[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: George W. Bush (2002, Book II)]
[December 3, 2002]
[Pages 2156-2161]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



[[Page 2156]]


Remarks at a Luncheon for Senatorial Candidate Suzanne Haik 
Terrell in New Orleans, Louisiana
December 3, 2002

    Nice to be back in New Orleans, home of a new basketball team, home 
of a winning football team, and in the State of the next United States 
Senator, Suzie Terrell.
    I'm thrilled to be here amongst a lot of our friends. It seems I've 
been coming to New Orleans for a long time. [Laughter] What a fabulous 
town. I'm honored to be here on behalf of a great candidate, somebody 
who represents the values of Louisiana, somebody who has got a record of 
accomplishment, somebody who is not afraid to speak her mind to the 
President of the United States--[laughter]--but somebody who I know will 
do a great job on behalf of all of Louisiana.
    I'm here to thank you for your support. I'm here to remind the good 
folks of Louisiana they have a duty to go to the polls on Saturday. In 
the land of the free, you have an obligation to defend freedom by being 
a part of our democracy. I don't care whether you're Republican or 
Democrat or don't give a hoot about a political party; you have an 
obligation in this country to vote. But I've got a suggestion. 
[Laughter] For the good of Louisiana and for the good of America, Suzie 
Terrell needs to be the next United States Senator.
    She's got a lot going for her. First of all, she's a mother of three 
fabulous young girls. There they are: Julie, 
Bebe, and Chrissy. 
Anybody who can raise three teenage girls--[laughter]--you know what I 
mean. [Laughter]
    I appreciate her willingness to serve the people, willingness to 
take the path that a lot of people won't take, and that is offer herself 
up for office. And she's done a great job in the office that she held. 
After all, you might remember that the election commissioner's office 
needed a little house-cleaning, needed to have the integrity restored, 
and Suzie Terrell did it. She saves the taxpayers money.
    I need an ally up there who understands, when it comes to spending 
what they call the Government's money, the Government doesn't own that 
money. It's not the Government's money that we spend. It's the people's 
money.
    And she's going to have some good hands to work with in the United 
States Congress from the great State of Louisiana, starting with the 
chairman, Billy Tauzin. I love working 
with Billy. He brings good common sense to the Halls of the United 
States Congress. And I like working with David Vitter from right here in the New Orleans area. David, thank 
you for being here. And Jim McCrery is with us 
today, and I appreciate your hard work, Jim. Thanks for coming. And 
Richard Baker is with us. Where are you, 
Richard? Baton Rouge. Good to see you, Richard.
    I so very much appreciate being here with your Governor. He too gives the President an earful. 
[Laughter] He's not the prettiest Governor in America. [Laughter] But 
he's one of the most effective. He's done a heck of a job for the people 
of Louisiana.
    And I know we've got another Governor here with us--celebrating the 
Louisiana Purchase, which I'm sure the people of Louisiana agree with 
me, is a heck of a deal. [Laughter] But Frank Keating from Oklahoma is here today as well. Frank, I 
appreciate you coming. Yes, sir. He probably wants to talk about the OU-
Texas game. [Laughter]
    I'm honored to be up here with Pat Brister 
and Boysie Bollinger, both of whom are good 
friends, and both of whom represent the grassroots activists in the 
State of Louisiana. I'm here to remind you all that--I want to thank you 
for what you

[[Page 2157]]

have done and what you are going to do over the next couple of days, and 
that is to gather up your buddies and get them to vote, is to man the 
phones and put up the signs and grab people by the wrists and say, ``You 
owe it to Louisiana to vote for Suzie Terrell for the United States 
Senate.''
    I like Suzie's attitude and her tone, the way she wants to go to 
Washington to get some things done. And we need more of that in 
Washington, DC. Sometimes, Washington is one of these towns where the 
person--people who think they've got the sharp elbow is the most 
effective person, kind of zero-sum politics in Washington: ``I win. You 
lose.'' That's not the right attitude for the American people. We need a 
United States Senator from Louisiana whose mission it is to improve the 
lives, as best we can, of all our citizens.
    And we're making some progress in Washington. Slowly but surely, 
we're changing the tone and getting things done on behalf of the 
American people. This week, last couple of weeks, I signed some 
important legislation. I signed the Department of Homeland Security, 
which will better enable our Federal Government to plan and to protect 
the American people from further attack. And I want to thank the Members 
of the Senate and the House who finally came together to get that 
legislation done.
    And I signed a bill on terrorism insurance. It's a bill that will 
get our hardhats back to working again, a bill that should make it 
easier for big construction projects to get started so that a lot of 
hard-working Americans can find work--by the way, a bill which is more 
favorable to the hardhats than to the trial lawyers in America. It's a 
good piece of legislation that shows what can happen when people come 
together to get the people's business done.
    Yesterday at the Pentagon, I signed the defense authorization bill, 
fulfilling a promise that I made--Dick Cheney 
and I made--that said that we're going to do everything we can to make 
sure we've got the strongest military in the world. A strong military 
makes it more likely the world is going to be peaceful. We not only had 
pay raises for our folks; I can say to those whose families serve in the 
service, ``You're going to have the best training and the best possible 
equipment when you put on the uniform of the U.S. military.''
    We're making good progress, but there's a lot of work to be done. 
And I look forward to working with Senator Terrell. We did some good 
things in education, but there's more to do. So long as any child can't 
read, we've got a problem in America. As a matter of fact, the new civil 
right is to make sure every child can read in America. I look forward to 
working with a Senator Terrell to make sure we maintain the highest of 
high standards, to challenge what I call the soft bigotry of low 
expectations.
    I look forward to working with Senator Terrell to make sure that we 
continually pass power out of Washington, DC, because we believe in 
local control of schools. I look forward to working with Senator Terrell 
to make sure that in return for Federal money, that we know whether or 
not our children can read and write and add and subtract. In order to 
make sure no child gets left behind, we must challenge schools which 
will not teach and will not change. And I'm confident I have an ally in 
Senator Suzie Terrell.
    We need a Senator who can help break logjams in the United States 
Senate, particularly when it comes to getting us a good energy bill. I 
see Billy nodding his head. He's been 
working on an energy bill. He agrees with me, in this world we need an 
energy strategy. I mean, face it; we import a lot of energy from 
overseas. Some of the people we import from don't exactly like us. 
[Laughter] We need an energy plan that encourages conservation and new 
technologies. We need an energy plan that encourages the development of 
safe nuclear

[[Page 2158]]

power. We need an energy plan that encourages clean-coal technologies. 
We need an energy plan that encourages environmentally safe exploration 
for hydrocarbons in the United States of America.
    I look forward to working with Senator Terrell to modernize 
Medicare. Medicare is an aged system which is not adapting to the times. 
Medicine has changed, but Medicare hasn't. Medicine is modern. There's 
all kinds of new technologies and prescription drugs which can save 
lives. But Medicare is stuck in the past. I want to work with Senator 
Terrell to see to it that we modernize Medicare, making sure we fulfill 
our promises to our seniors. And a modern Medicare system means 
prescription drug coverage for our seniors.
    I look forward to working with Senator Terrell to make sure the 
environment for the entrepreneurial spirit is strong. We understand the 
role of Government is not to create wealth; the role of Government is to 
create an environment in which the entrepreneur can flourish, in which 
small businesses can grow to be big businesses. And one way the Federal 
Government can affect job growth is to let people keep more of their own 
money, is through tax relief.
    Tax relief is not a political slogan; it's good economic policy. If 
a person has more of their own money, they're likely to demand an 
additional good or a service. And in the marketplace, when somebody 
demands a good or a service, somebody is likely to produce the good or a 
service. And when somebody produces the good or a service, somebody in 
Louisiana or elsewhere in America is going to be able to find work. We 
passed tax relief at the right time in American economic history, and 
now I need a Senator to join me in making sure that tax relief is 
permanent. And there is no question where Suzie Terrell stands on tax 
relief.
    And I need somebody to work with me to make sure that we've got a 
good judiciary. It's amazing what an election will do. [Laughter] For a 
long period of time, I couldn't get my judges even to have hearings. 
There's a vacancy gap on our Federal bench--benches--and that's a 
problem. It's a problem for people who need to have a hearing. It's a 
problem for people who want justice. And I couldn't get my judges 
through the Senate because they were playing politics with the people I 
put up, good, honorable, decent people, people whose job it is not to 
try to write legislation from the bench, people whose job it is to 
strictly interpret the United States Constitution. Those are the kind of 
people I put on the bench.
    And Louisiana needs a Senator who will vote for Louisiana values 
when it comes to the judiciary. And there's no question in my mind that 
when it comes to having a good, sound judiciary, the right United States 
Senator is Suzie Terrell from the State of Louisiana.
    No, there's a lot of issues we'll be working on, but there's no 
bigger issue than to win this war against the terrorists. I talked about 
the homeland security bill I signed, and you just need to know there's a 
lot of good folks working overtime to protect the American homeland. But 
the best way to secure the homeland is to chase the killers down, one at 
a time, and bring them to justice. And that's what we're going to do.
    It's a different kind of war. In the old days, you could destroy 
tanks and ships and airplanes, and say you're making progress. This is a 
different kind of enemy. It's an enemy that hides in caves and sends 
youngsters to their suicidal deaths. These people do not value innocent 
life. In America, we say every life is precious; everybody has value; 
everybody counts. Our enemy we face today murders in the name of a great 
religion, and they could care less who dies. They're nothing but 
coldblooded killers, and we're going to treat them that way. It doesn't 
matter how long it takes; it doesn't matter how deep the cave, the 
United States of America and our friends

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and allies will hunt them down one by one, in the name of freedom.
    I cannot imagine what was going through their mind when they hit 
America. They must have thought we were so soft, so weak, so fragile 
that after 9/11/ 2001, we might file a lawsuit or two. [Laughter] But 
they're learning something about America that I know, that when it comes 
to our freedoms, when it comes to the values we hold dear, this United 
States of America is plenty tough. And that's the way we got to be in 
this new war of the 21st century.
    And we're making progress. You just need to know we're making good 
progress. After all, this great Nation and our friends liberated a 
country from one of the most barbaric regimes in the history of mankind 
by routing the Taliban. We went into Afghanistan not to conquer anybody 
but to liberate people. And now, thanks to our great country and our 
great soldiers and our wonderful friends, young girls--many young girls 
go to school for the first time in a country that has been liberated by 
the American people.
    And we've got more work to do there. And we'll stay there until we 
rout them out. See, they think they can kind of hide in the countryside 
there in Afghanistan, and they may be able to hide for a day or two. 
They may be able to hide for a year. But it doesn't matter how long. 
See, that's what you just have to know. It just doesn't matter how long; 
we're going to stay on the hunt. These people are scattered in 60 
different countries. They're scattered around, and slowly but surely, 
we're dismantling their terrorist network--slowly but surely.
    The guy who led the U.S.S.--the bombing mastermind, the bombing on 
the U.S.S. Cole, he was the Al Qaida 
general for the Gulf states. He's not a problem anymore. [Laughter] One 
by one, we're bringing them to justice. That's what we've been called to 
do. History has put this big spotlight on us, and we're not going to let 
future generations of Americans down.
    And that's why I was so proud to sign this defense appropriation 
authorization bill. The big increases in defense spending sent a clear 
message to the world: We're in this deal for the long pull.
    And we've also got to recognize here in America times have changed. 
See, when a lot of us were growing up, we could feel pretty secure by 
the fact that we had two oceans surrounding us and protecting us from 
dangers that might be gathering abroad. September the 11th, 2001, 
completely changed the strategic calculations of this country. The 
battlefield is here. And therefore, it's incumbent upon the President 
and the Congress to work together to anticipate gathering dangers before 
they become acute, before the situation becomes so dire that drastic 
measures might be needed.
    It's very important for us to recognize threats when we see them and 
deal with them appropriately. After all, the threat gathering in a 
distant land turns out to be a threat directly on the American people. 
We've got to be wise about how we view the world and make sure that the 
new arrangements, the new alliances, aren't allowed to develop, an 
alliance, for example, where a nation that has weapons of mass 
destruction uses a shadowy terrorist network as a forward army, perhaps 
encouraging them to attack America without leaving any fingerprints. 
You've got to worry about disrupting training facilities.
    And that's why I started talking about Iraq and Saddam 
Hussein, not only starting a debate in the 
Halls of the United States Congress, which overwhelmingly supported any 
means necessary to deal with the threat to the United States, but also 
took the debate to the United Nations and a couple of weeks ago to NATO.
    It's important for our fellow Americans to understand that, when 
we're talking about Saddam Hussein, we're 
talking about a man who said he has had no weapons of mass destruction, 
yet we believe has weapons of mass destruction; a man who

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has not only had weapons of mass destruction, but he's used weapons of 
mass destruction. He used weapons of mass destruction on his neighbors, 
and he used weapons of mass destruction on his own citizens. He's a man 
who has professed hate to America as well as our friends and allies. 
He's a man who has got terrorist ties, a man who helps train terrorists. 
He's a threat, and he's a danger.
    I went to the United Nations because I felt like, in a world that 
required cooperation in this new war of the 21st century, that it was 
important the United Nations show some backbone, that the United Nations 
be something other than an empty debating society, that when they issue 
a resolution, they mean it. And on a 15-0 vote, the United Nations 
recognized the threat of Saddam Hussein and 
demanded that he disarm.
    I then went to our close Allies in NATO and said the same thing. I 
said, ``This man's a threat. He's a threat to 
us. He's a threat to you. He too must disarm.'' And now, as you've seen 
in your newspapers, inspectors are inside of Iraq. Inspectors are there 
not to play hide-and-seek with Mr. Saddam Hussein. Inspectors are there 
to verify the will of the world. And the will of the world says clearly, 
``Disarm.'' Saddam Hussein, for the sake of peace, must disarm. And if 
he refuses to disarm, if he tries to deceive his way out of disarmament, 
this Nation, along with other willing nations, will disarm Saddam 
Hussein.
    I say that because I believe in peace. I believe this is how you 
achieve peace, by being strong and resolute, by fighting terrorism and 
all forms of terror, by not allowing those who hate to try to dictate to 
those of us who love freedom. See, I believe out of the evil done to 
America is going to come some incredible good. Part of the good done to 
this--part of the evil done to this country is going to help lead the 
world to peace.
    Oh, I know some don't believe that, but I do. I believe that if we 
remain steadfast and strong, if we remain true to our values, we'll 
achieve peace, not only peace for ourselves but because we believe every 
life is precious, everybody matters, everybody has worth. We can achieve 
peace in parts of the world where they've quit on peace, where people 
have given up hope.
    I also believe here at home we can be a more compassionate country. 
See, there's people who are hurting in America. Amongst our plenty, 
there are pockets of despair, of loneliness and hopelessness. There are 
people when you say, ``American Dream,'' they wonder what the heck does 
that mean, American Dream? They have no idea about the promise of this 
country. And my attitude is, so long as some hurt, we all hurt.
    And I also recognize the limitations of Government. Government can 
hand out money, and frankly, we do a pretty good job of it sometimes. 
But what it can't do is put hope in people's hearts or a sense of 
purpose in people's lives. That's done when a neighbor puts their arm 
around somebody who hurts and says, ``I love you. What can I do to 
help?'' See, I strongly believe that America is going to change one 
heart, one soul, one conscience at a time, because the spirit of this 
country, a selfless spirit, is alive and well.
    There are thousands of people all across New Orleans and Louisiana 
and all across America who understand the responsibility of being an 
American. It's more than just making a living. The responsibility of a 
true patriot is somebody who's willing to serve something greater than 
themselves, serve their country. And one way to best serve your country 
is to love your neighbor just like you'd like to be loved yourself.
    No, there was tremendous evil done to America, but out of the evil 
is a new spirit, a vitality of the American spirit, perhaps best 
represented by the folks on Flight 93. The story, in my judgment, is 
going to be one of the profound stories of the September the 11th, 2001, 
tragedy. It captures what I know is the strength of our country.

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People were flying across the land, and they heard the airplane they 
were on was going to be a weapon. Imagine what went through their minds. 
They eventually got their thoughts together. They called their loved 
ones and said goodbye and ``I love you.'' History will show that a 
prayer was said. One guy said, ``Let's roll.'' These citizens took the 
plane into the ground to save lives, to serve something greater than 
themselves.
    That spirit of America is so strong and so alive, it allows me to 
boldly predict that out of the evil done to this country is going to 
come incredible good, not only a peaceful world but a more compassionate 
and hopeful and decent America for every citizen who's lucky enough to 
live in this country.
    And I can make that prediction with absolute certainty, because I 
know America. This is the greatest country, full of the most decent 
people on the face of this Earth. I'm honored you're here. May God bless 
you all, and may God bless America.

Note: The President spoke at 1:10 p.m. in the Imperial Ballroom at the 
Fairmont Hotel. In his remarks, he referred to Gov. M.J. ``Mike'' Foster 
of Louisiana; Pat Brister, chairman, Republican Party of Louisiana; 
Donald ``Boysie'' Bollinger, chairman of the board and chief executive 
officer, Bollinger Shipyards, Inc.; Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri, Al Qaida's 
chief of operations for the Persian Gulf; and President Saddam Hussein 
of Iraq.