[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: George W. Bush (2004, Book III)]
[October 31, 2004]
[Pages 2883-2889]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks in Gainesville, Florida
October 31, 2004

    The President. Thank you all. Thank you all for coming. So Jeb said, ``Why don't we go to Gainesville? Maybe a couple 
hundred will show up and say hello.'' I said, ``Well, I'm more than 
willing to go.'' I can't thank you all enough for coming. Thanks for 
taking time out of your Sunday afternoon. You're lifting our spirits, 
and we appreciate it.
    I'm here to ask for your vote and your help. I'm here to ask you to 
take your friends and neighbors to the polls. Remind them we have a duty 
in our free country to vote. We have an obligation, in my judgment, to 
participate in our democratic system. Now, when you're lining up votes, 
of course look for our fellow Republicans and independents, but don't 
forget to get discerning Democrats to go to the polls, people like 
Senator Zell Miller from right north of here. 
And when you get them headed to the polls, remind them, if they want a 
safer America, a stronger America, and a better America, to put me and 
Dick Cheney back in office.
    Perhaps the most important reason of all to put me back in is so 
that Laura is the First Lady for 4 more years.
    Audience members. Laura! Laura! Laura!
    The President. I'm proud of my runningmate, Dick Cheney. I don't want to offend anybody here who's follically 
challenged, but I readily concede my runningmate doesn't have the 
waviest hair in the race. [Laughter] But I suspect the people of north-
central Florida are going to be pleased to know I didn't pick him 
because of his hairdo. I picked him because of his judgment. I picked 
him because of his experience. He's getting the job done for the 
American people.
    I'm proud of brother Jeb. What a great 
Governor, and what a great brother. Jeb and I share the same campaign 
consultant: Mother. [Laughter] And my brother 
Marvin is with us too. I'm proud Marv is here. 
Thanks for coming, Marvin. I love my family, and I'm glad that--I'm a 
fortunate man to have such a great family.
    Listen, I want to urge you, when you go to the polls, to vote for 
Mel Martinez

[[Page 2884]]

for the next Senator of your State. I know him well. He'll make a great 
United States Senator for Florida. I want to thank Congressman Cliff 
Stearns for joining us today. He does a great 
job for the people of this part of the world. I want to thank all the 
other candidates, people running for office. I want to thank Carole Jean 
Jordan and all the grassroots activists 
who are here.
    I want to thank the Bellamy 
Brothers for being here. I'm proud to call 
them friend. I'm glad they are here.
    I want to thank you for what you have done. It takes a lot of work 
to turn out a crowd this big. I want to thank you for what you're going 
to do: Call your friends; call your neighbors; turn them out. We'll 
carry Florida again and win a great victory on Tuesday.
    This election takes place in a time of great consequence. The person 
who sits in the Oval Office for the next 4 years will set the course of 
the war on terror and the direction of our economy. America will need 
strong, determined, optimistic leadership, and I am ready for the work 
ahead.
    My 4 years as your President have confirmed some lessons and have 
taught me some new ones. I've learned to expect the unexpected, because 
war can arrive quietly on a quiet morning. I have learned firsthand how 
hard it is to send young men and women into battle, even when the cause 
is right. I am grateful for the lessons I've learned from my parents: 
Respect every person; do your best; live every day to its fullest. I 
have been strengthened by my faith and humbled by its reminder that 
every life is part of a larger story.
    I've learned how crucial it is for the American President to lead 
with clarity and purpose. As Presidents from Lincoln to Roosevelt to 
Reagan so clearly demonstrated, a President must not shift with the 
wind. A President should make the tough decisions and stand by them. The 
role of a President is not to follow the path of the latest polls; the 
role of a President is to lead based on principle and conviction and 
conscience.
    During these 4 years, I've learned that whatever your strengths are, 
you're going to need them, and whatever your shortcomings are, people 
will notice them. [Laughter] Sometimes I'm a little too blunt. I get 
that from my mother. Sometimes I mangle the 
English language. I get that from my father. [Laughter] But all the time, no matter whether you agree 
with me or not, you know where I stand, what I believe, and where I'm 
going to lead.
    You cannot say that about my opponent.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. I think it is fair to say that consistency is not 
his strong suit. I look at an issue and take a 
principled stand. As we've learned in this campaign, my opponent looks 
at an issue and tries to take every side. The people of Florida know the 
difference. And on Tuesday, Florida will vote for strong leadership and 
send me and Dick Cheney back to Washington.
    This election comes down to clear choices on five vital issues, 
issues facing every family in our country. The first clear choice 
concerns your family budget. When I ran for President 4 years ago, I 
pledged to lower taxes for our families. I kept my word. We doubled the 
child credit. We reduced the marriage penalty. We believe the code ought 
to encourage marriage, not penalize marriage. We dropped the lowest 
bracket to 10 percent. And as a result of these good policies, real 
after-tax income--the money in your pocket, the money you have available 
for spending--is up by about 10 percent since I took office.
    And this economy of ours has been through a lot. The stock market 
was in serious decline 6 months prior to my arrival. Then we had a 
recession and corporate scandals and an attack on our country that cost 
us a million jobs in 3 months after September the 11th.
    But we acted. And our policies are paying off. Our economy is 
growing at rates as fast as any in nearly 20 years. We've

[[Page 2885]]

added 1.9 million jobs in the last 13 months. Homeownership rate is at 
an alltime high. More minority families own a home than ever before in 
our history. The entrepreneurial spirit is strong. Our small businesses 
are flourishing. Florida's farmers and ranchers are making a good 
living. The unemployment rate is 5.4 percent across this country. Let me 
put that in perspective for you: That's lower than the average rate of 
the 1970s, the 1980s, and the 1990s. The unemployment rate in the great 
State of Florida is 4.5 percent. This economy is strong, and it is 
getting stronger.
    My opponent has an economic plan too. He 
voted to increase taxes 98 times.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. That's in 20 years. That's five times a year, nearly. 
I would call that a predictable pattern, a leading indicator. In this 
campaign, he's also promised $2.2 trillion of 
new spending. That is trillion with a ``T.'' That's a lot even for a 
Senator from Massachusetts. [Laughter]
    They asked him how he's going to pay for 
it. He threw out that same old, tired line, ``We're going to tax the 
rich.'' By raising the top two brackets, you raise between 6 and 800 
billion dollars. That's far short of the 2.2 trillion. There is a tax 
gap. And given his record, guess who he's going to ask to fill it? You. 
The good news is, we're not going to let him tax you; we will carry 
Florida and win on November the 2d.
    The second clear choice in this election involves the quality of 
life for our Nation's families. I ran for President to challenge and end 
the soft bigotry of low expectations by reforming our schools. I kept my 
word. We passed education reforms to bring high standards to the 
classrooms of America. Math and reading scores are up. We're closing an 
achievement gap for minority students across this country. My vision for 
a new term is to build on these reforms and extend them to our high 
schools so that no child is left behind in America.
    We will continue to improve our lives for our families by making 
health care more available and affordable. We'll expand health savings 
accounts. We will allow small businesses to join together so they can 
buy insurance at the same discounts that big companies are able to do. 
We'll help our families in need. We'll help patients and doctors by 
getting rid of the frivolous and junk lawsuits that are running docs out 
of practice and running up your medicine. I'm standing with the families 
of Florida. I'm standing with the doctors of Florida. I am for medical 
liability reform--now. In all we do to improve the health care for our 
families, we will make sure the decisions are made by doctors and 
patients, not by officials in Washington, DC.
    My opponent has a different approach. He 
voted for the education reform but now wants to weaken the 
accountability standards. He's proposing a big-Government health care 
plan. You might remember in the debate, they said, ``Talk about your 
health care plan.'' He looked straight in the camera, and he said, ``The 
Government doesn't have anything to do with it.'' I could barely contain 
myself. [Laughter] The Government has got a lot to do with it. Eighty 
percent of the people on his plan end up on a Government plan. He's 
voted against medical liability reform 10 times. He's put a personal-
injury trial lawyer on the ticket.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. He can run from his record, 
but he cannot hide.
    The third clear choice in this election involves your retirement. 
Our Nation has made a solemn commitment to America's seniors on Social 
Security and Medicare. When I ran for President 4 years ago, I promised 
to keep that commitment and improve Medicare by adding prescription drug 
coverage. I kept my word. Seniors are getting discounts on medicine with 
drug discount cards. Low-income seniors are getting help to pay for 
their prescription. And beginning in 2006, all seniors will be able to 
get prescription drug coverage through Medicare.

[[Page 2886]]

    My opponent has a record on this issue. He 
voted against the Medicare bill that included prescription drug 
coverage. In this campaign, he said he promised to repeal the bill, and 
then shortly thereafter, he promised to keep it. That sounds familiar. 
He also tries to scare our seniors about their Social Security, but he 
conveniently forgets that he's the one that voted eight times for higher 
taxes on Social Security benefits. He can run, but he cannot hide.
    I've kept the promise of Social Security for our seniors, and I will 
always keep the promise of Social Security for our seniors. But I 
understand we have a problem for the younger generation coming up. Baby 
boomers, like me and some others I see out there, are in pretty good 
shape when it comes to Social Security, but we need to worry about the 
younger folks. That's why I believe younger workers ought to be able to 
take some of their own payroll taxes and set up a personal savings 
account, a personal savings account they call their own. In a new term, 
I'll bring people together to strengthen Social Security for generations 
to come.
    The fourth clear choice in this elections are on the values that are 
so crucial to keeping our families strong. I stand for marriage and 
family, which are the foundations of our society. I stand for a culture 
of life in which every person counts and every being matters. I proudly 
signed the ban on partial-birth abortion. I stand for the appointment of 
Federal judges who know the difference between personal opinion and the 
strict interpretation of the law.
    On these issues, my opponent and I are 
miles apart. He said he would only appoint judges who pass his liberal 
litmus test. He was part of an extreme minority that voted against the 
Defense of Marriage Act, and he voted against the ban on partial-birth 
abortion.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. There is a mainstream in American politics, and John 
Kerry sits on the far left bank. He can run 
from his liberal record, but he cannot hide.
    The final choice in this election is the most important one of all 
because it concerns the security of your family. All progress on every 
other issue depends on the safety of our citizens. The most solemn duty 
of the American President is to protect the American people. If America 
shows uncertainty or weakness during these troubled times, the world 
will drift toward tragedy. This is not going to happen on my watch.
    Our strategy is clear. We are strengthening protections for the 
homeland. We are reforming and strengthening our intelligence 
capabilities. We are transforming the United States military. The All-
Volunteer Army will remain an all-volunteer army. There will be no 
draft. We are determined. We are relentless. We will stay on the 
offensive. We are fighting the terrorists abroad so we do not have to 
face them here at home.
    And we're succeeding. Afghanistan is an ally in the war on terror. 
Pakistan and Saudi Arabia are making raids and arrests. Libya is 
dismantling its weapons programs. The army of a free Iraq is fighting 
for freedom, and Al Qaida no longer controls territory like Afghanistan. 
They no longer have training camps there. We are systematically 
destroying the Al Qaida network across the world. More than three-
quarters of Al Qaida's key members and associates have been brought to 
justice, and the rest of them know we are on their trail.
    The leader must be consistent. The leader must not send mixed 
signals to the world. My opponent has taken a 
different approach. Senator Kerry says that we're better off with Saddam 
Hussein out of power, except when he says 
that removing Saddam made us less safe. He said in our second debate 
that he always believed Saddam was a threat, except a few questions 
later, when he insisted Saddam Hussein was not a threat. He said he was 
right when he voted to authorize the use of force

[[Page 2887]]

against Saddam Hussein, but I was wrong to use force to remove Saddam 
Hussein.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. The problems of Senator Kerry's record on national security are deeper than election-year 
reversals. For 20 years, on the largest national security issues of our 
time, he has been consistently wrong. During the cold war, Senator Kerry 
voted against critical weapons systems and opposed Ronald Reagan's 
policy of peace through strength. History has shown that Senator Kerry 
was wrong and President Ronald Reagan was right.
    When former President Bush assembled an 
international coalition to drive Saddam Hussein from Kuwait, Senator Kerry 
voted against the use of force to liberate Kuwait.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. History has shown that Senator Kerry was wrong and former President Bush was right.
    One year after the bombing--the first bombing of the World Trade 
Center, the Senator proposed massive cuts in 
America's intelligence, so massive that even his fellow Massachusetts 
liberal, Ted Kennedy, would not support 
them. History has shown that Senator Kerry was wrong and--let's be fair 
about it--Senator Kennedy was right.
    We will be relentless; we will be strong; we will be consistent in 
our security, in securing this country. And we've got a great United 
States military to help. I thank those who wear our Nation's uniform who 
are with us today. I thank the military families who are here with us 
today. And I thank the veterans who have set such a great example for 
those who wear the uniform. I assure you, we'll keep our commitment I 
made to the troops and their families and to our vets. We will make sure 
our troops have all the resources they need to complete their missions.
    That is why I went to the Congress in September of 2003 and asked 
for $87 billion of supplemental funding. It was important funding. It 
was necessary funding. It was funding to support troops in harm's way in 
both Iraq and Afghanistan. And we received great bipartisan support for 
that funding, so strong only 12 Members of the United States Senate 
voted against it, 2 of whom were my opponent 
and his runningmate.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. Senator Kerry said on 
national TV prior to that vote that it would be irresponsible to vote 
against the troops. Then the polls began to change. And he did the 
irresponsible thing, and he voted against the troops. Then he entered 
the flip-flop hall of fame by saying, ``I actually did vote for the 87 
billion, right before I voted against it.'' He's given a lot of answers 
since then about that vote, but I think the most revealing of all is 
when he said, ``The whole thing was a complicated matter.'' [Laughter] 
My fellow Americans, there's nothing complicated about supporting our 
troops in combat.
    We have differences on how to best protect America's families. 
During one of the debates, my opponent said 
that America must pass a ``global test'' before we commit troops.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. Some of you probably think I'm making that up. I 
heard him. He was standing right there. You 
see, to me that means that we've got to get permission before we get 
troops. I'll work with our allies. I'll continue to build alliances. But 
I will never turn over America's national security decisions to leaders 
of other countries.
    Audience members. Four more years! Four more years! Four more years!
    The President. A couple of weeks ago, Senator Kerry said that September the 11th didn't change him much at 
all. September the 11th changed me. It changed my outlook about what we 
need to do to protect this country. A few days after that attack, I 
stood in the ruins of the Twin Towers, on September the 14th, 2001. It 
was a day I'll never forget. I'll never forget the sights and sounds. I 
will never forget the workers

[[Page 2888]]

in hardhats who were yelling at me at the top of their lungs, ``Whatever 
it takes.'' I'll never forget the person that grabbed me by the arm, and 
he looked me in the eye, and he said, ``Do not let me down.'' Ever since 
that day, I wake up every morning trying to figure out how to better 
protect this country. I will never relent in the security of America, 
whatever it takes.
    During the next 4 years----
    Audience members. Four more years! Four more years! Four more years!
    The President. During the next 4 years, we will use every asset at 
our disposal to wage a comprehensive strategy to defend you. And perhaps 
the strongest asset we have is freedom. I believe in the power of 
liberty to transform nations. Free nations do not breed resentments. 
Free nations do not export terror. Free nations become allies in the war 
on terror. And by spreading freedom, we'll achieve the peace we all want 
for our children and our grandchildren.
    I want the younger folks here to think about what's happened in 
Afghanistan in just 3 years. Society there was grim under the reign of 
the Taliban. These people were ideologues of hate. Young girls couldn't 
go to school. If their mothers didn't toe the line, they'd get whipped 
in the public square and sometimes executed in a sports stadium. But 
because we acted to defend ourselves, because we upheld a doctrine that 
said, ``If you harbor a terrorist, you're equally as guilty as the 
terrorist,'' millions of people in that country went to the polls to 
vote for President. And the first voter was a 19-year-old woman.
    Iraq is still dangerous. It's a dangerous place because that country 
is headed toward a free society. There will be elections in January. 
Think how far that country has come from the days of torture chambers 
and mass graves. Freedom is on the march, and America and the world are 
better for it. I believe everybody yearns to be free. Freedom is not 
America's gift to the world; freedom is the Almighty God's gift to each 
man and woman in this world.
    These are historic times, and a lot is at stake in this election. 
The future safety and prosperity of America are on the ballot. 
Ultimately, though, this election comes down to who you can trust--who 
you can trust to keep your families secure, who you can trust to spread 
prosperity. I proudly offer a record of leadership and results at a time 
of threat and challenge.
    If you believe that taxes should stay low so families can pay the 
bills and small businesses can create new jobs, I ask, come stand with 
me.
    If you believe in high standards for our public schools, I ask you, 
come stand with me.
    If you believe patients and doctors should be in charge of health 
care, I ask you, come stand with me.
    If you believe that this Nation must honor the commitments of 
Medicare and strengthen Social Security for generations to come, I ask, 
come stand with me.
    If you believe that this Nation should honor marriage and family and 
make a place for the weak and the vulnerable, I ask you, come stand with 
me.
    If you believe America should fight the war on terror with all our 
might and lead with unwavering confidence in our ideals, I ask you to 
come stand with me.
    If you are a Democrat who believes your party has turned too far to 
the left this year, I ask you to come stand with me.
    If you are a minority citizen and you believe that free enterprise 
and good schools and enduring values of family and faith, and if you're 
tired of your vote being taken for granted, I ask you to come stand with 
me.
    If you are a voter who believes that the President of the United 
States should say what he means and do what he says and keep his word, I 
ask you to come stand with me.
    Four years ago, when I traveled your State asking for the vote, I 
made a pledge

[[Page 2889]]

that if elected, I would uphold the honor and the dignity of the office. 
With your help, with your hard work, I will do so for 4 more years.
    Thanks for coming. God bless. Thank you all.

Note: The President spoke at 4:25 p.m. at the University Air Center. In 
his remarks, he referred to Gov. Jeb Bush of Florida; Carole Jean 
Jordan, chairman, Republican Party of Florida; entertainers the Bellamy 
Brothers; and former President Saddam Hussein of Iraq.