[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: George W. Bush (2004, Book III)]
[October 16, 2004]
[Pages 2551-2558]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks in West Palm Beach, Florida
October 16, 2004

    The President. Thank you all for coming. Thank you all for being 
here. It lifts our spirits that so many came out to say hello on a 
Saturday afternoon. Laura and I are grateful that 
you're here, and we appreciate you being here.
    We're here to ask for your vote and your help. As Jeb mentioned, we're coming close to voting time, and it's 
time to go to your friends and neighbors and remind them they have a 
duty in this country to vote. And when you get them headed to the polls, 
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 going to give you some reasons to put me back in office today, 
but perhaps the most important one of all is so that Laura is the First Lady for 4 more years. When I asked her to 
marry me, she said, ``Fine, I'll marry you, just as long as I never have 
to give a political speech.'' [Laughter] I said, ``Okay, you got a 
deal.'' Fortunately, she didn't hold me to that promise. She's given a 
lot of speeches, and when she does, the American people see a warm, 
compassionate, great First Lady.
    I'm proud of my runningmate. I admit, Dick Cheney doesn't have the waviest hair in the race----
    Audience members. Laura! Laura! Laura!
    The President. Dick Cheney is a great Vice 
President.
    I'm proud of brother Jeb. You know, you can 
determine the character of a person when times are tough, and times are 
really tough for you all here in Florida--not one hurricane but four. 
Jeb stepped up, as did a lot of other people, including, I hope, the 
Federal Government to your satisfaction, to provide help for people who 
hurt. But you know what we saw in those storms was the great character 
of the people of Florida, neighbor loving neighbor, neighbor helping 
neighbor. There's no doubt in my mind that the people of this State 
showed the people of the world that there's great character amongst you. 
And I'm proud of you, and I want to thank you for doing everything you 
can to help rebuild this State.
    What an honor it is to be sharing the stage with Jack 
Nicklaus. He gave me a chance--I asked for a 
few putting lessons. [Laughter] He said, ``Your game is beyond repair.'' 
[Laughter] But I'm proud to have his support, proud for him--to be able 
to call him friend.
    I also want to thank Congressman Mark Foley, 
who is with us today. I appreciate you being here, Congressman. 
Congressman Clay Shaw and Emilie 
Shaw are with us today. Thanks for coming. Tom 
Gallagher is with us today. I appreciate him

[[Page 2552]]

being here. I want to thank all the other statehouse officials and local 
officials.
    But most of all, I want to thank the grassroots activists who are 
here. I want to thank all the volunteers who are getting ready to walk 
the vote across not only Florida but all across our country today. See, 
what's happening is, we've got people all over the country heading out 
into neighborhoods to knock on doors and putting in a good word for the 
Bush-Cheney ticket. Some volunteers are watching on the Internet right 
now, and I hope they're stretching for their walk. [Laughter] I want to 
thank them for their hard work. With your help, with their help, we're 
going to win a great victory in Florida and win on November the 2d.
    In the last few years, the American people have gotten to know me. 
They know my blunt way of speaking. I got that from Mother. [Laughter] They know I sometimes mangle the English 
language. I got that from Dad. [Laughter] 
Americans also know I tell you exactly what I'm going to do, and I keep 
my word.
    You know, I enjoyed the debates against my opponent, and they showed stark differences between his views and 
mine. We have different records. We have very different plans for the 
future. My record is one of reforming education, of lowering taxes, of 
providing prescription drug coverage for our seniors, improving homeland 
protection, and waging an unrelenting fight against the ideologues of 
hate.
    My opponent's record is 20 years of out-
of-the-mainstream votes without many significant reforms and results to 
show for it.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. These records are important. They are important 
because our country faces challenges. And the next President must 
recognize the need to lead and reform. On issue after issue, from jobs 
to health care to the need to strengthen Social Security, Senator 
Kerry's policies fail to recognize the 
changing realities of today's world and the need for fundamental 
reforms.
    See, when I came into office, the stock market had been in serious 
decline for 6 months. The American economy was sliding into a recession. 
To help families and to get this economy growing again, I pledged to 
reduce your taxes. I kept my word. The results are clear. The recession 
was one of the shallowest in American history.
    Over the last 3 years, our economy has grown at the fastest rate as 
any in nearly 20 years. The homeownership rate in America is at an 
alltime high. Farm and ranch income is up. In the past 13 months, we 
have added 1.9 million new jobs. The national unemployment rate is 5.4 
percent, lower than the average of the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s. Your 
unemployment rate is 4.5 percent. This economy is moving forward, and 
we're not going to go back to the days of tax and spend.
    To make sure quality jobs are created right here in America, we've 
got to make sure America is the best place in the world to do business. 
That means less regulations on our job creators. That means we've got to 
do something about these lawsuits that threaten small businesses that 
are creating most new jobs.
    To create jobs in America, Congress needs to pass my energy plan. 
It's a plan that encourages conservation. It encourages the use of 
renewables like ethanol and biodiesel. It encourages clean coal 
technology. It encourages the exploration for natural gas in 
environmentally friendly ways. To make sure this economy stays strong 
and people can find work, we must become less dependent on foreign 
sources of energy.
    To create jobs, we need to reject economic isolationism and open up 
markets around the world for U.S. products. We open up our markets for 
goods from overseas, and that's good for you. If you've got more choices 
in the marketplace, you're likely to get that which you want at a better 
price and higher quality. So, rather than

[[Page 2553]]

shutting our markets, I'm saying to countries like China, ``Treat us the 
way we treat you.'' Americans 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. In 20 years as a Senator from Massachusetts, 
he's built up a record of a Senator from Massachusetts. [Laughter] He's 
voted to raise taxes 98 times.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. Think about that. He's been 
in the United States Senate for 20 years. That's about five times a 
year. [Laughter] That's a pattern. [Laughter] That's an indication of 
what's going to come. See, he can run from his record, but he cannot 
hide.
    He's now promising not to raise taxes on 
anybody 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] He's promised $2.2 trillion in new spending. That's with a 
``T.'' And yet his plan to pay for it is to tax the rich. But you can't 
raise enough money to tax the rich to pay for 2.2 trillion. There's a 
tax gap between his promises and what he can raise. And guess who 
usually has to fill the tax gap.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. Yes. Let me say something else about the rhetoric of 
taxing the rich. The rich hire lawyers and accountants for a reason: to 
slide the tab and stick you with the bill. We're not going to let the 
Senator tax you; we're going to carry Florida 
again and win in November.
    When I came into office, our public schools had been waiting for 
decades for hopeful reform. Too many of our children were shuffled 
through school, year after year, without learning the basics. I pledged 
to restore accountability to our schools and raise standards and end the 
soft bigotry of low expectations, and I kept my word.
    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 
with people--by people with at least 2 years of college, yet one in four 
of our students gets there. So that's why 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 will help more Americans start their career with a college diploma.
    When I came into office, we had a problem in Medicare. Medicine was 
changing; Medicare was not. For example, Medicare would pay tens of 
thousands of dollars for a heart surgery but would not pay a dime for 
the prescription drugs that can prevent the heart surgery from being 
needed in the first place. That was not fair to our seniors, and it was 
not fair to the taxpayers. I pledged to bring Republicans and Democrats 
together to strengthen and modernize Medicare for our seniors, and I 
kept my word. Seniors are getting discounts on medicine. Docs are being 
treated fairly. Rural hospitals are being reimbursed. And beginning in 
2006, all seniors will be able to get prescription drug coverage under 
Medicare.
    We have more work to do. We have more work to do to make sure health 
care is available and affordable. We need a safety net for those with 
the greatest needs. I believe in community health centers, places where 
the poor and the indigent can get primary and preventative care, places 
where people can get the help they need without burdening the emergency 
rooms of our hospitals. In a new term, we'll work to make sure every 
poor county in America has a community health center. We'll need to do 
more to make sure poor children are fully subscribed in our program for 
low-income families.

[[Page 2554]]

    We've got to do more to make sure health care is affordable. Most of 
the uninsured work for small businesses. Small businesses are having 
trouble affording health care. To help our workers get the health care 
they need, we must allow small businesses to join together so they can 
purchase insurance at the same discounts big companies are able to do. 
We will expand health savings accounts so workers in small businesses 
are able to pay low premiums and can save tax-free for a health care 
account they manage and call their own.
    To make sure health care is available and affordable, we must do 
something about the junk lawsuits that are running good doctors out of 
practice and running the premiums up. By forcing doctors to practice 
defensive medicine, medical lawsuits cost the Government about $28 
billion a year. That means they cost you $28 billion a year. The 
lawsuits cost our Nation's economy anywhere from 60 billion to 100 
billion dollars a year. They drive up insurance premiums, which drives 
good doctors out of practice. You cannot be pro-patient and 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 trial lawyer on the ticket.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. I have made my choice. I'm standing with the doctors. 
I'm standing with the patients. I'm for medical liability reform--now.
    My opponent says he has a health care 
plan.
    Audience members. Four more years! Four more years! Four more years!
    The President. My opponent has a health 
care plan. It's a plan for bigger and more intrusive Government. The 
other day in the debate, he said, ``The Government has nothing to do 
with it.'' He was talking about his health care plan. I could barely 
contain myself. [Laughter] Of course, the Government has things to do 
with it. The facts are, 8 out of 10 people who get health care under 
Senator Kerry's plan would be placed on a Government program.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. Eight million Americans would lose their private 
health insurance, and most would go on Medicaid. That is a Government 
program. Senator Kerry claimed his plan would 
help small businesses. Those who've studied his plan call it an 
overpriced albatross which would saddle small businesses with 225 new 
mandates.
    I have a different view of health care. I'm not for increasing the 
Federal role in health care. I want to make sure health decisions are 
made by doctors and patients, not by officials in Washington, DC.
    I've set out policies that move America toward a positive and 
optimistic vision. We're headed toward an ownership society in America. 
There's a saying that no one ever washes a rental car. [Laughter] 
There's a lot of wisdom in that statement. [Laughter] When you own 
something, you care about it. When you own something, you have a vital 
stake in the future of your country.
    That's why we're encouraging entrepreneurship. 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 account. We're promoting 
homeownership. I love it when more and more people from all walks of 
life open up the door where they live and say, ``Welcome to my home. 
Welcome to my piece of property.''
    In a new term, we'll take the next step to build an ownership 
society by strengthening Social Security. Our Social Security system 
needs fixing. First, let me talk to those who are on Social Security 
today. You might remember the 2000 campaign when they said in these TV 
ads, ``If George W. wins, you will not get your check.'' I won, and you 
got your checks. You will continue to get your checks. The problem in 
Social

[[Page 2555]]

Security is not for those on Social Security today or baby boomers like 
me.
    The problem is for our children and our grandchildren. People are 
understandably worried about whether our children and grandchildren will 
have Social Security around when they need it. For their sake, we must 
be bold and think about how to reform Social Security. For our 
children's sake, we must strengthen Social Security by allowing younger 
workers to save some of their payroll taxes in a personal savings 
account that they call their own and that the Government cannot take 
away.
    My opponent wants to maintain the status 
quo when it comes to Social Security. He's against the Social Security 
reforms I just discussed, and he's just--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 Government 
control. There is a word for that attitude. It's called liberalism.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. He dismisses that as a 
label, but he must have been thinking differently when he told a 
newspaper, ``I am a liberal and proud of it.'' As a matter of fact, the 
nonpartisan National Journal magazine did a study and named him the most 
liberal Member of the United States Senate. That takes hard work. 
[Laughter]
    I have a different record and a different philosophy. I do not 
believe in big Government, and I do not believe Government should be 
indifferent. That is called compassionate conservatism. I believe in 
policies that empower people to improve their lives, not try to run 
their lives. So we're helping men and women find the skills and tools 
they need 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 
continue to lead our Nation for 4 more years.
    In a time of change, some things do not change, the values we try to 
live by, courage and compassion, reverence and integrity. We stand for a 
culture of life in which every person matters and every being counts. 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 the record is real clear. [Laughter] He says he 
supports the institution of marriage, but he voted against the Defense 
of Marriage Act, which my predecessor 
signed into law. He voted against the ban on the brutal practice of 
partial-birth abortion.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. 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 far left bank. He can 
run, but he cannot hide.
    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 of 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're defending the homeland. We're transforming our military. 
The All-Volunteer Army will remain an all-volunteer army. We're 
strengthening our intelligence. We're staying on the offensive. We will 
strike the terrorists abroad so we do not have to face them here at 
home. We will spread freedom and liberty. And we will prevail.
    Our strategy is succeeding. Think about the world as it was some 
3\1/2\ years ago.

[[Page 2556]]

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 acted, because the United States led, Afghanistan is free 
and an ally in the war on 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 members and associates 
have been brought to justice. Because we acted to defend ourselves, more 
than 50 million people are now free, and that makes us more secure.
    Think about what happened in Afghanistan. I want the youngsters here 
to understand the significance of what took place in 3\1/2\ short years. 
It wasn't all that long ago that the people of that country lived under 
the barbaric regime of the ideologues of hate. They lived in a period of 
darkness. Young girls were not allowed to go to school. Their mothers 
were pulled in the public square and whipped if they didn't toe their 
ideological line of these people. Because we acted to secure ourselves 
and to remove Al Qaida's ability to train, the people of Afghanistan are 
free. They went to the polls. They went to the polls to vote for 
President in the millions. The first voter in Afghanistan was a 19-year-
old woman. Freedom is on the march. The 
people of Afghanistan no longer live in darkness. They now live in light 
because of democracy.
    And we're making progress in Iraq. The people of Iraq will have 
elections in January. Think how far that society has come from the days 
of torture chambers and mass graves and brutality. No, we will stand 
with the people of Afghanistan and Iraq, because when America gives its 
word, America will keep its word. And we will stand with those people 
because we understand free societies in the Middle East will be hopeful 
societies which no longer feed resentment and breed violence for export. 
Free governments in the Middle East will fight the terrorists instead of 
harboring them. Freedom will help us keep the peace we all want.
    So our mission is clear. We'll help the countries train armies so 
that the people of Afghanistan and Iraq can do the hard work of 
defending their democracies. We'll help them get on the path of 
stability and self-government as quickly as possible, and then our 
troops will come home with the honor they have earned.
    It is a great honor to be the Commander in Chief of a great 
military. And we're a great military because of the character of the 
people who wear our Nation's uniform. I want to thank the veterans who 
are here today for having set such a great example for those who wear 
the uniform. I want to thank the military families who are here today 
for their sacrifices.
    We will make sure that our troops have all the resources they need 
to complete their missions. That's why I went to the United States 
Congress and asked for $87 billion of supplemental funding in September 
of '03. It was a very important request. We were there to support our 
troops in harm's way, and I received great bipartisan support for my 
request. As a matter of fact, the support was so strong that only 12 
Members of the United States Senate voted against funding for our troops 
in combat, 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 
of this startling statistic: Only four United States Senators voted to 
authorize the use of force and then voted against funding for our 
troops--only four--two of whom are my opponent 
and his runningmate.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!

[[Page 2557]]

    The President. So they asked him why--you 
might remember the most famous quote of the 2004 campaign, when he said, 
``I actually did vote for the $87 billion, right before I voted against 
it.''
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. He's had several 
explanations since then of his vote. One of them was, ``The whole thing 
was a complicated matter.'' There's nothing complicated about supporting 
our troops in harm's way.
    Tomorrow is the one-year anniversary of Senator Kerry's vote against funding for our troops. My opponent's many 
and conflicting positions on this issue are a case study into why his 
contradictions call into question his credibility and his ability to 
lead our Nation. In September 2003, as the $87 billion funding package 
was being debated, Senator Kerry said on national TV, ``It would be 
irresponsible to abandon our troops by voting against it.'' Just one 
month later, he did exactly that irresponsible thing, and he abandoned 
our troops in combat by voting against the funding. What happened to 
change the Senator's mind so abruptly in one short month? His opponent 
in the Democrat primary, Howard Dean, was 
gaining ground as an antiwar candidate. Senator Kerry apparently decided 
supporting our troops, even while they were in harm's way, was not as 
important as shoring up his political position.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. At a time of great threat to our country, at a time 
of great challenge to the world, the Commander in Chief must stand on 
principle, not on the shifting sands of political convenience.
    There are big differences of opinion about how best to lead in this 
world. Senator Kerry proposed that we should 
pass a ``global test'' before we defend ourselves.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. The problem is with that ``global test,'' the 
Senator can never pass it. Remember what 
happened in 1990. The United Nations Security Council passed a 
resolution supporting action to remove Saddam Hussein from Kuwait. The international community was united. 
Countries throughout the world joined our coalition. Yet, even after 
United Nations approval, in the United States Senate, Senator Kerry 
voted against the authorization for the use of force. If that coalition 
didn't pass his ``global test,'' nothing will pass a ``global test.''
    During the debate, you might remember he 
said that removing Saddam Hussein was a 
``mistake.'' He actually said he would have done it differently by 
supporting another United Nations Security Council resolution.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. Precisely what Saddam Hussein wanted. He wanted the world to look the other way. If 
my opponent had his way, Saddam Hussein would 
not only be sitting in a palace in Baghdad, he'd be in Kuwait. The world 
is better off with Saddam in a prison cell.
    Listen, I'll continue to work to build strong alliances to keep our 
coalition strong. I talked to Prime Minister Tony Blair yesterday on Air Force One as I was heading from Iowa to 
Wisconsin. Alliances are important. Friendships are important in this 
dangerous world. But I will never turn over America's national security 
decisions to leaders of other countries.
    I believe in the transformational power of liberty. I'll tell you 
what I mean by that. One of Laura and my best 
friends or closest friends in the international scene is Prime Minister 
Koizumi of Japan. That doesn't sound like 
much until you think about the fact that we were at war with them 60 
years ago. Japan was a sworn enemy of the United States of America. My 
dad fought against the--our dad fought 
against the Japanese. I'm sure your dads and granddads probably did as 
well. They were a mortal enemy.
    Yet, after we won in World War II, Harry S. Truman, President of the 
United States, believed in the transformational power of liberty. He 
believed that liberty could change an enemy into an ally. There

[[Page 2558]]

was a lot of skeptics about that in America then, and you can understand 
why. Why would you want to work with the enemy? People lost lives, had 
their families turned upside down, were wondering why we even cared 
about a former enemy. But fortunately, enough citizens and the President 
believed in the power of liberty. And today, I sit down with Prime 
Minister Koizumi, as a result of Japan 
being a democracy, talking about the peace we all want.
    Someday, an American President will be sitting down with a duly 
elected leader of Iraq. They'll be talking about 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 that women in the Middle East want to live in a 
free society. I believe moms in the Middle East want to raise their 
child in a free world. 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.
    Extending freedom means confronting the evil of anti-Semitism. 
Today, I signed the Global Anti-Semitism Review Act of 2004. This law 
commits the Government to keep a record of anti-Semitic acts throughout 
the world and also a record of responses to those acts. This Nation will 
keep watch and make sure the ancient impulse of anti-Semitism never 
finds a home in the modern 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 isn't one of those times. This is a time 
that requires firm resolve, clear vision, and the deep faith in the 
values that makes this a great nation.
    None of us will ever forget that era when one--that week when one 
era ended and another began. On 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 the top of their lungs, ``Whatever 
it takes.'' I remember trying to console people, and a guy grabbed me by 
the arm, and he said, ``Do not let me down.'' Ever since that day, I 
wake up every morning thinking about how to better 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 help, I 
will do so for 4 more years.
    Thanks for coming. God bless. On to victory. Thank you all.

Note: The President spoke at 1:20 p.m. at the Sound Advice Amphitheater. 
In his remarks, he referred to Gov. Jeb Bush of Florida; professional 
golfer Jack Nicklaus; Emilie Shaw, wife of Representative Clay Shaw; Tom 
Gallagher, chief financial officer, Florida Department of Financial 
Services; former President Saddam Hussein of Iraq; Prime Minister Tony 
Blair of the United Kingdom; and Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi of 
Japan.