[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: George W. Bush (2006, Book II)]
[November 3, 2006]
[Pages 2000-2009]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks at an Iowa Victory 2006 Rally in Le Mars, Iowa
November 3, 2006

    The President. Thanks you all very much. Thanks for coming. I've got 
something on my mind, but before I tell you, I want

[[Page 2001]]

to bring Congressman Steve King up here. He asked 
for a little air time. [Laughter]
    Representative Steve King. And the President 
yielded the balance of his time to--no, he didn't. [Laughter] But I do 
want to make sure we give the warmest of Le Mars and Plymouth County 
welcome to the President. We can't do that without having the Bull Dogs 
up here to do that.
    The President. I was hoping to get a Bull Dog shirt.
    I'm glad to be back in Sioux land; I'm glad to be Le Mars, Iowa. And 
I can't thank you enough for coming. I like being in country like this. 
It's good to look at, but more importantly, this part of the world is 
full of decent, hard-working people with common sense. And that's what 
you need in the statehouse here in Iowa, and that's what we need in the 
Capitol in Washington, DC, good, old, plain common sense, with a strong 
dose of values.
    I'm proud to be here with your next Governor, Jim Nussle. I've seen him in action. When he says he's going to 
do something, he'll do it. The thing about Jim Nussle is, he doesn't 
need to take a poll or have a focus group to tell him what to believe. 
When he says he's going to work to have a first-class education, he 
means it. When he says he's going to work to have affordable health 
care, Jim Nussle means it. When he says he's going to reduce your taxes, 
you can take it to the bank.
    I appreciate you coming out to support Nussle, and I appreciate your support for Steve King. Let me tell you something about Steve King. He is a 
self-made businessman. Listen, we've got plenty of lawyers in 
Washington, DC. [Laughter] It makes sense to have somebody who 
understands what it means to make a payroll. And in Congressman King, 
you've got somebody who knows what it means to make a payroll. He 
understands what you're going through. Send him back to the United 
States Congress.
    And finally, I'm glad to share the same stage with the 
chairman. That would be chairman of the 
Finance Committee; that would be one of the most important people in 
Washington, DC; that would be a good friend of mine, and that's a good 
friend of yours, Chuck Grassley. I have campaigned in your State with 
Chuck Grassley, and there's nothing like it. You're riding down the 
road, and he says, ``That's where old Smith lives.'' [Laughter] And 
about two miles later, he says, ``That's my friend Jones.'' I think he 
has shaken hands with every single person in this great State.
    All three of these men love Iowa, and they 
love Iowans. You know how I know? They're always talking about you when 
I'm with them. And somebody else who loves Iowa in my family is my wife, 
Laura. She sends her best. She's been out on the 
campaign trail. She's working hard for our candidates, and she's working 
her way back to Crawford. See--don't tell her this--[laughter]--but 
tomorrow, I'm sliding back after one event because we're going to have a 
birthday party for her. I'm not going to tell you her age--[laughter]--
but we were both born in the same year, and I turned 60 this year. I 
guarantee you she is just like the people you live next door to. She's 
raised in Midland, Texas. She is down-to-earth. She is a fabulous First 
Lady for this country, and I'm proud to call her wife.
    I'm proud to be here, as well, with Jim's runningmate, Bob Vander Plaats, and his wife, 
Darla. Speaking about wives, we got the 
next first lady of Iowa with us, and that would be Karen Nussle. State Auditor Dave Vaudt is 
with us. I saw him the other day in Des Moines. I said, ``How's your 
campaign going?'' He said, ``Pretty good. I don't have an opponent.'' 
[Laughter] What is that like? [Laughter]
    My friend Mary Ann Hanusa is with us; 
she is running for the secretary of state. I say she's my friend--she 
used to work in the Oval Office. She'll be a fine secretary of state. 
Put her in there. Give her a chance.

[[Page 2002]]

    Candidate for secretary of agriculture Bill Northey is with us today. I appreciate you coming, Mr. 
Secretary. Mayor Virgil Van Beek is with us. 
Mr. Mayor, thanks for coming. My only advice--you didn't ask for any--
[laughter]--and I recognize I'm at the Federal level, but my only advice 
is, fill the potholes. [Laughter]
    I want to thank Le Mars High School Marching Band for being here 
today. I want to thank the school for letting us come and use this 
fantastic facility. I want to thank the teachers who are here in this 
crowd. I want to thank you for working in a noble profession.
    And I want to thank all the grassroots activists. One reason I have 
come is to remind you that all of us have a duty to vote, and on 
November the 7th, you have a duty to show up at the polls. I'd like you 
to encourage your neighbors to go as well.
    You know, it's amazing what happens in Washington. Some of them have 
already begun to measure for new drapes. [Laughter] People are already 
deciding how this election is going to turn out, before the people of 
Iowa or anywhere else have shown up to vote. You know, I'm used to that. 
I remember 2004 campaign. The prognosticators said, ``No way old George 
W. can carry Iowa.'' You proved them wrong. In 2004, a bunch of them in 
Washington were already picking out their offices in the West Wing. And 
then the people went to the polls, and the movers were not needed.
    And the same thing is going to happen this year. The people are 
going to go to the polls, you're going to elect a Republican Governor, 
and we're going to have a Republican-controlled House and Senate, and 
the country will be better off for it.
    We're going to win because we understand the values and the 
priorities of the American people. We understand--we understand you 
can't make decisions based upon political polls. You have to stand for 
something. You have to believe in something. We are working to raise----
    Audience members. U.S.A.! U.S.A.! U.S.A.!
    The President. We believe in raising standards for our public 
schools and measuring so we can make sure no child is left behind in 
America. We have worked hard to make sure our seniors have got 
affordable prescription drugs, and the days of poor seniors having to 
choose between drugs and food are over with.
    We have got a record to run on. Jim Nussle has got a record to run on, and so does Steve King. We've got a record to run on when it comes to making 
sure we're less dependent on foreign oil. Oh, there's been a lot of talk 
about renewable fuels, but this administration and these public servants 
have delivered. We understand that when America's agricultural economy 
is strong, the whole economy is strong. And we are developing new 
technologies that will enable Iowa's farmers to produce the fuels 
necessary to run our automobiles.
    When people around this country go in the polls to vote, 
particularly where there's a Senate race, they're voting for more than 
just a Senator. They're voting for what the judiciary will look like. 
When I campaigned here in Iowa, I said to the people here in this State, 
``If I'm fortunate enough to be your President, I will name people to 
the bench who will strictly interpret the law and not legislate from the 
bench.'' And that is exactly what I have done. And make no mistake about 
it, if the Democrats were to control the United States Senate, judges 
like Sam Alito and John 
Roberts would never have been confirmed 
to the Supreme Court. And I thank Senator Grassley for his stalwart support of the kind of judges you expect 
me to appoint.
    There's a lot of issues in these campaigns. Jim Nussle talks about making sure this is a fine place to do 
business; he'll deliver. Jim Nussle talks about being fiscally wise with 
your money--he'll deliver.

[[Page 2003]]

    There's a lot of issues--I want to talk about two issues that 
confront the good folks of Iowa and the folks around this country. The 
two big issues in this campaign are taxes and who best to defend the 
United States from attack.
    Let me start with taxes. We believe you can spend your money better 
than the Federal Government can. The Democrats will raise your taxes, 
because they think they can spend your money better than you can.
    Audience members. Noo!
    The President. We believe that when you have more of your own money 
in your pocket to save, invest, or spend, the economy benefits. But you 
didn't send us to Washington just to be philosophers; you sent us to 
act. I was proud to sign the largest tax cuts since Ronald Reagan was 
the President of the United States. We cut taxes on everybody who pays 
income taxes. We doubled the child tax credit. We reduced the marriage 
penalty. We cut taxes on small businesses. We cut taxes on capital gains 
and dividends to encourage investment. And for the sake of our farmers 
and for the sake of our small-business owners, we put the death tax on 
the road to extinction.
    And Grassley, Nussle, and King were strong supporters in 
making sure you had more money. You might remember the debate in 
Washington. Oh, the Democrats said the tax cuts would not create jobs, 
and the Democrats said the tax cuts would not increase wages, and the 
Democrats said that those tax cuts would cause the Federal deficit to 
explode. Well, the facts are in. Reality has now come to be. The tax 
cuts we passed have led to a strong and growing economy. And I want to 
share with you the news that came out this morning. The national 
unemployment rate is at 4.4 percent. We added 92,000 jobs in the month 
of October. Over the last 3 months, Americans added 470,000 jobs. People 
are working in this country, and the wages are going up. Real wages rose 
2.4 percent over the past 12 months. That means an extra $1,300 for the 
typical family of four with two wage earners.
    And let me talk about the deficit. Instead of exploding, we have cut 
the deficit in half, 3 years ahead of schedule. If the Democrats' 
economic predictions--let me say, if their election predictions are as 
good as their economic predictions, we're going to have a fine day on 
November the 7th.
    The interesting thing about campaigns, if somebody is going to raise 
your taxes, they don't want you to know about it. Here are the words of 
the ranking Democrat in the House of Representatives. They asked her about tax cuts, and she said, ``We love 
tax cuts.'' Given her record, she must be a secret admirer. [Laughter] 
The record they have to run on is that every single tax cut we passed 
was opposed by the Democrats. When we made it easier for families with 
children, they voted no. When we made it easier for small businesses, 
they voted no. When we said, ``You shouldn't tax a fellow who owns a 
farm when he's living and then tax him after he dies,'' they voted no. 
Time and time again when they had the opportunity to show love for--
their love for tax cuts, they said no. If that's their definition of 
love, I sure would hate to see what hate looks like.
    Let me explain to you how it works: If we don't make the tax cuts we 
passed permanent or extend them, your taxes go up. And that's why people 
here in Iowa and around the country must take the words of those who 
want to run the Congress very seriously. The person who thinks he will be the head of the Ways and Means 
Committee, the head Democrat, said he couldn't think of one tax cut that 
he would extend. If that were to happen, the child tax credit would go 
from $1,000 a child to $500 a child.
    Audience members. Boo!
    The President. So when you get home and have dinner this evening, 
count the number of children you have at your table--[laughter]--and 
multiple by 500. See, if they take control of the House,

[[Page 2004]]

they're going to raise your taxes by not making the tax cuts we passed 
permanent. So if you've got three children, you can go one, two, three 
times 500, that's a $1,500 tax increase. If you happen to have four 
children--I bet somebody here has got four--[laughter]--there you go--
you count them up, one, two, three--you got six? One, two, three, four, 
five, six. [Laughter] And you multiply those six children by $500 a 
head, you're paying $3,000 more in taxes. That may not seem like a lot 
to those folks in Washington, but it seems like a lot to us. And that's 
why it's important to send Steve King back to the 
United States Congress, to keep your taxes low.
    This election is taking place in an historic time for our country. 
And when our children and grandchildren look back on this period, one 
question will overwhelm all the rest: Did we do everything in our power 
to fight and win the war on terror? I wish I could report to you all 
that there was no war, but there is. I see it every day. Our most 
important job in Washington is to protect you. It's by far the 
fundamental responsibility we have. And we face a brutal enemy that 
wants to kill Americans again. Let me share some thoughts with you about 
the enemy. You can't negotiate with them. You can't try to talk sense 
into them. The best way to protect you is to find them where they are 
and bring them to justice so they won't hurt Americans again.
    I know some ask, ``Well, why would they possibly want to hurt 
America?'' We're full of decent and compassionate people, which we are. 
And the reason why is these folks are ideologues. They're totalitarians. 
They believe in something, and what they believe in is the opposite of 
what we believe in. We believe in the freedom of people to worship as 
they so choose; they don't. We believe in public dissent; they don't. We 
believe that you can criticize your government; they don't believe that. 
They are the opposite of what we stand for. And yet they have ambitions. 
They want to establish a governing organization, a caliphate. They want 
to impose their will. And that's why I have called this struggle the 
ideological struggle of the 21st century.
    And so we're on the offense, and that's part of our strategy. The 
other part of our strategy is do everything we can to protect you here 
at home, and it's a challenge. It's a challenge because we have to be 
right 100 percent of the time to protect Americans, and they only have 
to be right one time.
    And that is why I have worked with Congress to provide our 
professionals with the tools they need to protect you. And let me share 
some of my thinking. You know that there was a wall that prevented our 
intelligence services from sharing information with law enforcement. 
That doesn't make any sense. I know it doesn't make any sense. It 
certainly had no common sense to it. But nevertheless, that's what 
happened. This is a different kind of war, and when we find 
intelligence, in order to protect you, it has to be shared with the 
people on the frontline of law enforcement. And yet we couldn't do it. 
That's why I went to the Congress and asked Congress to pass the PATRIOT 
Act. The PATRIOT Act protects civil liberties. On the other hand, it 
tears down the barrier that prevents people from sharing information. It 
was a vital piece of legislation.
    When it came time to be renewed, the Senate Democrats filibustered 
the bill. They tried to kill it. As a matter of fact, the minority 
leader of the Senate said--bragged, ``We killed 
that bill.'' See, there's a different mindset in Washington, and when 
people are thinking about going to the polls, they've got to understand 
the differences of opinion.
    I felt like if an Al Qaida or an Al Qaida affiliate was making a 
phone call into the United States, we need to know why. If our job is to 
protect you, and this is a different kind of war that requires good, 
sound intelligence, we ought to know why. And yet when that bill came up 
in front

[[Page 2005]]

of the House of Representatives, by far the vast majority of Democrats 
voted against giving our professionals the tools. See, they must not 
think we're at war. Either that--they must think it's okay to respond 
after we're attacked. What we must do is to respond before we're 
attacked, to protect the American people.
    We're picking up people on the battlefield. One day the--came in the 
Oval Office and said, ``Mr. President, we have captured Khalid Sheikh 
Mohammed.'' Our intelligence folks 
believe he was the mastermind of the September the 11th attacks. I told 
the CIA that I think it's important for them, the professionals, to 
figure out what he knows. See, if he ordered the first attack, he might 
know something about another attack. And if our job is to protect you, 
we need to know what these radicals and extremists are thinking, what 
they're planning. And so I put the program in place. It came up for a 
vote; in both bodies, the vast majority of Democrats voted against 
giving the professionals the tools necessary to protect you.
    Audience members. Boo!
    The President. We need to put people in the Congress like Steve 
King. We need people all across the United States 
who are running for the Senate and the House of Representatives who 
understand we're at war and will give us the tools necessary to protect 
you from attack.
    We've got a lot of great people who are on the hunt. It is hard to 
plan and plot when you're on the run. And that's exactly what we're 
doing. We're pressing on the offense. Anytime, anyplace we think there's 
an enemy who will do harm to the American people, we're moving. And you 
just need to know that.
    One of the lessons of September the 11th is this--and it's a lesson 
no President can ever forget--that when we see a threat, we must take 
that threat seriously, before it comes home to hurt us. See, it used to 
be that if a threat were overseas, we could say, ``It's overseas.'' 
September the 11th changed that. It changed it once and for all in this 
new kind of war. I saw a threat in Saddam Hussein; Members of the United States Congress in both 
political parties saw a threat in Saddam Hussein; the United Nations saw 
the threat in Saddam Hussein. I made the right decision to get rid of 
Saddam Hussein, and the world is better off for it.
    We're in a global war against these terrorists. And we must fight 
them where we find them, and right now Iraq is a central front in that 
war. Oh, I've heard them in Washington; you know, they say Iraq is a 
distraction from the war on terror. Well, we just have a difference of 
opinion. I believe Iraq is central to the war on terror. Our troops 
believe Iraq is central to the war on terror. And so does Usama bin 
Laden. Usama bin Laden has said that the 
fight in Iraq is the third world war. He went on to say--and I want you 
to listen to the enemy's words--he said that victory for the terrorists 
in Iraq will mean America's defeat and disgrace forever. That's what he 
said.
    But they think differently in Washington, particularly the 
Democrats. I want you to hear the words of one of the leading 
Democrats in Washington about this war on 
terror; she said, ``The President says that fighting there makes it less 
likely we will have to fight them here.'' I agree; I did say that 
because I believe that. She went on to say, ``The opposite is true. 
Because we are fighting them there, it may become more likely that we 
will have to fight them here.''
    Let me say something to you loud and clear: Iraq is not the reason 
why the terrorists are at war with us. We were not in Iraq when the 
terrorists attacked the World Trade Center in 1993. We were not in Iraq 
when they attacked the Embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. We were not in 
Iraq when they attacked the USS Cole. And we were not in Iraq on 
September the 11th, 2001, when they killed nearly 3,000 of our citizens. 
You do not create terrorists by

[[Page 2006]]

fighting the terrorists. The best way to protect you is to stay on the 
offense and bring these folks to justice, before they hurt the American 
people again.
    Our goal in Iraq is victory. Our goal is to have a country which can 
govern itself, sustain itself, and defend itself and be an ally in the 
war on terror. And it's a tough fight. I know it's a tough fight, and 
you know it's a tough fight. It's a tough fight because we face an enemy 
that kills innocent people in order to achieve their objectives. And 
they're good at propaganda. They understand that the carnage they create 
will end up on our TV screens, and they believe that the American people 
do not have the will to protect ourselves in the long run. That's what 
they believe.
    But they don't understand this administration, and they don't 
understand the American people. We're not going to run from thugs and 
assassins. My message to our commanders on the ground is, you will have 
what it needs to succeed. You can adjust your tactics the way you see 
fit, in order to be able to defeat the enemy. As the enemy changes, we 
change. As the enemy adjusts, we adjust.
    We've got something going for us in Iraq--two things--that the 
American people must understand. We've got a strategy for victory that's 
being implemented by the finest United States military ever on the face 
of the Earth. And around this country--I understand people don't agree 
with my decision on Iraq, but let me say this: Whether you do or not, 
you owe the troops the full support.
    When I went to the Congress to ask for the full support for our 
troops, I could count on Jim Nussle, and I 
could count on Steve King, and I could count on 
Chuck Grassley. You don't have to worry 
about these three people understanding that we owe it to our troops and 
their families to make sure they have everything they need to do the 
jobs I've asked them to do.
    And there's something else that leads me to believe we'll win. I'm 
going to tell you something point-blank: If I didn't think we could win, 
I'd get our troops out. See, I can't look in the eyes of the loved ones 
who have got somebody in harm's way and not believe in my heart of 
hearts that the cause is noble and necessary and that we'll achieve 
victory.
    The Iraqis want success. They're suffering unspeakable violence, yet 
they are firm in their resolve to be a country which can govern itself, 
sustain itself, and defend itself. You know, I was pleased when nearly 
12 million people defied the car bombers and terrorists and voted, but I 
wasn't surprised. I'll tell you why I'm not surprised. I believe that 
one of the great gifts from an Almighty is a desire to be free in 
everybody's soul. I believe in the universality of freedom. It didn't 
surprise me that people, when given a chance, would say, ``We want to 
live in a free society.''
    So our strategy is to help this young democracy defeat the 
extremists by encouraging a political system that unifies the country, 
by helping their economy grow, and by training Iraqis so they take the 
fight. And I believe we'll succeed in having a government of and by and 
for the people in Iraq, unless we leave before the job is done.
    This is an important issue facing the American voters. If you listen 
carefully for the Democrats' plan for success in Iraq, you're not going 
to hear anything. They don't have a plan for success. Iraq is the 
central front in the war to protect you, and yet they don't have a plan 
for victory. You can hear all kinds of voices. You hear them say, ``Pull 
out now.'' Then you hear other candidates say, ``We're going to have a 
fixed date for withdrawal, regardless of whether or not we've 
succeeded.'' You've had a Member of the House of Representatives from 
the Democrat side saying his recommendation is to move our troops to an 
island 5,000 miles away. You've had 19 House Democrats say, ``We're 
going to cut off the funds for our troops.''

[[Page 2007]]

    One of Chuck Grassley's colleagues, 
a Democrat Senator, explained her 
party's position this way: ``We haven't coalesced around a single 
plan,'' she said, ``but we're in general agreement on basic 
principles.'' She's right. The basic principle is, get out before the 
job is done. I'm not saying these people are unpatriotic, I'm saying 
they're wrong.
    On this vital issue, the Democrats have taken a calculated gamble. 
They believe that the only way they can win this election is to 
criticize and not offer a plan. One Democrat 
said recently of the strategy, ``This election is about them,'' talking 
about us. So far, they've refused to tell us how they intend to win in 
Iraq and how they intend to secure this country. But there are 4 days 
left in the election. There's still time. [Laughter]
    If you happen to bump into a Democratic candidate, you might want to 
ask this simple question: What's your plan? If they say they want to 
protect the homeland but opposed the PATRIOT Act, ask them: What's your 
plan? If they say they want to uncover terrorist plots but opposed 
listening in on terrorist conversations, just ask them: What's your 
plan? If they say they want to stop new attacks on our country but 
oppose letting the CIA detain and question the terrorists who might know 
where those plots are, ask them: What is your plan? If they say they 
want to win in the war on terror but call for America to pull out from 
what Al Qaida says is the central front on the war on terror, ask them: 
What is your plan? See, they don't have a plan. They have no plan.
    Harsh criticism is not a plan for victory. Second-guessing is not a 
strategy. If we were to leave Iraq before the job is done, the enemy 
would be emboldened. This is a different kind of war. Unlike other 
wars--you could leave the battlefield before the job was done, and 
nothing would happen here at home. In this war, if we were to leave 
before the job was done, the enemy will follow us here. If we were to 
leave before the job is done, it would strengthen the hands of the 
radicals and extremists. If we were to leave before the job was done, it 
would dash the hopes of millions in the Middle East who want to simply 
live in peace. And if we were to leave before the job was done, it would 
dishonor the sacrifice of the men and women who have worn our uniform. 
The consequences of not fulfilling our strategy for victory would be 
felt for generations.
    See, the enemy has made it clear that they believe they can drive us 
out of the Middle East so they can establish a safe haven from which to 
launch further attacks, just like the safe haven they had in 
Afghanistan. The enemy has made it clear that they would like to topple 
moderate governments to begin to impose their totalitarian ideology. The 
enemy has made it clear that they would like to use energy resources to 
be able to blackmail the West.
    Imagine a Middle East where the radicals and extremists were able to 
use oil to say to America, ``We're going to run your price of oil up 
unless you abandon your allies such as Israel,'' or, ``We're going to 
run your price of oil up unless you just totally withdraw and let us 
be.'' And you couple all that with a country which doesn't like us 
having a nuclear weapon, and 30 years from now, people are going to look 
back and say, ``What happened to them in 2006? How come they couldn't 
see the impending danger? What clouded their vision?''
    My vision is clear. I see the danger. That is why we will support 
our troops. That is why we will fight in Iraq. And that is why we will 
win in Iraq.
    I would like to share one story with you, and then we'll all go 
outside and get some oxygen. [Laughter] Pretty soon. Recently I went 
with the then-sitting Prime Minister of Japan to Elvis's place. [Laughter] I did so for a couple 
reasons: One, I had never been in Elvis's place, thought it would be fun 
to go. [Laughter] And Laura was kind of nudging 
me. [Laughter] Secondly, Prime

[[Page 2008]]

Minister Koizumi wanted to go to Elvis's place because he liked Elvis. 
Thirdly, I want to tell a story, and it's a story about the power of 
liberty.
    The Japanese attacked us in the early forties. People like George 
H.W. Bush, people like your relatives said, 
``I want to join the military to defeat the sworn enemy,'' and a lot of 
people did--just like people are doing today, by the way. A lot of 
people--a lot of--[applause]. And it was a bloody conflict, and 
thousands and thousands of people lost their lives. And yet I'm on Air 
Force One, flying down to Memphis, Tennessee, talking to the Prime 
Minister of the former enemy about peace. 
I'm talking to him about how we can work together to convince the leader 
in North Korea to give up his nuclear weapons 
ambitions. I talked to him about the fact that Iraq has--I mean, Japan 
has 1,000 troops in Iraq. See, he understands what I know. In an 
ideological struggle against totalitarians, you can defeat them with 
liberty. And therefore, when we find young democracies, it's in our 
interest and the interest of our children to help those young 
democracies survive.
    We talked about how to whom much is given, much is required, and 
that is why we will continue to help save lives on the continent of 
Africa by defeating the pandemic of HIV/AIDS. We talked about the need 
to feed the hungry. We talked about our responsibilities to do necessary 
work to keep peace.
    Isn't that interesting, that my dad 
fought the Japanese, and yet his son was able to talk about keeping the 
peace. What happened was, was that Japan adopted a Japanese-style 
democracy. Liberty has got the capacity to change enemies into allies. 
And liberty has got the capacity to change regions of frustration and 
hopelessness to regions of hope. Someday an American President will be 
sitting down with elected leaders from the Middle East talking about 
keeping the peace, and a generation of Americans will be better off for 
it.
    I'm honored you came out and let me share some thoughts with you. My 
thought to you is, go from here and find Republicans, discerning 
Democrats--[laughter]--openminded independents--[laughter]--and get them 
to the polls, and remind them about the stakes. You got a chance to have 
a fantastic Governor in Jim Nussle in the 
statehouse. The people in this State and around the country have an 
opportunity, in their votes, to decide how much money you have in your 
pocket. Make no mistake about it, one of the big issues in this campaign 
is whether or not your taxes are going to go up or whether they're going 
to go low. You know our choice. Our choice is, we're going to keep your 
taxes low.
    And finally, the vote in 2006 will help determine whether or not 
this country will use everything in our power to protect the American 
people from attack and, at the same time, lay the foundation of peace 
for generations to come.
    I'm honored you're here. May God bless you, and may God continue to 
bless the United States.

Note: The President spoke at 4:54 p.m. at Le Mars Community High School. 
In his remarks, he referred to former President Saddam Hussein of Iraq; 
Usama bin Laden, leader of the Al Qaida terrorist organization; and 
Chairman Kim Jong Il of North Korea.

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