[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: WILLIAM J. CLINTON (2000-2001, Book III)]
[October 23, 2000]
[Pages 2295-2298]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks at a Westchester County Democratic Party Dinner in New Rochelle, 
New York
October 23, 2000

     Thank you. Thanks. [Laughter] Thank you for the wonderful welcome. 
Thank you for being here in such large numbers. Thank you for making 
David Alpert look good tonight at the 
Westchester County Democratic dinner. [Laughter] Thank you, Dennis 
Mehiel, for your friendship and your support. 
I want to thank my great friend John Catsimatidis for helping you at this dinner, and Anthony Pagano and everyone else who had anything to do with the 
dinner.
    I want to thank the county executive, Andy Spano, for being such a good friend to Hillary and to me and 
making me feel welcome here in Westchester County. Our great 
comptroller, Carl McCall, we welcome him 
tonight. And I want to thank the two people here who, next to 
Hillary, are most responsible for 
making me look good over the last 8 years, Representatives Eliot 
Engel and Nita Lowey. Thank you very much for all you have done, wherever they 
are.
    Now, let me say to all of you, I want you to have most of the time 
to listen to Hillary and to think 
about this Senate race, but I want to say just a few things about how 
the race for the Senate in New York relates to the larger national 
campaign, which will also unfold 2 weeks from tomorrow. I want to begin 
by thanking you all from the bottom of my heart for the phenomenal 
support that the people of New York have given to me and Al Gore in 1992 
and then in 1996. I am very grateful.
    I would just say, to me there are basically three or four questions 
that are really important. I think they matter in the Senate race. I 
think they matter in the race for President and Vice President. And I 
hope you will share them with friends of yours who not only live in New 
York but live in other States, because every one of you has tons of 
friends or family members, co-workers, some of whom live in New York, 
some of whom don't even live in this State, who will never come to a 
dinner like this. Isn't that right?
    When you come to a dinner like this, don't you have some people say, 
``Why do you spend your time and money doing that?'' [Laughter] You do, 
don't you? Everyone one of you do, right? But all these people that 
sometimes make fun of you, sometimes want to know why you're doing this, 
virtually all of them are going to vote 2 weeks from tomorrow, or they 
would if they knew exactly what was at stake.
    So while we're all having a good time tonight, and the temptation is 
just for me to hit you with a bunch of one-liners that make you want to 
scream with joy--[laughter]--the truth is, what we should be focused on 
is, how do we get people who don't come to dinners like this, who aren't 
as political as we are but who love our country very much and will 
definitely show up at election time, to understand this election in the 
way that we understand it?
    I told the Democratic Congress and the Senate the other day that we 
ought to think of ourselves as America's weather corps, that if we can 
make the choices clear, our side wins. If the choices can be blurred and 
remain cloudy, we have a lot more trouble. So over the next 2 weeks, 
this is what I could say, if I could personally speak to all your family 
and friends: Here's why you ought to be for Al Gore, Joe Lieberman, and 
Hillary.
    Number one, we've had the longest economic expansion in history, the 
lowest unemployment in 30 years, the highest homeownership in history, 
the lowest minority unemployment ever recorded. And it's really 
important to keep this prosperity going, especially if you want to 
extend it to the inner-city neighborhoods in New York and the rural 
counties in New York that still haven't fully participated. You will 
never be able

[[Page 2296]]

to do that unless you keep the economy going, keep unemployment down, 
and keep it going.
    Now, you have a choice. And what our side says is, ``Look, we're 
going to have a tax cut, not near as big as theirs, not nearly as big. 
And we're going to focus it on paying for college tuition, paying for 
long-term care for elderly or disabled relatives, financing retirement, 
paying for child care, the basic things that families need today, and 
inducing people to invest in areas that are still underdeveloped.''
    But it's a smaller tax cut than theirs. We admit it. Why? Because we 
want money to invest in education and health care and the environment, 
what we have to invest in technology and national defense, and we've got 
to keep paying down the debt. The single most important economic 
difference in the election today is that our budget pays down the debt 
and gets America out of debt for the first time since 1835.
    Now, why is that important? Why is that important, and why should 
people, even people who do quite well and would get more money in the 
short run under their tax cut, support our program? Because if you pay 
the debt down, you keep interest rates lower. If you keep interest rates 
lower, it's like a whole other tax cut. If we keep interest rates a 
percent lower a year for a decade, and that's about what the difference 
in the two plans will do, do you know what that's worth to you, as an 
American? Listen to this: $390 billion in lower home mortgages; $30 
billion in lower car payments; $15 billion in lower college loan 
payments; plus lower credit card payments; plus lower business loans, 
which means more businesses, more jobs, higher incomes, and a better 
stock market. It's a tax cut for everyone, to get America out of debt. 
It is the progressive, right thing to do.
    We have worked so hard to turn a $290 billion deficit into a $230 
billion surplus, so hard after quadrupling the national debt for 12 
years, before we came in, to start paying the national debt off. This is 
a big deal. You need to go out and tell people, ``If you want to keep 
the prosperity going, support Al Gore, Joe 
Lieberman, and Hillary and get this country out of debt to keep interest 
rates down.''
    Number two: Second thing you ought to say is, if you want to build 
on the progress in areas other than the economy and keep our society 
growing stronger, you should vote for Gore/
Lieberman, and Hillary. Look at where we were 8 years ago compared to now. The 
crime rate has dropped every year to a 26-year low. The murder rate is 
at a 33-year low. Gun violence down 35 percent. In the environment, the 
air is cleaner; the water is cleaner; the drinking water is safer; the 
food is safer. We cleaned up 3 times as many toxic waste dumps in 8 
years as they did in 12. We set aside more land in perpetuity than any 
administration since that of Theodore Roosevelt 100 years ago. And the 
economy got better.
    We added 26 years to the life of Medicare, had the most sweeping 
improvements in diabetes since the development of insulin, did more to 
prevent breast cancer and prostate cancer, provided health insurance for 
children of low-income working parents, which has given us the first 
decline in uninsured people in 12 years. In education, we sponsored 
higher standards, accountability, smaller classes. We're in the process 
of putting 100,000 teachers in the schools. We've gone from zero to 
serving 800,000 children in after-school programs. We're trying to build 
or modernize schools. We've opened the doors to 2 years of college to 
everybody, and our college tax credits are now being taken advantage of 
by 10 million families.
    What are the results of all this? A lower dropout rate, a higher 
graduation rate, higher test scores, the biggest college going rate in 
history. So the question is, are we going to keep going in the right 
direction? If you want to go in the right direction, since there are 
honest differences in this campaign, on crime policy, on environmental 
policy, on health care policy, on education policy--it's not like you 
don't have a record here. And the differences are honest and heartfelt. 
So Al Gore and Joe Lieberman and Hillary, 
they'll do what they think is right, and our opponents, they'll do what 
they think is right.
    But we have a record here. So you have to say, if you want to build 
on the prosperity of the last 8 years, and you want to take on the big 
challenges of the future--excellence in education for everybody, closing 
the digital divide, opening the 4 years of college, making the most of 
the human genome, protecting the privacy rights of people and their 
medical and financial records, all these big new questions--you only 
have one choice. You've got to vote for Al Gore, Joe Lieberman, and 
Hillary, if that's what you want.

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    The third thing and maybe the most important is, you ought to vote 
for them because we are really the party of one America. We believe that 
our diversity of all kinds is interesting and makes America more 
exciting, makes us much better prepared for the global society we'll be 
living in, but we think our common humanity is even more important. And 
that has very practical implications. It means we think all these young 
people that served your meal tonight, they ought to have the same chance 
to go to college and send their kids to college as people who could 
afford to come here and buy a ticket tonight do.
    It means we're for raising the minimum wage. It means we're for 
stronger enforcement of the equal pay laws, because there's still 
discrimination against women in the workplace today, and we think we 
ought to get rid of it. It means we're for strong hate crimes 
legislation and employment nondiscrimination legislation. It means that 
we are for a Supreme Court that will protect a woman's right to choose 
and the other basic fundamental rights.
    Look, I have spent, as all of you know, and many of you mentioned 
tonight when I saw you earlier, I spent a lot of time the last 8 years 
trying to bring peace to the world. We've made a lot of progress in 
Northern Ireland. We've made a lot of progress in the Balkans, after 
combat in Kosovo and conflict in Bosnia. We finally had the last 
dictator in that part of the world gone from office now. We've worked 
for 8 years in Korea to try to bring an end to the conflict on the 
Korean Peninsula. We're closer than ever before, and the Secretary of 
State of the United States is in North 
Korea, and the President of South Korea won the 
Nobel Peace Prize because he went with an outstretched hand and said, 
``Let's put an end to the Korean war. It's been 50 years.''
    The world is moving in the right direction. And until 2 weeks ago, 
you could make the same case about the Middle East. With all the trouble 
that has roiled the Middle East in the last 2 weeks--I don't want to 
talk too much about it tonight, because I find when I'm heavily involved 
in something like this, the more I say about it, the less positive 
impact I can have, and the less I say, the more I can get done. But 
suffice it to say that the United States has been a friend to Israel, 
has believed in Israel and its right to be in the Middle East, and has 
thought the only way, ultimately, for real peace and security to come 
was through a reconciliation and a peace process that would end the 
violence and enable everybody to live on fair and decent terms. And I 
don't think all this is going to change that.
    The reason I mention it to you is this. So much of the world's 
trouble, in this most modern of ages, where all of our kids are teaching 
us more than we know about computers, where the human genome--this is 
literally the truth--the human genome will lead to the younger women in 
this audience who have, let's say, 10 years of childbearing left, I 
think in about 10 years, women will be coming home from the hospital 
with kids that will have a life expectancy of about 90 years. There's 
going to be an enormous number of wonderful things happening, and the 
old world we live in is bedeviled by the oldest fear of mankind. We are 
still paralyzed by our fear and distrust and our vulnerability to slip 
into violence and hatred against people who are different from us; 
they're of a different race, a different ethnic group, a different 
faith.
    And we can all clap when we look around this room. I mean, look 
around this room. This is America in the 21st century. And we can all 
clap about it; it's great. But what we need to understand is, you just 
look what happened to people who have been working together for 7\1/2\ 
years, in the last 2 weeks. And I'm telling you, the country needs a 
leader in the White House and a voice in the Senate that--people who 
believe with the core of their being that what we have in common is more 
fundamentally significant than all of our differences. Our differences 
are interesting. Our common humanity is fundamental.
    So, if somebody asks you tomorrow--and I wish you wouldn't wait for 
them to ask--why you showed up here and why are you doing this and why 
are you for Hillary or Al Gore or Joe Lieberman, 
I hope you will say, ``Well, you see, there are three reasons. One is, 
I'd kind of like to keep this prosperity going, and the only way to do 
it is to keep paying down this debt, investing in our future, and take a 
tax cut we can afford instead of one that looks good. Number two, I'd 
like to keep making progress. I like the fact that we've got a cleaner 
environment, a lower crime rate, better schools, more people with health 
insurance, and I want to build on that progress, not turn around. And 
number three, the most important thing of all

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is, I want to keep building one America, where we grow closer together, 
where we believe everybody counts, everybody deserves a chance, and we 
all do better when we help each other.'' That's what you ought to say. 
And you ought not to wait for somebody to ask you to say that. 
[Laughter]
    I'm telling you, these races are close, and you may have more 
influence over the kind of people I'm talking about than I would. And 
you need to know just what three things to say. That's what I believe. 
If I were talking to any of your friends or family members alone in a 
room, with nobody looking and no media covering it, and they said, ``Why 
should I vote for Al Gore and Joe 
Lieberman? Why should I vote for your 
wife for Senate?'' those are the 
three things I would say. And I hope you'll say them.
    And let me just say one other thing. Dennis is going to come up here and introduce 
Hillary, but I want to say just one 
or two things about her candidacy. First of all, I am grateful to all of 
you for being so good to her, and I am immensely proud of her for having 
the courage to run and for running as she has for this last year and 
some odd months.
    We met almost 30 years ago, and even then she was literally obsessed with the welfare of children 
and families, with education and health care and early childhood 
development. We worked together for a dozen years when I was Governor of 
my native State on education and economic development. One of the 
reasons the people in upstate New York ought to vote for her is that she 
literally devoted an enormous percentage of her time for years and years 
and years to just what upstate needs now, which is figuring out how to 
get investment and opportunity to places that aren't fully participating 
in the national economy.
    When she became First Lady, she 
traveled all over the world, from the Balkans to Northern Ireland to the 
Middle East to Africa to the Indian subcontinent, trying to promote 
peace and reconciliation and the interests of young girls and families 
that were left behind in poorer societies. She sponsored the Millennium 
Project, to preserve our treasures for the new millennium, which has 
done a lot for New York. It's the biggest historic preservation movement 
in history, in American history--the biggest one--$100 million in public 
and private money that among other things preserve George Washington's 
revolutionary headquarters in this State, Harriet Tubman's home, Louis 
Armstrong's home and archives, in places that it's good for tourism, 
good for community pride, and good for the history of this great State.
    I can just tell you that in 30 years of working in public life--you 
know, it's probably not even fashionable to say this quote until the 
election, but I basically like most of the people I've known in 
politics. I find that most of the Republicans and well as most of the 
Democrats I've know are honest people who work hard and do what they 
think is right, to the best of their ability to do it. But I have never 
known anybody that had the combination of intelligence, compassion--
compassion and commitment and ability to get things done and think of 
new things to do that Hillary has. 
She will be a worthy successor to Senator Moynihan and a great partner for Chuck Schumer.
    Thank you, thank you, thank you.

Note: The President spoke at 9:48 p.m. at the VIP Club. In his remarks, 
he referred to dinner emcee David Alpert, chairman, Westchester County 
Democratic Party; dinner cohosts Dennis Mehiel, John A. Catsimatidis, 
and Anthony Pagano; New York State Comptroller H. Carl McCall; and 
President Kim Dae-jung of South Korea.