[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 31, Number 23 (Monday, June 12, 1995)]
[Pages 997-1000]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

<R04>
Remarks at a Police Swearing-In Ceremony

June 8, 1995

    Thank you, Attorney General Reno, for your outstanding work. Thank 
you, Mayor Rendell; Senator Biden, Senator Kennedy, Senator Kerry, 
Congressman Foglietta; ladies and gentlemen from all across our country 
who are here today.
    These 263 new police officers are living proof that our crime bill 
will help to make your communities safer and help to make America safer. 
I want to thank the Attorney General for the work she has done to cut 
through the redtape and the bureaucracy to turn the crime bill into a 
reality. The Congress passed it, and I did push hard for it. But in no 
small measure because of the Attorney General and the dedicated people 
at the Justice Department, we have already awarded almost 17,000 new 
police officers to over half the police departments in the United 
States. We are under budget and ahead of schedule.
    And most important, I want to thank all of you who are with us today 
who are dedicating your lives to law enforcement. I know I speak for all 
Americans when I say thank you.
    I want to take a moment, if I might, to speak about another person 
to whom we all want to say thank you today, an American hero who risked 
his life and service to our country. I know all of you and all of our 
fellow citizens join me in rejoicing at the rescue of Captain Scott 
O'Grady late last night. We share the relief of his family, his friends, 
and his loved ones that he is now safe and sound. I can tell you that 
he's now on a United States aircraft carrier, and we're looking forward 
to having him back home on American soil. His bravery in the face of 
great danger and uncertainty is an inspiration to all of us. I can tell 
you, having followed this almost hour by hour for the last 6 days, when 
he gets back here and tells the whole story, it will be an astonishing 
story, indeed. He was well-trained and well-prepared, but he also rose 
to an extraordinary challenge. I also want to say how very proud I am of 
the skill of all of those who took part in the operation to rescue him 
and those who supported them.
    Yesterday evening, when it became clear that Captain O'Grady had 
been located in general and that a rescue operation was possible and we 
began to get regular reports and then it became obvious that he could be 
res- 

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cued but that the group could not get in and out before daylight in 
Bosnia, there was no doubt in the minds of either the commanders or our 
people in uniform that even though that entailed some increased risk, 
they had to go and get him out, that he had survived for 6 days, and 6 
days was long enough. And they did their job.
    And last night, when I talked to Captain O'Grady's parents, after 1 
o'clock in the morning, they and all of his siblings were full of joy 
and pride and gratitude. Let me tell you that they proved once again--
all these people--that our country has the finest Armed Forces in the 
world. And we are very, very proud of them and ecstatically happy today.
    I want to say to all of you here in uniform, you, too, are our 
country's heroes. Each and every one of you will make our streets a 
little safer, at more risk to yourselves. There is nothing more 
effective in the fight against crime than more police officers on the 
beat. This is not a partisan issue. This is an issue on which all 
Americans can be on the solution side.
    We know that we owe it to our children to give them back the freedom 
to walk to school in safety. I have said this before, and I want to say 
it one more time: I intend to keep my promise to the American people to 
put 100,000 more of you on the streets. And I will fight and veto, if 
necessary, any attempt to stop us until there are 100,000 of you out 
there protecting the American people.
    We need more police on the street. We need to get our children and 
our assault weapons off the streets. Our neighborhoods are not a place 
for military assault weapons, violent criminals, or gangs. In recent 
months, we have seen all too clearly that keeping our country safe and 
secure requires new efforts by both our Government and our people.
    The crime bill provides law enforcement the tools they ask for. 
After the tragedy in Oklahoma City and what we endured in the World 
Trade Center, law enforcement needs additional tools to crack down on 
terrorists wherever they may come from, from within or beyond our 
borders.
    I am very pleased that last night the Senate passed my antiterrorism 
legislation. I thank Senator Dole and the Republicans who voted for it. 
I thank Senator Daschle and the Democrats who voted for it. I thank them 
for working together. That's what America expects us to do, after all.
    Now I want to urge the House of Representatives to act as quickly as 
possible. Some there have said maybe they ought to slow this up. Well, I 
assure you that the people who work in terrorism operate on their own 
timetable, and they will not pause for an extended debate in the United 
States Congress. So let this bill be reviewed. Let it be examined. That 
is the job of the legislative body. But let us act quickly. The safety 
and security of our people is not now and must never become a partisan 
issue.
    Now, let me say one other thing. The budget passed in the House of 
Representatives, as distinct from the one passed in the Senate, reduces 
the crime bill by about $5 billion. We do need to cut spending further. 
We can move toward a balanced budget. But I don't think that is a good 
idea.
    The crime bill was carefully balanced. It was worked on for 6 years. 
Senator Biden gave a major portion of his entire life's energy to it. 
And it was calibrated to fight crime in several ways: It had more 
police, more punishment, more prisons, and more prevention; and it had 
all those elements because the law enforcement community told us that we 
need to have those elements. I believe as strongly as I can say that we 
can continue to reduce the deficit. We can balance the budget without 
undermining the crime bill. And that is exactly what we ought to do.
    In the next few months, as we get into this budget debate, and we 
argue about what to cut and where to spend, how soon we need to balance 
the budget, and what other objectives we need to pursue, I want to tell 
you that underneath all this, there will be a huge debate that you will 
see played out in a lot of ways. And it's a debate that I strongly 
believe is a false one. Those who argue that we can cut anything except 
national defense, anything else at all to balance the budget as quickly 
as possible, basically believe that most of the problems of this country 
are cultural in nature, that if people would simply behave themselves 
and take responsibility for their own lives and tend to their families 
and show up for work everyday, we wouldn't have

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the problems we've got, and therefore it is not necessary to make these 
investments.
    Others will argue that the first responsibility of Government is law 
and order, that another responsibility of our Government in this time, 
with this global economy just beating the living daylights out of 
working Americans so that they never get a pay raise, even though they 
work harder, there is a responsibility to help people make more of their 
own lives, to get the education and training they need to compete and 
win in a global economy.
    There are others who will argue that there are people who through no 
fault of their own, because they're very young children or elderly or 
disabled, cannot take care of themselves and deserve some support from 
our Government. And so you'll see this big argument, the cultural side 
and the economic and political side. I personally believe it's a phony 
argument.
    Now, I know from my own family's experience. I had a brother who was 
addicted to drugs and who did time because of that. I know that there is 
no program in the world that can make people do the right thing if 
they're not prepared to take responsibility for themselves. I am well 
aware of that. I know that.
    But I also know that unless we take responsibility collectively for 
doing what we can, we will have people killed on the streets that don't 
need to be killed. We will have young people who lose their futures who 
don't need to lose them. We will have people whose incomes never get 
better because we don't invest in them and give them a chance to 
succeed. We will hurt the elderly and the defenseless because we don't 
recognize our common responsibilities. We have cultural problems and 
economic and political challenges in this country, and we should not 
permit Washington to be divided over what is essentially a phony choice. 
Keep in mind, often when we talk about cultural problems up here, we're 
looking for an excuse not to do our part and assume our responsibility.
    So let's say there are both kinds of challenges in America. Let's 
get everybody on the solution side of dealing with them. And don't you 
let for a minute anybody try to push you into one camp or another. Life 
is all about personal responsibility and our actions together as 
families, communities and as a nation.
    Captain O'Grady triumphed because he was personally responsible, 
personally able, personally courageous. He also got the finest military 
training in the world from the United States of America. You will do 
well as police officers if you are personally dedicated, not to abusing 
your authority but to using it to the maximum extent to protect people 
and to stop crimes from occurring and to punishing people when they do 
commit crimes. But it matters if you're well-trained. It matters if 
you're well-supported. It matters if you're properly funded.
    Do not let America be divided over this debate. We have our 
responsibilities here in Washington. You have your responsibilities on 
the streets and in your own homes. If we all do our job, we can move 
America forward. If we get caught up in a bogus debate about whether our 
problems are cultural or economic and political, we will never get to 
the end of the road. They are both, and we must act that way.
    Let me just say one thing in closing. The crime rate is going down 
all over America. In most major cities the crime rate has dropped 
substantially in the last couple of years. A lot of that is because of 
able and visionary mayors like the mayors that we honor here today, 
because of the reforms that have been undertaken in cities like those 
that I saw when Mayor Rendell and I walked in his neighborhood streets 
in 1992, and as I have done since then in the city of Philadelphia.
    But let's don't forget one thing: The crime rate, especially random 
violence among very young people, is still going up, which means that 
the long-run battle to recover our children and to turn them away from 
mindless violence and to protect those who are not violent from that is 
still hanging in the balance.
    So I honor you today for your contribution. I tell you that, for the 
next 10 years, you may be involved in the most important national 
security battle in the United States. And I ask you when you go home to 
ask every single citizen in your communities to help you win

[[Page 1000]]

this fight. It is truly the fight for America's future.
    Thank you, and God bless you all.

Note: The President spoke at 12:07 p.m. on the South Lawn at the White 
House. In his remarks, he referred to Mayor Edward Rendell of 
Philadelphia, PA.