[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 30, Number 26 (Monday, July 4, 1994)]
[Pages 1372-1375]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

<R04>
Remarks at a Fundraiser for Senators Jim Sasser and Paul Sarbanes

June 28, 1994

    Thank you very much, Senator Graham and Paul and Christine and Jim 
and Mary. I'm delighted to be here tonight in your behalf with a lot of 
old friends. I thank all the Members of the Senate for coming.
    Senator Graham really is sorry that Paul and Jim didn't bring their 
charts. When he was Governor of Florida, he spent 80 percent of his 
time, when he wasn't out doing those work days on television, with 
charts, showing the people of Florida why they should change whatever it 
was they were doing at the time. [Laughter] And I love charts, too. I 
was made an honorary member of the Senate's ``Wonk Caucus,'' chaired by 
Sarbanes and Sasser. Together we put more people to sleep than all the 
pills designed for that purpose in the history of the country. 
[Laughter]
    I want to say seriously, I appreciate what Bob Graham said. You 
know, I served with I think 150, roughly 150 Governors. Unlike him, I 
never could get a promotion until this job came along. [Laughter] So I 
kept just struggling to hold on to my job. And I was a Governor for 12 
years, over a 14-year period. And I served, literally, with 150 
Governors. And if you asked me to go in a private room and write down 
the five best Governors I served with out of 150, Bob Graham would be on 
that list. And I say that because he had a quality as Governor which I 
have seen Paul and Jim bring to their work in the Senate, and of course 
Bob, and that is that he had this crazy idea when he got elected--really 
a rather radical idea in today's politics--that his job was to 
accomplish something, not to position himself, not to blame his 
opponents, not to divide his State but to actually do something, that he 
got hired to show up for work every day with an agenda which would be 
implemented which would change the lives of the people for the better.
    Now, you may think that it's self-evident, but the longer I stay 
here the more I wonder whether that is the real purpose of politics for 
many people. Senator Mitchell has labored in the Senate, oftentimes to 
try to put together a majority of votes, when the real issue is, is the 
purpose here to get something done, or is the purpose to just sort of 
talk about it, position it, use a lot of rhetoric and spray a lot of 
blame?
    It's interesting because I think, in a State when people get a feel 
for who you are and what you stand for, they will stick with you

[[Page 1373]]

through tough times and sometimes unpopular decisions if they know that 
you hired on to do what you honestly think is right and you're working 
as hard as you can to do it.
    I am really elated at the prospect of Paul Sarbanes becoming the 
chairman of the Senate Banking Committee. And I frankly can't imagine 
what my life would be like if Jim Sasser were not the chairman of the 
Senate Budget Committee. He sort of took all my good lines, but it is 
true, you know, that the other party spent years and years and years 
telling us how terrible the Government was and how terrible Government 
spending was and how terrible the deficits were. And they were able to 
get away with it, even though the evidence was that in every single year 
the Congress, whatever you think of its faults, always actually spent a 
little less money than Republican Presidents asked them to spend. So the 
thing was out of hand.
    Now finally, we got a little partnership. We got in harness. We got 
two budgets passed on time, the budget resolutions, for the first time 
in 17 years. We're going to have 3 years of deficit reduction for the 
first time since Harry Truman was President of the United States, and 
they're scurrying around to say, ``Well, they must have done it in the 
wrong way, and it doesn't count.''
    Well, one of the things I want to say to you today is that when you 
get in a tight and you have difficult decisions to make, whether it is 
in public life, business life, or personal life, there is often no 
painless alternative. Every one of us knows some experience we had as a 
human being, growing up as a child, in our early adulthood, struggling 
to help our family, something where we knew we had to make a decision 
that would determine whether we would go forward, whether we would 
continue to grow as people, whether we'd be able to be faithful to our 
commitments and our values. And we looked around, oftentimes for a long 
time, for the easy way to get that done. But there just was no easy way. 
And if you take the difficult way, it turns out to be better than 
walking away and living with the consequence of that. Now, that's what 
Jim Sasser has done in the Senate. That's what Paul Sarbanes has done in 
the Senate. That's what we are trying to do in this administration.
    I could have written the ads in my head I now see played--I'm seeing 
played in all these races about our terrible budget plan and what a 
terrible tax increase it was. Well, the fact is it raised income taxes 
on 1.2 percent of the American people, including most of the people in 
this room--[laughter]--which says a lot about your devotion to your 
country. It says a lot about your devotion to this country. It lowered 
income taxes on one-sixth of our taxpayers, about 16 million of them, 
with about 50 million Americans all over--around 20 percent of our total 
population and their families, working people with families.
    It made 90 percent of the small businesses in this country eligible 
for a tax cut. A lot of those folks are active members of the NFIB, and 
they may be involved in the Republican Party. And the Democrats gave 
them a chance to get a tax cut if they reinvested more money in their 
business. Most of them may not know it, but it's true. It happened. And 
it happened because of that economic plan.
    That economic plan gave 20 million college students the chance to 
borrow money at lower interest rates with better repayment terms, so 
they could continue their education. It brought interest rates down. It 
got investment going. It started this economy up again. We've now had 
3.4 million new jobs since January, 3.1 million private sector jobs, 
more than 3 times as many private sector jobs as were created in the 
previous 4 years.
    Now, I still believe that the purpose of public life is to move our 
collective ball forward, to advance the interest of our people, to do 
things that will bring us together and to move us forward. And our 
system will not work unless there are people in the Congress of the 
United States willing to make the tough decisions even when it is 
difficult, at least in the short-run, willing to believe that they can 
still convince their constituents in the old-fashioned way, not 
withstanding the blizzard of 30-second ads, not withstanding the palaver 
content of our public discourse, still willing to believe that they can 
go home and lay it on the line and talk to their folks in the country 
crossroads, in the small civic clubs, in the union halls, on the factory 
floors, in the sale barns, and make the sale.

[[Page 1374]]

    And I cannot begin to tell you how much my respect for and 
appreciation for the Members of the Congress that are willing to take 
these kinds of risks and make these kinds of decisions because they know 
we cannot grow as a country at a time of profound change, just like a 
person can't grow, without making tough decisions--my respect has grown 
immeasurably. And Jim and Paul, they don't go around saying, ``Look at 
me; I'm a brave soul.'' They just sort of show up for work every day. 
And they do right by America.
    The other party, they talk all the time about how tough they are on 
crime. And the crime bill won't be like the budget where we got zero 
votes from the other side. We're going to get some Republican votes. And 
we've always had some. But that bill languished in gridlock for over 5 
years, and now we're on the verge of passing it. And it's profoundly 
important. We just decided to put aside gridlock and get after it.
    This bill does something that I don't think a lot of Americans have 
focused on. Since 1965 the violent crime rate's increased sevenfold. Now 
the crime rate is kind of tapering off, but the irrational rate of crime 
among younger Americans, unfortunately, is still going up. But the crime 
rate has gone up 7 times, the violent crime rate, sevenfold since 1965. 
In 1965, America had 500,000 police officers. In 1994, America has 
550,000 police officers. So we spent a fortune expanding our courts, a 
double fortune expanding our prisons, when if we had spent some money 
expanding our police forces, we not only would catch more criminals, we 
would prevent more crimes by having police presence out there in the 
neighborhoods, knowing the kids, knowing the neighbors, understanding 
what can be done. This Congress, with the leadership of these people, is 
going to put 100,000 more police officers on the streets. It's very 
important.
    I could go through issue after issue after issue, but if you look at 
the things that will shape the future for the children of this country, 
whether it's immunizing millions of more kids, putting tens of thousands 
more children in Head Start, securing the kind of future that our 
children need, these two men have been there.
    Now, let's face facts. In addition to the extraordinary nature of 
the public debate today, which so often is completely disconnected with 
what is actually being done and what will affect the lives of our 
people, we know that historically, in the 20th century, there's only 
been one election in which the sitting President's party actually picked 
up seats in both Houses of the Congress at midterm. Why is that? That's 
partly because of what Governor Cuomo says, ``We always campaign in 
poetry, but we have to govern in prose.'' So at midterm people say, 
``Well, the novel wasn't quite as good as the song was.'' [Laughter] 
``The movie was better than the book.'' The hard work sometimes takes 
some time not only to bear fruit but to be felt.
    But I say to you that this year, given the nature of our national 
politics, that would be a mistake. The people say they want change. 
We're giving it to them. We had an historic first year last year. Since 
World War II, our first year was the most productive in partnership 
between the President and Congress of any except President Eisenhower's 
and President Johnson's first years, the first year in 60 years when 
there was no Presidential veto; breaking gridlock--7 years for family 
leave, 7 years for the Brady bill, 5 years on the crime bill, 7 years on 
the worldwide trade agreement. No one thought we could get the assault 
weapons ban passed in the House, even after the Senate passed it.
    This thing is rocking along. But we have got to keep people in the 
Congress who have this old-fashioned notion that the founders were 
right, that this is not a place where people just position themselves 
and throw blame grenades across the ramparts of their opponent's 
defenses. It is a place where people are supposed to show up for work 
every day and do things which will affect the lives of their 
constituents. That is really what is at issue.
    And I implore all of you--I thank you for giving this money. And I 
agree with what Jim said about roots: Everybody has got to have them. 
And they'll need the money for the defense to rebut some of the 
grenades. But I ask you to think more deeply about what this election 
means for the continuation of progress in this country.

[[Page 1375]]

    We're doing our best to face the health care issue. Why? We had 100 
health care professionals in yesterday to the White House from the 
academic medical centers. We had people from Washington State; we had 
people from Senator Exon's State of Nebraska; we had people from all 
over the country. And their spokesperson read an agreed-upon statement 
calling for health care coverage for all Americans. He said a very 
profound thing. He said, ``Everybody wants to keep what's best about 
American medicine and fix what's wrong about our health care system. And 
that's a good thing.'' He said, ``What I don't think people have focused 
on is we're getting to the point where you can't keep what's best unless 
you do fix what's wrong.''
    And he went on to describe the inordinate pressures our great 
medical schools are facing, keeping their patients and paying for their 
care and having enough money to train doctors and continue to make 
progress, because medical schools used to be able to pass along the cost 
of operation to people who would pay it. If they took poor patients, the 
Government didn't reimburse them at the full cost, but they got a little 
extra program from the Government, and they passed the rest of it along 
to wealthy businesses who had well-insured people coming there. And if 
people showed up without any insurance, well, they'd do the same thing.
    But now all the businesses are becoming much more competitive; they 
have to lower the cost of health care, so they're not there. And the 
doctor went on to say, ``They say if we give coverage to everybody, 
well, we'll be rationing health care.'' He said, ``We're rationing 
health care today. We decided 39 million can't have it. Everybody else 
figured out how to solve this problem; all these other nations have. But 
we ration that.''
    Now, the point I want to make is not to give another speech for my 
health care program, the point I want to make is this: This is one of 
those kind of growing pain issues. If there were a simple, easy answer, 
somebody would have done this before. And I would never have been 
elected President. The American people took a chance on me because I 
said I wanted to move beyond the dogmas, the partisan fights, to grow 
the economy, to break gridlock, to make Government work for ordinary 
people. This is one of those growing pain issues. We either will decide 
to do something that is a little difficult today to give ourselves a 
much better future tomorrow, or we will not.
    The chances of America meeting not only this challenge but all the 
challenges--I'm telling you, for the next 10 or 20 years there are going 
to be a lot of very tough questions facing this country. The chances of 
our meeting those challenges in the proper way depend as much as 
anything else on the ability of the people to sort through the high-
temperature rhetoric to the true reality of the spirit, the soul, the 
mind, and the courage and the real character of their candidates. It 
depends, in other words, on whether we will have the capacity to reward 
people like Jim Sasser and Paul Sarbanes for serving well and bravely. I 
hope we will, and I believe we will.
    Thank you, and God bless you.

Note: The President spoke at 8:30 p.m. in the Crystal Ballroom at the 
Sheraton Carlton. In his remarks, he referred to Mary Sasser, wife of 
Senator Sasser, and Christine Sarbanes, wife of Senator Sarbanes.