[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 32, Number 12 (Monday, March 25, 1996)]
[Pages 535-537]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

<R04>
Remarks to the Independent Insurance Agents of America Legislative 
Conference and an Exchange With Reporters

March 21, 1996

    The President. Thank you very much. First let me welcome the 
Independent Insurance Agents of America to the White House and thank 
President George Shaffer for the fine statement that he made.
    I want to say to the press here assembled that this is a big 
announcement out in America. Where Americans live, there are 300,000 
agents and their employees in independent insurance agencies all across 
this country, people who know and serve their friends and neighbors and 
are active in their community and are trusted for their judgment on many 
issues, not the least of which is health care. The fact that they have 
decided to come in here today and express their support for the 
Kassebaum-Kennedy bill is a remarkable act of statesmanship and good 
citizenship, and it will reverberate in every Main Street in the United 
States of America.
    It is a true bipartisan, almost a nonpartisan effort to make an 
honest endeavor to bring health care to millions of Americans who've 
been shut out of the market. These people know the folks who lose their 
jobs and can't get health insurance. These people see across a small 
desk in a modest room the people who can't get health insurance because 
someone in their family has a crippling condition or has once had a 
serious illness, even if they have overcome it. The Independent 
Insurance Agents are therefore, in some ways, about the most valuable 
partner America could have in shaping health care reform.
    I want to say again how grateful I am to President Shaffer and all 
the other members here, the incoming president, Ron Smith, my longtime 
friend from Arkansas George Frazier, and the people who work for the 
organization here in Washington. They've all done a wonderful job, and I 
want to thank them for this.
    As the Vice President said, this bill could help as many as 24 
million Americans. That's a lot of folks out there, working people, 
people that are working hard to make this country go, to keep our 
economy strong and to keep our communities strong, and most important of 
all to raise their children and keep their families strong. In this new, 
more dynamic economy where we're creating more jobs than we have in a 
very long time, but where people are also feeling the sting of change, 
it is more important than ever before to pass this legislation.
    From the beginning, this proposal has had enormous bipartisan 
support. Besides the strong bipartisan support in the Senate, which 
includes 30 Democratic and 23 Republican cosponsors, this bill has been 
en- 

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dorsed by groups representing doctors, consumer groups, businesses, 
manufacturing groups, and citizens. To have the support of the 
Independent Insurance Agents of America, and the fact that the bill has 
passed the Senate Committee on Labor and Human Resources unanimously, 
seems to me to virtually guarantee that before long, if Congress will 
proceed in good faith, this bill will be the law of the land, and 
millions and millions of American families will be better off and our 
whole country will be stronger because of it.
    I am very pleased that the Senate leadership has committed to move 
this bill expeditiously when the lawmakers return from recess. And I 
urge the Congress to pass it.
    Now, let me also say that I hope this will become a model for what 
we can do on other legislation. I am far from giving up on passing a 
balanced budget plan, on passing welfare reform, on passing strong 
antiterrorism legislation. If we can do this, we can do those other 
things as well. These are important national priorities, and we ought to 
be dealing with them this year. We shouldn't be deterred by the fact 
that it's an election year.
    Let me just make one other comment about an issue that has come up 
in the last couple of days that I think I need to make a statement 
about, and that is the proposal to repeal the assault weapons ban. That 
assault weapons ban was adopted after a very heated debate and a lot of 
controversy and a lot of pain, in 1994. There were, clearly, Members of 
Congress who lost their seats because they voted to ban assault weapons 
and because they voted for the Brady bill.
    The ban covers 19 deadly kinds of assault weapons and their copies. 
It didn't take any guns away from anybody; it expressly protected 
hundreds of hunting and sporting weapons for the first time in Federal 
law. It was passed because America's law enforcement officials asked for 
it, every single law enforcement organization in the country.
    It was passed to try to help save the lives of law enforcement 
officials who have to go out on the streets and sometimes face gangs 
that are better armed than they are. It was passed to save the lives of 
innocent people who often get caught in crossfires. And I believe it 
would be deeply wrong for Congress to repeal this assault weapons ban 
and in essence, to take the side of the Washington gun lobby over the 
interests of the law enforcement people of this country and the law-
abiding citizens of this country. And I very much hope that it will not 
pass. It will endanger law enforcement officials if it does pass. It 
will cost more citizens their lives if it does pass. The only people 
that will be benefited are people who engage in illegal activity.
    I believe Congress should reject this extreme step. We ought to keep 
the assault weapons ban. And I would like to call upon the Republican 
leadership in the Congress to reconsider their decision to bring this to 
a vote. It doesn't need to be voted on in the House or the Senate, and 
if it is passed, I will veto it. They know I intend to do that. There is 
no point in distracting the American people or the Congress from the 
important work before us.
    Let me close by saying that this is what we ought to be doing more 
of, what we're doing here and what the Senate has done with the 
Kassebaum-Kennedy bill. Again, I say that it's--I rarely make 
announcements in this room or in this White House with people that are 
so reflective of Main Street America on an issue that would have such a 
profound impact on ordinary Americans as this Kassebaum-Kennedy bill.
    President Shaffer, and to all the rest of you, I thank you. You have 
done a good thing for your country today. Thank you very much.
    Q. Mr. President, how much do you think Presidential politics is 
going to enter into all these votes?
    The President. I hope not very much at all. It's a long time 'til 
election; we don't need a work stoppage here. We need to just keep on 
working. We'll have several months for elections.

Note: The President spoke at 10:38 a.m. in the Roosevelt Room at the 
White House. In his remarks, he referred to George Frazier, past 
president, Independent Insurance Agents of America.

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