[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: George W. Bush (2006, Book II)]
[November 2, 2006]
[Pages 1970-1977]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks at a Montana Victory 2006 Rally in Billings, Montana
November 2, 2006

    The President. Thank you for the warm welcome. It's good to be in a 
part of the world where the cowboy hats outnumber the ties. And I'm 
proud to be here in Big Sky country with a fine United States Senator in 
Conrad Burns.
    You might call him a plain-spoken fellow. [Laughter] As a matter of 
fact, I've heard some of them say that he's a 
little rough on the English language. [Laughter] Where have I heard that 
before? [Laughter]
    Conrad, I'm keeping good company. We don't 
need a lot of doublespeak in Washington. I think somebody who speaks 
plainly for the values of Montana is somebody you need to send back as 
your United States Senator.
    Laura sends her love. See, Conrad and I married above ourselves. [Laughter] I'm really 
proud to be here with Phyllis Burns. Phyllis, 
thank you for coming. There's nothing better than having a First Lady 
that you can be proud of. And I'm really proud of my First Lady, and I know you are as well. She knows Phyllis and 
Conrad well, and she joins me in saying: For the good of this State and 
for the good of the United States, send Conrad Burns back to Washington.
    I'm proud to be here with Denny Rehberg. 
He's one of the strong Members of the United States Congress. Given my 
age and Conrad's age, I guess you could say 
he's a young star. [Laughter] But I'm proud to be with Denny and 
Jan. I want to thank the secretary of state, 
Brad Johnson, who is with us. The former 
Governor, Judy Martz, is with us. I want to thank 
all the grassroots activists. Here's what a grassroots activist is: A 
grassroots activist is somebody who is putting up the signs and making 
the phone calls and turning out the vote. I want to thank you in advance 
for what you're going to do in these last days of the campaign: turn out 
the vote and send this man back to Washington.
    And I know you'll join me in sprinting to the finish line. It's 
interesting what's happening in Washington, however. Some of them are 
already measuring the drapes for their new offices. [Laughter] See, they 
think this election is over. They don't understand that the people of 
Montana haven't voted yet.
    Oh, we've been through this before. You might remember 2004. Some of 
them were picking out their new offices in the West Wing. [Laughter] The 
movers never got the

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call. [Laughter] And the same thing is going to happen on November the 
7th. We will win the Senate, and we will win the House.
    And we're going to win these elections because we understand the 
values and priorities of the American people. We're going to win this 
election because our values and our priorities do not shift because of 
the latest public opinion poll. We're going to win because we've got an 
optimistic and hopeful agenda.
    Let me tell you something about Conrad Burns. I've worked with him closely. He understands that when 
the ag economy is strong, the national economy benefits. He spends a lot 
of time talking to me about--saying, ``Let's get those foreign markets 
open for Montana beef.'' We worked together on a good piece of farm 
legislation that's helped Montana's farmers and ranchers. If I were a 
farmer and rancher in this State, I'd want to make sure this man is sent 
back to the United States Senate.
    We got a lot to do. We're going to continue to work to make sure 
this country is less dependent on foreign oil. So we worked together to 
pass good energy legislation that supports conservation, expands 
domestic production, and invests in cutting-edge technologies. You got a 
lot of coal in this State. It's very important for us to be able to use 
your coal in environmentally friendly ways. That's why Conrad 
Burns promotes clean coal technology. And we're 
also investing to bring alternative sources of fuel like ethanol and 
biodiesel to the markets quicker. Here's what I want: I want Montana 
farmers growing crops that fuel our automobiles so I can tell the 
American people, we're less dependent on oil from parts of the world 
where people don't like us.
    And Senator Conrad Burns understands the 
importance of having good judges on the Federal bench. We believe that 
judges ought to strictly interpret the law and not legislate from the 
bench. Confirming Federal judges is one of the most important 
responsibilities of the Senate, and it is one of the most important 
issues at stake in this election.
    When the people of Montana cast the ballot on Tuesday, your vote 
will determine more than who represents you in the Montana--from Montana 
in the Senate. It will also determine what kind of judges sit on Federal 
courts all across the United States.
    At this moment, there are 50 vacancies on the Federal bench, and it 
is vital to maintain a Republican Senate so we can confirm the men and 
women I have nominated to fill those positions. Our record on appointing 
judges is clear. With the support of Senators like Conrad Burns, we have confirmed good judges, solid thinkers to the 
district court, to the circuit courts, and to the Supreme Court.
    America is better off because John Roberts and Sam Alito are now 
serving on the Supreme Court of the United States. The people of Montana 
have got to understand, a vote for a Democrat Senator would be a vote 
against highly qualified judges like these. All you have to do is look 
at the record. When the Democrats held the Senate, they denied a hearing 
to over one-third of my nominees for the Court of Appeals. When they 
lost the majority in 2002, the Democrats didn't change their tactics. 
They filibustered or opposed 19 of my nominees to the Court of Appeals.
    They tried to use the same tactics when Sam Alito's Supreme Court nomination came before the Senate. More 
than half of the Senate Democrats voted to filibuster him. And when he 
finally did get a vote, 40 of the 44 Democrats voted no. If the 
Democrats had their way, this man would not be sitting on the Supreme 
Court.
    John Roberts had to overcome strong 
Democrat opposition in the Senate to make it to the Federal bench. More 
than a decade ago, another President Bush 
nominated John Roberts to serve on the DC Court of Appeals. A Democrat-
controlled Senate denied him even a hearing. When I took office, I 
renominated him to that seat, and

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another Democrat chairman of the Senate Judiciary denied him a hearing. I think you're beginning to see the 
pattern. It was only after the Republicans took the Senate back in 2002 
that John Roberts got his hearing and got his vote and was confirmed for 
the DC Circuit. And then I put him up for the Supreme Court, and we 
confirmed him as Chief Justice last year.
    Now I want you to hear this loud and clear: If the Democrats 
controlled the Senate, John Roberts 
would not be the Chief Justice today. He'd still be waiting for the 
Democrats to give him a hearing for his seat on the Court of Appeals. If 
the people of Montana want good judges, judges who will not legislate 
from the bench, judges like John Roberts and Sam Alito, you vote for Conrad Burns 
for the United States Senate.
    Now, there's a lot of big issues facing the voters around the 
country. The two biggest issues are these: Which party is going to keep 
your taxes low and keep this economy growing; and which party is going 
to take the necessary steps to protect you in this war on terror?
    First, let me talk about taxes. See, we have a philosophy; 
Conrad and Denny and 
I have a philosophy: We believe that you know how to spend your money 
far better than the Federal Government does. That stands in stark 
contrast to the Democrats, who want to take more of your own money 
because they think they can spend it better than you can spend it.
    Audience members. Boo!
    The President. We believe that when you have more money in your 
pocket to save, invest, or spend, the economy benefits. The difference 
between some of them in Washington and those on the stage here is, we 
don't just talk philosophy; we act. And so we passed the largest tax 
cuts since Ronald Reagan was the President. We cut taxes for 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 jobs. And to 
reward family farmers and small-business owners for a lifetime of hard 
work, we put the death tax on the road to extinction.
    We got a record to run on. You might remember the debate in 
Washington. The Democrats predicted the tax cuts would not create jobs; 
they predicted they would not increase wages; and they said the Federal 
deficit would explode. Well, the facts are in. The truth is, the tax 
cuts have led to a growing economy that has added 6.6 million new jobs 
since August of 2003. The unemployment rate in the great State of 
Montana is 3.6 percent. Real wages are on the rise, and we cut the 
deficit in half 3 years ahead of schedule. The tax cuts we passed are 
working.
    The Democrats are going to raise your taxes. They got a record too; 
they just don't want you to know about it. Interestingly enough, the top 
Democrat leader in the House made this 
statement: She said, ``We love tax cuts,'' speaking about the Democrats. 
Well, given her record, she must be a secret admirer. [Laughter]
    She and her party voted against reducing 
the marriage penalty. They voted against cutting taxes on small 
businesses. They voted against lowering taxes for families with 
children. They voted against reducing capital gains and income--
dividends, taxes on dividends and capital gains. They voted against 
getting rid of the death tax. They voted against every single tax cut. 
Time and time again, when the Democrats in Washington had a opportunity 
to show their love for tax cuts, they voted no. If that's their idea of 
love, I sure would hate to see what hate looks like.
    Those House Democrats have got a lot of company in the Senate too. 
We cut taxes in 2003; 46 of 48 Democrats voted against it. During the 
debate over tax cuts, one senior Democrat in the Senate called our 
policies insulting. See, there's a mindset; when you get in that box, I 
want you to remember, there's a mindset amongst the

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Democrats: It's insulting for you to have more of your own money. And 
others said the tax cuts were the wrong prescription for our economy.
    When people in Montana get in that voting booth, you remember what 
those tax cuts have done for our economy. If they take control of the 
Senate and the Congress, they don't have to lift a finger to raise your 
taxes. See, these tax cuts are set to expire. And their leaders have 
said they're going to let it expire. And if those tax cuts expire, it 
means your taxes are going up.
    Let me give you an example. If the child tax credit were to go from 
$1,000 to $500 per child--which is what would happen if these tax cuts 
were not extended or made permanent--those of you with children get to 
pay $500-a-child tax increases. So when you get home this evening, I 
want you to think about the Democrat plan for you. You can go around the 
table and count the number of children that are eating dinner, and you 
can multiple that by $500 a child. So if you've got four children and 
it's 500 a child--the Democrats win, you're paying $2,000 more in taxes. 
That may not seem like a lot to the Democrats in Washington, DC, but 
Conrad and I know it's a lot, and that's why 
we're going to keep your taxes low.
    I want you to not fall prey to one other trick the Democrats like to 
say. They like to say, ``Oh, we're just going to tax the rich; we'll 
only tax people who make a lot of money.'' That's not how it works in 
Washington. Their spending appetite exceeds their capacity to raise 
taxes. You might remember 1992; they went around the country saying, 
``Vote for us; we'll give the middle class a tax cut.'' Well, that 
middle class tax cut turned out to be one of the largest tax increases 
in the history of the United States. When it comes to taxes, the 
Democrats are going to tax whoever they can find, and we're not going to 
let them because we're going to put Conrad Burns back in the United States Senate.
    This election is taking place in an historic time for this country. 
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 that 
there wasn't a war, but there is. There's still an enemy that like--
would like to strike the United States. These people are brutal. They 
have no conscience. They do have an ideology. They believe exactly the 
opposite of what we believe. We believe in basic freedoms: freedom to 
worship; freedom to dissent; freedom to speak. They do not believe in 
those freedoms.
    And yet they have a plan that says they're going to extend their 
vision as far as they can extend it. It's called a caliphate. You cannot 
negotiate with these people. You cannot hope for the best in dealing 
with these people. The best way to protect the American people is to 
find them and bring them to justice before they hurt us again.
    So our strategy is twofold. We're on the offense overseas, and we're 
doing everything we can to protect you here at home. And it's a tough 
task because the enemy only has to be right one time, and we have got to 
be right 100 percent of the time to do our most important job, which is 
to protect the American people.
    And so that is why, after the enemy hit us, I worked to figure out 
ways to give the professionals on the frontline of protecting you the 
tools necessary to do so. There was a wall that prevented our 
intelligence folks from sharing information with law enforcement. In 
this different kind of war, we need to have the best kind of 
intelligence so we can protect you. We need to know what the enemy is 
thinking so that we can do everything we can to stop attacks.
    We designed a piece of legislation that protects our citizens and 
protects our civil liberties. It was called the PATRIOT Act. And this 
act--[applause]--and this vital law has helped break up terror cells 
across the

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United States. It's an important piece of legislation. If you expect the 
President and the professionals in Washington to do our jobs and protect 
you, you must put people in the Congress who will make sure we have the 
tools to do so.
    When it comes to this piece of legislation, the Senate Democrats 
wanted to have it both ways. In the 2000--2001, the Senate passed this 
bill 98 to 1. But when the bill came up for renewal in 2005, the Senate 
Democrats filibustered it. In fact, the Senate leader bragged, ``We killed the PATRIOT Act.'' There's just a 
different mindset in Washington amongst these people.
    The Democrat attempt to filibuster the PATRIOT Act follows an 
approach that might sound familiar. They voted for it, right before they 
voted against it. [Laughter] Well, thanks to Senators like Conrad 
Burns, we overcame their filibuster. And I 
signed this important piece of legislation.
    I want to talk about two other measures, two other steps I've taken 
to make sure that this Government of ours can protect you. If Al Qaida 
is making a phone call into the United States, or an affiliate of Al 
Qaida is making a phone call into the United States, we want to know 
why. We want to know why they're making a call into our country. So when 
we created--I sent this bill up to the House, Denny supported it; 90 percent of the Democrats voted 
against it. It hasn't made it to the Senate floor yet, but rest assured, 
the folks there have a different attitude about what it takes to protect 
you. I felt it was important in this different kind of war to understand 
what the enemy is thinking.
    And so when we captured people off the battlefield, I instructed the 
professionals at the Central Intelligence Agency to interrogate them. We 
picked up a man named Khalid Sheikh 
Mohammed--let me tell you about him. Our intelligence folks thinks he 
was the mastermind of the September the 11th attacks. He's the person 
that organized and ordered the attacks. When we picked him up, I felt it 
was important, in order to protect you, that we found out what he knew. 
See, if he was the mastermind of one attack, he might be masterminding 
another attack, and therefore it made sense--if our most important job 
is to protect you--to find out what he knew.
    This bill came on the Senate floor. Conrad Burns strongly supported. Seventy percent of the Senate 
Democrats voted against it.
    Audience members. Boo!
    The President. On all these vital measures--measures necessary to 
fight and win the war on terror--the Democrats in Washington have 
followed a simple philosophy: Just say no. When it comes to listening on 
to the terrorist--listening to the terrorists, what's the Democrats' 
answer? Just say no. When it comes to detaining terrorists, what's the 
Democrats' answer?
    Audience members. Just say no!
    The President. When it came time to renew the PATRIOT Act, what was 
the Democrats' answer?
    Audience members. Just say no!
    The President. When it comes time to questioning the terrorists, 
what's the Democrats' answer?
    Audience members. Just say no!
    The President. And so when the Democrats ask for your vote on 
November the 7th, what's your answer?
    Audience members. Noo!
    The President. We are on the offense against the enemy wherever we 
can find them. One of the important lessons of September the 11th, in 
this new kind of war, America must take threats seriously before they 
come to the homeland. It's important for the people of this State to 
understand that lesson. In other words, when we see a threat, we just 
can no longer hope that oceans will protect us. We can no longer hope 
for the best--that in order to protect you, we must be on the offense. I 
saw a threat in Saddam Hussein. Members of 
both political parties saw a threat in Saddam Hussein. The United 
Nations saw a

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threat in Saddam Hussein. I made the right decision to take Saddam 
Hussein from power.
    And now Iraq is the central front in the war on terror. See, this is 
a global war. It is being fought on a variety of fronts. And Iraq is now 
the central front in this war. Oh, I hear them in Washington all the 
time saying, Iraq is just a distraction from the war on terror. I don't 
believe it's a distraction. Our troops know it is not a distraction in 
the war on terror. And guess who else doesn't think it's a distraction? 
Usama bin Laden. He has called Iraq the 
third world war. He says that victory for the terrorists in Iraq will 
mean America's defeat and disgrace forever.
    I want you to listen to the words of a Democrat leader in Washington about Iraq, just to give you a sense of 
the difference of opinion, a different mindset: ``The President says 
that fighting them makes--fighting them there makes it less likely we'll 
have to fight them there.'' That's exactly what I said. I said it then; 
I'm going to keep saying it because it's true. ``The opposite is true,'' 
this lady went on to say, ``Because we're fighting them there, it may be 
more likely that we will have to fight them here.'' I want to remind the 
Democrats that you do not create terrorism by fighting terrorists.
    Our troops were not in Iraq when the terrorists first hit the Trade 
Center in 1993. Our troops were not in Iraq when they attacked in Kenya 
and Tanzania and the USS Cole. And our troops were not in Iraq on 
September the 11th, 2001, when they killed nearly 3,000 people. The best 
way to protect you is when we find a terrorist, is to bring them to 
justice. And that's exactly what we're going to continue to do.
    We have a plan for victory in Iraq. I'm not going to leave our 
troops there unless I can tell you we're going to win. And our plan for 
victory is an Iraq that can govern itself, sustain itself, and defend 
itself and serve as an ally in the war on terror. And no question about 
it, the fighting in Iraq is tough. It's tough because we face a brutal 
enemy that is willing to kill innocent men, women, and children in order 
to achieve their objective. And their objective is to shake the will of 
the United States. Their objective is to get enough carnage on the TV 
screens so that we withdraw before the job is done. I've got a message 
to the terrorists: America does not flee in the face of thugs and 
assassins.
    Our military is constantly adjusting to tactics necessary to stay 
ahead of the enemy. When the enemy makes a decision, we move. And our 
troops are performing brilliantly in combat. No matter what your opinion 
is about my decision to go into Iraq, America needs to support the men 
and women who wear our uniform. And I know the people of Montana can 
count on Conrad Burns to make sure our troops 
have all that is necessary to do the jobs I've asked them to do.
    Our troops are brave, and so are the Iraqis. They've been suffering 
unspeakable violence, yet they are dedicated to having a government of 
and by and for the people. It's easy to forget, but nearly 12 million 
people went to the polls to defy car bombers and assassins and said, 
``We want to live in a free society.'' I was pleasantly pleased, but I 
wasn't surprised, because I believe freedom is universal. I believe 
there's an Almighty, and I believe in the heart of every soul is the 
desire to be free.
    So we'll help this Government politically; we'll help them 
economically; and we'll help train their security forces so they can 
take the fight to the enemy. And we'll succeed. The only way we can fail 
is if we leave before the job is done. And that's exactly what the 
Democrats want to do.
    You know, imagine this: We're in the middle of a war on terror, and 
one of the most fundamental fights is in Iraq, and yet the Democrats 
have no plan for victory. They have no idea how to win. Harsh criticism 
is not a plan for victory. [Laughter] Leading Democrats argue we ought 
to pull our troops off the battlefield right now.

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Others suggest we ought to withdraw at a--on a specific date, even 
though the job may not have been finished. Others recommend moving our 
troops to an island some 5,000 miles away. These are serious leaders 
making these kinds of suggestions.
    Nineteen House Democrats introduced legislation that would cut off 
funds for our troops in Iraq. Last week, one of Conrad's colleagues, a Democrat Senator, explained her party's positions this way: ``We haven't 
coalesced around a single plan, but we're in general agreement on the 
basic principles.'' She's right; they're in agreement that we ought to 
leave Iraq before the job is done. I'm not saying these people are 
unpatriotic; I'm saying they're wrong. You can't win a war unless you're 
willing to fight the war.
    Retreat from Iraq before the job is done would embolden the enemy. 
It would make this country more vulnerable to attacks. This is a 
different kind of war. In this war, if we leave early, if we leave 
before the job is done, the enemy will follow us here. If we leave Iraq 
before the job is done, it would enable these extremists and radicals to 
be able to recruit. If we leave before the job is done, it would 
embolden the extremists and it would dishonor the sacrifice of the men 
and women who have worn the uniform of the United States of America.
    The consequences of retreat from Iraq would be felt for generations. 
The enemy has said that they want to drive us out of Iraq because they 
want to establish safe haven, because they believe they can topple 
moderate governments. I want you to envision a world in which extremists 
battle for power, in which moderate governments have been toppled, in 
which these radicals are then capable of using oil to extract blackmail 
from the West.
    Couple all that with a country with a nuclear weapon that can't 
stand America, and a generation of Americans will say, ``What happened 
in 2006? How come the leaders couldn't see the impending dangers? Where 
were they when the warning signs were evident?'' I want you to 
understand, I see the impending danger. That is why we will support our 
troops; that is why we will fight the enemy; and that's why we will win 
in Iraq.
    Victory in Iraq will be a blow to the terrorists and the extremists 
and the radicals. Victory will say to those in the Middle East who long 
for peace, you've got a friend in America. Victory will make Iraq an 
ally in the war on terror. Victory will say to young democracies, we're 
willing to stand with you. You see, we not only got great assets in our 
military; we got a fantastic asset in the power of liberty.
    I want to share a story with you before we--before I unleash you to 
go turn out the vote. [Laughter] It's a story of my recent trip to 
Elvis's place. You might have heard about that. I went down there with 
then-sitting Prime Minister Koizumi of 
Japan.
    People said, ``Well, why did you go to Elvis's place?'' Well, one, I 
had never been down there. And Laura was kind 
of--[laughter]--pushing me. She said, it's about time we took a family 
vacation. [Laughter] Secondly, Prime Minister Koizumi wanted to go to Elvis's place. He's a big believer 
in--he loved Elvis, in other words.
    But I also wanted to tell a story, and it's a story that many of you 
share here, too, because you had a relative, just like I did, that 
fought the Japanese. World War II came about; the Japanese attacked us 
at Pearl Harbor. In Pearl Harbor, we lost fewer people than we did at 
the World Trade Center and in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, and at the 
Pentagon. But it was an attack on the homeland. Thousands of young 
Americans volunteered, just like happening today, by the way.
    One of those volunteers was George H.W. Bush, Navy fighter pilot. And he, like a lot of other 
youngsters, fought hard against the Japanese. Thousands and thousands 
died. It was a bloody war. I find it very interesting that on the plane 
down

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to Elvis's place, I was talking about keeping the peace with the Prime 
Minister of the former enemy. Something 
happened between my dad's being in the Navy and your relatives being in 
the military fighting the Japanese, and in 2006, the President of the 
United States talking about the peace.
    See, we're talking about the fact that Japan had 1,000 troops in 
Iraq. Prime Minister Koizumi understands 
what I know: In this ideological struggle of moderation versus 
extremism, when you find a young democracy, you support that democracy. 
We talked about working to end the scourge of HIV/AIDS on the continent 
of Africa, understanding, to whom much is given, much is required. We 
were talking about the North Korean and how we 
must work together to convince him to give up his nuclear weapons.
    Something happened between World War II and talking about the peace: 
Japan adopted a Japanese-style democracy. The lesson of history is, 
liberty has got the capacity to convert an enemy into an ally. Liberty 
has got the capacity to turn regions of despair into regions of hope. 
Freedom is universal. People desire to be free, and the more people that 
become free, the more likely it is our children will live in peace.
    Someday duly elected leaders from the Middle East will be talking 
about keeping the peace with an American President, and generations of 
Americans will be better off for it. And that's why I say these are 
historic times. In the election--the differences of opinion in this 
election are clear. If you want your taxes to go up, just go ahead and 
vote Democrat. If you want your taxes to stay low so this economy 
continue to grow and create opportunity, elect Conrad Burns to the United States Senate. If you want this country 
to do everything in its power to protect the American people, to stay on 
the offense against an enemy, and at the same time, create the 
conditions for lasting peace, you vote for Conrad Burns for the United 
States Senate. And while you're in there, make sure Denny goes back to 
Washington too.
    So my call for our fellow citizens is to leave the hall, find our 
fellow Republicans, and tell them we have a duty to vote; find 
discerning Democrats, and remind them about the stakes; find discerning 
independents, and tell them what's at stake in this election. Work hard 
between now and election day. Turn out the vote, and Conrad Burns will be reelected for the United States Senate.
    God Bless.

Note: The President spoke at 11:27 a.m. at the MetraPark Arena. In his 
remarks, he referred to Janice Rehberg, wife of Rep. Rehberg; former 
President Saddam Hussein of Iraq; Usama bin Laden, leader of the Al 
Qaida terrorist organization; and Chairman Kim Jong Il of North Korea.