[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: WILLIAM J. CLINTON (2000-2001, Book III)]
[October 28, 2000]
[Pages 2355-2358]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks on the Budget and Legislative Agenda and an Exchange With 
Reporters
October 28, 2000

    The President. Good afternoon.
    Q. Got it right.
    The President. I got it right. I'm making progress. [Laughter]
    As I said yesterday, when this Congress has acted in a spirit of 
genuine bipartisanship, we have made profound progress. Yesterday I 
signed the VA/HUD bill that invests in the health of veterans, advances 
welfare reform with 75,000 housing vouchers, strengthens AmeriCorps, and 
invests in cutting-edge scientific research with the largest increase 
ever in the National Science Foundation. Earlier this month I signed an 
Interior bill that creates the largest appropriation for lands 
preservation in our Nation's history. I also look forward to signing the 
bipartisan foreign operations bill, which will fund our debt relief 
initiative for the poorest countries in the world.
    And just a few moments ago, I signed a vitally important and 
bipartisan Agriculture appropriations bill. This legislation will fund 
our Nation's agriculture programs for the coming year and provided much 
need help to our farmers, our ranchers, our rural communities, who have

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suffered everything from devastating droughts to low commodity prices.
    It also contains the largest increase ever in development funding 
for rural and Native American communities that have not shared in our 
Nation's prosperity. It will help to create new businesses and expand 
current ones in small towns and rural areas. It will help rural 
communities attract new residents, and with funding for new health 
clinics and improved water systems, it will improve the quality of life 
all across rural America.
    The bill also will help us provide humanitarian relief and 
development loans to countries that need help, and promote the sale of 
United States goods abroad. The bill modernizes our food inspection 
system with increased surveillance and more food inspectors.
    Finally, this bill includes commonsense reforms that will let food 
stamp recipients own a dependable car and have decent housing. If we 
want people to go to work, they have to be able to get to work. They 
shouldn't have to choose between a car they need to get to their jobs 
and the nutrition and shelter they need for their children.
    This is a good bill for America. It helps hard-hit farmers, 
ranchers, and rural communities; improves the safety of our food; and 
takes the next steps in welfare reform.
    Of course, there are also things in the bill I don't like. It says 
it allows the importation of lower cost prescription drugs from other 
countries, but leaves the power of deciding whether or not to import 
these drugs to the drug companies, meaning it will do nothing for 
seniors and others struggling to pay high prescription drug bills.
    It purports to allow the export of American products to Cuba, yet it 
makes it virtually impossible for family farmers to arrange the 
financing that enables such sales to take place. Moreover, the 
legislation is designed to impose new restriction on our efforts to 
foster people-to-people contacts and bring reform in Cuba.
    It also includes objectionable trade provisions and doesn't restore 
food stamps for legal immigrants. And it contains fewer resources than I 
requested for clean water for farms and for climate change.
    Nonetheless, I decided that, on balance, this bill advances the 
interests of the American people. That's why I signed it, and that's how 
progress is made, when we work together and have honorable compromise. 
No one gets everything he or she wants.
    I still have the feeling the congressional majority has not yet 
decided whether they want to work with us in this way on the remaining 
bills, or just score points and leave town. On Medicare, we sent the 
majority a very detailed proposal. We said when it comes to more 
resources, the priority should not be HMO's but teaching hospitals, 
rural hospitals, home health agencies, children with disabilities, and 
pregnant women and children who are legal immigrants. The congressional 
leadership so far has virtually ignored that proposal.
    The story is the same on taxes. We put forward a good-faith 
compromise and then offered to work to craft a bipartisan tax bill that 
meets the test of fairness to children, to seniors, to millions of 
Americans without health coverage, and to small business. The answer we 
got was disappointing: Instead of meeting with us, instead of working 
with the White House and/or congressional Democrats, the Republican 
leadership instead crafted their own partisan tax package and passed it 
on largely a party-line vote. Again, I'm asking the congressional 
leaders to instruct their tax negotiators to meet with ours tomorrow, so 
we can find common ground on tax relief for America's families.
    We don't yet know how the education and health bill will work out. I 
hope the majority doesn't choose the path they took on the tax bill or 
the Commerce/State/Justice bill, for that matter. Instead, we should do 
what was done on the agriculture bill I signed today, on the VA/HUD 
bill, on the Interior bill--the bipartisan path that invariably leads us 
to progress.
    We said very specifically what our schools need--smaller class sizes 
and modern classrooms, investments in accountability, turning around 
failing schools, and teacher quality. There's no secret about what the 
right course is. Our priorities are clear, and we're ready to work with 
them in good faith, just as we have on all other bills.
    Again this morning, Congress voted for a stopgap spending bill for 
today and quickly left town for the weekend. That's like going to work 
in the morning, punching the clock, and going back home. Our budget team 
is working all weekend, ready to meet. We need to come together on a 
budget, meet on Medicare, work out a fair tax cut bill, raise the 
minimum wage, and pass the new markets legislation.

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    Tonight we turn back the clocks, and we gain an hour. We ought to 
put that extra hour to good use. We're here, we're ready, and we need to 
finish the job.
    Thank you.

Continuing Resolutions and Relations With Congress

    Q. Mr. President, does it bother you that your insistence on just 
single-day extensions of the emergency spending bill has provoked 
considerable anger and irritation on the Capitol? Trent Lott says it's 
humiliating. Arlen Specter said you're intimidating Congress--I'm sorry, 
Trent Lott said it was harassment. Does that bother you? Do you think 
this works against you?
    The President. Well, I hope not. I'm not trying to harass them. I'm 
just trying to get them finished and get out of town. They want to go 
home and campaign, and they have a right to. They need to campaign, but 
they need to finish their jobs.
    And I think it's highly--it's frustrating for Senator Lott because the real problem here is that the rightwing of 
the Republican caucus in the Senate so far has not permitted the 
Republicans to meet with the Democrats and work out a compromise on 
these last bills, as we have on all the others.
    Now, we're working together on the Labor/HHS bill, which is the 
education bill and human services bill. But on the tax bill and on the 
appropriation for Commerce/State/Justice, they haven't permitted him to 
work with us. And he's in a very difficult position. I'm very 
sympathetic with him. I'm not trying to harass them. But if we kept 
passing these 4- and 5-day continuing resolutions, we'll just never get 
our work done. And they are coming back tomorrow night. Last week they 
came back on Monday night. So if we could make an agreement tomorrow 
night, they could be out of here by Monday, and that would give them--
they could go home 8 days and take their case to the American people. 
That's all I'm trying to do.
    Q. Mr. President, after you spoke out yesterday, the House Speaker 
said he believed you were being forced by House Democrats to veto the 
tax cut bill and to keep lawmakers in session in order to, A, prevent 
Republicans from getting a victory before election day, and also to 
force some confrontation for election-year gain. What do you say to the 
Speaker?
    The President. Well, that's not true. I mean, look at what--I mean, 
I have--for 3 days in a row now, I have lavished praise on the 
Republicans, as well as the Democrats, where we have worked together. 
And in each case I've told you the things that I didn't agree with, that 
they wanted in the bills, that we accepted. So we're not trying to force 
a confrontation.
    I will say again, look at the facts here. We haven't finished the 
education bill because we are still arguing over one issue, but I have 
not criticized them. We're working in good faith to try to work through 
this.
    There are two pieces of legislation, and two only, in this entire 
Congress that they basically have refused to meet with us on. They said, 
``We heard you, and here's the best we can do. Take it or leave it.'' 
And they're in that position because of the power of the rightwing of 
their caucus in the Senate and the House. And I understand; it's a very 
difficult thing for them. I am not trying to provoke a confrontation 
here. But these are the only--I will say again, the facts are clear. 
These are the only two bills on which we have not had a bipartisan 
negotiation.
    All we're asking for is to do these bills the way we did the others. 
They'll get some of what they want; we'll get some of what we want. 
We'll have an agreement. It will be, on balance, good for the American 
people. I will say that. Then they can go home and make their case about 
what else they want to do; the Democrats can go home and make their case 
about what else we would like to do.
    All I'm trying to do is get the job done here, and all I'm asking 
for is we treat these bills the same way we treated every other one.
    Q. Mr. President, is it your position that you'll sign one-day CR's 
until you get a Labor/HHS bill, or that you'll only sign one-day CR's 
until you get a Labor/HHS bill, a tax proposal, and a Medicare--
[inaudible]?
    The President. Well, first of all, we've got to finish the education 
bill. But what I would--my preference, my strong preference is to finish 
it all. Let me just go back to--your question is tied to the previous 
one. It is not true that I do not want a tax bill before the election. 
That is not true. I believe we should give some tax relief. I am more 
than willing to do it, but I cannot in good conscience do something that 
I think is unfair and that will aggravate some of the problems that it 
purports to solve.

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    All I'm asking for here is what I have done every single year I've 
been here. I just want--if you go back, ever since we've had divided 
government, whenever we have negotiated, we have reached agreement; 
we've done things that have been good for America, starting with the 
welfare reform bill in '96. We had the Balanced Budget Act in '97. We 
had the Telecommunications Act, which has been an incredible boon to our 
economy, and many, many other things.
    And this year, because we've been fiscally prudent and we've got 
some funds to invest in America's future, we have made some truly 
astonishing steps forward for our country. All I am asking for is the 
same method of working out the bill, on the last two remaining bills, 
that we got on the other bills, and a good-faith conclusion to the work 
we're doing on the education bill. That's all I'm asking for.

2000 Presidential Election

    Q. Mr. President, one question about the campaign, if I might. There 
are reports today that Vice President Gore has communicated to you that 
he would like you to steer clear of the battleground States of 
Pennsylvania and Michigan. Is that true? And do you think you'd be a 
political liability, or does he think that, if you went there?
    The President. Well, I said yesterday, generally--remember what I 
said yesterday? Let me just go back through this. I think, in general, 
these elections are always decided by the candidates and the case they 
make to the people. I actually, as I said, I may be the only person 
that's involved in this debate who has experienced this situation in 
reverse, when President Reagan was immensely popular and came to 
Arkansas in '84 to campaign. And when the votes were counted, he had 62 
percent, and I think I had 63.
    So what a President who is not running--there are only two things a 
President who is not running can do: You can tell people what you think 
the condition of the country is and what the stakes are, and you can try 
to rally the people that are already with you in the hope of getting a 
bigger turnout. The undecided voters will be swayed primarily by the 
others.
    And what I have to hope is that wherever I go, that what I have to 
say is more important than just the fact of my being there. Because 
you're going to decide who you want to be the next President; Mark is 
going to decide; all of you are going to decide, and very few third 
parties can change your mind. So that's not what is at issue here. The 
most important actors in this drama are Al Gore and Governor Bush. They're the 
only actors in the drama that really have any sway here--except for 
Senator Lieberman and Congressman 
Cheney; I think they can have some impact. And 
the rest of us might be able to sway some undecided voters if our 
arguments are heard--and I have an understanding of this that's unique 
because I've been President the last 8 years.
    I may--we haven't decided every place I'm going yet, and I may still 
go to Michigan. If they want me to come and the campaign thinks it will 
be helpful, I'll go. But what I have to do is what I think will be most 
helpful. The President--if your arguments are heard and people listen to 
them, you may sway a few undecided voters. But the fact of your going is 
not a votegetter, ever. That wasn't for any previous President. It 
wasn't for President Reagan.
    But it does help if you can turn out your votes. So we're looking at 
all the best ways we have to try to make sure all the people who are for 
our side and agree with us actually show up. That's very important. The 
Republicans are doing the same thing. And we'll just see what happens. 
I'll do whatever I think is best, in consultation with the campaign. But 
I don't think the final travel schedule has been set yet, and I think we 
just have to wait and see how things unfold the next few days.
    Also, as I said yesterday, I have to finish this work here. And as 
you know, we're watching events in the Middle East very closely. So if I 
can be helpful, I will. I've already done a lot the last year, and I've 
done a lot in the last few days. I will continue to do what I can, but 
the first priority for me has to be here. And the election will be 
determined by, I believe, the case made by the two candidates for President in 
the next few days. And I think the rest of us, all we can do is hope to 
sway a few undecided voters if they hear us, and get the folks out that 
are already for us.
    Thank you.

 Note:  The President spoke at 2:17 p.m. in the James S. Brady Press 
Briefing Room at the White House. In his remarks, he referred to former 
President Ronald Reagan; and Republican Presidential and Vice 
Presidential candidates Gov. George W. Bush of Texas and Dick Cheney.