[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 33, Number 45 (Monday, November 10, 1997)]
[Pages 1716-1719]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

<R04>
Remarks at a Rally for Gubernatorial Candidate Jim McGreevey in Edison, 
New Jersey

November 2, 1997

    Thank you very much. Ladies and gentlemen, if you have heard the 
radio spot I did for your next Governor, you know that I am not in very 
strong voice. I've been a little hoarse. But the subject of my speech is 
the last line of the radio address: I may have lost my voice, but you 
can find your voice on Tuesday, election day.
    I want to thank the people of New Jersey for being so good to me and 
to Al Gore in 1992 and in 1996. I thank the Members of your 
congressional delegation who are here who work with us every day--
Congressmen Payne and Menendez, Pallone and Pascrell, and our good 
friend Congressman Harold Ford from Tennessee. I thank Barbara Buono, 
Senator Bryant, Chairman Giblin for helping in this campaign. I want to 
say a special word of thanks to your Senator, Senator Lautenberg, who 
did so much work on the balanced budget. And I want to thank Senator 
Torricelli for the work he did--for the work he has done on the balanced 
budget and the work he has done to stand up to the negative partisan 
attacks of the leaders of the other party. You should be very proud of 
both of them for what they have done.
    I'm glad to be back here at Middlesex. Hillary and I were here 3 
years ago. Since I came here, with the help of these Members in 
Congress, we passed a balanced budget which includes the HOPE 
scholarship, which is a $1,500 tax credit for the first 2 years of 
college so that every American can go on to a place like Middlesex.
    And I want to thank the students here for their engagement in 
community service, for their involvement in AmeriCorps. And especially I 
want to thank the volunteers in the America Reads program who are making 
sure our children can read.
    Now, this is an interesting Governor's race. As I said the last time 
I was here, Senator McGreevey, I don't get a vote in New Jersey, and he 
won't get a vote in Congress--why am I here? Why have two members of the 
Republican majority in Congress come here to campaign for the Governor 
in the last few

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days? Because it really matters in the world we're trying to create for 
the 21st century not only what we do in Washington but what happens in 
the State capitals.
    And so I say to you, in the last 2 days you should listen to what 
they say and how they voted. You listen to see what I say and what I've 
done. But when you sort it all out, you should vote based on what's best 
for you and your children and the future of New Jersey.
    This election is terribly important to me because the people of New 
Jersey are important to me, and because you can send a signal to the 
rest of the country about the direction that we have to take into the 
new century. You know, just remember what it was like 6 years ago when 
we started: the economy was in bad shape; the country was increasingly 
divided; the middle class felt like it was on the ropes and ignored; and 
we seemed to be drifting toward the future. Washington was dominated by 
exceedingly partisan debates and a lot of hot air rhetoric.
    And I said, I think we can do better. We can create a country where 
the American dream is alive for everybody responsible enough to work for 
it. We can create a country where we're coming together across the lines 
that divide us, not being driven apart, as so many other people around 
the world are being driven. We can continue to lead the world for peace 
and prosperity. But we have to change, and we have to move forward.
    And I've worked hard to do that. But what I want you to understand 
today is that everything we do in Washington depends upon whether it is 
supported, implemented, and added to in State after State after State 
for its ultimate success.
    I've worked so hard to get this country out of debt. You know, the 
deficit of this country was so bad when I took office, we had quadrupled 
the debt of the country in the 12 years before I became President, over 
the previous 200--increased 4 times. And I said we're going to reduce 
the deficit, we're going to balance the budget, but we're going to 
invest more money in the education and health care and environmental 
protection of our country so that we can have a better country.
    We took some tough votes. When Senator Lautenberg and then-
Congressman Torricelli and the other Members of the House, they stood up 
and voted for our economic plan in 1993, they were excoriated, and the 
people who are here campaigning against Senator McGreevey said we were 
going to bring the economy down. The people who are here from Washington 
campaigning against him said our economic policy would be a disaster. 
Well, we've had 4 years of experience. They were wrong, and we were 
right. And we're right about this race, too.
    They said they were tough on crime. I said, let's show it. Let's 
punish the people that ought to be punished and spend more effort trying 
to prevent our kids from getting into trouble in the first place and 
support the police--and support the police with 100,000 more police and 
the Brady bill and the assault weapons ban. Their party was overwhelming 
against these measures. And now we've had 4 years to know whether they 
were right and we were wrong--and we know: Crime just keeps coming down. 
Our approach was right. We were right; they were wrong. And we're right 
about this race, too.
    On the environment, New Jersey is a State that has shown time and 
again it is passionately committed to cleaning up the environment and 
preserving it. They said we don't have time to reauthorize the 
Superfund. They said we have to relax our environmental laws because 
it's too hard on the economy. They said it's just too much trouble; 
we're going to relax all these laws. I said, no, no, we're going to have 
cleaner water, cleaner air, clean up more toxic waste sites, and grow 
the economy--and grow the economy.
    We've had a test now--4 years of experience we have--and we stopped 
the contract on America and its assault on the environment. And we know 
now--after 13 million jobs, the last quarter the lowest inflation in 
over 30 years, the best growth picture in a generation--we know our 
ideas are right and theirs are wrong. We know. You don't have to guess 
anymore.
    And so I say, what's that got to do with the Governorship of New 
Jersey? Plenty. Let me tell you, folks, I was a Governor for 12 years--
and on the hard days in Washington I think it was still the best job I 
ever had. [Laughter] And let me tell you exactly what

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it has to do, based on 12 long, good years. Number one, our economic 
policies of getting this country out of debt won't work in States that 
get themselves in debt. You have to have fiscal responsibility in 
Washington and at the State capital in New Jersey. You have to do it 
together.
    Number two, we have to be partners. We can't restore middle class 
values, middle class lifestyles, and a future for our children by 
providing sensible tax relief and a strong economy if you have to deal 
with the problems that you have here in New Jersey with the car 
insurance rates and the property tax. We have to work together to 
rebuild the lives of ordinary American families in New Jersey.
    Number three--and these are very specific--education. We're doing 
everything we can to hook up all our classrooms and libraries to the 
Internet, to open the doors of college to all, to provide more

choices in schools, to provide more excitement and innovation and reform, 
and most importantly, as Jim McGreevey said, to raise standards. But the 
work, the day-to-day work in education, and the money comes at the State 
and local level. Everything we are trying to do in Washington can quickly 
be undermined unless you have a passionate believer that every child can 
learn, is entitled to the world-class education that every child needs.

    Child health--10 million children in this country and tens of 
thousands in New Jersey live in working families without health 
insurance. We passed a bill to provide health insurance to 5 million of 
those kids as part of the balanced budget. But the plans have to be 
devised by the State. I trust Jim McGreevey to work with us to insure 
the children of New Jersey.
    Welfare reform--we have reduced the welfare rolls by over 3 million, 
but we have a lot of work still to do. They said, just cut people off. I 
said, make people who can work, work; but remember, everyone's most 
important job is being a good parent. Provide the child care, provide 
the support; then require people to work. Our plan is working. But it 
has to be implemented by the States. I trust Jim McGreevey to help us 
drive the welfare rolls down more, in ways that support being strong for 
work but good to the children of this State. And it's a big issue for 
you.
    Finally, in the last few months, Hillary and I have had two 
conferences in Washington about young children, preschool children--one 
on the development of children's brains, in which we discovered that an 
enormous amount of the capacity all of us have as adults was developed 
in our first 4 years of life; in which we discovered that if a child has 
loving and supportive parents and a good child care environment, they'll 
get about 700,000 positive interactions in their first 4 years, but if a 
child lives in either a home or is in a child care center or both where 
the children are not being stimulated, they might get as few as 150,000 
supportive interactions in the most important period of a child's life.
    Then we had this child care conference in which we discovered that 
some families are spending up to 25 percent of their income on child 
care; that some of our best-educated child care workers are more poorly 
paid than some of our rudimentary workers in our society; and that we 
are simply not doing enough.
    Now, I want to design a system in this country by the time I leave 
office where I can have confidence that people can succeed at home and 
at work, and no one has to sacrifice being a good parent to do their 
job. I want to see--I'm telling you, we have to balance the budget, we 
have to run a stronger economy. We cannot afford to do the whole job at 
the national level. It will have to be done in partnership, partnership 
with private companies, partnership with the States. I trust Jim 
McGreevey to care about the children of the working families of the 
state of New Jersey.
    So that's about it, folks. [Laughter] I want you to understand this 
is not about me, or about my Republican congressional friends who are in 
here campaigning for the Governor. This is not about Washington or about 
what the pundits will say. Only one thing matters: Is it good for you 
and your children and the future of this State?
    But I can tell you, based on 12 years as Governor, almost 5 years as 
President, and the things that I have seen work and my passionate 
commitment to the future of this

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country, you can trust Jim McGreevey to fight for that future as 
Governor.
    Thank you.

Note: The President spoke at 3:10 p.m. in the gymnasium at Middlesex 
County Community College. In his remarks, he referred to State 
Assemblywoman Barbara Buono; State Senator Wayne Bryant; Tom Giblin, 
State Democratic chair; and Gov. Christine Todd Whitman of New Jersey.