[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 32, Number 38 (Monday, September 23, 1996)]
[Pages 1816-1819]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

<R04>
Remarks in Vancouver, Washington

September 19, 1996

    The President. Thank you. Hello, Vancouver. Thank you for being here 
in such wonderful numbers. Thank you for waiting for us. We have had a 
wonderful, wonderful trip all the way from Tacoma; we started this 
morning in the rain. There were about 25,000 people there, and then the 
Sun came out, and then the Sun went in, and the Moon came out--
[laughter]--and we came to beautiful Vancouver. Thank you. Bless you.
    Thank you, Gary Locke, for being with us and good luck--we need you. 
I hope you'll help him become the next Governor of the State of 
Washington. And thank you, Brian Baird, for taking on this brave fight 
for Congress. Congratulations on your great vote on Tuesday. Stick with 
him, folks. This young man can make it, and he'll represent you well.
    Hillary and Tipper and Al and I, we've had a wonderful visit in 
Washington State. It's great to be back. I was just up the road, 
Woodland, where I came when the flood came, you know, and I saw some of 
the people I met there. I was so moved by the way they responded to the 
flood, by what they did, that I wrote about them in the book I put out 
this year as part of telling the American people what I wanted to do for 
the next 4 years.
    And I have to tell you--when I go around to these communities in 
your wonderful State, I see all of the children coming out, full of hope 
for the future, I see all of you come out, determined to play a 
constructive role in this election, it is so different from the way it 
was beginning to be 4 years ago when we had a stagnant economy, rising 
crime, a more divided country, and increasing cynicism. Today, we're on 
the right track for the 21st century, and we need to stay right on it.
    My fellow Americans, this election in 6 weeks and 5 days is an 
election for the last President of the 20th century and the first 
President of the 21st century. But by far more important, it's an 
election that will shape what America will be like when our children are 
our age.
    The questions I try to ask and answer every day are: First, what do 
we have to do to keep the American dream alive for every American, every 
boy and girl willing to work for it? Second, what do we have to do to 
keep our country coming together? We're becoming increasingly diverse 
and different. How can we come together in mutual respect to build the 
bonds of strong communities to make a strong nation? How can we beat the 
odds and not become like so many other countries that are being torn 
apart by their differences, their religious, their racial, their ethnic, 
their tribal differences? That's not America. We need to be a strong 
community, just like this is a strong community. And fi- 

[[Page 1817]]

nally, how can we keep on leading the world for peace and freedom and 
prosperity? We've worked on that for 4 years, with a simple strategy: 
opportunity for every American, responsibility from every American, and 
a real effort to build our community together.
    Now I tell you, yes, we're better off than we were 4 years ago, and 
it wasn't an accident. And yes, there are big differences between our 
opponents, the nominee for President, Senator Dole, Mr. Gingrich, and 
all of them--we fought over many different issues that we honestly 
disagreed on. They said if our budget plan passed, it would bring on a 
recession and increase the deficit; that's what they said.
    Well, 4 years later we've reduced the deficit 4 years in a row for 
the first time since the 1840's, we have 10\1/2\ million new jobs; our 
auto industry is number one; we have record exports, record small 
businesses. I think we were right. We're moving in the right direction. 
We'll balance the budget if you'll give us 4 more years.
    There's been a lot of talk--a lot of talk about crime. Well, folks, 
you never heard a politician who was for crime, did you? I never heard a 
politician give a speech saying, ``I really wish we had more crime.'' Of 
course, we're all against crime, but what I found when I came to 
Washington is, we'd had 6 long years of talks, and nothing but hot air 
and nothing to show for it.
    We passed a crime bill that our opponents led the opposition to, to 
put 100,000 police on the street, to have a ``three strikes and you're 
out'' law, to have much tougher punishment, to ban 19 kinds of assault 
weapons, to protect hunting and sporting weapons. We passed the Brady 
bill over their opposition. What's happened? Four years in a row, we're 
halfway home on 100,000 police; we stopped them when they tried to 
repeal the 100,000 police; we took the assault weapons off the street, 
60,000 felons, fugitives, and stalkers didn't get handguns, but all the 
Washington hunters still have their hunting rifles. I believe we were 
right, and they were wrong, and we need to keep on going in that 
direction.
    We've moved almost 2 million people off the welfare rolls, increased 
child support collections by 40 percent. There are one million fewer 
crime victims in America today. We are moving in the right direction. As 
the Vice President said, while growing the economy we've worked hard to 
make the air cleaner, the drinking water and the food safer, to protect 
our natural resources and to expand them.
    Folks, we're moving in the right direction. And I want to ask you to 
help me build a bridge to the 21st century where we keep cleaning up the 
environment, where we keep bringing crime down. If we bring it down 8 
years in a row instead of 4, it'll be about low enough so we'll actually 
be surprised when we see a crime on the evening news at night and our 
children will be safe on the streets.
    I want you to help me to keep building strong families. One of the 
most interesting issues of this election is that the first bill I signed 
when I became President was a bill, again, which was opposed by my 
opponent and Speaker Gingrich. They led the opposition to it, the family 
and medical leave law. They said it was bad for business, bad for 
business to say you could have a little time off when your baby is born, 
or your parent's sick, without losing your job. We did it. Twelve 
million families have taken advantage of it, and 10\1/2\ million jobs 
later, we know it was good for business. America is stronger when we can 
raise our children and work and succeed at the same time.
    So I want you to help me do better. I'd like to see people be able 
to take a little time off to go to their children's regular meetings 
with their teachers, the parent-teacher conferences, and take their 
folks to medical appointments, and we'll be stronger because of it. 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 this 
economy growing, where we expand trade even more. Washington State--
because we've had over 200 separate trade agreements, the people of 
Washington are selling more airplanes, more computer software, and 
apples from Washington for the first time all the way in Japan. We need 
more of that, and I will give you more of it.
    We need to balance the budget, and we can cut taxes. But we only can 
cut the taxes

[[Page 1818]]

that we can pay for balancing the budget. Why? Because when we bring 
this deficit down, it keeps interest rates down; it means your car 
payment, your credit card payment, your house payments are lower; it 
means businesses can borrow money to hire people to grow the economy. We 
have to continue.
    We cannot have a tax cut that's so big that we have to have the 
Government start borrowing more money again to drive up your interest 
rates. Somebody gives you that kind of a tax cut to go take it right 
back out in higher interest rates for credit cards, car payments, and 
home mortgages, and businesses won't be growing again.
    So yes, let's cut taxes for education, for childrearing, for medical 
care, for buying that first-time home. Let's don't charge people a tax 
on the gain when they sell their homes, but let's pay for it in a 
balanced budget. Let's do that.
    Finally, let me remind you what is at stake. We also have to balance 
the budget without undermining our commitments to education, to the 
environment, to Medicaid's commitment to little children, to the seniors 
in nursing homes, the families with disabilities, most of them middle 
class families, without creating a two-tier system of Medicare that will 
be unfair to our seniors. We can do that, folks, without walking away 
from research.
    I want you to think about this. We have to balance the budget, but 
we do not have to cut Head Start. We do not have to raise taxes on the 
poorest working people. We do not have to do it in ways that allow 
corporations to raid their workers' pension funds. We don't have to do 
it in a way that abolishes the safe and drug-free school program, the 
AmeriCorps program, gets rid of direct student loans which have helped 
millions and millions of young people in this country. They were wrong. 
Our way of balancing the budget is better. And I hope you'll support it.
    Will you help us build that bridge to the 21st century?
    Audience members. Yes!
    The President. Finally, most important of all, most important of 
all, we've got to create a bridge that all of our children can walk 
across that gives every American without regard to their age access to a 
lifetime of educational opportunity.
    And I just want to mention two things. Number one, I want to see 
every classroom and library in America hooked up to the Internet by the 
year 2000, hooked up to the World Wide Web. I want to make sure that 
children in small towns, children in inner-city neighborhoods, children 
in Native American tribes on reservations--children everywhere--for the 
first time in the history of this country have access to the same 
learning, in the same way, at the same level of quality, in the same 
time--everybody. It has never happened. We can do it.
    Will you help me build that bridge to the 21st century?
    Audience members. Yes!
    The President. And the second thing I want to say is, I want you to 
help me make a college education available to every single American 
citizen who needs it. And we propose to do it with three simple steps.
    First, let families save in an IRA, an individual retirement 
account, and then withdraw from it tax-free if they're spending the 
money on a college education for their children or themselves.
    Second, second, let's make a commitment that by the year 2000, at 
least 2 years of education after high school, a community college 
diploma will be just as normal, just as usual, just as universal as a 
high school diploma is today. We can do it.
    Here's how. I propose to let you take a credit, just take it off 
your taxes, dollar for dollar, for the cost of tuition at the typical 
community college in America. You go find the college, reduce your taxes 
by the tuition. That way we'll pay for everybody who needs it to go to 
community college. And we can do it and balance the budget.
    And third, third, for people who want to go to the 4 year colleges 
or to graduate school--of any age--people that were working and have to 
go back--I think we should allow you a deduction on your taxes of up to 
$10,000 for the cost of college tuition every year.
    Will you help me build that bridge to the 21st century?
    Audience members. Yes!

[[Page 1819]]

    The President. Folks, there are 6 weeks and 5 days to this election. 
I have done everything I could do to make this an election of ideas not 
insults, to stop the old-fashioned Washington politics of dividing 
people. There was a sign at our last rally that said, ``We don't need 
division. We need vision.'' And I believe that. We need more of that.
    So I want to ask you: Will you take some time every day that you 
possibly can between now and the election to reach out to your family 
members, your friends, your parents, your children, your cousins, your 
uncles, your aunts, your coworkers, the people you go bowling with, the 
people you ate lunch with and talk to them about what they want America 
to look like when we start that new century?
    I'm telling you, there is no nation in the world as well-positioned 
as the United States for the 21st century. It is there for us if we 
build the right bridge. Our best days are ahead if you will help us 
build that bridge to tomorrow.
    Will you do it?
    Audience members. Yes!
    The President. Thank you, and God bless you.

Note: The President spoke at 8:27 p.m. A tape was not available for 
verification of the content of these remarks.