[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 36, Number 46 (Monday, November 20, 2000)]
[Pages 2858-2859]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

<R04>
The President's Radio Address

November 11, 2000

    Good morning. On this Veterans Day, as America honors the service 
and sacrifice of our men and women in uniform, we are witnessing the 
extraordinary resilience of the democracy they've pledged their lives to 
defend.
    From our earliest days, the right to vote has meant the right to 
participate and be heard. If ever there was a doubt about the importance 
of exercising the most fundamental right of citizenship, it sure was 
answered on Tuesday. No American will ever again be able to seriously 
say, ``My vote doesn't count.''
    President Franklin Roosevelt once said, ``Democracy is not a static 
thing; it is an everlasting march.'' Our Founders may not have foreseen 
every challenge in the march of democracy, but they crafted a 
Constitution that would.
    The people have spoken. The important thing for all of us to 
remember now is that a process for resolving the discrepancies and 
challenges to the election is in motion. The rest of us need to be 
patient and wait for the results.
    I want to congratulate both Vice President Gore and Governor Bush 
for a vigorous and hard-fought campaign. Once again, the world is seeing 
democracy in action. The events unfolding in Florida are not a sign of 
the division of our nation, but of the vitality of our debate, which 
will be resolved through the vibrancy of our Constitution and laws. 
Regardless of the outcome, we will come together as a nation as we 
always do.
    As this election unfolds, the nation's business continues. Tomorrow 
I will begin a trip to Asia that will end in Vietnam. I will be the 
first President to visit that nation since the height of the Vietnam 
war. I will go to open a new chapter in our relationship with its 
people.
    For nearly a decade now, we have been building a more normal 
relationship with Vietnam, basing each step forward on progress and 
accounting for Americans missing from the war in Vietnam. We've made 
great strides, repatriating remains, obtaining documents, never 
forgetting that each case

[[Page 2859]]

represents a brave American with a name, a home, a family that cares 
about his fate.
    I will make clear to Vietnam that we expect continued cooperation. I 
will also offer the support of the American people as Vietnam becomes 
more open to the world, promoting trade and more ties among our people 
and championing human rights and religious freedom.
    We also have important business here at home. As Congress prepares 
to finish its work for the year, I urge the members to build on the 
bipartisan progress we have already made. Let's finish the job of 
improving our schools, resolve our differences on immigration and worker 
safety, and let's raise the minimum wage. We should pledge to get these 
things done for the American people before the next President takes 
office in January.
    A couple of nights ago, we celebrated the 200th anniversary of the 
White House. We marked much more than the bicentennial of a building. 
Through two centuries of war and peace, triumph and tragedy, the White 
House has stood as the living symbol of our democracy. It has welcomed 
every President since John Adams under its roof, always through a 
peaceful transition of power.
    This January, as it has done for 200 years, it will do so again--
because of the timeless power of our Constitution and our undying faith 
in we, the people.
    Thanks for listening.

Note: The address was recorded at 10:30 a.m. on November 10 in the Map 
Room at the White House for broadcast at 10:06 a.m. on November 11. The 
transcript was made available by the Office of the Press Secretary on 
November 10 but was embargoed for release until the broadcast.