[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 36, Number 33 (Monday, August 21, 2000)]
[Pages 1876-1881]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

<R04>
Remarks at an American Federation of Teachers and National Education 
Association Luncheon in Beverly Hills, California

August 14, 2000

    Thank you very much. Well, first I want to thank Sandy and Bob and 
all of you with the AFT and the NEA for all these years of support and 
friendship and for what you have done in our schools over the last 8 
years. It seems like only yesterday that I started this odyssey to 
become President in late 1991, in no small measure because I wanted

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to see the President and the National Government really, really take 
education seriously on a consistent, day-in and day-out basis, to care 
for our children not just in word but in deed.
    And one of the best decisions I made the whole time I was President, 
I think, was to ask my friend of more than 20 years, Dick Riley, to 
become the Secretary of Education. He and Tunky are here today, and he 
deserves at least--at least--50 percent of the awards and the 
recognitions that you have given to me.
    I can't tell you how much it has meant to me to know that what we 
have done together has actually made life better for the children of 
America. Bob gave a little history lesson. I got tickled, actually, when 
I heard them talking in Philadelphia. It was really almost funny, you 
know. [Laughter]
    You know, when they were in--remember that?--[laughter]--they took 
credit when the Sun came up in the morning. [Laughter] ``It's morning in 
America.'' [Laughter] But now they want you to believe that the turtle 
on the fencepost got there by accident--[laughter]--and that we just 
somehow just coasted along. Where do they think I got all this gray 
hair? [Laughter]
    What I'd like to point out is that all the things that Sandy and Bob 
talked about have actually changed the lives of millions of Americans. 
In our schools today the math scores are up; the reading scores are up. 
Some of the biggest gains have come in some of the poorest schools, and 
I'll just give two examples for the public record here.
    I was in Harlem the other day, in a school, celebrating the ``Save 
the Music'' program that VH1 is doing. And I was in this elementary 
public school in Harlem which 2 years ago had 80 percent of the kids 
reading and doing math below grade level--2 years ago. So they get a new 
principal; the teachers all get together; they adopt a school uniform 
policy; they adopt real standards of measurement of what they're going 
to do; and 2 years later--in 2 years--they went from 80 percent of the 
kids doing reading and math below grade level to 74 percent of the kids 
doing reading and math at or above grade level--in 2 years.
    Then I was in western Kentucky a few weeks ago, at a school where 
well over half the kids are on the school lunch program. It was 
identified 3\1/2\, 4 years ago, under the Kentucky law as one of the 
failing schools in Kentucky. They got some more of our teachers we were 
talking about; they have smaller classes in the early grades and a 
dedicated, very well-trained young woman that I had the privilege of 
meeting, known in her school as the ``Clinton teacher,'' which I like. 
[Laughter] So in 3 years, they went from 12 percent of the kids doing 
reading at or above grade level to 57 percent. Listen to this; it gets 
better--from 5 percent of the kids doing math at or above grade level to 
70 percent; from zero percent of the kids doing science at or above 
grade level to 63 percent. It's now one of the 20 best elementary 
schools in the entire State of Kentucky.
    So what's the point of this? The teachers of America now have 
example after example after example to rebut the critics. They can say 
all our children can learn, number one. And number two, our public 
schools, all of them, can produce; they can educate our children; they 
can make the grade.
    You know the argument for Proposition 38 out here, the argument for 
that proposition in Michigan? Their whole argument is that there is this 
sort of mindless bureaucracy out there grinding our children down. And 
the appeal really goes to people who really don't know what's going on 
in the schools, don't understand how hard it is, and don't understand 
how much it's changing. Now, you have evidence.
    And we say to our friends in California, our friends in Michigan, 
and throughout America, we don't have a dollar to spend on something 
besides the educational improvement of our public schools, and that's 
what we ought to be doing with that money. [Applause] Thank you.
    Now, let me say--let me just go on a little bit. [Laughter] Sandy 
talked about the big expansion in college aid. We had a big increase in 
Pell grants. We went from 700,000 to a million work-study positions. We 
had the education IRA's. There are now 15 million families taking 
advantage of the HOPE scholarship tax cut. And the direct student loan 
program--listen to this--has already

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saved college students over $8 billion in loan repayment rates.
    So this is really good news. Why? Because the dropout rate in high 
school is down. The college-going rate is the highest it's ever been. 
The SAT scores are up, even though more people are taking it from more 
diverse backgrounds. And last year, for the first time in the history of 
our country, the high school graduation rate for African-Americans was 
about the same as it was for white American students. This country is 
moving in the right direction.
    Now, who deserves the lion's share of the credit for that? The 
teachers, the other educators, the students, themselves, and their 
parents. But it matters that we have a national policy that says: high 
standards, strict accountability, more investment, do what works, and 
empower these schools, put more teachers out there. Well, I just 
announced an initiative a couple days ago to let teachers who go into 
underserved areas or into underserved fields get more of their college 
loans forgiven for teaching. We need to do things that work.
    Now, that brings me to the next point. I was given a note here 
before I came in, and I don't know if they're still here, that 
Congressman Earl Hilliard and Congressman Rush Holt are here, or at 
least they were here. I'm going to New Jersey for Rush Holt in a few 
days. He's got a tough race. He's the only physicist in Congress. 
[Laughter] Somebody told me the other day, he said, ``Rush is not 
qualified to be in Congress. He actually knows something.'' [Laughter] 
Now, Earl has got no problem, but I want you to help him, too. 
[Laughter] But Rush Holt was the first Democrat from that district in--I 
don't know--since the Civil War, and he deserves to be reelected.
    And every one of these House and Senate seats is important. We still 
have to fight every year for that 100,000 teachers. Every year it's 
another battle. We still have not succeeded in getting Federal 
assistance to build or do major repairs on 6,000 schools and repair 
another 5,000 a year for 5 years, which is a desperate problem for our 
public schools all over America. It matters. Every one of these House 
and Senate seats matter.
    And I hope you'll forgive me if I put in a little extra plug for the 
Senate candidate from the State of New York. [Applause] Thank you. I'll 
tell you, I am quite sure that there is no person running for the 
Congress this year, the House or the Senate, who was not previously a 
teacher, who spent as much time in school, listening to teachers, 
listening to principals, talking to parents and kids as Hillary has over 
the last 20-plus years. Even when she was younger, when she was a young 
girl, she would go door to door in Chicago trying to figure out why kids 
weren't in school and what it would take to get them there. Her whole 
life has been an obsession with the welfare and the proper development 
of our children.
    And you know, the big question for the American people this year is 
whether to keep this progress and prosperity going. It's very, very 
important, every one of these House seats, every one of these Senate 
seats. And I can tell you, if the people of New York see fit to elect 
her, she will be one of the great Members of the United States Senate, 
now or ever.
    I will also say that by far the biggest decision the American people 
have to make, obviously, is the race for President and Vice President. 
And you all know how I feel. [Laughter] But there is a big teaching job 
here, and I just want to say a few things about that.
    I've known Joe Lieberman for 30 years, since I was a law student, 
still a student, and he was a young man running for the State Senate. I 
probably know Al Gore better than anybody outside his family now, 
because of the way we've worked together for 8 years. We had lunch once 
a week, every week for 8 years, until he got something more important to 
do. [Laughter]
    You know, as your time runs out, you have little--it's sort of a 
gradual, your increasing humility; it doesn't just all hit you at once. 
[Laughter] One former President once told me it took him 3 or 4 months 
to realize he wasn't lost every time he went in a room because nobody 
played a song anymore. [Laughter] Anyway, it'll be all right. [Laughter]
    To get back to the main point, I know this guy. This is not 
politics. I know this guy. I

[[Page 1879]]

have seen him when he was happy. I've seen him when he was sad. I've 
seen him when he was worried about his children being sick and when he 
was happy and elated about some achievement we had secured. I know him.
    And I know how deeply he feels about equal opportunity for all 
people, because of his depth of conviction about the inherent worth of 
every person. And I know how that will play itself out in education 
policy. I know he will be a ferocious advocate of the children, the 
teachers, the schools and the future of this country. And I think it's 
really important because--you know, I say this, and a lot of times 
people laugh. But sometimes it's better to get people to laugh; they'll 
actually listen to you then. One of the things I learned when I became 
President is, just because you're talking doesn't mean somebody's 
listening. [Laughter] I'm sure you've had that experience in the 
classroom. [Laughter]
    But look, we need you. I know you're all well organized, and I know 
you've contributed your dues. And I know that you'll invest money in 
this, and I am sure you'll do your Get Out the Vote and everything. But 
we need you from now until election day to be teachers. We need you to 
do the kind of thing that Bob did here on the education record and throw 
it into the future.
    Why is that? Because this is a really big election. And what we do 
with our prosperity is as big a test of what kind of wisdom and what 
kind of values we have, what kind of judgment we have, as what we do in 
adversity, maybe a bigger test. Because, when you're, you know, in the 
ditch, you don't have to be as smart as a tree full of owls to know 
you've got to do something different to get out. [Laughter] But when 
everything is just rocking along, you can just sort of bliss out and 
say, ``Well, you know, what difference does this make? They all seem 
pretty nice to me.''
    So it's a big election. Most of you are younger than me, but those 
of you my age or older know that you maybe get one chance in a lifetime 
to build the future of your dreams for your kids, unencumbered by 
incoming fire. America has--the people of this country must know how 
blessed we are now. You can help them understand that.
    Then it's a big election because there are very large differences 
between the two candidates and their visions--the parties--which will 
have immense concrete impact on the lives of every American.
    Now, does that mean this should be a negative campaign? No, this 
should be a highly positive campaign. I don't want anybody at our 
convention to say anything bad about them. I don't like that. We've had 
enough of that for the last 20 years, mostly coming out of their side, 
to last us a lifetime. I don't like that. We should posit that they are 
good, honorable, patriotic people who love their children and love this 
country and will do what they believe is right.
    But then we ought to say, however, we disagree with them on a lot of 
things, and it seems like we're the only ones who want the American 
people to know what our disagreements are. Big election; big 
differences; only the Democrats want you to know what the differences 
are. Who does that tell you about who you ought to vote for?
    Think about this. This is really true. I think we should compliment 
them for abandoning their mean and harsh rhetoric. [Laughter] We should. 
No, we should--wait, wait. Words are important. Woodrow Wilson said 
once, ``Words could inflict more pain and damage than bullets.'' I 
wouldn't know, but he said that. [Laughter] So we're all having a good 
time, but you should welcome that. It's a good thing they did.
    And everybody talks about--there was even a big article in one of 
the papers about phrases, verbatim phrases we had used in '92 and '93 
and '94, verbatim were used by the Republicans in their speeches in 
Philadelphia. And I consider that both a compliment and an advance. 
[Laughter] Look, I'm being serious now. Don't laugh when--[laughter].
    But the difference in where we were in '92 and where they are today 
is that we actually had policies that backed up our rhetoric. We had a 
new education policy, a new welfare policy, a new crime policy, a new 
environmental policy, a new economic policy. We had policies that backed 
up our rhetoric. And Al Gore and Joe Lieberman can speak for themselves, 
but I just want to say one word about the economy because that affects 
how much we can help our schools. And I think

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I've earned the right to talk about economic policy.
    People say to me all the time, ``What great innovation did you and 
Bob Rubin bring to Washington to get this great economy?'' And I always 
say, arithmetic. [Laughter] We stopped pretending that 2 and 2 was 6. We 
got rid of rosy scenarios and looked at the money that was coming in, 
and we had priorities for what was most important.
    So we had this new economic policy. But it really was based on 
arithmetic. And that's what is at issue now. The Vice President says we 
ought to have a tax cut, but it ought to be one that we can afford, 
targeted to helping people send their kids to college, pay for long-term 
care, pay for child care, pay for retirement, easing the marriage 
penalty, helping low income workers with a lot of kids. And we ought to 
save some money for education and to cover Medicare and Social Security 
out through the life of the baby boomers and add a Medicare prescription 
drug benefit. And oh, by the way, the money may not come in because this 
so-called surplus is a projected surplus.
    So his policy is: Stay with what works; get us out of debt; keep the 
interest rates down; give a tax cut we can afford; save some money to 
invest in our future, in education, Medicare, drugs, lengthening the 
life of Social Security and Medicare. That's his policy.
    Their policy sounds better the first time you hear it. Their policy 
is this: ``Hey, we're going to have this big surplus. It's your money. 
We're going to give it back to you.'' That sounds good. There are 
several problems with it.
    First of all, if you give all the projected surplus and more in a 
tax cut, it leaves you nothing to lengthen the life of Social Security 
and Medicare. It leaves you nothing to invest in education. It leaves 
you nothing to prepare for an emergency. We've had 3 years of big farm 
emergencies. And it leaves you no cushion in case the money doesn't come 
in.
    Never mind the programs they have. If they privatize Social Security 
partially, like they say, that will cost another trillion dollars over a 
decade. So inevitably what they're really saying is--what they're saying 
is the sweet part of it, ``I will give it all back to you in tax cuts.'' 
They're not playing the sour part, which is, ``Now, of course, this will 
mean that we'll have higher interest rates, because we're going back to 
deficits, and we will have less money to invest in our future.''
    Our tax cut, the one our side has proposed, costs way less than half 
theirs and gives two-thirds of the American people more money. Plus 
which, by keeping interest rates at least a percent lower than they 
otherwise would over the next decade, you know what that's worth, a 
percent a year for 10 years? Two hundred and fifty billion bucks in 
lower home mortgage, 30 billion bucks in lower car payments, 15 billion 
bucks in lower college loan payments, all to middle class people, like 
school teachers.
    Now, how is it that we could have a tax cut that costs less than 
half theirs, that gives two-thirds of the people more money? Because, 
like always, as Bob said, most of their money is going to people like I 
hope I'll be when I get out of here. [Laughter] But you know, that's not 
our way. We think the people that served this food to you deserve the 
same chance to send their kids to college that we have. That's not our 
way. [Applause] Thank you.
    So you've got to think about it. And you've got to be teachers. You 
need to ask people who tell you, ``Well, it's not a very important 
election,''--you have to say, ``Oh, yes it is; here's why.'' ``Well, 
they both seem pretty nice, and there's not any difference in them.'' 
Say, ``Oh, yes, there are, big difference in crime policy, big 
difference in environmental policy, big difference in civil rights 
policy and over a woman's right to choose. Big difference in''-- 
[applause].
    You just go down through all the things that will affect real 
people's lives. Anybody that writes a column in the newspaper saying 
there's not much difference between them is somebody that's already got 
everything they want in life and doesn't think anybody can take it away 
from them.
    This is a big election. And you don't have to say one single, 
solitary mean thing personally about the people who are on the other 
side. Just be teachers.
    But now this economics thing is big. Because if we put this country 
back in the ditch economically and we start running deficits again, 
there won't be any money for anybody

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to keep these education promises or to invest in our children. And you 
need to go out and ask people, say, ``Listen''--just go up and ask 
people, be a teacher--say, ``What's your projected income for the next 
10 years? How sure are you that it's going to come in? Now, if I ask you 
to sign a binding contract today to spend it all, every last penny, even 
on something you really, really wanted, would you do that and save no 
money for your family's health care or education or an emergency or just 
have a cushion in case you didn't get the raises you're counting on?'' 
Of course, they wouldn't. Now, if they would, they should really 
consider supporting the Republicans. [Laughter] But of course they 
wouldn't, and America shouldn't either. This is dead serious. This is a 
huge difference, and so much else depends on that.
    So I want you all to think about this. It's not enough to vote. It's 
not enough to work on election day or the weekend before. It's not 
enough to give your dues to the organization and have them invest it 
right. I am telling you, this election is going to be determined by what 
people think it's about. This is one of those deals where the answer you 
give depends on what you think the question is.
    And if people really believe it's about how to keep the progress and 
the prosperity going and if they really understand the differences, then 
the Vice President and Senator Lieberman and Hillary and Rush Holt and 
our crowd--we'll be fine because we're on the side of the American 
people, and they agree with us. But we have to flush this out, and you 
have to be teachers.
    The last thing I'd like to say is that I have no words to convey how 
grateful I am to you for what you do every day, for taking care of our 
kids. Almost a hundred percent of you could be making a lot more money 
doing something else. And you embody, to me, the best of American 
citizenship. Working with you has been a joy; knowing that we made it 
better has made it even more joyful. I'll be grateful for the rest of my 
life.
    But remember, we are all citizens first, and our citizen duty now is 
to make sure the American people understand exactly what is at stake. If 
they do, trust me, the best is still out there.
    Thank you, and God bless you.

 Note:  The President spoke at 2:34 p.m. at the Beverly Hills Hilton 
Hotel. In his remarks, he referred to Sandra Feldman, president, 
American Federation of Teachers; Robert F. Chase, president, National 
Education Association; Ann (Tunky) Riley, wife of Secretary of Education 
Richard W. Riley; and former Secretary of the Treasury Robert E. Rubin.