[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: WILLIAM J. CLINTON (2000-2001, Book III)]
[October 24, 2000]
[Pages 2312-2314]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks at a Reception for Congressional Candidate Donald Dunn
October 24, 2000

    Well, let me first of all say I'm delighted to see all of you here, 
and I'm delighted to be here, myself, for several reasons. I'd like to 
begin by thanking Ron and Beth Dozoretz for doing this, for their incredible 
generosity, and their support.
    I'm here because I owe this guy. [Laughter] You know, he started out 
with me as an intern; then he went to work in the White House; then he 
went out of the cocoon of the White House, into the administration. And 
then he actually--he could have stayed here in a cushy job until I left, 
and then sort of written it all up on his resume and gone out and made a 
lot of money in Washington or New York or someplace. And instead, he 
made the decision that I made half my lifetime ago, when I turned down 
all the clerkships and all the things I was offered and I went home to 
Arkansas.
    And when I ran for Congress in 1974 in Arkansas, I ran in a district 
where the previous Democratic candidate for President in the previous 
election had received 24 percent of the vote. So I know what he is going 
through. [Laughter] And half the people thought I was a communist, 
because I was a Democrat. [Laughter] And it was in 1970, so it was 
acceptable to have longer hair. [Laughter]
    But I identify with this. And it was a real rural district, and I 
just--I admire you so much for doing this. And nothing ever changes 
until someone like you steps out and takes a chance. I also want to say 
that sometimes things do change.
    And I always tell people--this is the first election since 1974 that 
I haven't been on the ballot. And I think the really great campaigns of 
my life were the 1992 Presidential campaign; the 1982 campaign for 
Governor, where I got reelected after I had been defeated, and that had 
never happened before; and that first campaign I ran for Congress. I 
learned how to listen. I learned how other people viewed Government. I 
learned the richness and texture of the story that every person has. It 
made me believe completely in democracy. And I also learned that you can 
turn a lot of people around if you take the trouble to do it and you 
believe in them and you give them respect to do it.
    And I'm also glad to be here because I really care a lot about Utah, 
and I honor the heritage of Democrats in Utah. When I became Governor in 
1978, the Governor of Utah was a man named Scott Matheson, who is now 
deceased, but he was a great--he was a great friend of mine, and I loved 
him. I appointed his son United States attorney, and now he's running 
for Congress, also in Utah. And his wife, Norma, was and remains a friend of mine.

[[Page 2313]]

    And I've always wanted to see the Democrats come back in the 
Intermountain West. And it can be done. Fifty years ago, when everyone 
thought Harry Truman was defeated in his race for President in 1948, one 
of the reasons he won is that he swept the Intermountain West, the most 
Republican area of America today. And the reason he won then is the same 
reason we lose today--so much of the Intermountain West belongs to the 
Federal Government. And in the beginning, when all that was happening, 
it was just a boon to the people who lived there, nothing but a source 
of income and grazable land and mines to be mined.
    Then, after the whole ownership of the Federal Government had 
matured and the resources had to be managed--and sometimes they had to 
say yes, as well as no, and sometimes the Federal Government was good at 
it, and sometimes they weren't very good at it--so, sort of a culture of 
having to hate the Federal Government that owned all the land built up, 
so that now it's sort of culturally unacceptable to be a Democrat, 
because they all think we're, by definition, nuts. [Laughter]
    That's sort of what's happened. And the only way you can break that 
psychology in a State like Utah or Idaho or the other smaller States, 
Montana, is if one person, like him, will go home and say, ``Listen, 
this is my place, too. I love it. Here's where I stand. Here's why I 
want to be in public office. Here's why I want to serve you.''
    So I just want to tell you, I think you've got a chance to win, too. 
And you have changed your life. You have changed the lives of the people 
that have worked with you. And you have changed the district in which 
you have worked forever, whatever happens. But I hope all the rest of 
you will take a little solace at what he's done.
    And let me just say one other thing. This election is unfolding 
against the backdrop of the national election. I have always felt, I 
will say again--I've been saying this for 2 years. I will say it one 
more time--when the votes are counted on November 7th, Al Gore will be the next President of the United States. 
That's what I believe, because in the end, people will have to decide 
whether we want to continue the economic prosperity and expand it or 
adopt a whole different economic theory that has already been tried once 
and didn't work as well as ours. They'll have to decide whether they 
want to continue to build on the social progress of the last 8 years. 
Compared to 8 years ago, the crime rate is down; the welfare rolls are 
cut in half; the environment is cleaner. For the first time in a dozen 
years, fewer people are uninsured; the schools are getting better, we 
have a record number of people going on to college. You have to decide 
if you want to build on that or take down a lot of those policies.
    And finally, the thing that makes those of us who are Democrats, 
Democrats: Do we want to go forward together as one America? Do we 
really believe that everybody counts, everybody should have a chance, we 
all do better when we help each other? We ought to have hate crimes 
legislation because hate crimes are bad for a society like ours, that 
has to accept everybody that obeys the law and plays by the rules. We 
ought to have equal pay enforcement because it's bad in a society like 
ours, where women and men both have to work, if the women don't get paid 
for what they do. We ought to grow together.
    So I believe that the next 2 weeks will be a fertile period for him 
to go back to Utah and put his message out there, because I think the 
American people will begin to focus on the big things. What has happened 
big in America in the last 8 years? He was a part of it. He was there. 
We changed the economic policy, the environmental policy, the education 
policy, the health care policy, the crime policy, and the welfare policy 
of the country. And compared to 8 years ago, everything is better.
    The question now is not whether we will change but how. This country 
is changing so fast, the young women in this audience today that haven't 
had their children yet, within a decade they'll be bringing home babies 
from the hospital with a little gene card that tells them all the good 
things and all the bad things and what to do about the bad things. And 
within a decade, maybe--certainly not much longer--women will have 
little babies that will have a life expectancy of 90 years. The world is 
going to change dramatically. And it's very, very important that we keep 
changing but in the right direction.
    I was looking at Don making his talk, and I was trying to remember 
what I might have been like 27 years ago--half my lifetime ago, when I 
was your age. I'm quite sure I wasn't nearly as well-dressed. [Laughter] 
Of course, we

[[Page 2314]]

were all sort of cosmetically challenged in the early seventies, if 
you've ever--[laughter]--most men wore clothes that looked like they 
came off the seat covers of old 1950's automobiles.
    I doubt if I made as much sense as you did, but I'm quite sure I was 
as optimistic and idealistic as you are. And what I want to say to all 
of you today is that I think that you'll always be proud you gave this 
young man a hand up when he needed it. And I hope you'll look forward 
for other opportunities to do the same for other young people. This is a 
great country, but we have to keep bringing young people into the 
system. We have to empower them. We have to give them a chance to serve. 
And we've got to keep changing in the right direction.
    I think he's got a great career ahead of him. I think he's done a 
brave thing. And I won't be terribly surprised if lightening strikes and 
he wins, because he's always had a clear idea of what he was doing and 
he's always had a message that he could take out there that people who 
share his roots could hear. And I just want you to know I'm really proud 
of you. And I'm really grateful to all of you for helping him.
    And you remember what I told you about this election. We've got 2 
weeks. You get out there and tell people, whether it's the race for the 
House in Utah or the race for the Senate in New York or the race for the 
White House, there are three big questions: Do you want to keep this 
prosperity going and extend it to people who haven't felt it, or abandon 
it for a theory that won't work, and it won't pay down the debt? Do you 
want to keep building on the social progress of the last 8 years, or 
reverse policies that are proving to work? And do you think we ought to 
go forward together as one America? Those are the three great questions 
we have to ask and answer. If people understand that those are the 
questions, I know what the answers will be, and we'll all be celebrating 
2 weeks from tonight.
    Thank you, and God bless you.

Note: The President spoke at 9:42 p.m. at a private residence. In his 
remarks, he referred to reception hosts Ronald I. and Beth Dozoretz; and 
Jim Matheson, candidate for Utah's Second Congressional District, and 
his mother, Norma. Donald Dunn was a candidate for Utah's Third 
Congressional District.