. Every day, when 
you come home from work or when you end your day, if you are a homemaker 
or whatever you do, you ought to ask yourself if you've talked to one or 
two people about the decision that we have to make as a people in this 
millennial year.
    Because I'm telling you, there are profound economic and educational 
and health care and environmental and criminal justice and what I call 
one America--how we're all going to live and work together--issues, that 
there are honest differences--big election, big differences. All the 
best stuff is still out there. The other side wants to blur over the 
differences and emphasize how appealing their tax cuts are.
    We want to have tax cuts, too, very badly, actually, in the area of 
the marriage penalty or giving kids--families a tax deduction for their 
children's college tuition, long-term-care credit for elderly and 
disabled family members that you have to take care of, making it easier 
for people to save for retirement. We've got quite a nice tax package, 
but theirs is 3 or 4 times bigger than ours.
    But there's a reason theirs is 3 or 4 times bigger--because we don't 
want to get rid of this whole surplus. We think it's a good thing that 
we're paying the debt down. We know that we need some money to invest in 
education and health care, in science and technology, in the future of 
America. We know we may have some emergency come up. We know we may have 
some defense crisis develop, where we need to give our military even 
more than we anticipate. We know that over 10 years we might have a 
recession and the money might not all come in.
    So we can't make the expansive tax cut promises they can, and that 
may obscure the fact to the voters that we actually have, as Jim said, 
quite a good tax cut package that we strongly believe we can still pass 
in this Congress, if they want to do it. But I think they'd rather have 
the issue, because they want it to look like we're sort of the, you 
know, the curmudgeons that won't give the average Joe a break, and the 
country's rolling in dough, and it's their money, and the other side is 
going to give it all back to them.
    Let me just remind you, that rhetoric quadrupled the debt of the 
United States of America in the 12 years before I took office with Al 
Gore. And we have worked very hard--we've worked very hard to turn that 
around. A lot of Members of Congress gave up their seats after 1993 
because they voted to turn it around. And we'd better think a long time 
before we play games with our fiscal discipline and our ability to pay 
down that debt.
    Let me just give you one example. They talk all the time about tax 
cuts. If you did everything they're talking about, you passed all the 
tax cuts they've advocated and all the one's they're rolling out and all 
the one's their nominee for President rolled 
out and then you pass their Social Security privatization plan, which 
costs another trillion dollars, nearly--and that's before they pay for 
Star Wars or any of their other spending--no, seriously, before they pay 
for any of that--and you compare that to the Gore-Lieberman-Maloney 
positions--now, listen, hear me here--you can--interest rates under our 
approach would be one percent lower a year for a decade. Why? Because 
we're going to keep paying down the debt until we get America out of 
debt for the first time since 1835, and they'll have to stop doing that, 
because they're going to spend so much money on the tax cuts and the 
privatization program. They're going to spend all this projected 
surplus, and then some.
    And when you do that, interest rates will go up, and the market will 
react accordingly, and the economy will be weaker. Everybody will have 
their tax cut. I don't know how much good it will be if the economy gets 
weak. But let me say this--I had a study done--you know how much a one 
percent reduction in interest rates for a decade is worth? Three hundred 
and ninety billion dollars in home mortgages, about $900 a year on a 
$100,000 mortgage--I don't want to mess this up--$30 billion in car 
payments, and $15 billion in student loan payments. So that's a $435 
billion tax cut the American

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people get for paying for a strong economy and getting rid of the debt 
and saving some money to invest in caring for the needs of all 
Americans.
    You know, we believe, our party does, that all these people in these 
pretty uniforms that served our lunch here, we believe that they ought 
to have the same chance to send their kids to college that I have to 
send my child to college. We believe they ought to be able to make a 
living. And if they need child care, they ought to have it. And when the 
time comes to raise the minimum wage, we ought to raise it. And that's 
what we believe.
    We believe the rest of us are going to make more money when the 
average Americans are all out there working, making a good living, and 
able to support their children. So I'm just saying to you--I realize I'm 
preaching to the choir, but what I'm really trying to do here is to 
drive home the imperative of your taking some time every day to talk to 
your fellow citizens.
    Most of you are more interested in politics than most of your 
friends. Is that right? Isn't that right? Every one of you has friends 
who--even the Congressman's in-laws, I'll bet, have friends. [Laughter] 
I used to have an uncle--let me tell you, I had a great uncle I buried a 
couple of years ago. He was 91 years old, and I loved him like he was my 
own father. And he was my total barometer about how I was doing when I 
was Governor. This guy had about a sixth grade education and about a 200 
IQ and total recall of events that occurred in the 1930's.
    And I called him one time to ask about something. He said, ``I don't 
care about politics.'' He said, ``I wouldn't care about you if you 
weren't my nephew.'' [Laughter] And so whenever I needed to know how I 
was doing, I called him, and he was better than any poll I ever took. 
[Laughter] So I'm telling you, you all know people who--they think 
they're too busy. They're too preoccupied with their lives. They don't 
think about this all the time like you do. They've never been to one of 
these political fundraisers. They've never heard their Congressman give 
a speech like this, and they may never get a chance to.
    And it may be that the only direct flesh-and-blood contact they ever 
have with anybody asking them to think about this is with you. 
Otherwise, it's just some secondhand experience with the television ads 
or the debates for President or whatever.
    Now, I've done everything I could to turn this country around. You 
know there are big differences in this election. I hope you believe me 
when I tell you, as good as the last 8 years have been, the next 8 years 
can be better. And we can keep building on this if we decide that we're 
going to use and not abuse what is a truly unique moment in our history.
    But the members of the clergy who are here will tell you that 
throughout human history, people have been more likely to make a mistake 
when things were so good than when things were full of adversity and the 
options were clearer. So I implore you. This is a good man representing 
you in Congress. He is a good man, and he deserves to be reelected. And 
I want Joe Lieberman to be the next Vice 
President, and I believe he will be.
    But believe me, you can make a difference here. You can make a 
difference if every day--you just look at how many people there are in 
this room--if every one of you talk to three people every day between 
now and November, it's enough to turn the entire margin--that would be 
far more, by the way--if every one of you talk to three people between 
now and November, that would be far more than the victory margin he had 
in the last election. Far more, right?
    Now, I'm telling you, it's your country--and if you know anybody in 
New York, I wouldn't mind you talking to them either. [Laughter] If the 
American people really believe this is a magic moment, if they really 
believe that together we can build the future of our dreams for our 
children, if they understand clearly what we're for and what we're not, 
then Al Gore and Joe Lieberman, Jim Maloney and Hillary, the whole crowd, they'll win.
    Clarity, clarity and focus are our friend. You've got to bring this 
message clearly into focus for people who might never come here but who 
are going to be just as affected by the decision we make as a people in 
November as you are. So you cared enough to come here for Jim. Care 
enough to talk for him, every day for the next 60 days, and help us 
build America's best days.
    Thank you, and God bless you.

Note: The President spoke at 2:25 p.m. in the Amber Room Colonnade at 
Western Connecticut

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State University. In his remarks, he referred to Representative 
Maloney's wife, Mary; State Representative Lewis Wallace, Jr.; Edward L. 
Marcus, chair, Connecticut State Democratic Party; delegates to the 2000 
Democratic National Convention John Olsen and Joseph Walkovich; former 
Special Assistant to the President and Presidential Speechwriter 
Jonathan Prince; and Republican Presidential candidate Gov. George W. 
Bush of Texas. Representative Maloney was a candidate for reelection in 
Connecticut's Fifth Congressional District. The President also referred 
to a September 11 Federal Trade Commission report entitled ``Marketing 
Violent Entertainment to Children: A Review of Self-Regulation and 
Industry Practices in the Motion Picture, Music Recording & Electronic 
Game Industries.''