[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: George W. Bush (2004, Book III)]
[October 14, 2004]
[Pages 2513-2520]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks in Reno, Nevada
October 14, 2004

    The President. Thank you all for coming out today. It's great to be 
back in Nevada. It's such a beautiful day. I'm proud to be here in the 
``Biggest Little City in the World.'' I'm really pleased to be in a 
place where the cowboy hats outnumber the suits.
    Thank you all for coming. I'm here to ask for the vote. And I want 
your help. Tell your friends and neighbors to go to the polls on 
November the 2d. Everybody ought to vote in this country. And tell them 
if they want a safer America, a stronger America, and a better America 
to put me and Dick Cheney back in office.
    I'm sorry Laura is not here.
    Audience members. Aw-w-w!
    The President. I know it. We were in Las Vegas earlier, and they had 
an AARP convention there. And the head of the AARP said, ``Send your 
family's best speaker.'' [Laughter] So Laura 
went. [Laughter] You know, when I married her, I said--she said, ``Fine, 
I'll marry you, just so long as I never have to give a speech.'' I said, 
``Okay, you've got a deal.'' [Laughter] Fortunately, she didn't hold me 
to that deal. When she speaks, America sees a compassionate, warm, great 
First Lady.
    I'm proud of my runningmate, Dick Cheney. 
He's a fine man with good judgment and great experience. He's getting 
the job done for the American people. I'm proud to be introduced by a 
unique and strong and great American in John McCain. When he says he's for you, he's really for you. Las 
Vegas this morning, Reno right now, and then we're headed to Medford, 
Oregon. He's by my side. He's campaigning hard, and I'm proud to have 
his support.
    And I'm proud of the job that Senator John Ensign is doing for the great State of Nevada. He's a really 
fine man. I want to thank Jim Gibbons for his 
service as well. Old Congressman Greg Walden 
from Oregon snuck across the State line. He's with us today. Thanks for 
coming, Greg. I appreciate you being here.
    I'm really proud that Dema Guinn is with us, 
the first lady of the great State of Nevada. Thank for coming, Dema. I'm 
proud you're here. How about your attorney general, Brian 
Sandoval? What a class act he is. I want to 
thank Brian Krolicki, the State treasurer, 
for being with us today. I want to thank--Dean Heller is with us today. I'm proud he's here.
    I want to thank all the State and local officials. But mainly, I 
want to thank the grassroots activists, the people who are putting up 
the signs, the people making the phone calls, the people turning out the 
vote. With your help, we'll carry Nevada and win a great victory in 
November.
    I enjoyed the debate last night. You know, those debates clarify the 
differences in our record, our approach, and our plans for the future. 
I'm proud of my record. My opponent seemed to 
want to avoid talking about his. [Laughter] My record is one of lowering 
taxes, reforming education, providing prescription drug coverage to 
seniors, improving homeland protections, and waging an aggressive war 
against the ideologues of hate.

[[Page 2514]]

    The Senator's record is 20 years of out-
of-the-mainstream votes without many significant reforms or results. Our 
very different records are a window into what we believe and what we'll 
do for the next 4 years. The Senator believes in a bigger Federal 
Government. I believe in more freedom and more choices for individual 
Americans. The Senator believes Government should dictate. I believe you 
should decide.
    Sometimes it's a little hard to tell exactly what he believes--[laughter]--as he tries to obscure his approach 
to Government. Take health care. Once again, last night, with a straight 
face--[laughter]--the Senator tried to say his health care plan is not a 
Government plan. [Laughter] I could barely contain myself. [Laughter] 
Yet 22 million new people would enroll on a Government program under his 
plan, the largest expansion of Government health care ever. Eighty 
percent of the newly insured on his plan would be placed on a Government 
program like Medicaid. The Senator claimed his plan would help small 
business, yet a study conducted by small-businesses groups concluded 
Senator Kerry's plan is an overpriced albatross that would saddle small 
businesses with 225 new mandates.
    I have a different view. I want health care to be available and 
affordable by helping small businesses, not by saddling them with a 
bunch of new Government rules.
    Once again last night, with a straight face, the Senator, shall we say, refined his answer on the proposed 
``global test'' he would administer before acting to defend America. 
See, after trying to say it really wasn't a test at all, last night he 
once again defended his approach by saying, ``I think it makes sense.'' 
Now he says we have to pass some international truth standard.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. The truth is, we should never turn America's national 
security decisions over to international bodies or leaders of other 
countries.
    The last few years, the American people have gotten to know me. They 
know my blunt way of speaking. I get that from Mom. [Laughter] They know I sometimes mangle the English 
language. I get that from Dad. [Laughter] 
Americans also know I tell you exactly what I'm going to do, and I keep 
my word.
    When I came to office, the stock market had been in serious decline 
for 6 months. The American economy was sliding into recession. To help 
families, to get this economy growing again, I pledged to reduce taxes. 
I kept my word, and the results are clear. The recession was one of the 
shallowest in American history. And over the last 3 years, America's 
economy has grown at the fastest rate of any major industrialized 
nation.
    In the past 13 months, we've added more than 1.9 million new jobs. 
The unemployment rate in America is at 5.4 percent, below the average 
rate of the 1970s, the 1980s, and the 1990s. The unemployment rate in 
your State is 4 percent. Mining sector is strong. Farm and ranch income 
is up. Homeownership is at an alltime high in America. We're moving 
forward, and there's more to do.
    To make sure quality jobs are created here in America, America must 
be the best place in the world to do business. That means less 
regulations on the job creators. That means we've got to do something 
about these frivolous lawsuits that make it hard to expand employment.
    To create jobs, Congress needs to pass my energy plan. It encourages 
conservation. It encourages the use of renewables like ethanol and 
biodiesel. It encourages new technologies. It encourages clean coal 
technology and increased domestic production. To keep jobs here, we must 
become less dependent on foreign sources of energy.
    To protect jobs and communities in the West, we need to reduce the 
risk of devastating wildfire. I was proud to sign the Health Forests 
Restoration Act. I want to thank the three Members of Congress for

[[Page 2515]]

working on that act. Under this good law, we're clearing the underbrush 
that serves as fuel for fires. Because we acted, our forests are 
healthier, residents and small businesses are safer, and people across 
the West are better off.
    To create jobs here in America, we need to reject economic 
isolationism and open up markets around the world for U.S. products. 
America can compete with anybody, anytime, anywhere, so long as the 
rules are fair.
    To create jobs, we've got to be wise about how we spend your money 
and keep your taxes low. My opponent has his 
own history on the economy--20 years as a Senator from Massachusetts, 
he's built a record of a Senator from Massachusetts. [Laughter] He voted 
to raise taxes 98 times.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. That's a vote for a tax increase about five times 
every year.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. I think that qualifies as a pattern. [Laughter] 
He can run from his record, but he cannot 
hide.
    Now the Senator--he looked in the camera 
last Friday night and promised not to raise taxes for anyone who earns 
less than $200,000 a year. The problem is, to keep that promise he would 
have to break almost all of his other ones. [Laughter] His plan to raise 
taxes on the top two income brackets would raise about $600 billion, but 
his spending promises cost about 4 times that much--about 2.2 trillion. 
That's with a ``T.'' [Laughter] See, you can't have it both ways. To pay 
for all his big spending promises he's made, he's going to have to raise 
your taxes.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. The choice in this election is clear when it comes to 
taxes. My opponent has a history of voting for 
higher taxes, and he's promised to raise them on the campaign trail, and 
that's a promise politicians usually keep.
    I believe our families and our economy are better off when Americans 
keep more of what they earn. In a new term, I'll work with Congress to 
keep your taxes low.
    When I came into office, our public schools had been waiting decades 
for hopeful reform. Too many of our children were shuffled through 
schools, grade after grade, year after year, without learning the 
basics. I pledged to restore accountability to the schools and end the 
soft bigotry of low expectations, and I kept my word. We're now seeing 
results. Our children are making sustained gains in reading and math. 
We're closing the achievement gap for minority students. We're making 
progress for America's families. We will leave no child behind.
    To make sure jobs are here and to build a more hopeful America, we 
must have the best prepared and most highly skilled workforce in the 
world. Most new jobs are filled by people with at least 2 years of 
college, yet only one in four of our students gets there. So we'll fund 
early intervention programs in our high schools to help at-risk 
students. We'll place a new focus on math and science. Over time, we'll 
require a rigorous examination before graduation. By raising performance 
in our high schools and expanding Pell grants for low- and middle-income 
families, we'll help more Americans start their career with a college 
diploma.
    My opponent has a history on education 
issues, a history of doing almost nothing. [Laughter] The Senator has 
pledged to weaken the No Child Left Behind Act. He's proposed diluting 
the accountability standards and looking at measures like teacher 
attendance to judge whether students are learning. His proposals would 
undermine the high standards and accountability we worked hard to pass. 
We've moved beyond the old days of failure and mediocrity and low 
standards, and we're not going to go back.
    When I came into office, we had a problem in Medicare. Medicine was 
changing, but Medicare wasn't. Think about this: Medicare would pay tens 
of thousands of dollars for a heart surgery but wouldn't pay

[[Page 2516]]

a dime for the prescription drugs that could prevent the heart surgery 
from being needed in the first place. That wasn't fair to seniors. It 
certainly wasn't fair to taxpayers. I brought Republicans and Democrats 
together to strengthen and modernize Medicare for our seniors. And I 
kept my word.
    We're moving forward on health care, and there's more to do. We need 
to make health care more affordable and more available for all our 
people. We'll have a safety net for those with the greatest need. I 
believe in community health centers, places where the poor and the 
indigent can get primary preventative care. In a new term, we'll make 
sure every poor county in America has a community health center. We'll 
do more to make sure poor children are fully subscribed in our programs 
for low-income families.
    We'll do more to make sure health care is affordable. Most of the 
uninsured are employees of small businesses. Small businesses are having 
trouble affording health care. To help workers get the health care, we 
should allow small businesses to join together so they can buy insurance 
at the same discounts big companies can do. We've got to expand health 
savings accounts so workers and small businesses are able to pay lower 
premiums, and people can save tax-free in a health care account that 
they call their own.
    And to make sure health care is available and affordable, we must do 
something about the junk lawsuits that are running up the cost of health 
care. By forcing doctors to practice defensive medicine, medical 
lawsuits cost the Government about $28 billion a year. They cost our 
Nation's economy anywhere from 60 to 100 billion dollars a year. They 
drive up insurance premiums, which drive good doctors out of practice.
    Today in Las Vegas, I met Dr. James Barber. 
Three years ago, Dr. Barber paid $27,000 in insurance premiums as an ob-
gyn in Henderson, Nevada. Last year's premiums would have been more than 
$100,000. So he had to stop delivering babies here, and he moved his 
practice to California. Because the medical liability laws in California 
have reasonable caps, that good doctor's premiums cost him about $33,000 
a year. I also met one of his former patients, Nicole Byrne. Nicole 
Byrne said that Dr. Barber saved her life 
during a previous pregnancy. Now she's pregnant again, and she's 
devastated that Dr. Barber will not be around to deliver her baby. 
Nicole and Dr. Barber understand you can't be pro-patient, pro-doctor, 
and pro-plaintiff-attorney at the same time. You have to choose. My 
opponent made his choice, and he put a 
personal injury lawyer on the ticket.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. I made my choice. I'm standing with the docs and the 
patients. I'm for medical liability reform--now. The choice is clear in 
this election. My opponent wants to move in 
the direction of Government-run health care. I believe the health 
decisions ought to be made by patients and doctors, not by officials in 
Washington, DC.
    I've set out policies that move our country toward an optimistic and 
positive vision. I believe our country can become an ownership society. 
You know, there's an old saying that no one ever washes a rental car. 
[Laughter] There's a lot of wisdom in that statement. When you own 
something, you care about it; you have a vital stake in the future of 
our great country.
    So we're encouraging entrepreneurship, because every time a small 
business is started, someone is achieving the American Dream. We're 
encouraging health savings accounts so people have the security of 
owning and managing their own health care. We're promoting 
homeownership. I love the fact that more citizens than ever are able to 
open up the door where they live and say, ``Welcome to my home. Welcome 
to my piece of property.''
    In a new term, I'll take the next great step to build an ownership 
society by

[[Page 2517]]

strengthening Social Security. Now, listen, our Social Security system 
needs fixing. I want the seniors out here to hear me loud and clear: 
You'll get your check. I remember when I was running in 2000, they said, 
``If George W. gets elected, you won't get your Social Security check.'' 
You got your checks. You'll continue to get your check. When you hear 
them talk about reform, don't let them fool you and say you're not going 
to get your check. Baby boomers are in pretty good shape when it comes 
to the Social Security trust.
    But we need to worry about our children and our grandchildren. They 
are understandably worried about whether Social Security will be around 
when they need it. And for their sake, we must strengthen Social 
Security by allowing younger workers to save some of their own payroll 
taxes in a personal savings account that will earn compounded rate of 
interest, an account that Washington cannot take away.
    My opponent wants to maintain the status 
quo when it comes to Social Security.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. He's against these Social 
Security reforms. As a matter of fact, he's just about against about 
every other reform that gives more authority and control to individuals. 
On issue after issue, from Medicare without choices to schools with less 
accountability to higher taxes, he takes the side of more centralized 
control and bigger Government. There's a word for that attitude. It's 
called liberalism. [Laughter] My opponent dismisses that as a label. He 
must have seen it differently when he said to a newspaper, ``I'm a 
liberal and proud of it.'' [Laughter]
    Others have noticed. The nonpartisan National Journal magazine did a 
study and named him the most liberal Member of the United States Senate. 
That's hard work. [Laughter] A group known as the Americans for 
Democratic Action have given Senator Kerry a 
higher lifetime liberal rating than Ted Kennedy. That's an accomplishment. [Laughter]
    I have a different record and a different philosophy. I don't 
believe in big Government, and I don't believe in indifferent 
Government. I'm a compassionate conservative. I believe in policies that 
empower people to improve their lives, not try to run their lives. We're 
helping men and women find the skills and tools necessary to prosper in 
a time of change. We're helping all Americans to have a future of 
dignity and independence, and that is how I will lead our country for 4 
more years.
    Audience members. Four more years! Four more years! Four more years!
    The President. In this time of change, some things do not change. 
These are the values we try to live by, courage and compassion, 
reverence and integrity. In the times of change, we'll support the 
institutions that give our lives direction and purpose, our families, 
our schools, our religious congregations. We stand for a culture of life 
in which every person counts and every being matters. We stand for 
marriage and family, which are the foundations of our society. We stand 
for the appointment of Federal judges who know the difference between 
personal opinion and the strict interpretation of the law.
    My opponent's words on these issues are a 
little muddy, but his record is clear. [Laughter] He says he supports 
the institution of marriage, but he voted against the Defense of 
Marriage Act, which a bipartisan Congress overwhelmingly passed and 
which President Clinton signed. He voted 
against the ban on the brutal practice of partial-birth abortion.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. He calls himself the 
candidate of conservative values, but he described the Reagan years as a 
time of moral darkness.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. There is a mainstream in American politics, and my 
opponent sits on the left bank. He can run, 
but he cannot hide.

[[Page 2518]]

    This election will also determine how America responds to the 
continuing danger of terrorism. The most solemn duty of the American 
President is to protect the American people. If America shows 
uncertainty or weakness in this decade, the world will drift toward 
tragedy. This will not happen on my watch.
    Since that terrible morning, September the 11th, 2001, we have 
fought the terrorists across the Earth, not for pride, not for power, 
but because the lives of our citizens are at stake. Our strategy is 
clear. We'll defend the homeland. We'll strengthen our intelligence 
services. We'll transform the All-Volunteer Army--we'll keep the All-
Volunteer Army an all-volunteer army. We're staying on the offensive. 
We'll strike the terrorists abroad so we do not have to face them here 
at home. We'll spread freedom and liberty. And we'll prevail.
    Our strategy is succeeding. Think about the world as it was 3\1/2\ 
years ago. Afghanistan was the home base of Al Qaida. Pakistan was a 
transit point for terrorist groups. Saudi Arabia was fertile ground for 
terrorist fundraising. Libya was secretly pursuing nuclear weapons. Iraq 
was a dangerous place and a gathering threat. And Al Qaida was largely 
unchallenged as it planned attacks.
    Because we led, Afghanistan is a free society and is an ally in 
fighting the war against terror; Pakistan is capturing terrorist 
leaders; Saudi Arabia is making raids and arrests; Libya is dismantling 
its weapons programs; the army of a free Iraq is fighting for freedom; 
and more than three-quarters of Al Qaida's key leaders and associates 
have been brought to justice.
    Free societies in the Middle East will be hopeful societies which no 
longer feed resentments and breed violence for export. Free governments 
in the Middle East will fight terrorists instead of harboring them. And 
that's why I think it's so significant that because we defended 
ourselves, we liberated 50 million people in Afghanistan and Iraq.
    Freedom helps us keep the peace. That's why it was so uplifting to 
see what took place in Afghanistan. Remember what that society was like. 
These people lived under the brutal darkness of the Taliban regime. 
Young girls weren't allowed to go to school. Their mothers were whipped 
in the public squares if they didn't toe the ideology of hate.
    But because we acted, there's light in Afghanistan. Thousands and 
thousands of people voted in the Presidential elections. The first voter 
was a 19-year-old woman in Afghanistan. Iraq 
will have elections in January. Our mission is clear. We will help these 
countries train armies and police so they can do the hard work of 
defending freedom and democracy. We'll help them get on the path to 
stability as quickly as possible, and then our troops will come home 
with the honor they have earned.
    We've got a great United States military. I want to thank the 
veterans who are here for having set such a great example for those who 
wear the uniform. I want to thank the military families who are here for 
the sacrifices they have made. And I want to assure you, we'll keep our 
commitments to our troops. We will make sure they have the resources 
they need to complete their missions.
    And that's why I went to the Congress in September of 2003 and asked 
for $87 billion, supplemental request to help our troops in combat both 
in Afghanistan and Iraq. We received great bipartisan support. As a 
matter of fact, only 12 United States Senators voted against the funding 
request, 2 of whom are my opponent and his 
runningmate.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. When you're out rounding up the vote, remind people 
there's only 4 United States Senators who voted to authorize the use of 
force and then voted against the support of our troops----
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!

[[Page 2519]]

    The President. ----only 4 of 100, 2 of whom are my opponent and his runningmate.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. So they asked him how he 
could have made that vote. You might remember perhaps the most famous 
quote of the 2004 campaign, ``I actually did vote for the $87 billion, 
right before I voted against it.''
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. I suspect a lot of people in Reno don't talk that 
way. [Laughter] He's given several 
explanations since then. One of my favorites is, he said, ``The whole 
thing is a complicated matter.'' [Laughter] There's nothing complicated 
about supporting our troops in harm's way.
    I believe in the transformational power of liberty. I want you to 
explain this to your friends and neighbors this way. One of my friends 
in the world is Prime Minister Koizumi of 
Japan. What's interesting about that, it wasn't all that long ago that 
Japan was a sworn enemy of the United States of America. My dad fought against the Japanese. John's dad--I'm sure 
your dads and granddads did as well. They were our sworn enemy. But 
because Harry S. Truman, President of the United States then, believed 
in the power of liberty to transform an enemy into an ally, we worked to 
help Japan become a democracy. There were a lot of people in our country 
that didn't agree with that. ``Why bother? They're the enemy. Why help 
them? They hurt my family.'' There was a lot of reasons, a lot of 
pessimism that Japan couldn't conceivably become a self-governing 
democracy. But she did.
    And as a result of that, I sit down at the table today with Prime 
Minister Koizumi talking about the peace 
we all want. He's an ally.
    And someday, an American President will be sitting down with a duly 
elected leader of Iraq, talking about keeping the peace in the Middle 
East, and our children and our grandchildren will be better off for it.
    I believe that millions in the Middle East plead in silence for 
their freedom. I believe women in the Middle East want to grow up in a 
free society. I believe if given a chance, the people in that region 
will embrace the most honorable form of government ever devised by man. 
I believe all these things because freedom is not America's gift to the 
world; freedom is the Almighty God's gift to each man and woman in this 
world.
    For all Americans, these years in our history will always stand 
apart. There are quiet times in the life of a nation when little is 
expected of its leaders. This is not one of those times. This is a time 
that requires firm resolve, clear vision, and the deep faith in the 
values that makes us a great nation.
    None of us will ever forget that week when one era ended and another 
began. September the 14th, 2001, I stood in the ruins of the Twin 
Towers. It's a day I will never forget. There were workers in hardhats 
there yelling at me at the top of their lungs, ``Whatever it takes.'' I 
remember trying to console the folks coming out of the rubble. A guy 
grabbed me by the arm, and he said, ``Do not let me down.'' Ever since 
that day, I wake up trying to figure out how best to protect our 
country. I will never relent in defending America, whatever it takes.
    Four years ago, when I traveled your great State, I made a pledge 
that if you gave me a chance to serve, I would uphold the honor and the 
dignity of the office to which I had been elected. With your hard work, 
I will do so for 4 more years.
    God bless. Thank you for coming. On to victory. I appreciate you 
all.

Note: The President spoke at 1:41 p.m. at Rancho San Rafael Park. In his 
remarks, he referred to Dema Guinn, wife of Gov. Kenny C. Guinn of 
Nevada; State Attorney General Brian Sandoval, State Treasurer Brian K. 
Krolicki, and Secretary of State Dean Heller of Nevada; and Prime 
Minister Junichiro Koizumi of Japan.

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