[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 33, Number 48 (Monday, December 1, 1997)]
[Pages 1903-1905]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

<R04>
Remarks at a Reception for Senator Patty Murray in Seattle, Washington

November 22, 1997

    The President Thank you very much. Ken, thank you for that wonderful 
introduction. I kind of wish you'd just finish the speech, you did so 
well. [Laughter] And Senator, thank you for your hospitality tonight and 
for your terrific statement and for a terrific record. Washington State 
should be very proud of Patty Murray. She has done a remarkable job.
    I'd also like to say a special word of thanks to my dear friend, 
your outgoing mayor, Norm Rice, for all that he has done for you and for 
me. I wish Mayor-elect Schell well, and I pledge my cooperation. I thank 
Norm Dicks and Jim McDermott and Adam Smith for what they do for you and 
for our country in Congress. And I wish Brian Baird and Greta Cammermyer 
all the best in this election. I hope you'll help them.
    Patty did such a good job that I almost feel like the sort of old 
saw about everything that needs to be said has been said, but not 
everyone has said it yet. [Laughter] But I would like to try to ask you 
to think about the issues she raised and the points she made and the 
work she's done in the context of where we are on America's journey.
    If you just think back to 1992 when we were running for this job--I 
for President; she for Senator--our country was in a stagnant economy. 
We seemed to be increasing our social tensions. And we seemed to be 
drifting toward a new century and a new millennium and a very different 
time. Now, I don't believe that any person, even the most ardent 
partisan on the other side, could deny that America is in better shape 
today than it was 5 years ago.
    It happened partly because of specific actions and specific votes 
and largely because of the enormously impressive efforts of all of our 
citizens all across this country getting up every day and trying to do 
the right thing. But it also happened, I believe, because we have been 
trying to pursue a common vision.
    I ran for President because I wanted to reclaim the future for our 
children, because I wanted to restore a sense of possibility and 
confidence to people, that everybody who worked hard and did his or her 
best ought to have a chance, and because I really thought we had to do 
far more to prepare this country for the 21st century if we wanted to 
have opportunity for every responsible citizen, if we wanted to have a 
community of one America across all the lines that divide us, and if we 
wanted to continue to lead the world for peace and freedom and 
prosperity. I hope you have seen in the difficult week we have just had 
over the weapons inspections in Iraq how important it is for your 
country to continue to stand up for peace and freedom and security 
around the world.
    So we started with this vision that we didn't have a person to 
waste, that everybody ought to have a part of our America, that we all 
needed to make ourselves into a common quilt of effort to prepare this 
country for the future, that we all needed to serve beyond our narrow 
ways in larger ways. And we knew that would require us to change. But 
one thing we had to change--what I thought was the completely irrelevant 
debate about Government in Washington, where one side said, ``We ought 
to keep on trying to do everything even though we don't have any 
money,'' and the other side said, ``Government is always a problem; we 
should do nothing.''
    Our administration and Patty Murray--we said, now, ``We can't do 
everything. We're in debt. But we can't sit on the sidelines and let 
America drift and divide either. We are committed to a new form of 
Government that will create the conditions and give the American people 
the tools they need to make the most of their own lives. And we will do 
whatever we have to do to change our economic policy, our crime policy, 
our welfare policy, our environmental policy, our family policy, our 
health care policy, our foreign policy to meet the challenges of 
tomorrow. We're not going to freeze yesterday, and we're not going to 
allow ourselves to be divided. We're going into the future, and we're 
all going together.'' That is what we have said here.
    Just consider this--Patty Murray mentioned the budget bill in 1993--
we lost some people in the Congress, maybe some in Washington State, who 
had the courage to vote for the budget bill. Why? Because the

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other party advertised heavily that we had raised the income taxes of 
ordinary citizens, that we were going to raise the deficit, bankrupt the 
economy, and it was going to be a disaster.
    Well, the truth is that we cut taxes for 10 times as many people as 
raised them, including working people with children on modest incomes, 
that we reduced the deficit, that we continued to invest in education 
and our future. And 5 years later--we just got the latest figures--the 
deficit--before one dollar of the balanced budget plan is saved, before 
one dollar, based on the 1993 economic plan--has been reduced by 92 
percent. Patty Murray was right, and they were wrong. The people who 
stood up were wrong. They were wrong.
    In 1992, everywhere I went in America people were distraught about 
crime. They wanted something done about it. And I had learned already 
that the easiest thing in the world for a politician to do is to stand 
up in front of a crowd and talk about being tough on crime, and then you 
don't have to think anymore and, you know, just serve up some bill that 
raises sentences for some crimes and walk away.
    But I was determined we could do better than that, and that we ought 
to listen to the police officers and the prosecutors and also the 
community workers who work with all these troubled kids all across our 
country, and let them write us a crime bill. And we did. And Patty 
Murray and I stood up for it. And all across the country, and in 
Washington State, there were some Members of Congress who lost their 
seats because the other guy said, ``They're trying to take your guns 
away from you. They're going to take your hunting rifle away from you.''
    Well, in 1996, I had the pleasure of going all the way across this 
country, from New Hampshire, where it happened, to Washington State, 
where it happened, two States that voted for me and then voted people 
out over this gun issue. And I said, ``You voted people out in '94 over 
this gun issue. And if you have lost your gun, I want you to vote 
against me, too.'' [Laughter] ``But if you haven't lost your gun, one 
more time they did not tell you the truth, and you ought to let them 
know you do not appreciate it and send them a message.''
    So the hunting seasons rolled on from Washington to New Hampshire. 
[Laughter] But 250,000 people with a criminal record or a serious mental 
health history couldn't buy handguns, and this is a better country 
because of it, and there are people alive on the streets because of it. 
And we've already put two-thirds of those police officers on the street, 
and the crime rate has gone down. It's a better country.
    In welfare, on the other side they wanted to say, any able-bodied 
person----

[At this point, an audience member required medical attention.]

    The President. I got my doctor coming to look; we're all right, 
relax--they wanted to say, ``Any able-bodied person that doesn't get a 
job in a certain amount of time should just be cut off welfare.'' We 
said, ``It's okay to make people go to work if they're able-bodied, but 
don't hurt their children. Don't cut off their medical coverage. Don't 
cut off their food coverage. Give them child care. Give them job 
training, and give them a chance to make a full life.'' That's what we 
said. And you know, a couple of vetoes, but we finally did it our way. 
We've had the biggest drop in welfare rolls in the history of this 
country. So I believe our side was right, and theirs was wrong.
    On the environment, when they won the Congress in '95, they tried to 
implement the contract on America; their idea of the contract was get 
rid of all the environmental rules and regulations because they are bad 
for the economy. Our idea was you can make the economy better and the 
environment better. That's Patty Murray's idea. That's why she got such 
a big hand on Hanford--[applause].
    The truth is, today, 1997, compared to 1992, we have 13.5 million 
more jobs, cleaner air, cleaner water, fewer toxic waste dumps, and a 
safer food supply. Patty Murray was right, and her critics were wrong. 
And you ought to send her back to the United States Senate on the basis 
of it.
    So I guess my plea to you is, the people of Washington State have 
been good to Bill Clinton and to Hillary Clinton and to Al and

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Tipper Gore. You voted for us twice. You've given us a chance to serve. 
But we need leaders in this battle who understand what local conditions 
are and what local concerns are and who stand up for the big national 
issues.
    Patty Murray can come before the people of Washington and say, 
``Compared to where we were, we've got the lowest unemployment rate in 
23 years, the lowest crime rate in 23 years, the biggest drop in welfare 
rolls in history, a cleaner environment, and I support the direction 
that this country has taken. That is working.'' And, furthermore, let's 
look to the future. Who do you really trust to give every child in this 
State world-class education? Who do you really trust to make sure that 
we do everything we can to provide health insurance to the children in 
poor working families who don't have it? Who do you really trust to 
continue to fight these environmental battles and to deal with all these 
other things? Patty Murray.
    I say this now, and every group of Americans I speak to, this is a 
democracy. There is a direct line of causation from your presence here 
tonight, the contribution you have made, the work you will do to what 
happens in Washington, DC, the decisions that are made, and how it 
echoes back all across America into every little hamlet in this State. 
This is a better country because the ideas and the values that Patty 
Murray espouses have dominated the American political landscape, and we 
are further toward the future, toward building that bridge to the 21st 
century because of it--more opportunity, more citizen responsibility, 
and a much, much stronger sense of community than if those who opposed 
her ideas and her votes had prevailed. So you stick with her, and we'll 
go there together.
    Thank you, and God bless you.

Note: The President spoke at 10:05 p.m. in the Pavilion at the Seattle 
Center. In his remarks, he referred to Ken Alhadeff, chairman, Elttaes 
Enterprises; Mayor-elect Paul Schell of Seattle; Brian Baird, candidate 
for Washington State's Third Congressional District; and Greta 
Cammermyer, candidate for Washington State's Second Congressional 
District. A tape was not available for verification of the content of 
these remarks.