[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 32, Number 38 (Monday, September 23, 1996)]
[Pages 1806-1810]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

<R04>
Remarks in Centralia, Washington

September 19, 1996

    The President. Thank you.
    Audience members. Four more years! Four more years! Four more years!
    The President. Thank you so much. Thank you for waiting for us. 
Thank you for

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making us feel so very welcome. What a beautiful, beautiful community 
this is. I love this street. I love these stores. I love all your signs. 
We do feel welcome to your village, and we're glad you're here with us 
to build that bridge to the 21st century. Thank you.
    I want to say a special word of thanks to the mayor and the other 
local officials. Thank you to the two bands that played so well for us. 
Thank you very, very much. Thank you, John Simpson, for your welcome and 
for the power of your life's example. Now when I leave town I will not 
have taken any money off you in a poker game, but I hope that won't 
weaken your support for the Clinton-Gore ticket. We're proud of you. 
Thank you, sir. And thank you, Gary Locke, not only for running for 
Governor but for the good, positive, constructive, progressive, future-
oriented campaign that you ran and that you will run.
    Ladies and gentlemen, the partnership between the National 
Government and the States is critical and will be more critical in the 
next few years. We're reforming the welfare laws, for example, and 
giving the States the power to design programs for able-bodied people on 
welfare to have to work in return for support for their children. You 
want people who care about those kids, who want to bring those folks 
into the mainstream, who have both compassion as well as a strong work 
ethic. I think you know who should be the next Governor of the State of 
Washington, Gary Locke.
    Let me also say a special word of thanks to the Vice President for 
what he said about the fight we had last year with the leaders of 
Congress--with Speaker Gingrich and Senator Dole and those who were 
committed to their Contract with America. I remember well in 1994 when 
they went across the country and they won the Congress back. They won as 
many seats in the State of Washington, including this one, as in any 
State in the country. And they said a few clear things. They said, ``We 
have this Contract with America, and it will move America forward.'' 
They neglected to say they wanted to cut education, they wanted to 
weaken the environment, they wanted to raise taxes on the poorest 
working people, they wanted to permit people to raid their workers' 
pension funds, they wanted to abolish AmeriCorps, abolish our student 
loan program, abolish the safe and drug-free schools program. They 
wanted to turn Medicare into a two-tier system. They wanted to stop 
Medicaid's guarantee of health care to poor children, to pregnant women, 
to families with people with disabilities, to the elderly in our nursing 
homes. They left out all that fine print in 1994.
    But when they took office we saw what they wanted. They also 
attacked us for two things. They said the economic program which passed 
in 1993 raised the taxes of ordinary Americans, their income taxes. It 
wasn't true. They said that the crime bill of 1994 was going to take 
guns away from the hunters and sportsmen of Washington. And guess what, 
that wasn't true.
    Well, now you've had 2 years to see them and to see the results of 
our efforts. And what I want to say to you is the country is going to be 
looking at Washington State because the voters of Washington State, by 
the narrowest of margins in five congressional districts, bought on to 
Mr. Gingrich's and Mr. Dole's ``Contract With America.'' And now you 
have seen the results. First of all, what they told you about our 
program was wrong. We have 10\1/2\ million more jobs; they were wrong. 
The deficit has gone down, not up; they were wrong.
    You've seen our crime bill. The crime rate has gone down for 4 years 
in a row. We're putting 100,000 police on the street. Not a single 
Washington hunter has lost a weapon in 2 years. They did not tell the 
rural people of Washington the truth. But 60,000 felons, fugitives, and 
stalkers couldn't get guns because of the Brady bill. We were right, and 
they were wrong.
    And in pursuit of their contract they shut the Government down when 
we pleaded with them to balance the budget in a humane way. We said, 
``We're for balancing the budget. After all, we brought the deficit 
down, and all of you voted against us. But we don't want to destroy 
Medicare or Medicaid or cut education or turn our backs on our 
commitment to the environment. We can't raise taxes on the poorest 
working people in America. We can't allow a raid on our pension funds. 
We went through that in the 1980's, and I saw too many people have their 
retirement taken away. Let's just balance the

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budget. We've got the agreed-upon savings.'' And they said no; they shut 
the Government down.
    Now, folks, right here in Centralia you're going to be looked to all 
over America. People are going to ask, did the people of Centralia, 
Washington, really vote for that contract on America? Did they really 
vote to stop the commitment to put 100,000 police on the street? Did 
they really vote to end the safe and drug-free school program? Did they 
really vote to deprive these fine young people here of the opportunity 
to earn their way through college by serving their communities in the 
AmeriCorps program?
    Audience members. No-o-o!
    The President. Did they really vote to end our new college loan 
program, which is lower cost and gives children better repayment options 
so that no one need fear going to school because of the debt? They're 
going to be looking to you for answers, and I hope your answer will be, 
``We'd like for Brian Baird to be our Congressman.'' And I'd like for 
him to come up here and be seen.

[At this point, Mr. Baird, candidate for the 3d congressional district, 
made brief remarks.]

    The President. Thank you. Folks, I want you just to take a couple of 
minutes. You waited a long time here today, and I want to talk to you 
about the next 4 years. This election will see the American people elect 
the last President of the 20th century and the first President of the 
21st century. At a time of enormous change in how we work and live and 
relate to the rest of the world, just think of it: Here we are in a 
beautiful, traditional American town, a great Main Street here, in a 
State where one in five jobs is dependent upon our ability to trade with 
people all around the world. This is a new age.
    Let me tell you, to the young people here--there are young people in 
this audience who will soon be doing jobs that have not been invented 
yet. Many of them will do jobs that have not been imagined yet. You will 
see miraculous medical discoveries. I'm so glad we have this section 
here for our friends who have come in wheelchairs. Do you know that just 
a few weeks ago, for the first time ever, laboratory animals that had 
their spines severed had movement in their lower limbs because of nerve 
transplants. There are going to be things happening in the next 10 or 20 
or 30 years that we never could have imagined. And we have to be in the 
forefront. We recently agreed to undertake with IBM--the United States 
and IBM--to build a supercomputer--listen to this--a supercomputer that 
will do more calculations in a single second than you can go home and do 
on your hand-held calculator in 30,000 years.
    The point I'm trying to make is that we are going to see Americans 
with more chances to live out their dreams and live up to their God-
given abilities than at any point in the history of our great country if 
we make the right decisions, if we build the right sort of bridge to the 
21st century, if we say we want opportunity for all, responsible 
citizenship from all, and everybody has a place in our community. We 
want everybody, everybody, without regard to where they start in life, 
without regard to their race or their background, if you will work hard 
and be a good citizen, you're a part of our country and we want to walk 
over that bridge into the next century with you. That's what we have to 
do.
    I want us to build a bridge to the 21st century with the best 
education system in the world. I want every classroom and library in 
America, from the smallest rural schools to the most remote mountain 
villages to the poorest inner-city schools to be hooked up to the 
information superhighway by the year 2000, to the Internet, to the World 
Wide Web so that we can say--think of this, here in Centralia, think of 
this--we will be able to say by the year 2000 for the first time in our 
history, every child in America, no matter where he or she goes to 
school, will have access to the same information in the same time at the 
same level of quality as any other child in the richest school districts 
in the country, everybody has access to it immediately. Will you help me 
build that bridge to the 21st century?
    Audience members. Yes!
    The President. I want us to build a bridge to the 21st century where 
every young person, every middle-aged person and every

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older person who needs it can go to college and know that it can be paid 
for in a country with opportunity for all, and here's how I want to do 
it.
    Number one, I want every family to be able to take out an IRA and 
save in it and then withdraw from it to pay for college costs without 
having any taxes to pay on it. Number two, number two, I want to make 2 
years of community college just as universal in 4 years as a high school 
diploma is today. And it's easy to do.

Here's how we're going to do it. We're going to say you can deduct, dollar 
for dollar from your tax bill, the cost of the tuition at a typical 
community college in America for up to 2 years. We will pay the bill by 
lowering your taxes for how much your tuition costs if you will just go and 
be a good citizen, learn a lot, improve your skills and make America 
stronger. We can revolutionize America if we do it.

    Number three, I propose to give a tax deduction of up to $10,000 a 
year for the costs of all college tuition anywhere, undergraduate, 
graduate, you name it, for old, middle-aged, or the very youngest 
people. We need to educate America, and we can pay for this and still 
balance the budget. That's what we ought to do. Will you help me build 
that bridge to the 21st century? [Applause]
    I want to build a bridge to the 21st century where we keep growing 
jobs, 10\1/2\ million jobs in the last 4 years, record numbers of new 
small businesses, record exports. We have to keep doing that. We can do 
it if we balance the budget and continue to invest in education, 
technology, research, the environment, protecting Medicare and Medicaid. 
We can grow the economy. We can have a tax cut targeted to education and 
childrearing and medical expenses and buying that first home and not 
taxing people when they sell their homes on the gain they get from the 
sale and still balance the budget. We can do that. Will you help me do 
that and build that bridge to the 21st century? [Applause]
    I want to finish the job of making our streets safer. Four years of 
declining crime, 1 million fewer crime victims in America--I want to 
keep going down. That means we've got to keep putting police on the 
streets of communities like this one. We've got to keep the safe and 
drug-free schools program and tell those in Congress who want to get rid 
of it and our support for the D.A.R.E. program and other things like it, 
``We can't turn around. We've got to intensify our efforts here.''
    We've got to toughen our efforts to try to make our streets safer, 
but we also have to do things that give our young people things to say 
yes to, that give them hope: leaving our schools open later, giving them 
opportunities to work in the summer, improving the educational 
opportunities of kids that are in trouble, supporting AmeriCorps and 
giving more young people the chance to work their way through college 
and serve their communities and be good role models. Will you help me 
build that bridge to the 21st century? [Applause]
    We have to build a bridge to the 21st century that makes more 
communities stronger, like I see here today, starting with strong 
families. I am very proud of the fact that the first bill I signed was 
the family and medical leave law. And I might add, it really is a 
classic example of the differences between my opponent and his party and 
me. I signed it; he led the fight against it. I brag on it, he says we 
still made a mistake to sign it. Now, you be the judge.
    Here's what the family and medical leave law does. It says quite 
simply, if you work in a business with 50 or more employees and you need 
a little time off from work because you or your wife is about to have a 
child--your spouse is about to have a child or because your child is 
sick or because you have a sick parent, you can take that time off and 
not lose your job, because we know you need to succeed at home and at 
work. That's what the law says.
    Now, in 3\1/2\ years, 12 million times, American families have taken 
advantage of that law. Has it hurt us? No. We've got 10\1/2\ million 
more jobs. We've got record new businesses. We've got the healthiest 
small businesses climate in history. We made every small business 
eligible for a tax cut, if they invest more in their own business or if 
they invest in

health insurance. We made it easier for them to take out retirement plans, 
but we said, look, people have to be able to succeed at raising their 
children and at work. That's our objective as Americans. I want

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more of that kind of policy for America. That's the difference between us 
and them. We know it takes a village. We know workers should also be good 
parents. We know raising children is the most important job of any society, 
and we want you to support our approach to that. Will you help us build 
that bridge to the 21st century? [Applause]

    And finally, let me say, to echo what the Vice President said, we've 
got a cleaner environment than we had 4 years ago. The air is cleaner, 
drinking water standards have been raised, safety standards for food 
have been raised with the support, I might add, of farmers in Washington 
and others throughout the country.
    We have cleaned up more toxic waste dumps in 3 years than the 
previous administrations did in 12. We have saved our national parks 
from an ill-advised scheme to sell some of them off. Just yesterday, I 
announced 1.7 million acres of land being established as a national 
monument in southern Utah, the Grand Staircase-Escalante Monument.
    We just completed a plan to restore the salmon in the Columbia 
River. We just completed an agreement to protect the old growth forest 
here, and timber jobs have increased, not decreased, in the last 4 
years. Those who said that you couldn't protect the environment and 
maintain the strength of rural communities were wrong.
    But finally, let me say, we still have some problems. This is an 
amazing thing. There are 10 million children living within 4 miles of a 
toxic waste dump. If you will give us 4 more years, we're going to clean 
up the two-thirds of those dumps that are the worst so we can say of all 
of our children, our kids are growing up next to parks, not poison. We 
want to preserve our environment and grow our economy. That's the way to 
build a bridge to the 21st century. Will you help us build that bridge? 
[Applause]
    Will you work for us for 6 weeks and 5 days and talk to your friends 
and neighbors and make this a campaign of ideas, not name-calling and 
insults? Will you ask people to think about what they want America to 
look like when their children are their age and to vote for that kind of 
America? Let's take advantage of this season. Let's create a sense of 
community all over this country that our elections make a difference, 
our votes make a difference, and this time more than any election in a 
very long time, we are voting for the shape of the future and voting for 
our children.
    I ask you, as we look at these children--there are some children 
back here that have ``Centralia class of 2000.'' I want them to come up 
on this stage when I finish. I want you to look at them, and I want you 
to think about them every day between now and the election and remember 
that's what this is all about. We need your help.
    Thank you for being here. God bless you. Stay with us. Thank you.

Note: The President spoke at 2:50 p.m. at the corner of Tower St. and 
Pine St. in downtown Centralia. In his remarks, he referred to Mayor 
Peter Corwin of Centralia, and resident John Simpson who introduced the 
President.