[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 32, Number 45 (Monday, November 11, 1996)]
[Pages 2267-2274]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]
<R04>
Remarks in Santa Barbara, California
November 1, 1996
The President. Thank you. Good morning. Thank you very much. Thank
you. Can it really be November? [Laughter] Thank you so much, Mayor
Miller, County Superintendent Naomi Schwartz, President MacDougall,
Senator O'Connell. And an alumna of this school, your State
Superintendent of Schools, Delaine Eastin, thank you for being here.
I am delighted to be back here. As all of you know, I think, our
family came here on a little vacation after the '92 election. I hope
this will bring us good luck in the next 4 days. I'm glad to be here.
I want to thank Walter Capps for running again for Congress after
1994. As some of you may know, I have more than a passing interest in
this race because his daughter, Laura, works for us at the White House.
And if there were a popularity contest among White House employees, she
would probably win it. The apple doesn't fall far from the tree. I know
from her that he should be elected, quite apart from everything he has
done. Let me say, Walter Capps lost a very close race in 1994, about a
thousand votes. It would have been easy to walk away from a
disappointment like that, but he came back. He had a serious accident.
It would have been easy to walk away and say, ``Well, someone else
should take up this battle,'' but he came back. That's the kind of
commitment and courage and fortitude this country needs in the United
States Congress.
And last year, when his opponent joined the Gingrich-Dole
revolution----
Audience members. Boo-o-o!
The President. ----and voted for an almost unbelievably destructive
budget for America, one that would have cut environmental enforcement
drastically, made it more difficult for us to take further actions to
protect our environment, the first cut in education in modern history,
including student loans and Head Start----
Audience members. Boo-o-o!
The President. ----repealed the guarantee of health care we had
provided for 30 years to poor children; to middle class families with
members with disabilities to allow them to care for their family
members, let them live at home, and maintain their middle class
lifestyles; to our seniors in nursing homes, even to repeal the very
standards of care we impose to protect people in nursing homes.
When that happened and I vetoed it, they shut the Government down.
And they said, ``You have to accept everything in our budget, or we will
just keep shutting the Government down.'' And the people who led the way
were those first-year Members of Congress, like Mr. Capps' opponent.
They said, ``We want everything.'' I said, ``Well, there's a provision
in this budget which would allow corporation managers to raid their
workers' pension funds. Don't we have any memory?'' Look what happened
in the eighties to the pension funds. In 1994, finally I got through the
last Congress a bill to protect the pensions of 40 million working
Americans. I said, ``Are we going to turn right back around and do this
all over again?'' ``Yes, shut the Government down.''
I said, ``Well, there's a provision in this bill, while it gives me
a tax cut at my income level--which I don't need--until we balance the
budget, this bill would actually raise taxes on 8 million of the hardest
working Americans, people working for very modest wages--trying to raise
their taxes? You're going to take away their present tax credits and
raise their taxes? Can we take that out?'' ``No, shut the Government
down.''
Audience members. Boo-o-o!
The President. Now there's an attempt to develop a little short-term
amnesia among the electorate as we get closer to the elections: ``Please
forget that; forget that.'' [Laughter]
You have a big choice to make in this race. Walter Capps is a good
man, a brave man. He shares your values; he shares your dreams. I hope
you'll send him back to Congress.
Ladies and gentlemen, in just 4 days we will elect the last
President of the 20th century and we will choose the first President of
the 21st century. As Walter Capps said, I do believe we're at one of
those magic moments between hope and history, when we have the
opportunity to both have unprece-
[[Page 2268]]
dented prosperity and discovery and adventure and move closer to the
values and the ideals which we all say we believe in. But it depends
upon what vision we choose. And it depends on what strategy we choose.
There are so many young people here in the audience--and I thank you
for being here, because this is about you. And I want to ask you to do
something tonight. Before you turn in when you go home, take just a
couple of minutes and see if you can ask yourself and answer this
question: What would I like my country to look like when we cross that
great bridge into the 21st century? What would I like my country to be
like when my children are my age?
I know what I want. I want the American dream alive for every person
who's willing to work for it. I want America to keep being the strongest
force for peace and freedom and prosperity in the entire world, even if
we have to make some controversial decisions to help end wars like
Bosnia or throw dictators out of Haiti or continue to move forward in
other areas. I know I've been criticized for some of the things I've
tried to do, but I know that there are no Russian missiles pointed at
the children of America for the first time since the dawn of the cold
war. And I want an America that is coming together instead of being torn
apart. All around the world people are being divided by race, by
religion, by ethnicity, by tribe, killing each other and each other's
children because they cannot get along. Look in this crowd today. In
this crowd we say, you can be an American; it doesn't matter who you
are, where you're from, anything else about you. You've just got to
believe in our values, obey the law, and do a good job.
Now, we have followed a simple strategy: opportunity for all,
responsibility from all, an American community that includes all. Four
years ago, the people of California, in very difficult conditions, took
that strategy on faith. Today there is a record. You don't have to take
our word for it when you see the differences in our vision, that we want
to build a bridge to the 21st century; they want to build a bridge to
the past. They want to say, you're on your own; we want to say, to use
the words of my best friend and someone I'm reasonably close to, it does
take a village to raise a child and to build a future.
Now we know which side is right. Over the last 4 years, incomes have
been rising, jobs have been coming in, the average family income has
gone up $1,600 after inflation in the last 2 years alone. We've had the
largest drop in child poverty in 20 years; the largest drop in
inequality among working people in 27 years; the lowest rates of
unemployment, inflation, and home mortgages in 27 years; the highest
rates of homeownership in 15 years; record rates of new businesses
formed every year, including new businesses owned by women and
minorities. We are moving in the right direction.
The crime rate has gone down for 4 years in a row and, in the Nation
as a whole, is at a 10-year low. The welfare rolls have been reduced by
1.9 million. Child support collections are up 50 percent, $4 billion a
year for deserving children all across America. We are moving in the
right direction.
In the closing days of the last Congress, we raised the minimum wage
for 10 million people. We said to 25 million people--25 million people--
you can't have your health insurance taken away from you anymore just
because you changed jobs or someone in your family has been sick. We
said that insurance companies can no longer force hospitals to kick
mothers and newborn babies out of the hospitals in 24 hours.
We gave more help to small businesses, every one in the country,
making them eligible for tax cuts if they invest more in their
businesses. We helped people get health insurance if they self-insure by
giving them greater tax benefits for doing that. We helped people to
take out pensions and to carry with them from job to job if they work
for small businesses. We're moving in the right direction.
We gave families who will adopt a child--and there are so many out
there who need adoption--a $5,000 tax credit. We are moving this country
in the right direction. And we had the biggest increase in Pell Grants
in 20 years and added 200,000 work-study positions to the Federal
Government's efforts to help people go to college.
Just a few days ago, we learned that our annual growth is about 3
percent; that real
[[Page 2269]]
incomes are rising at about 5 percent, which is a very healthy rate
after 20 years of virtual stagnation; that we have the highest rates of
new investment in our country, almost 19 percent, since President
Kennedy was President.
We have protected the air, the water, the land. We set aside in the
Mojave Desert the biggest natural reserves south of Alaska in the
history of America with three national parks; converted the Presidio to
a national park, set aside 1.7 million
acres in southern Utah in the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument,
moved to save Yellowstone Park from a gold mine, and helped to protect the
environment. And we stopped our friends on the other side when they tried
to lift the ban on offshore drilling.
Now, during this whole campaign, a lot of interesting things have
happened. I told someone yesterday and the day before, my opponent,
Senator Dole, said that we had the worst economy in America in 20 years,
but just 2 weeks before that he said we had the worst economy in 100
years. [Laughter] So I think he made the case for reelection; not
everyone can make up 80 years in 2 weeks.
Now, the truth is, back in February he admitted we had the best
economy in America in 30 years. And you know California, while we've
still got a long way to go, is way better off than it was 4 years ago.
We are moving in the right direction.
And today we got some more good news. Unemployment held steady at
5.2 percent in the country, 210,000 new jobs in October. That makes 10.7
million new jobs in America since I took the oath of office. We are
moving in the right direction.
It is time for my opponent and those on the other side to stop all
this doom-and-gloom talk about America. In spite of what he wants you to
think, when it comes to the economy, the sky is not falling. The sky is
the limit, and we're going after it.
But this election should be about what else we have to do to build
our common bridge to the 21st century. And I'd like to ask you all to
sort of ride along with me for a moment and let me discuss an issue that
hasn't been discussed enough in this campaign, and that is whether we
will reform our system of politics by finally passing meaningful
campaign finance reform legislation.
When I ran for President 4 years ago, I said I wanted to give our
Government back to the people. I wanted a Government to represent the
national interests, not narrow interests, a Government that would stand
up for ordinary Americans. And I have worked hard to do that. When I
became President, I barred top officials from ever representing foreign
Governments when they leave our service. I barred top officials from
lobbying their own agencies for 5 years after leaving office. The days
of the revolving door, when top trade negotiators left to work for the
very countries they were negotiating against, are over.
We passed the most sweeping lobby reform legislation in 50
years. From now on, professional lobbyists must disclose for whom they
work, what they are spending, and what bills they are trying to pass or
kill--for the first time ever. I challenged the Congress to ban gifts from
lobbyists, and they did that.
We passed a line-item veto so Presidents can strip special-interest
pork in general legislation. We passed the motor-voter law, which has
enabled millions of people to register more easily and will add millions
to the voting rolls next Tuesday. We passed the Congressional
Accountability Act and then the White House accountability act to apply
to Congress and the White House the same laws that we pass and impose on
everyone else in America.
All these actions will serve to make Washington work better for you.
But there is still more to do, and special interests still have too much
say. We have clearly one more big job to do: curbing the power that
special interests have in our elections. Everybody knows the problems of
campaign money today. There is too much of it. It takes too much time to
raise. And it raises too many questions.
The parties are engaged in an escalating arms race. In the past 2
years--listen to this--in the past 2 years, the Democrat Party and its
House and Senate campaign committees have raised $241 million. The
Republican Party and its Senate and House campaign committees have
raised $399 million.
[[Page 2270]]
Raising that much money strains the political system. We have played by
the rules, but I know and you know we need to change the rules.
I proposed a tough campaign finance bill when I came into office,
but the Congress would not pass it. The Republicans have been reluctant
to give up their access to big money. Led by my opponent, they
filibustered the bill I proposed to death. In fact, campaign finance
reform has come before the Congress six Congresses in a row, and my
opponent filibustered it five times. He blocked the last one right
before he left office.
In 1995, I met with Speaker Gingrich at a townhall meeting in New
Hampshire. And when we were there a citizen asked us if we would create
a bipartisan commission to come up with a campaign finance reform
proposal that we would then try to pass. We both agreed. I thought it
offered a real chance for bipartisanship and action. And frankly, I was
excited about it. I even appointed two distinguished citizens, John
Gardner and Doris Kearns Goodwin, to help get it started. But the
Republicans walked away. My opponent now says he would support such a
commission. But when we had a real chance to succeed, he wouldn't help
us start it.
Now we have a chance--we had a chance to take bipartisan politics--
or partisan politics out of this issue this year as well. I supported a
strong bipartisan bill introduced by one of my opponent's strongest
supporters, Senator John McCain, and Senator Fred Thompson and
Democratic Senator Russ Feingold from Wisconsin. They've got a good
approach. It's based on principles I advocated back in 1992. We should
curb the power of special interests by restricting political action
committees and dramatically reducing the amount they can give to
candidates. We should ban contributions from lobbyists to those who
lobby. That's what I believe. We should end the big money contributions
to political parties known today as soft money. We should ban
corporations and unions from directly giving to parties to help Federal
candidates they can no longer help directly. And for the first time
ever, we should restrict the virtually unlimited amount of money
individuals can now give to parties. We should set voluntary spending
limits for candidates. And we should give free TV time so that all
candidates who observe the voluntary limits--but only those who observe
the voluntary limits--can talk directly to voters.
And parenthetically, I might say we made a beginning on that
approach this year, and I would like to thank those networks which
offered Senator Dole and me the opportunity to speak directly to the
voters at various times in 90-second or 2-minute messages. I thought
that was a very good public service. It's the beginning of seeing how we
might do it on a sustained, regular, disciplined basis, because we have
to have access to the voters and if you have to purchase it all, it is
extremely expensive. So the voluntary spending limits and the free time
must work together.
This is a good approach. It was endorsed by Common Cause and every
other major reform group. It was bipartisan. It was tough. It was real
reform. But my opponent opposed it. He refused to bring it to the floor
for a vote. And after he left Congress to run for President, the
Republican leaders finally allowed the legislation to come to a vote,
and then they killed it.
There is one more issue that reform must deal with. Today it is
legal for both parties to receive contributions from corporations that
are completely owned by foreign corporations or interests and from
individuals who live in the United States legally but are not citizens.
Many of them have lived here many years and have employees and interests
in this country. The Democratic Party has raised money this way, and so
has the Republican Party. In fact, the Republican Party has raised much
more money in this way than the Democrats,
but that's not the point. It's time to end this practice as well.
Now, McCain-Feingold would end all corporate contributions, so it
would take care of that part of the problem. But we should also end
contributions to either party from individuals who are not citizens.
There are many immigrants who play an important role in our country, and
all of you in California know I have done my best to defend legal
immigration and the rich contribution it
[[Page 2271]]
makes to the United States of America. But if the essence of a democracy
is its citizens decide, and only citizens can vote, then I believe only
citizens should be able to contribute. That is not anti-immigrant, it is
simply stating the fact: Those who vote should finance the elections
that they vote in.
There is no more excuse for waiting. I tried to form a commission,
but now is not the time for a commission. This is a time for action.
Once again, I call upon the Congress to enact real reform. Delay will
only help those who don't want to change at all. When McCain and
Feingold introduce their bill next year, I will introduce it with them.
Real reform will mean a Government that is more representative, not
less. And I ask you, every one of you, to help us to pass real,
meaningful campaign finance reform in Washington. Will you do that?
[Applause]
Now, let me say one other thing. We should also understand that in a
recent case the Supreme Court has made it impossible to enforce some of
the strictest limits. And this bill will not solve all of our problems.
Even as it establishes limits, it will still allow, because of the
Supreme Court's decisions, a millionaire or a billionaire to spend
endless sums running for office. It may be that further measures are
needed. But in the meantime, that's not an excuse to do what we can. We
must act, and we must act now.
Let me also say to you that your vote will decide a lot of things in
this election. It's far bigger than President Clinton or Senator Dole,
even bigger than Congressman Capps or Congresswoman Seastrand. This
election is really about how we are going to proceed into the 21st
century as a people. Your vote will decide, for example, whether we keep
the economy growing by balancing the budget while protecting our
investments in education, the environment, and research and technology
and Medicare and Medicaid or whether we adopt an even more radical
version of the budget I vetoed that will blow a hole in the deficit,
raise taxes on 9 million people, and require bigger cuts than the ones
that I vetoed last time.
Your vote will decide what we do about helping families to balance
the demands of work and childrearing, the biggest challenge many
families face. I'm proud of the fact that we passed the
Family and Medical Leave Act and let 12 million people take some time off
from work when a baby was born or someone in their family was sick.
Now, this is an honest difference between the two parties. My
opponent led the opposition to it, said this year it was still a
mistake. Well, we have some evidence now. Twelve million times it's been
used, and during that time we've had record new business formation and
10.7 million new jobs. The reason is, America is stronger economically
with happy, productive people in the workplace who aren't worried sick
about their children at home. That's why.
I'd like to see us expand family leave. I think people ought to be
able to take a little time off from work to go see their children's
teachers twice a year or take their kids to regular doctor's
appointments. I believe people who earn overtime and have problems in
the family, a sick spouse, a sick child, a sick parent--I think people
who earn overtime ought to have the right to decide whether to take the
overtime in money or time with the family. We'll be a stronger country
with a stronger economy when people feel better about fulfilling their
responsibilities to their family members. And I want you to help me do
that. Walter Capps will. Will you help us? [Applause]
We passed the beginning of health care reform, but our balanced
budget would help people who are between jobs keep health insurance for
their families for 6 months. It would add another million people to the
ranks of insured--children. It would work with States to add another 2
million working families to the ranks of insured. There are still too
many people without insurance. It would give free mammograms to women on
Medicare. It would give help for respite care for the over 1\1/2\
million families that are struggling nobly and bravely and humanely to
care for a family member with Alzheimer's. Our budget pays for it;
theirs doesn't. Will you help us do that? [Applause]
We passed the V-chip for new television sets, got a TV rating system
voluntarily developed by the entertainment industry, secured an
agreement for 3 more hours of educational television, doubled the amount
of funds going into the safe and drug-free
[[Page 2272]]
schools program, and for the first time ever took action to stop the big
tobacco companies from advertising and marketing tobacco to children.
Now, on the V-chip, on the safe and drug-free schools program which
has helped so many children to stay away from drugs and trouble, and on
the tobacco issue, my opponent disagrees. All these things can still be
reversed. I think we need them as building blocks in our bridge. Will
you help me keep them and do
them into the 21st century? [Applause]
We passed the Brady bill, the assault weapons ban, a bill to put
100,000 police on the streets, ``three strikes and you're out.'' Our
opponents, Senator Dole and the Speaker, they led the fight against that
crime bill. And now they don't understand why every major law
enforcement organization, for the first time ever, has endorsed the
Clinton/Gore ticket for reelection.
We know how to lower the crime rate. We've fought for the 100,000
police; Senator Dole led the fight against it. When they won the
Congress, they voted to abolish the program, even though the crime rate
was going down. Then they tried to cut the program. We've only funded
half of those police officers, and I'd like to finish the job, but you
have to help me. Will you do it? [Applause] They actually tried to
repeal the assault weapons ban, and Walter Capps' opponent voted to do
that.
Audience members. Boo-o-o!
The President. Now, you know, 2 years ago, frankly, they were just
paying a debt 2 years ago. That's why a lot of them won. They went out
in a lot of these rural districts in places like my home State, where
half the people have a hunting or a fishing license or both, and they
said, ``There they go again. They're going to take your guns away.
That's what the Brady bill and the assault weapons ban mean.''
Well, 2 years later, those same people who voted that way know the
truth. Not a single hunter or sportsperson in America has lost a
legitimate weapon, but over 60,000 felons, fugitives, and stalkers can't
get a handgun because of the Brady bill. And we just extended the Brady
bill so that now people who beat up their spouses and their children
can't get it either. And now that we have fought off the attempt to
repeal the assault weapons ban, we ought to make sure they don't come
back with that. And we ought to ban bullets that are designed for one
purpose only, to pierce the bulletproof vests of police officers. They
are wrong, and we ought to get rid of them. Will you help us finish this
job? [Applause]
We moved a million nine hundred thousand people from welfare to work
and passed historic welfare reform legislation that says we will
guarantee to poor people, and to the children especially, health care,
nutrition, and more child care than ever when people move from welfare
to work. But able-bodied people must move within 2 years from
welfare to work. But the law doesn't do anything. You can't require people
to go to work unless there are jobs for them to take. I have a plan to
create another million jobs to help move people from welfare to work. Will
you help us implement that plan? [Applause]
There is much more to do on the environment. A lot of these plans
for these national parks and other preserves are just beginning. We have
to finish the job. We cleaned up more toxic waste sites in 3 years than
they did in 12. But we still have 10 million kids living within 4 miles
of toxic sites. We'll clean up the 500 worst ones. We want to be able to
say in the 21st century, all our children can grow up next to parks, not
poison. Will you help us do that? [Applause]
And most important of all, your vote will decide--as the president
said here when we started--whether we put ourselves squarely on the line
for giving every single American access to world-class education. I am
proud of the fact that we have increased Head Start; passed the national
service program; given schools all over California and the rest of the
country opportunities to try new and exciting ways to achieve
excellence, like the charter movement; that we passed a new college loan
program which lowers the cost of college loans and gives young people a
chance to repay them as a percentage of their income so people can never
be bankrupted by borrowing the money to go to college. I'm proud of the
increase in the Pell grants and 200,000 more work-study positions. But
it is just a
[[Page 2273]]
beginning. There is more we need to do. And I need your help.
Forty percent of our 8-year-olds still cannot read independently by
the third grade. Part of it is we're having a new wave of immigration. A
lot of those children's first language is not English. But that will be
cold comfort for them if they move through school unable to continue to
learn. I have a proposal to mobilize AmeriCorps volunteers and 30,000
other reading specialists to go around the country and get a million
volunteers to teach our children to read. And I want 100,000 of those
200,000 new work-study slots to go to young college students who say,
``I'll go. I'll teach young people to read.'' Will you help us do that?
Will you help us? [Applause]
Schools all over America are bursting at the seams with the largest
number of children in history. We have the first plan ever to help
school districts to build new facilities and repair old ones so our kids
have decent learning environments. We have a plan to hook up every
classroom and every library in every school in America to the
information superhighway by the year 2000. Will you help us do it?
[Applause]
We do want to say in 4 years we can make at least 2 years of higher
education as universal as a college diploma is today simply by saying
you can deduct from your taxes, dollar for dollar, the cost of the
typical community college tuition if you go and make your grades and
you're a good citizen. Will you help us do that? [Applause] I want to
let families save in an IRA for their retirement but withdraw tax-free
if the money's being used for education, health care, or first-time home
buying. Will you help us do that? [Applause] And I believe we should
give families a tax deduction of up to $10,000 a year for the cost of
any college tuition at any level for Americans of any age. Will you help
us do that? [Applause] Now, that will build a bridge to the 21st
century.
And finally, let me say as you look around this vast sea of people
today, I ask you to think again of how we are going to do this and
whether we are going to practice the politics of division--what some
gleefully call wedge issues--or are we going to say, we want to go
forward together?
Think about how sad it is that in the Holy Land, the home of the
world's three great monotheistic religions, people still cannot lay down
their hatred of one another. Think how sad it is that in the home of my
ancestors, Ireland, full of young, brilliant people bursting at the
seams for new opportunity in Northern Ireland, people still cannot lay
down their religious differences and their arguments about incidents
that occurred centuries ago. Think about how sad it is that in Bosnia,
people who are biologically indistinguishable killed one another's
children with reckless abandon. Or in Rwanda, Burundi, the Hutus and the
Tutsis--both of them with no money, really, to speak of to further their
dreams and help their children--instead of cooperating, slaughter each
other at record rates.
In America we must fight against that. That's why we had to stand
against what happened at Oklahoma City. That's why we had to stand
against the church burnings and the defacement of synagogues and mosques
and Islamic centers. And that's why we have to stand together for a
different future.
If you want all these things I talked about, in the end it will to
some extent be an affair of the American heart. We must be willing to
say, I tell you again, that in this country all we need to know about
you is whether you embrace our Constitution, our Bill of Rights, our
Declaration of Independence; whether you are willing to show up for work
or school tomorrow; whether you are willing to give your neighbors the
elbow room to pursue their personal lives and their freedom; whether you
are willing to treat people, even those with whom you dramatically
disagree, with genuine respect if they are law-abiding, hard-working
citizens. And we ought to say, if you're that way, we don't need to know
anything else about you. You're part of our America, and we're going to
build a bridge together to the 21st century.
Thank you, and God bless you all.
Note: The President spoke at 9:44 a.m. at Santa Barbara City College. In
his remarks, he referred to Mayor Harriet Miller of Santa Barbara; Naomi
Schwartz, superintendent, Santa Barbara County schools; Peter
MacDougall, president, Santa Barbara City College; State Senator Jack
O'Connell; Delaine Eastin, California State Superintendent
[[Page 2274]]
of Schools; and Walter Capps, candidate for California's 22d
Congressional District. This item was not received in time for
publication in the appropriate issue.