[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 31, Number 27 (Monday, July 10, 1995)]
[Pages 1186-1187]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

<R04>
The President's Radio Address

July 1, 1995

    Good morning. On this Fourth of July weekend, I want to talk about 
one thing that is at the root of all of our independence: going to work. 
It makes you self-sufficient. It makes you and your family truly 
independent.
    Unfortunately, millions of Americans are not independent because 
they are dependent on welfare. The vast majority of these Americans 
dream the same dreams most of us do. They want the same dignity that 
comes from going to work and the pride that comes from doing right by 
their children. They want to be independent.
    The Congress and I are now working hard on welfare reform to give 
them that kind of independence. I look forward to Congress passing and 
my signing into law a bipartisan bill that stands a real chance of 
ending welfare as we know it.
    Though there are very different approaches in the bills now before 
Congress, we have agreed on much of what we need to do. We agree there 
must be time limits on welfare after which all who can, must work. And 
I'm pleased that Congress has now agreed with me that we must enforce 
child support with the toughest possible laws.
    But if we're going to end welfare, we must do more about a crucial 
element that is missing from the current approach of many in Congress. 
Instead of providing the child care people need to get off welfare, some 
in Congress actually are trying to cut child care.
    So today I say to Congress, child care must be the central element 
of our effort to put welfare mothers to work. The bold plan that I 
support, which has been proposed by Senators Daschle, Breaux, and 
Mikulski, provides that kind of child care. Our bill presents a genuine 
opportunity for bipartisan agreement, and I hope we take advantage of it 
soon. After all, we should want the same thing for people on welfare we 
want for all Americans, the chance to build strong families and to make 
the most of their own lives.
    The very name of the welfare program says it all: Aid to Families 
With Dependent Children. Children by nature are dependent. The point of 
welfare reform must not be to punish children but to help their families 
become independent. To be independent with dependent children, a person 
must be able to succeed both as a worker and a parent. That's what most 
Americans have to do these days. That's a big reason I worked so hard 
back in 1993 to cut taxes for working families with children whose 
incomes were under $28,000, and now they're about $1,000 lower than they 
used to be.
    And that's why I'm working hard to include in my middle class bill 
of rights a tax credit of $500 per child for all the children under 13 
in middle class families. And that's why it is pure fantasy to believe 
we can put a welfare mother to work unless we provide child care for her 
children. We don't need more latchkey kids. We certainly don't need more 
neglected children. And we don't want more welfare mothers staying at 
home, living on welfare, just because they can't find child care.
    We do want people to be good workers and good parents. And if we 
want parents on welfare to go to work, we have to make

[[Page 1187]]

sure they can find good, clean, safe places for their children to go 
during the day.
    Many in Congress want to cut child care just to save money. Well, I 
want to cut spending, and I want to save money too. But we have to do it 
the smart way. Cutting child care will make it harder for parents to get 
off and stay off welfare. It will, therefore, cost us far more down the 
road than it will ever save in the near term.
    Some people in Congress want to take even more extreme steps that 
will hurt, not strengthen, families. They don't want welfare reform 
unless it cuts off all help to children whose mothers are poor, young, 
and unmarried. I want to discourage teen pregnancy. We have to do that, 
but not by hurting innocent babies. We should require teen mothers to 
live at home, stay in school, and turn their lives around so they and 
their children stay off welfare for good.
    Our administration has already put 29 States on the road to ending 
welfare as we know it with waivers to free them up from cumbersome 
Federal rules and regulations when they have good ideas to reform 
welfare.
    Today I'm pleased to announce that Virginia will receive the newest 
waiver. Virginia's plan requires people on welfare to go to work. Like 
the States of Oregon, Missouri, and a few others, it also allows money 
now spent on welfare and food stamps to go to employers to supplement 
wages to help create jobs in the private sector. And it helps people get 
child care. It's a good plan, and I'm proud to be supporting it.
    Several months ago, I called on Congress to send me a welfare reform 
bill by July the 4th, Independence Day. I'm disappointed they haven't 
been able to meet that deadline, but I am hopeful that we'll move 
forward on a bipartisan welfare reform bill. I don't want filibusters. I 
don't want vetoes. I don't want gridlock. But I do want real welfare 
reform that requires work, demands responsibility, and provides the 
child care people need to move off welfare and to be successful as 
workers and parents.
    It's time to get to work so we can give millions of other Americans 
a new Independence Day.
    Thanks for listening.

Note: The address was recorded at 12:38 p.m. on June 30 at the Sheraton 
Chicago in Chicago, IL, for broadcast at 10:06 a.m. on July 1.