[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 29, Number 22 (Monday, June 7, 1993)]
[Pages 1016-1017]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

<R04>
Remarks to the Bay View Community in Milwaukee

 June 1, 1993

    The President. Thank you very much. I want to thank Gerry Kleczka 
and everybody else. But I especially want to thank the Langer family for 
bringing me to Bay View. I'm glad to be here. When I was on the way out 
here today the mayor said that he was the mayor of Milwaukee and Bay 
View and that I needed to know that if I was going to come here. So I'm 
glad to be here. I also want to introduce to you Wisconsin's newest 
Member of Congress, Mr. Peter Barca, who just showed up.
    I'm sorry you all are in there behind that fence, and I look forward 
to getting out and shaking hands with you. I just wanted to say one or 
two things before I do. I was just in downtown Milwaukee, speaking with 
several thousand people about the economic plan that I have presented to 
Congress. And there are two or three things that I want to say to you 
about it so you'll all know, because there are a lot of things that have 
not been brought out that I think you're entitled to hear.
    First of all, this plan has over 200 spending cuts. I see all these 
signs saying, ``Cut spending.'' Where were you when we cut them? It has 
a lot of spending cuts in it, over $240 billion.
    Secondly, the tax increases in this plan all go to reduce the 
deficit, and over 74 percent of the money comes from people with incomes 
above $100,000. Families with incomes below $30,000 pay nothing. The 
other thing I want to tell you is, if your income is above $30,000 and 
below $100,000, depending on the size of your family, the energy tax 
that the House approved costs you a dollar a month next year, $7 a month 
the year after that, and for a family of four, $17 a month the year 
after that. All of it goes to reduce the debt.
    I think it's worth doing. It's brought interest rates down to a 20-
year low. We have interest rates at a 20-year low. That means Americans 
are going to refinance their homes, get lower car loans, refinance their 
business loans, get lower consumer loans, lower college loans. It will 
save $100 billion for American businesses and individuals this year if 
we can keep those interest rates down. So I want you to support that.
    The second thing I want to say about it is this: We have put forward 
a program which will open the doors of college education to all 
Americans, just like I promised in the campaign, lower interest loans, 
better repayment terms, and giving tens of thousands of Americans a 
chance to pay their college loans by serving their communities here at 
home, by working to make their communities a better place.
    The next point I want to make is that as soon as this budget is 
over, just like I said in the campaign, we're coming forward with a plan 
to provide health care security, affordable health care, to the working 
families of this country, who have been savaged by high costs, 
insufficient coverage, and the inability to change jobs because somebody 
in their family has been sick. This administration is about jobs, 
incomes, health care, education, and training, and bringing this deficit 
down.
    Now, I want to say one last thing. I heard all this talk in the 
country about how this is a tax program. I just want to make this point. 
It is not just a tax program. It's an economic program. It is over $240 
billion in budget cuts. We're going to reduce the size of the Federal 
Government by 150,000. We are----
    Audience member. Make the cuts first!
    The President. We are cutting first. That's what the budget 
resolution is all about. You can't raise taxes without the budget cuts. 
It's illegal now. That's the whole point. We won't have the tax 
increases without the budget cuts. It's all going to be put in a trust 
fund. And unlike all previous years, if we don't make our reduction 
targets and reduce that debt, the President by law is now required to 
come in and fix it, something previous Presidents did not have to do. We 
have changed the law.
    And what you've got to decide is whether you want more hot air, more 
rhetoric, more politicians up there telling you what you want to hear, 
or somebody who will tell you the truth, turn the country around, and 
get the economy going again. I think that's what you want, and I hope 
you'll support your Mem- 

[[Page 1017]]

bers of Congress and me as we try to do that.
    Let me say one final thing. I think that a lot of you before I came 
here today had no earthly idea that we'd cut all that spending because 
the Congress didn't fight it; they just did it. I think you did not know 
also that families with incomes under $30,000 were being held harmless 
because we had support for that. And you may not know that small 
businesses like Langer's Pharmacy are going to have tax incentives to 
reinvest in their businesses that were not there before if this plan 
passes.
    This is a good plan for the economy. It's a fair plan for the middle 
class. It asks the wealthiest Americans to pay their fair share. And 
unlike previous plans, it's not a lot of hot air. It will do what it's 
supposed to do. I think we've had enough hot air for the last 12 years. 
Let's do something real and strong and move this country forward.
    Thank you, and God bless you all.

Note: The President spoke at 3:45 p.m. at Jack Langer's Pharmacy. In his 
remarks, he referred to Representative Gerald D. Kleczka.