[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 31, Number 36 (Monday, September 11, 1995)]
[Pages 1504-1506]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

<R04>
Remarks Prior to a Meeting With Mayors and County Officials and an 
Exchange With Reporters

September 6, 1995

    The President. Good morning. We're about to start a meeting with a 
bipartisan group of mayors and county officials who represent a much 
larger number of their

[[Page 1505]]

counterparts all across America and who are quite concerned about the 
consequences of the proposed budget and the budget cuts to the people 
they represent.
    They have declared September 7th a national day for budget 
awareness, and they're going back to the people they represent to 
explain to them exactly what the consequences will be in terms of either 
human harm or lost services or higher taxes at the local level. They 
will be joining to educate their citizens about the potential damage 
that could be done to our country's future if the particulars of the 
budgets now being debated in the House and Senate are adopted pretty 
much as they have passed, especially in the House.
    Later today I will meet with a group of CEO's who are concerned 
about what these cuts will mean to our educational improvement programs 
and especially to Goals 2000, which has helped us to help States and 
local school districts throughout the country to improve the quality of 
education, to bring more technology into the classroom, to get smaller 
class sizes, to promote education reforms.
    Business executives all across America, especially in a bipartisan 
way, both Republicans and Democrats, have supported Goals 2000 very 
strongly, and so they'll be coming in to discuss this. This is back-to-
school time in our country, and it seems to me that we need to focus on 
the values of education and the values of our community and on what we 
really mean by America's family values.
    It seems to me that we are departing from what has been the 
experience of our country now for many years in terms of having a 
bipartisan commitment to a lot of the things that now some in Congress 
seem more than willing to abandon, including our commitment to 
education. As I said yesterday in California, there is an alternative, a 
way to balance this budget. It's not that we shouldn't balance the 
budget; we should balance the budget. I strongly support it, we ought to 
do that, I believe we're going to do that, but we don't have to do it in 
a Draconian way that hurts the American people.
    If you just take the education issue, for example, the proposed 
budget in Congress by the Republican majority would cut education by $36 
billion. It means more overcrowded classrooms. It means fewer teachers. 
It means fewer computers for the students. It means 45,000 kids cut off 
of Head Start by 1996. It means the elimination of the Goals 2000 
program. It means cutting over a million of our poorest children off 
from extra educational help. It means cutting 23 million students out of 
the safe and drug-free schools program, something that clearly ought to 
be at the forefront of any family values agenda in our country. It means 
taking 50,000 young Americans out of national service, out of the 
AmeriCorps program and other service programs that help them to pay 
their way to college. It means denying millions of students access to 
college educations because of weakening of the Pell grant program and 
the elimination of the direct loan program or the severe limitation of 
it.
    So I would say that what we need to do now at back-to-school time is 
to get educated; all Americans need to be educated about the details of 
the budget debate. The question is not whether we're going to balance 
the budget. I have a plan to balance the budget, but it doesn't cut 
education by $36 billion. There are ways to balance the budget and still 
permit these local officials to do the work that they have to do and 
maintain a partnership. And the ways are fairly clear, and we can 
achieve it.
    I know there are those who say that we ought to just shut the 
Government down and that there is a mandate essentially to dismantle the 
partnership that has existed between our National Government and local 
government and the citizens of this country. I don't agree with that. I 
think we need common sense, common ground. I think we need to appeal to 
our better instincts. And I think it would be a great mistake for the 
people of our country to miss this back-to-school opportunity to become 
educated about what's really at stake here and to be involved in it. And 
I thank these mayors and county officials for showing up here today and 
for the work they're about to do in this next week.

Budget Debate

    Q. Mr. President, what are you going to do about Senator Dole saying 
that this is going to be the autumn of discontent, of no compromises?

[[Page 1506]]

    The President. Well, I am going to stick with my position. Now, it's 
been several months since I offered an----
    Come on in, Mayor Rendell. Sit down. [Laughter]
    Mayor Edward Rendell. Sorry. Blame it on Amtrak, although Amtrak 
usually does a great job. [Laughter] And we shouldn't be cutting its 
funding. But they were late today.
    The Vice President. We know a cameo entrance when we--[Laughter]
    The President. That's right. Actually he arrived at 6:30 this 
morning and was--[Laughter].
    There will be a lot of things said and a lot of maneuvers made, I 
suppose, in the next 90 days. I think the important thing is that we 
balance the budget without destroying our commitment to education, 
without wrecking Medicare and Medicaid and undermining the security and 
stability that our elderly people are entitled to have, and without 
undermining the fabric of the country and the strength of the economy.
    I mean, you know, we even have one economic study claiming that the 
congressional majority's budget would provoke a long-term recession. I 
mean, presumably, we are balancing the budget to help the American 
economy, to take the burden of debt off of our children and our 
grandchildren. That's why I want to do it. I want to do it because I 
think it'll help the economy, not to give the American people a low-
grade infection for 7 years. And so I believe that we need to look at 
the facts. And I'm going to do my best to avoid a lot of this political 
rhetoric and a lot of these charges back and forth.
    And the thing that has impressed me about the mayors and the county 
officials that are here is that they really are going to spend a week 
looking at the facts, trying to make sure that their citizens look at 
the facts. That's what I want the American people to do. But I'm going 
to bend over backwards not to get into a lot of political word wars and 
just keep looking at the facts. And we can----
    Q. Lots of luck. [Laughter]
    The President. Yeah? Thank you. Thank you. [Laughter] Let me just 
say this. I will--I like that so much I will never again criticize 
editorializing by news--[laughter]--that was a wonderful comment. 
[Laughter]
    Q. Mr. President, will you be able to avoid this train wreck, 
however, that you've been talking about, and how can you do that?
    The President. Well, I hope so. But I mean, I think, frankly, that's 
up to Congress. I have been--it's up to the leaders of Congress whether 
we have a train wreck. I have now had my position out there clear and 
crystal clear and in great detail for months. That's what they said they 
wanted me to do, and I did it. I offered them an alternative balanced 
budget. I offered the opportunity of negotiations. I said what I thought 
we had to do, that we shouldn't wreck the fabric of health care for 
seniors. We shouldn't wreck the educational commitments of our country. 
We shouldn't totally overlook the impact of these budget cuts on the 
people who actually had to do the work of America, the mayors, the 
county officials, the Governors of our country, and that we could do 
this.
    And I committed to a balanced budget, and I offered it. So I have 
done all I can do now. The rest of it is largely up to them, but we 
should not have a train wreck. There's no reason for a train wreck. You 
know, we've already done a lot of their work for them. When I became 
President, we had a $290 billion deficit. Now it's down to $160 billion. 
We've cut it nearly in half in 3 years, and we did it without any train 
wrecks. We did it in a more rapid way in the last Congress than had been 
the case for the previous 10 or 12 years, so we can get a lot of this 
work done if we'll just do it. There just needs to be a little less talk 
and a little more action, a little more common sense, a little more 
working together.

Note: The President spoke at 10:15 a.m. in the Cabinet Room at the White 
House. Edward Rendell is mayor of Philadelphia, PA.