[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: GEORGE W. BUSH (2001, Book I)]
[March 29, 2001]
[Pages 340-344]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks to African American Leaders
March 29, 2001

    Thank you all. The legislative branch is always trying to take 
something from the executive branch. [Laughter] Thank you, J.C., for helping set up this meeting. And thank you all 
for coming. It's my honor that you're here, and I want to welcome you to 
the people's home.
    Before I begin, I do want to make mention of the fact--and ask you 
to join me in a moment of silence--a Member of the United States 
Congress passed away today, Norm Sisisky from 
the State of Virginia. I know you'll join me in asking God's blessing on 
Norm, as well as on Rhoda and his four sons 
and seven grandchildren.

[A moment of silence was observed.]

    Amen. Thank you very much.
    Secretary Paige, thank you very much 
for being here. I've known Rod a long time. You may remember, at one 
time I was the Governor of the great State of Texas. [Laughter] And we 
had a superintendent of schools in our largest school district who 
insisted that every child could learn, and he caught my attention by 
saying that. And then not only did he insist that, he worked hard to 
make sure that that was the case. And it's such an honor to have Rod 
make the sacrifice of moving from Texas up here and becoming the 
Secretary of Education. People are going to be proud of the job he does. 
It doesn't matter what your political party is; you'll be proud of the 
job this man does. Thank you, sir.

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    I know the Lieutenant Governor of the great State of Colorado is 
here, Joe Rogers. And I don't know if Kenny 
Blackwell is here from Ohio. We've got 
elected officials, I know, from Oregon and Nevada and all around the 
country. Thanks for coming.
    I love the old words of Jackie Robinson--he one time said, when 
President Kennedy did something he disagreed with, he said, ``The 
President is a fine man,'' but he reserved the right to change his 
opinion. [Laughter] Every President, whatever his party, is judged not 
only by the words he speaks but, more importantly, by the work he leaves 
behind. And that's what I hope my administration is judged on--by the 
work we leave behind.
    I will constantly speak for the values that unite our country: 
personal responsibility, equal justice, equal opportunity for everybody. 
These are important common values. And I've set this administration to 
the work of putting those values into practice and into law.
    The work begins where opportunity usually begins, and that's in the 
schoolhouses. I have made public education the number one priority of 
this administration for a reason: Because when we get it right, when 
every child learns, America will be a much more hopeful place.
    Today, all the children--there was a day when all the children 
couldn't enter schools. Some of you may remember that. I'm not trying to 
age you. [Laughter] As a result of a lot of hard work, that has changed. 
All children can enter schools, but the fundamental question now is, 
once in school, will all children learn? And that's the question all of 
us must ask. And if not, we must insist on change--we must insist on 
change. I've asked Congress to spend more money on education. But I've 
also asked that we expect more in return.
    A good education system is one that's based on some fundamental 
principles. One is high expectations for every child. You all know, 
those of you involved with education know, if you lower the bar, if you 
have low expectations, you get those kind of results. If you assume 
certain children can't learn, certain children won't learn. So, inherent 
in any good reform system is one that sets high standards.
    Secondly, it's so important to trust the local folks; it's to set 
power out of Washington so as not to provide convenient excuses for 
failure. We must align authority and responsibility at the local level. 
There's nothing worse than having a school system where centralized 
authority says, ``You must do it this way,'' and when there's failure, 
somebody says, ``Oh, we would have succeeded except somebody told me to 
do it the way we didn't want to do it.'' Authority and responsibility 
must go hand in hand.
    And finally, at the center of reform, something Rod and I worked hard on in Texas, is to measure, is to insist 
upon accountability. There's a lot of fear about accountability in the 
education system. People view it as a way to punish. That's not our 
vision. We view it as a way to correct.
    How do you know if a child isn't learning unless you measure? So 
it's so important that Congress gets the message that in return for 
Federal help, States and local jurisdictions must develop accountability 
systems that measure third, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, and eighth 
grade. It's important that we disaggregate those results, so that we 
treat each child as an individual. It is important that we post the 
results so people know and, as importantly, when we find success, thank 
the teachers and principals that are working hard. But when we find 
failure, instead of accepting the status quo, do something about it. 
That's why it's important to start measuring early.
    I've got a reading initiative in front of the Congress that starts 
with those in kindergarten. It basically says, in order to access the 
money, you must develop diagnostic tools so that we can determine early 
whether a child needs extra help, extra time on task. It says, we'll use 
curriculum that works, not fancy, feel-good theories, but curriculum 
that actually can take a child

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from illiteracy to literacy. It says, if need be, teach reading all day 
long until you get it right, because literacy, as our friend Phyllis 
Hunter said in Houston, Texas, ``is the new civil right.''
    And so this is an education program that's based upon principles. I 
firmly believe that when implemented, that when it's in place, that 
we'll begin to achieve the goal and dream that we all want, and that's 
an educated tomorrow.
    I also know that--the importance of our historically Black colleges. 
I know it well, because in our State of Texas, many of our finest 
citizens have been educated at those places of higher learning. And 
therefore, in the budget I've submitted to the Congress, I'm asking for 
an increase of 1.4 billion over a 5-year period of time. I hope Congress 
doesn't blink. I hope they join us in this important mission.
    And people say, ``Well, is there money? Do you have enough money in 
Washington to be able to make those kinds of commitments?'' Let me talk 
about my budget, because there's a lot of discussion about budgets. And 
I want to thank the House for passing what I call a commonsense budget. 
It's a realistic budget.
    It's a budget that has set priorities. One of the priorities is 
education. In the budget is the amount of money I've just spoken to.
    It's a budget that sets aside all the payroll taxes for Social 
Security and only Social Security. That old-style, that old, tired 
debate hopefully will be put to rest now forever, so they don't try to 
scare folks away from good public policy.
    The budget doubles the Medicare budget. That's over a 10-year period 
of time we double the Medicare budget.
    It's a budget that increases the--doubles the number of folks who 
will be served in the community health centers over the next 5 years. I 
don't know if you know what the community health centers are. They're 
places where folks living on the edge of poverty, maybe the newly 
arrived, can get good primary care in the health care system.
    It's a budget that talks about, how do we enable the working 
uninsured to purchase health insurance?
    It's a budget that grows by 4 percent in the discretionary side of 
things. Now, 4 percent is greater than the rate of inflation; 4 percent 
is greater than most people's paychecks have increased. But for some, 4 
percent isn't enough. I happen to think it's just right, because by 
focusing and by having a budget that's realistic, it leaves more money 
left over. And with this economy beginning to sputter, we need to send 
some money back to the people who pay the bills. We need to have 
meaningful, real tax relief.
    And we can afford tax relief. We certainly can afford tax relief. 
And that's the debate: Can you afford tax relief, or do you want bigger 
Government? And after setting priorities and, by the way, paying down $2 
trillion of debt over a 10-year period and setting aside money for 
contingencies, I firmly stand on the side of letting people keep their 
own money. It's not only good for the economy; it's good for people, 
more importantly.
    The crux of the issue is, who do you trust with the money? And I 
trust the people. It's their money to begin with. This surplus is not 
the Government's money; it is the people's money. And so we've submitted 
a plan that I think makes the code more fair, eminently more fair.
    If you're a single mother in America, let's say, trying to raise two 
children--if she's at the income level of $22,000 and makes an 
additional dollar, she will pay a higher marginal rate on that dollar 
than someone who makes $225,000 a year. The way our Tax Code is 
structured is that for every additional dollar above the level of 
22,000, in this case, for this particular woman, she starts losing her 
earned-income tax credit, she pays the 15 percent bracket for the first 
time, and she pays payroll taxes. Our

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code is structured so that somebody struggling to get ahead, somebody 
working the hardest job in America, pays a higher marginal rate than 
successful folks--Wall Street bankers.
    And that's not right, and that's not fair. So one of the things we 
have done is, we worked with Congress to drop the bottom rate from 15 
percent to 10 percent and doubled the child credit from $500 to $1,000, 
making the middle class easier to access than the current code. The code 
is more fair.
    I also drop the top rate from 39.6 to 33 percent. My attitude is 
that everybody who pays taxes ought to get tax relief. I get nervous 
when I hear we're going to have targeted tax cuts. I guess that's okay, 
just so long as you're not targeted out--[laughter]--just so long as the 
target is fixed in the right way. I don't believe in trying to pick or 
choose winners and losers in good public policy. I think everybody who 
pays taxes ought to get relief.
    But I have been reminding people around here about the benefits of 
dropping the top rate, and it's important for you all to hear this. By 
far, the vast majority of small businesses are unincorporated 
businesses, sole proprietorships, maybe Subchapter S corporations, all 
of which pay taxes at the highest marginal rate.
    There's a lot of discussion, and rightly so, about, how do we 
encourage ownership in all communities in America? Well, one way to do 
so is to have an environment for the growth of small businesses in 
America. It turns out there are many hundreds of African Americans who 
are starting their own business. And public policy people got to think 
about how to create an environment so that those businesses can 
flourish. And one way to do so is to let people keep more of their own 
cashflow so they can reinvest it.
    Seventy-five percent of the new jobs in America are created by small 
businesses. And 100 percent--100 percent--of the great hope of America 
comes when somebody owns a company. And that's what it's all about. So I 
urge Congress not to get trapped in the--the kind of the rhetoric of 
class warfare, and think about the positive benefits that come by 
encouraging the growth of the small-business sector of America.
    I see many of my friends here who are involved in the faith 
community, and I want to thank you all for coming. As you know, there's 
been a lot of discussion about a Faith-Based Initiative. My attitude is 
that Government can pass laws, and we can work on matters of justice--
and by the way, we will. Racial profiling is wrong. I've instructed the 
Attorney General to come up with a plan to end 
it, and he's following through.
    But what Government cannot do is cause people to love one another. I 
wish we could. We would sign the bill. J.C. 
will sponsor it--[laughter]--I think. Won't you? And I will sign it. 
[Laughter] But love comes as a result of a higher calling, in many 
cases. Love comes from hearts. And our job in America is to gather the 
great compassion of America.
    You know, we were talking about, earlier--I remember my friend Tony 
Evans gave a speech outside of Dallas, in 
Greenville, Texas. And he talked about the greatest welfare programs are 
on every street corner in America, because there are houses of worship 
where people have heard the universal call to love a neighbor like 
they'd like to be loved, themselves, people who spend their days trying 
to help a neighbor in need.
    Government can't make people do that. We've got to recognize the 
limitations. But what Government can do is encourage faith-based 
programs and their mission. What Government can do is fund an individual 
who we'd like to help and let that individual make a choice as to 
whether or not they want to find help in a secular program or in a 
faith-based program. Government can do that.

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    And we can do that without offending the process-oriented people who 
worry about church and state. We shouldn't breach the line of church and 
state, but we should welcome faith-based initiatives and faith-based 
programs that use a powerful, powerful way of changing people's lives. 
That's called the power of faith. You change somebody's heart, you 
change their lives. And Government shouldn't fear faith-based 
initiatives. As a matter of fact, we ought to welcome them.
    And I want to thank those in the room who have been on the forefront 
of change, of helping us change Government attitude toward a policy that 
I'm absolutely convinced is going to positively affect the lives of 
thousands of people. One such initiative that we've asked for Congress 
to fund is a mentoring program for boys and girls whose mom or dad may 
be in prison.
    And so these are some of the goals that we're working on here in 
Washington. I cannot do it alone. One, I've assembled a great team of 
people, of good people, like Rod and 
others. I was today with the Chancellor of Germany, and I was at the Oval Office, there in the little 
dining room. And sitting next to me were Colin Powell and Condoleezza Rice, as we 
were effecting foreign policy that affects the world. And I've got a 
great team of people around me.
    As you can tell, I welcome good, strong folks--I think that's the 
sign of a chief executive officer who knows what he's doing--and I 
empower them, and I work with them. But we can also do some other 
things. We can help work to change the culture of Washington and to kind 
of tone down, dial down the rhetoric and dial up success. I'm doing my 
very best to stop the name calling and the finger pointing, to say that 
good people can disagree in an agreeable way. It's so important that we 
have mutual respect in the Nation's Capital. The issues that I've talked 
about, I don't particularly--I don't think are necessarily Republican 
issues. I think they're good policy issues. I think these are issues 
that are best for everybody in the country. Otherwise, I wouldn't be 
promoting them. And I know we can do a better job. And I hope the 
country's beginning to get a sense that there is now a culture of 
respect in Washington, DC, and as importantly, a culture of 
accomplishment, that we're getting some things done.
    And not everybody's going to agree with every detail, but we're 
getting things done. And that's important, because, after all, those of 
us who have assumed the high offices we hold must understand we have a 
responsibility to those offices. We have a responsibility to conduct 
ourselves in ways in which somebody will say, ``I'd like to serve.'' 
Public service is a noble calling. Public service is important to this 
Nation.
    But you don't have to be a President or a Congressman or a Secretary 
of a Cabinet to affect people's lives in a positive way. And that's a 
message I'm also trying to spread, that the true strength of this 
country really isn't in the halls of Government or in the White House; 
it's in the hearts and souls of people who live all across America, 
without Government, without a President saying to go do this--just walk 
across the street and say to somebody in need, ``What can I do to 
help?''
    And that's why I'm so optimistic about America and so optimistic 
about our future and so thankful that you are here to give me a chance 
to talk about our vision.
    Thanks for coming, and God bless.

Note: The President spoke at 4 p.m. in the East Room at the White House. 
In his remarks, he referred to Representative J.C. Watts, Jr.; 
Representative Norman Sisisky's widow, Rhoda, and sons Mark, Terry, 
Richard, and Stuart; Ohio Secretary of State J. Kenneth Blackwell; 
Phyllis Hunter, consultant, Texas Reading Initiative; Anthony T. Evans, 
senior pastor, Oak Cliff Bible Fellowship, and president, The Urban 
Alternative; and Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder of Germany.