[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 36, Number 6 (Monday, February 14, 2000)]
[Pages 265-269]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

<R04>
Remarks at a Democratic National Committee Dinner in Dallas, Texas

February 9, 2000

    Thank you. First of all, Fred, thank you for what you said, and I 
thank you and Lisa for being wonderful friends to me and Hillary and to 
Al and Tipper Gore and to our party. I thank Jess and Betty Jo for being 
here tonight. I can't help but say, Betty Jo is the niece of former 
Speaker Carl Albert, who passed away in the last couple of days, a great 
Democrat. And I had a wonderful talk with his wife today, and it 
reminded me of why I have been a Democrat all my life. And our thoughts 
and prayers are with your family.
    I thank ``B'' and Audre Rapoport and Garry Mauro for their work 
here. And I wanted to acknowledge not only the mayor, who I think has 
done a superb job, and Senator Cain, thank you for being here, and 
Sally, thank you for being here and for being our regional Department of 
Education person, for all the good work you do. But I also want to 
introduce a former very important person on my White House staff, Regina 
Montoya, who is now a candidate for the House, who is here. I want you 
all to help her get elected to Congress. We need to win this seat. 
[Applause] Thank you. She's here, I think.
    I got tickled--I started laughing all over again when Ed Rendell was 
up here talking about the rap that the Republican chairman laid on him 
after the New Hampshire primary. He said, we were the candidate of 
special interests, and he mentioned--what did he say--trial lawyers, 
labor, gays, and Hollywood. [Laughter]
    Let me take you back to 1992. In 1991, I was having the time of my 
life living in Arkansas in the 11th year of my governorship. I had had a 
new lease on life. I loved my job. I could have done it now to kingdom 
come. But I was really worried about my country, because that's the kind 
of stuff that everybody in Washington said, what Ed just said. And there 
was a Republican line and a Democratic line. There was a liberal line 
and a Republican line. And everybody was struggling to be politically 
correct and to be as confrontational as possible, because that is the 
only way you would get your 15 seconds on the evening news.
    I suppose it was perfectly good for the people who got on the talk 
shows all the time and the people who could raise funds for their 
reelection and stay in, but the country was in the ditch. Even when we 
were nominally in a recovery, we couldn't generate any jobs. And we had 
quadrupled the debt in 12 years, and we didn't have much to show for it, 
because we were spending less in real terms on things that we needed, 
like education.
    The reason I ran for President is that I had been working on all 
this stuff for a long time, and it became clear to me there were limits 
to what any Governor or any people could do, or people in their private 
lives could do to turn America around until we had a National Government 
that had it right--that had the right philosophy that was dynamic and 
change-oriented and was interested in bringing people together and was 
committed to creating the conditions and giving people the tools to 
succeed in a very different world.
    So I admit that what the chairman of the Republican Party said is 
right, but I don't think he got it right. That is, I'm not ashamed of 
the fact we've got a lot of trial lawyers here. I'm not ashamed of the 
fact that I think, if people have been shafted, they ought to be able to 
go to court and pursue their remedy. I also want to say this: I'm also 
proud of the fact that we've had a real relationship. This has not been 
a political deal. We haven't 100 percent agreed on everything. We've had

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a relationship. It's like being in a family or an organization or 
anything else. It's real here.
    You know, I hear all these--our friends in the other party talk 
about how terrible the trial lawyers are. All I want to know is, if you 
guys are so destructive, why do we have 21 million jobs and the best 
economy we've ever had? And the same thing about the labor unions. Labor 
enrollments went up last year for the first time in many years. I think 
that's a good thing for people to be organized, to be able to not only 
vent their grievances but, more importantly, build partnerships for the 
future. And if it's so bad, why do we have the lowest unemployment rate 
in 30 years? And why do we have the highest productivity that we can 
ever remember?
    I plead guilty to believing that we should not deprive people of 
jobs or subject them to violence just because they're gay. I'm guilty of 
that; I believe that. I think anybody that shows up for work and pays 
their taxes and are willing to do whatever it takes to be a good citizen 
of their country ought to be treated with the same amount of respect as 
anybody else. That's what I believe. And I think the evidence is that 
that's right.
    In terms of Hollywood, that's sort of the last refuge of the 
rightwing arsenal there. [Laughter] I was the first person, not a member 
of the Republican Party, I was the first political leader, in 1993, to 
go to Hollywood and ask them to give me a ratings system for television 
for children and to reduce the amount of inappropriate material our 
children were exposed to. And not everybody agreed with it, but again, 
we're in--I have a relationship with a lot of people out there, and we 
got a rating system. I wish it worked better now because it's kind of--
practically, it's difficult because you've got to worry--if you're a 
parent, you've got to worry about the video games and the TV and the 
movies and all that. And we're trying to work through that.
    But the point I want to make is, my whole idea about politics is 
that we ought to run it the way we--our country--the way we would run--
we would sensibly run a family or a business or any other common 
enterprise if you were part of a big charitable endeavor here in Dallas. 
I just think that if you look at the way the world works and how it's 
changing, all these trends toward globalization, all the threats that 
are out there from people who are trying to take advantage of 
globalization for their own ends--if you look at all the opportunities 
that are out there through scientific and technological advances, it 
does not make sense for us in this year to revert to the patterns that I 
have spent 7 years trying to break.
    Everybody has got--we're going to divide up sides now, and if you're 
a liberal, you've got to be over here; and if you're a conservative, 
you've got to be over here. And here's your line attacking them, and 
here's your line attacking the other. And let's don't worry about 
whether we ever get anything done or not. I think this is nuts. None of 
you live like this, and none of you have any role at all like this, 
except when you vote, we're supposed be like this.
    I have worked for 7 long years, with the help of people in my 
administration, people like you, to prove that we could have a unifying 
vision that would bring this country together, not in the middle of the 
road but in a dynamic movement forward.
    And look, 7 years ago we had a terrible economy, and now we've got 
the longest economic expansion in history. Seven years ago we had 
worsening social problems, and now we've got the lowest welfare and 
crime rates in 30 years and the lowest poverty rates in 20 years. This 
works, and it's not rocket science.
    And if somebody asked me, ``Well, what is the difference? What did 
you really do that was different as President,'' and you only get a 
sentence or two, I would not say our economic policy, although we have a 
good one, I think, and it's different; or our crime policy, although we 
have a good one, and it's different; or our welfare policy, although we 
have a good one, and it's different; or even our education policy, which 
is profoundly different from what was done before. I would say, I 
believe that everybody counts; everybody deserves a chance; and we all 
do better when we try to help each other. And I believe that we don't 
get anywhere by denying the challenges that are before us so that we can 
continue the comfortable arguments that we've been making in the past, 
instead of

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taking the uncomfortable but exhilarating march into the future.
    That's what this whole deal has been about, and that's what I tried 
to say in the State of the Union Address. Anybody that's over 30 years 
old--we've got a few people who aren't in this room, so they will have 
to learn this--but anybody that's over 30 years old can remember at 
least one time, if not more, in your life when you made a real bad 
mistake, not because times were tough but because times were so good, 
you didn't think anything could go wrong. And so you just didn't want to 
do what you knew that you ought to do, keep planning, keep thinking 
about the future, make the tough decisions now. Better to be diverted. 
Better to lay down and rest. Better to just indulge yourself for the 
moment. Anybody who has lived any length of time has made a mistake 
under those circumstances.
    That is the question that is facing the United States today. And the 
consequences are far greater for the Nation than they are for any of us 
in our personal lives, because we have never had this kind of chance 
before. So what I tried to say at the State of the Union, what I want to 
say again to you, I hope you will hammer home to everyone you can talk 
about this year is that if there was ever a time when we ought to have 
an election that was a unifying referendum on our common future, it is 
this one, because the economy is in good shape, the society is in good 
shape, we've got a lot of confidence, we have relatively few internal 
crises or external threats. There is nothing to prevent us from saying, 
``Okay, what's out there that's a big problem or a big opportunity, and 
let's go deal with it.''
    And if we do both, we will be able to literally make the future of 
our dreams for our children. That's what I think the Democrats ought to 
be saying this year. And that is what we represent. We shouldn't be 
denying that we ought to change. If somebody who was running for 
President said, ``Vote for me. I'll do just what Bill Clinton did,'' I'd 
vote against that person because we live in a dynamic time. But if 
somebody says, ``Vote for me. I'd like to go back to the way it was in 
1992 and before,'' I would certainly vote against that person. 
[Laughter]
    So the question is not whether we're going to change; it is how. So 
I think if you know the number of people over 65 is going to double, you 
have to meet the challenge of the aging of America. Putting it off will 
only make it more expensive and more painful. Today we can save Social 
Security for the baby boom generation, extend the life of Medicare, and 
add a prescription drug benefit for the 60 percent of the seniors that 
don't have access to one. We can do it today. We have the money, and we 
have the reforms to save money, and we ought to do it.
    If we know that education is more important than ever before and 
we've got more kids from more diverse backgrounds, we should act today 
to make sure all our kids start school ready to learn and graduate ready 
to succeed: Head Start, after-school programs, school repairs and 
building and modernizing schools, hooking them all up to the Internet, 
training the teachers better, the whole nine yards. There is no excuse 
for us not doing this.
    Test scores are up; graduation rates are up; college-going rates are 
up, but not near where they ought to be but enough so that we know what 
to do. It would be different if we didn't know what to do. We know what 
to do now. We don't have an excuse. So to squander this moment in 
education would be a great error.
    In health care, I was always--one of my friends in the Congress came 
up to me the other day, and they said, ``You know, they told me, the 
insurance companies did, if I voted for your health care plan back in 
1994, the number of uninsured people would actually go up.'' And he 
said, ``They were absolutely right. I voted for it, and there's more 
uninsured people today than there was when I voted for it.'' [Laughter] 
So we had to find a different approach.
    The only social indicator, just about, that's worse today than it 
was in '93 when I took office, is that there are more Americans who work 
for a living without health insurance. So we got this program, and I 
wish you would look at this. Some of you, by the way, who work with the 
agencies in Texas, we've got this program that will enroll 5 million 
kids in the Children's Health Insurance Program of lower income working 
people who can't

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get health insurance on the job. We've got 2 million enrolled now. We've 
got money for 3 million more. A lot of the ones who aren't enrolled are 
still in Texas--for a lot of good reasons. I'm not criticizing anybody, 
but we just need to go out there and get those kids in there.
    And I'd like the Congress to say their parents can be enrolled, too, 
and I'd like the Congress to let people between 55 and 65 who don't have 
insurance--it's the fastest growing group of uninsured people--people 
who take early retirement. They're not old enough for Medicare. They 
don't have insurance. I think they ought to be able to buy into 
Medicare, and we ought to give them a modest tax credit so it's 
affordable.
    Now, this is a big issue. We know that more and more parents will 
work. Either they will be single parents working, or two-parent 
households where both people will be working. If we know that and we 
know right now that for all of our success, America does less to support 
work and family--that is, to help working parents succeed as 
childrearers, which is the most important job anybody can have--if we 
know we don't do enough, we should do more.
    We know more and more families, as people live longer, are going to 
be taking care of aging or disabled relatives. We should do more. So I 
recommended to the Congress to increase our support for the child care 
tax credit, to give families a long-term care credit for caring for 
elderly or disabled loved ones, to give parents a tax deduction for 
college tuition, up to $10,000 a year so we can open the doors of 4 
years of college to all Americans. These are big things. Why? Because we 
know there will be big problems 10 or 20 or 30 years from now if we 
don't deal with them right now.
    And I could go on and on. I don't want to give you the whole State 
of the Union Address, but the point I'm trying to make is, the 
Democratic Party is now in a position to say, we have the resources. 
We've worked very hard to get rid of this deficit. We've worked very 
hard to pay the debt down. And we've now got the resources to deal with 
the aging of America, the challenge of the children and their education, 
the challenge of health care, the challenge of balancing work and 
family. We can do it and still get this country out of debt in 13 years 
and still provide extra incentives to places like where I was this 
morning, in the Rio Grande Valley, to give people extra incentives to 
invest in urban neighborhoods, rural areas, Indian reservations, where 
our prosperity hasn't reached.
    And why do we do all that? Because we believe everybody counts; 
everybody ought to have a chance; and we all do better when we help each 
other. That's what I believe. Nobody believes the Democrats anymore are 
weak on the budget, weak on the economy, weak on welfare, weak on crime. 
But we do believe that if somebody is trying, we ought to help them make 
the most of their lives. And we now have 7 years of evidence that that's 
not only a morally defensible thing to do, it not only makes us feel 
better, it actually works.
    So I will close with this, and I don't want to be maudlin, but I can 
pretty well say what I want to because I'm not running for anything. 
[Laughter] First time in over two decades I haven't been on the ballot 
for anything. Some of those guys on the other side may write me out just 
to--[laughter]--they may feel deprived that they're being cut out of one 
more chance to vote against me, but I'm not on the ballot. So I'm just 
telling you this as a citizen.
    Once before in my lifetime, I thought we had a chance to build the 
future of our dreams. In the last economic expansion--that was until 
this month the longest one in history; it ran from 1961 to 1969--I 
graduated from high school in 1964. And I think it's appropriate that I 
say this here. Most of the people who now look back at that period date 
the onset of American cynicism to the assassination of President 
Kennedy. That is dead wrong. That is wrong. The country was heartbroken, 
but they rallied. They united. They tried to lift themselves up. Lyndon 
Johnson did a good job of moving the country forward.
    And we believed, when I graduated from high school, that we were 
going to solve the civil rights crisis and the poverty problems of 
America through the orderly legislative process in Congress and working 
with people. We believed we were going to be able

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to stand against communism without having an unacceptable cost at home 
or around the world. We believed that we could do this.
    Four years later, I was at my college graduation, 2 days after 
Robert Kennedy was killed, 90 days after Martin Luther King was killed, 
94 days after Lyndon Johnson said he wouldn't run for reelection. The 
economy was beginning to shut down. The country was torn apart over 
Vietnam, and we had had riots in the streets of America. I have waited, 
as an American, over 30 years for my country to get another chance to 
build the future of our dreams for our children.
    Most of us get at least one second chance in life, and if we didn't, 
we'd be a long way behind where we are. Our country, in our lifetime, 
has this chance in even better circumstances than existed 30 years ago, 
with science and technology changes that are breathtaking. I believe 
that the young women here may very likely give birth to children who 
will have a life expectancy of 100 years. They will come home from the 
hospital with genetic road maps of their children's lives. And if they 
give birth to young daughters that have one of those two broken genes 
that are high predictors of breast cancer, they'll be able to take gene 
therapies that will block them from ever developing in the first place. 
I believe that will happen.
    I believe the young people here will soon be driving automobiles 
that get probably 80, 90 miles a gallon, and within 5 years they'll be 
running on biofuels that will be the equivalent of getting 500 miles to 
the gallon because they require so little oil to produce. I believe 
we'll find out what's in those black holes in outer space. I believe 
we'll be able to keep people with diabetes, adult onset diabetes, alive 
and healthy to a normal lifespan. I believe that we will actually 
develop computers the size of a tear drop that use DNA for computer 
memories more powerful than any human chip, so that you will have tiny 
little computers with a computing power of all the super computers 
today.
    I believe all this is going to happen. I think we'll also have to 
deal with highly sophisticated terrorists and organized criminals and 
drugrunners that have access to chemical and biological and other 
weapons. There will always be enemies of civilization out there. But 
we'll do just fine if we understand that it still comes down to whether 
you believe everybody counts, everybody ought to have a chance. We're 
all going to do better if we work together.
    For 30 years I have waited for this moment. If I contributed at all 
to it, I am grateful. But as a citizen, I implore you, don't let America 
turn away from what works when we've finally got a chance to redeem the 
whole promise of our Nation.
    Thank you.

Note: The President spoke at 8:30 p.m. at a private residence. In his 
remarks, he referred to Fred Baron and Lisa Blue, dinner hosts; Mary 
Albert, widow of former Speaker of the House Carl B. Albert; Bernard 
(``B'') Rapoport, former chairman and chief executive officer, American 
Income Life Insurance Co., and his wife, Audre; Garry Mauro, former 
Texas land commissioner; Mayor Ron Kirk of Dallas; State Senator David 
Cain and his wife, Sally H. Cain, Region VI Director, Office of 
Intergovernmental and Interagency Affairs, Department of Education; 
Regina Montoya Coggins, congressional candidate for Texas' Fifth 
Congressional District; Edward G. Rendell, general chair, Democratic 
National Committee; and Jim Nicholson, chairman, Republican National 
Committee.