[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 32, Number 42 (Monday, October 21, 1996)]
[Pages 2096-2100]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

<R04>
Remarks in Santa Ana, California

October 17, 1996

    Thank you. Good morning. What a crowd. Thank you for being here. 
Thank you. Mayor Pulido, thank you for that wonderful welcome. Thank you 
for your leadership of this great city. And let me say that the mayor 
was a little too modest. I want to brag on him a little more. We have 
had a great partnership with this city. Among other things, our program 
to put 100,000 police on our street has brought 54 here, and the crime 
rate has gone down by 50 percent in Santa Ana. Thank you, Mayor, for 
your leadership and your work here. I'd like to thank Lieutenant 
Governor Gray Davis for being here. Senator Chris Dodd is here, all the 
way from Connecticut, the chairman of the Democratic Party. Thank you, 
sir, for being here. Thank you, Art Torres, our Democratic Party chair, 
for being here.
    I'd like to say a special word of thanks to the mayor of Tustin, 
Tracy Worley, for being here. She spoke earlier. Thank you, Mayor. God 
bless you, and thank you so much. I'd like to thank the other 
congressional candidates who are here, Sally Alexander, Tina Louise 
Laine, Dan Farrell. I thank Steven Weber for speaking earlier. And I 
want to thank the Santa Ana High School Marching Band, the Saddleback 
High School Road Runners. Thank you both for being here. Thank you both. 
Thank you.
    I'd like to thank all the young AmeriCorps volunteers who are here 
for the work you're doing to make our country a better place. Thank you, 
Lou Correa, for your speech and for what you're doing. Give him a hand, 
folks. He did a good job. [Applause] And I was watching Loretta Sanchez 
give her speech, and I thought, boy, I'm glad she's not running against 
me. [Laughter] Thank you for running for Congress. Thank you for your 
commitment to give this congressional seat back to all the people of 
this

congressional district. Thank you, Loretta Sanchez.

    Ladies and gentlemen, a lot of people have asked me what I thought 
about the debate last night. And what I thought was that everybody in 
California should be very proud of those 123 citizens from San Diego and 
the surrounding area. They did a fine job, and they spoke for all of 
America, and I was very proud of them. I know you were, too.
    When I came to Orange County in 1992, many people said, ``Why are 
you going there? It's the most Republican county in the country.'' And I 
said, ``Because I'm trying to change our country, and Orange County has 
got to be a big part of America's future.'' I came because I was tired 
of the politics of blame and division and name calling that had 
dominated Washington for far too long, because people being put into 
little boxes and labeled gave everyone an excuse not to work together to 
solve our problems and move this country forward. I did it because I 
believed that you could go beyond the tired rhetoric of yesterday's 
politics, that the real issue was how you could be both good for 
business and good for working people, how you could both grow the 
economy and protect the environment. I believe that you could be a 
fiscal conservative and still be progressive enough to meet the 
challenges of today and tomorrow for all these young people in the 
audience. That's what I believed then; that's what I believe now.
    And so, in 1992, I came to California and Orange County saying that 
I wanted to create a country in which there's opportunity for all, 
responsibility from all, and an American community in which everyone has 
a place.

[[Page 2097]]

    Do you feel that we're better off than we were 4 years ago? 
[Applause] You know 4 years ago, the people of California had to take me 
on faith, but now there is a record. There has never been a partnership 
between the National Government and the people of any State like the one 
we have forged over the last 4 years. A lot of it was born of necessity, 
of earthquakes and fires and floods, of the economic dislocation caused 
by defense cutbacks, of the terrible recession you were facing when I 
came here. But little by little, day by day, month by month, we worked 
together to meet the challenges the people of California faced. And look 
at the difference 4 years can make.
    Four years ago, we had high unemployment and rising frustration. We 
still have a lot of challenges, but compared to 4 years ago, we have 
lower unemployment, 10\1/2\ million new jobs, a 15-year high in 
homeownership, the biggest drop in childhood poverty in 20 years, the 
biggest drop in inequality among working

Americans in 27 years, the lowest rates combined of unemployment, 
inflation, and home mortgage interest rates in 27 years. We are on the 
right track to the 21st century.

    After inflation the typical family's income is up over $1,600. 
Nearly 2 million people have moved from welfare to work. The crime rates 
have gone down for 4 years in a row. And we have invested more money in 
education and research and in environmental protection while holding 
Government spending to slower growth than my two Republican predecessors 
did. And we brought the deficit down every year for 4 years, the first 
time in the 20th century any administration has done that.
    Our friends on the other side, they complain about Government all 
the time. They set it up as the enemy; it's Government versus the 
people. The last time I checked, the Constitution said, ``of the people, 
by the people and for the people.'' That's what the Declaration of 
Independence says. That's why, even though we have abolished more 
regulations, ended more programs, and reduced the size of the Government 
more than our predecessors did, we have also done more to create 
opportunity, to reinforce responsibility, and to bring the American 
people into a community together instead of always dividing us. I am 
tired of that. I want us to go forward together, and I think you do, 
too.
    Let me say, I was just looking at this magnificent new courthouse 
that's coming up up here, and I want to give special credit to one 
citizen of Orange County, a Republican, Roger Johnson, who worked in our 
administration and had a lot to do with the progress of the last 4 
years. He's not here today, but I want to thank him for what he did.
    Ladies and gentlemen, the FBI reported last week that our crime rate 
is at a 10-year low. In California it's dropped to a 25-year low. We can 
change this country. You don't have to wonder anymore about whether what 
we do and you do together can make a difference to make life better. 
Four years ago, it was simply a matter of faith. Today you have a 
record.
    Now, I'm glad we've got some of our friends in the opposition over 
there, and I understand why they have to try to shout us down every now 
and then, because for them the evidence hurts. But let's talk about the 
evidence and welcome them here.
    But the question is not what have we done, but what will we do? Last 
night, I was so moved by the questions, because repeatedly what people 
wanted to know was, what are you going to do about this, that, or the 
other thing; how does what you do affect how I live; how does what you 
do, Mr. President, affect the world

my children will live in.

    And I was so impressed because the people who asked questions were 
not just concerned about what's going to happen next week or next month, 
they were also worried about what the world would be like in 20 years, 
in 30 years. And I tell you what I try to think about every day--and I 
recommend this to all of you, before you vote on November the 5th, you 
ought to try this: Every day I ask myself, can I say in 30 seconds or a 
minute what my vision is for America in the 21st century? Can I say in a 
minute what I want my country to look like when my daughter is my age, 
when our children are our age? What do you want to be able to say about 
America and be absolutely sure it's true when we go roaring into this 
new century?

[[Page 2098]]

    The young people in this audience today, many of them will be doing 
jobs that have not been invented yet. Some of them will be doing work 
that has not even been imagined yet. And what we have to do is to create 
a world that will enable all of them to live up to the fullest of their 
God-given potential, a world in which all citizens take responsibility 
not only for themselves and their own families but for bringing us 
together and moving us forward.
    As I said, I think you saw two very different visions of the future 
last night, two honestly different visions. We need not say bad things 
about our opponents to say we just have different views. We just have 
different views.
    I believe the most important things in all of our lives are the 
personal things--that your individual life, your family life is clearly 
the most important thing. I believe many things have to be done at the 
grassroots level by people in the private sector, by religious and 
community organizations and civic organizations, by local government. 
But I believe the National Government is not your enemy; it is your 
servant, your partner. I believe it does take a village to raise our 
children and build our future.
    And let me say to you, what does that mean in practical terms? It 
means I'm proud of the fact that we lowered the deficit for 4 years in a 
row, but I want to finish the job of balancing the budget, to keep 
interest rates down and the economy growing. California has not come all 
the way back. Not everybody who wants a good job has one. We've got to 
balance the budget, but we do not have to wreck Medicare or Medicaid or 
cut education or environmental protection or research and turn our back 
on our future to do it. And we should not blow a hole in it with his 
$550 billion tax scheme. We should keep going.
    I believe we have to help our families. I go all over the country 
talking to people, and whenever I go home, I also spend a fair amount of 
time talking to people I grew up with. Most of them are just solid 
middle class citizens leading the lives that we all assumed we would 
lead when we were children. And everybody I talk to, when they talk 
about their real concerns, somehow or another it always gets around to: 
Can I succeed at home and at work? Can I raise a successful family and 
have a good career? Will I be able to do well enough financially to take 
care of my family, but will I have enough time with my family so that 
the money means something to me? I hear it everywhere in different ways. 
That's why I'm proud the first bill I signed was the Family and Medical 
Leave Act, an honest difference between my opponent and me.
    So what are we going to do about it? First of all, we ought to have 
a tax cut, but it ought to be one we can afford and still balance the 
budget, one targeted to childrearing, to education, to buying a home, to 
dealing with medical costs.
    Secondly, we ought to keep working to protect our children from the 
dangers of crime and guns and gangs and drugs and tobacco. We need to 
finish the job. We have only funded about half of those 100,000 police. 
The opposition believes we're making a mistake putting these police on 
the street. The mayor knows better. I say let's finish the job of 
putting 100,000 police on the street. Will you help me do that? 
[Applause]
    The second thing we ought to do, we passed the Brady bill and the 
assault weapons ban and this country is safer because of it. But our 
police officers are not as safe as they ought to be, and we ought to ban 
bullets whose only purpose is to pierce the bulletproof vests that 
police officers wear and protect them.
    We ought to continue to expand the safe and drug-free schools 
program so that in every grade school in this country there's a D.A.R.E. 
officer, there's somebody in a uniform telling our kids that drugs are 
wrong, drugs can kill you, giving them somebody to look up to. We 
shouldn't cut that program back for 23 million kids, as our adversaries 
tried to do. I say let's stay with the safe and drug-free schools 
program. Will you help me do that? [Applause]
    We ought to continue until we have finally put into effect a set of 
legally binding rules that will stop tobacco companies from advertising 
and distributing tobacco to children. Three thousand kids a day start 
smoking illegally; 1,000 will die sooner because of it. It is illegal. 
It is wrong. We should not reverse course. That's another difference 
between

[[Page 2099]]

me and our friends on

the other side. Will you help us prevail in that fight? Will you stick up 
for our future? [Applause]

    We ought to expand the family and medical leave law so parents can 
take a little time off from work without losing their jobs to take their 
children to regular doctors' appointments and to go to parent-teacher 
conferences at the schools. That's important, too, and our economy will 
be stronger if our parents are happier at work because they know their 
kids are doing better. Will you help me do that? [Applause]
    We passed health care reform to say you can't have your health 
insurance taken away just because you changed jobs or someone in your 
family gets sick. Twenty-five million Americans could be helped by it. 
We stopped insurance companies from forcing hospitals to kick mothers 
and newborn babies out of the hospital after just a day. They can't do 
that anymore.
    But we have more to do. Our balanced budget plan will provide 
coverage to families when they're between jobs for up to 6 months, will 
add another million children to the ranks of health-insured instead of 
uninsured, will provide mammograms for women on Medicare, and will help 
families who are caring for a member with Alzheimer's. And it's all paid 
for in the balanced budget. Will you help me do that? [Applause]
    We've worked with States all over the country, without regard to 
party, including California, to move nearly 2 million people from 
welfare to work. I signed a welfare reform bill that says, we'll still 
guarantee to poor families health care and nutrition, but the money that 
the Federal Government used to send to the States for a welfare check 
now has to be turned into a paycheck within 2 years for able-bodied 
people. That's a good thing to say, but you have to have the jobs there 
if you're going to make people take them. I have a plan to say that this 
is the beginning, not the end of welfare reform. We have to create at 
least another million jobs in the private sector with tax incentives and 
other support. Will you help me do that? [Applause]
    We have made the air and the water cleaner. We have made our food 
safer. We have cleaned up more toxic waste sites in 3 years than the 
previous administrations did in 12. But 10 million American children 
still live within 4 miles of a toxic waste dump, and that is wrong. We 
have a plan, paid for in our balanced budget plan, to clean up the 500 
worst sites in this country so that we can say by the 21st century the 
children of America, rich, poor, or middle class, are going to grow up 
next to parks, not poison. Will you help us do that? [Applause]
    And finally, and most important of all, we have got to guarantee 
that every child in this country has access to the finest educational 
opportunities in the entire world in part--in part, because we are more 
than ever a nation of immigrants, 40 percent of our children cannot read 
independently by the third grade. That means that everything they try to 
learn later on in life, they are handicapped in learning. It is wrong 
for us to permit children to leave the third grade not being able to 
read on their own.
    I have a plan to mobilize 30,000 trained reading tutors, including 
AmeriCorps volunteers, to enlist a million volunteers across America so 
that we can go into the schools of America and teach our children. We 
did this in a rural county in Kentucky, and within a year the average 
child had increased their reading level by 3 years--3 years. We can do 
this.
    So I ask you, will you help me put a million people out there so 
that every 8-year-old can say, ``This is a book, and I can read it all 
by myself''? Will you help me? Will you help us to hook up every 
classroom and library in every school in the United States, free access 
to the Internet, to the World Wide Web, so that every child in America 
can be part of this new technology age? [Applause] And to grownups here 
who aren't as expert in computers as a lot of the kids are, let me tell 
you what that means. That means, if we can say that every 12-year-old in 
America can log on to the Internet, let me tell you what that means in 
practical terms. It means for the first time in the entire history of 
the United States, for the very first time, we can say that every child 
in America, rich, poor, or middle class, in every community in America, 
now has access to the same learning at the same level of quality at the 
same time. It

[[Page 2100]]

will revolutionize education in America. Will you help me do it? 
[Applause]
    And finally, we must open the doors of college education to all 
Americans of any age who need further education. I want to give every 
family the ability to save for an IRA but withdraw tax-free if the 
money's used to pay for college or health care or buying a first home. I 
want to make 2 years of education after high school just as universal as 
a high school diploma is today. And we can do it in only 4 years if 
we'll simply say we're going to let you deduct from your tax bill dollar 
for dollar the cost of a typical community college tuition. Will you 
help me do that? [Applause] And we should make any college cost, any 
college tuition tax deductible up to $10,000 a year for any Americans of 
any age, including older people who need to go back and get school. Will 
you help us do that? [Applause]
    Now, this election is 19 days away. And they always tell you when 
you're 19 days away, just come in like this, give a whoop-dee-doo 
speech, talk 3 minutes, leave--no more issues. But I'm telling you, the 
big question is 19 days is, who's going to show up. Are you going to 
show up? Are you going to show up? [Applause]
    And example, after example, after example--some of which I was able 
to cite last night--the people of the State of California can say, 
``There is a direct consequences between the vote I cast, the person who 
is in charge in Washington, and the decisions made here on the streets 
of Santa Ana and every other city in this State that affect my life.''
    So I ask you--I talk a lot about our responsibilities--it is your 
responsibility to go vote, your responsibility as a citizen, your 
responsibility to be there, your responsibility to build that bridge to 
the 21st century. In 19 days let's do it.
    Thank you and God bless you. Thank you.

Note: The President spoke at 11:26 a.m. at the Old Orange County 
Courthouse. In his remarks, he referred to Mayor Miguel Pulido of Santa 
Ana; actor Steven Weber; State Assembly candidate Lou Correa; and former 
Administrator of General Services Roger Johnson. A tape was not 
available for verification of the content of these remarks.