[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 40, Number 38 (Monday, September 20, 2004)]
[Pages 1966-1973]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

<R04>
Remarks in Holland, Michigan

September 13, 2004

    The President. Thank you all very much for coming. Nothing like a 
little Dutch hospitality on the campaign trail.

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    I'm here to ask for your vote. That's what I'm doing today. I 
believe you've got to get out amongst the people and ask for the vote. 
And not only do I want your vote, I want your help. Go out and register 
your friends and neighbors to vote. Don't overlook the discerning 
Democrat, people like Zell Miller. And then when you register them to 
vote, get them headed to the polls. Then when you get them headed to the 
polls, tell them if you want a safer America, a stronger America, a 
better America, put Dick Cheney and me back in office.
    I wish Laura were here today. She is a great mom, a wonderful wife. 
I'm going to give you some reasons to put me back in, but perhaps the 
most important one of all is so that Laura is the First Lady for 4 more 
years.
    Audience members. Four more years! Four more years! Four more years!
    The President. Listen, I'm real proud to be--I'm proud to be running 
with my friend Dick Cheney. Look, I admit it, he doesn't have the 
waviest hair in the race. [Laughter] I didn't pick him because of his 
hair. I picked him because he's a man of good judgment, good experience, 
a man who gets the job done.
    I want to thank my friend Pete Hoekstra and his wife, Diane. 
Hoekstra is a good one, a fine Member of the United States Congress. I 
look forward to working--he said, when we were coming in on the bus, he 
said, ``Remind them we worked on the desks together.'' [Laughter] I did. 
They put him the head of the Intelligence Committee. Believe me, that's 
a big deal. I'm looking forward to working with him to make sure we've 
got the best intelligence possible to protect our country.
    I want to thank the mayor for being here. Mr. Mayor--Mayor Al is 
with us today. I appreciate him coming. Just fill the potholes, Mr. 
Mayor, and everything will be fine. [Laughter] I appreciate, Mayor--tell 
your police force how much we appreciate their sacrifice and service. 
And while you're thanking the police, thank those firefighters, too, for 
their service.
    And I want to thank my friend Betsy DeVos and her father-in-law, 
Rich. I want to thank all the grassroots activists who are here. Those 
are the people who put up the signs and make the phone calls. Thank the 
local officials who are here.
    I thank the Bellamy Brothers who are here, my friends the Bellamy 
Brothers. Good to see you guys. Thank you for coming. I want to thank 
the Holland Public High marching band for coming today. Make sure you 
hustle back to class and start studying. [Laughter]
    Here's what I believe. I believe with your help, we will carry 
Michigan and win a great victory in November. I'm looking forward to 
campaigning in your State. I'm looking forward to spending a lot of time 
here. I'm going to tell the people where I stand, what I believe, and 
where I'm going to lead this Nation for the next 4 years.
    I believe every child can learn and every school must teach. I went 
to Washington to challenge the soft bigotry of low expectations, to 
raise the standards, to measure early and solve problems before it's too 
late. I went to stop this practice of just shuffling children through 
the schools grade after grade, year after year, without learning the 
basics. I went to make sure Washington trusts the local people to make 
the right decisions for their schools. We're closing the achievement gap 
in America, and we're not turning back.
    I believe we have a moral responsibility to provide our seniors with 
good health care. I knew Medicare was an important program, but it 
wasn't changing with the times. See, we pay $100,000 for heart surgery 
but not the prescription drugs to prevent the heart surgery from being 
needed in the first place. That didn't make any sense for our seniors. 
It didn't make any sense for our taxpayers. We've strengthened Medicare, 
and we're not turning back.
    I believe in the energy, innovation, and spirit of America's workers 
and farmers and small-business owners. And that's why we unleashed that 
energy with the largest tax relief in a generation.
    When you're out rounding up the vote, you remind your friends and 
neighbors what this economy has been through. We have been through a 
recession. We've been through corporate scandals. By the way, we passed 
new laws, and it's now clear, abundantly

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clear, that we're not going to tolerate dishonesty in the boardrooms of 
America. And we went through that terror attack. And that attack hurt 
our economy.
    But we're overcoming those obstacles. Our economy has been growing 
at rates as fast as any in nearly 20 years. We're overcoming those 
obstacles because we've got great workers and great farmers. We're 
overcoming those obstacles because the tax relief is working.
    The national unemployment rate is 5.4 percent. That is lower than 
the average rate of the 1970s, the 1980s, and the 1990s. Listen, there 
are some areas of our country that are still lagging behind, but we'll 
continue to promote a pro-growth, pro-small-business policy, pro-
entrepreneur policy for the next 4 years so people can find a good job 
here in America.
    I believe a President--I believe it's a job of a President to 
confront problems, not pass them on to future Presidents and future 
generations. I believe the most solemn duty of the American President is 
to protect the American people. If America shows uncertainty and 
weakness in this decade, the world will drift toward tragedy. This is 
not going to happen on my watch.
    Audience members. Four more years! Four more years! Four more years!
    The President. I am running for President with a clear and positive 
plan to build a safer world and a more hopeful America. I am running 
with a compassionate conservative philosophy that Government should help 
people improve their lives, not try to run their lives. I believe this 
Nation wants steady, consistent, principled leadership, and that's why, 
with your help, we're going to win a great national victory in November.
    Listen, I understand the world we live in today is a changing world. 
Think about what happened in the workplace. Years ago, our fathers and 
grandfathers worked for one job, one company. They had one pension plan, 
one health care plan. Today, people change careers and change jobs 
often, and the most startling change of all is that women now work not 
only in the house but outside the house.
    We have a changing world. And yet, the fundamental systems haven't 
changed. The Tax Code, health coverage, pension plans, worker training 
were created for the world of yesterday, not tomorrow. So over the next 
4 years we're going to transform these systems so that all citizens are 
equipped, prepared, and thus truly free to be able to make their own 
choices and to be able to realize the great promise of this country.
    Listen, any hopeful society has got to be one in which the economy 
is growing, and I've laid out a plan to make sure that this economy of 
ours continues to grow. To keep jobs here in America, America must be 
the best place in the world to do business. That means less regulations 
and less lawsuits on our small-business owners.
    Listen, to keep jobs here in America, we need an energy plan. I 
submitted a plan to the United States Congress, and it's stuck in there. 
It's a plan that encourages conservation, encourages the use of 
renewables, encourages clean coal technology, encourages the use of 
technology to make sure we explore for hydrocarbons in environmentally 
friendly ways. But it's a plan that recognizes to keep jobs here, we 
need to be less dependent on foreign sources of energy. To keep jobs 
here, we've got to be wise about how we use our natural resources, 
including water. And that starts with keeping the Great Lakes water in 
the Great Lakes Basin.
    See, earlier this year, my opponent said a decision about Great 
Lakes water diversion would be a delicate balancing act.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. That kind of sounds like him, doesn't it? My position 
is clear: My administration will never allow the diversion of Great 
Lakes water.
    Listen, to keep jobs here, we've got to make sure we open up foreign 
markets to our products. See, if we open up our market, it's good for 
you we do. See, the economy works this way: If you have more choices in 
the marketplace, you're likely to get the product you want at a better 
price and higher quality. So what I'm telling the places like China is, 
``You treat us the way we treat you.'' And the reason I'm saying that is 
I know we can compete with anybody, anytime, anywhere if the rules are 
fair.
    To create jobs here in America, to make sure this economy continues 
to grow, we've

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got to be wise about how we spend your money, and we've got to keep your 
taxes low. Taxes are an issue in this campaign. I'm running against a 
fellow who's promised at least $2 trillion in new money so far.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. And we haven't even gotten in the stretch run yet. So 
they said to him the other day, ``Well, how are you going to pay for 
them?'' And he said, ``That's easy. Just tax the rich.''
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. We've heard that before, haven't we? First of all, 
you can't raise enough money by taxing the rich to cover his $2.2 
trillion of new spending. There is a tax gap. Guess what he's thinking? 
Guess who he thinks is going to fill the tax gap when he can't make it 
with the rich? Yes.
    Let me tell you what else--you've heard that ``I'm going the tax the 
rich'' before, haven't you? That's why the rich hire accountants and 
lawyers so you get stuck with the bill. But we're not going to let him 
tax you. We're going to win in November.
    Let me tell you something else we've got to do about this Tax Code: 
We've got to change it. It's a complicated mess. It's full of special-
interest loopholes. In a new term, I'm going to bring the Republicans 
and Democrats together to simplify the Tax Code, to make the Tax Code 
more fair. We want more people working than spending time--than the time 
they have to spend on filling out all these forms. Do you realize 
Americans spend about 6 billion hours a year on Federal taxes? That's 
one complicated code that needs to be fixed and will be fixed.
    In a changing world, we've got to recognize we've got to help our 
workers gain the skills necessary to fill the jobs of the 21st century. 
Jobs are changing. Sometimes the skill sets aren't. That's why I'm such 
a big believer in the community college system around America. I also 
understand that most new jobs are filled by people with at least 2 years 
of college. Yet, only one in four of our students gets there. That's why 
in high schools we'll fund early intervention programs to help students 
at risk. We must place a new focus on math and science. Over time, we 
will require a rigorous exam before graduation. By raising performance 
standards in high school, by expanding Pell grants for low- and middle-
income families, we will help more Americans start their career with a 
college diploma.
    Times have changed. We've got to do more to make sure health care is 
available and affordable. More than half of the uninsured in America are 
small-business employees and their families. Small businesses are having 
trouble affording health care. In order to help the families who work 
for these companies, we must allow small firms to join together so they 
can purchase insurance at the discounts available to big companies.
    We want people owning and managing their own health plans, and 
that's why I believe we ought to expand health savings accounts. I want 
to expand community health centers so poor people can find good health 
care all across America, particularly in our poor counties.
    I know in order to make sure we've got good docs practicing 
medicine, to make sure health care is affordable, we need to stop these 
junk lawsuits. You cannot be pro-doctor, pro-patient, pro-hospital, and 
pro-trial-lawyer at the same time. You have to choose. My opponent made 
his choice, and he put him on the ticket.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. I made my choice. I'm for medical liability reform--
now.
    Our plan to improve the quality of health care is practical. It's a 
commonsense plan to make health care more accessible, more affordable, 
and to keep the good docs practicing medicine. I believe that health 
care decisions should be made by doctors and patients, not by 
Washington, DC, bureaucrats.
    We have a difference of opinion in this campaign. I'm running 
against a fellow who's put out a health care plan that is massive. It is 
complicated. It is a blueprint to have the Government control your 
health care.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. And he can't pay for his plan. Today there's an 
independent study out that says his health care plan today would cost 
taxpayers 1.5 trillion new dollars.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. No, that's just the kind of plan you would expect 
from a Senator from Massachusetts.

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    In a new term, I'll continue to promote an ownership society in 
America. In changing times, ownership can bring stability to your lives. 
One of the great statistics of the modern--of the last couple of years, 
is the homeownership rate is at an alltime high in America. We've got a 
plan to continue homeownership in America. I love the fact, when people 
from all walks of life can open up their door where they're living and 
say, ``Welcome to my home. Welcome to my piece of property.''
    We need to--listen. On Social Security, we need to--I want the 
younger workers here to listen carefully to this debate on Social 
Security. If you're on Social Security today, nothing is going to 
change. I do not care what the DC politicians will tell you. Nobody is 
going to take away your benefits. And if you're a baby boomer, you're in 
pretty good shape when it comes to Social Security.
    But we need to worry about our children and grandchildren when it 
comes to the Social Security system. I think we need to think 
differently when it comes to our children and grandchildren. I think we 
ought to allow young workers to put aside some of their own tax money in 
a personal savings account, to make sure Social Security fulfills the 
promise.
    If you listen carefully to the rhetoric in this campaign, I'm 
running against a fellow who wants to expand Government. We want to 
expand opportunity for every single citizen of this country.
    I also recognize, in the world of change, some things do not change. 
The values we try to live by do not change, courage and compassion, 
reverence and integrity. In times of change, we'll support the 
institutions that gives our lives direction and purpose, our families, 
our schools, our religious congregations. We stand for a culture of life 
in which every person counts and every being matters. We stand for 
marriage and family, which are the foundations of society. And I stand 
for the appointment of Federal judges who know the difference between 
personal opinion and the strict interpretation of the law.
    This election will also determine how America responds to the 
continuing danger of terrorism. Since the terrible morning of September 
the 11th, 2001, we have fought the terrorists across the Earth, not for 
pride, not for power, but because the lives of our citizens are at 
stake. Our strategy is clear. We're defending the homeland, transforming 
our military, and strengthening our intelligence services. We're staying 
on the offensive. We are striking the terrorists abroad so we do not 
have to face them here at home.
    Audience members. Four more years! Four more years! Four more years!
    The President. We will work to advance liberty in the broader Middle 
East and throughout the world, and we will prevail. Our strategy is 
succeeding. Four years ago, Afghanistan was the home base of Al Qaida; 
Pakistan was a transit point for terrorist groups; Saudi Arabia was 
fertile ground for terrorist fundraising; Libya was pursuing nuclear 
weapons; Iraq was a gathering threat; and Al Qaida was largely 
unchallenged as it planned attacks.
    Because we acted, because we led, the Government of a free 
Afghanistan is fighting terror; Pakistan is capturing terrorists; Saudi 
is making raids and arrests; Libya is dismantling its weapons programs; 
the army of Iraq is fighting for freedom; and more than three-quarters 
of Al Qaida's known leadership has been brought to justice.
    We have led. Many have joined, and America and the world are safer. 
This progress involved careful diplomacy, clear moral purpose, and some 
tough decisions. And the toughest came on Iraq. We knew Saddam Hussein's 
record of aggression and support for terror. We knew his long history of 
pursuing, even using, weapons of mass destruction. And we know that 
after September the 11th, our country must think differently. We must 
take threats seriously before they fully materialize.
    In Saddam Hussein, we saw a threat. I went to the United States 
Congress, and members of both political parties, including my opponent, 
looked at the same intelligence, remembered the same history, and 
recognized Saddam Hussein was a threat. They voted the authorization of 
force. They said, ``Go ahead and use force if you need to. He's a 
threat.''
    Before the Commander in Chief commits troops into harm's way, we 
must have tried

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all alternatives. That's why I went to the United Nations. I was hopeful 
that diplomacy could deal with this threat. I was hopeful diplomacy 
would work. The United Nations looked at the same intelligence I did. 
They remembered the same history we remembered and voted 15 to nothing 
to say to Saddam Hussein, ``Disclose, disarm, or face serious 
consequences.''
    The world spoke, but as he had for over a decade, he ignored the 
resolutions of the United Nations. He wasn't about to listen to the 
demands of the free world. As a matter of fact, when the U.N. sent 
inspectors in to find the truth, he systematically deceived them. So at 
this point, I have a choice to make. I have a decision to make, a 
decision that only comes to the Oval Office, a decision no President 
wants to make but must be prepared to make, and that is: Do I trust the 
word of a madman, forget the lessons of September the 11th, or take 
action to defend this country? Given that choice, I will defend America 
every time.
    Audience members. Four more years! Four more years! Four more years!
    Audience members. U.S.A.! U.S.A.! U.S.A.!
    The President. Because we acted to defend ourself, more than 50 
million people are now free. That makes the world more peaceful. Think 
about Afghanistan. It wasn't all that long ago that young girls weren't 
allowed to go to school, and their mothers got whipped in the public 
square because they didn't toe the line of the Taliban. These people 
were barbaric people. They had hijacked a good religion and converted it 
into an ideology of hate. Today, in Afghanistan, more than 10 million 
people, 40 percent of whom are women, have registered to vote in the 
upcoming Presidential election.
    Despite ongoing acts of violence, Iraq now has a strong Prime 
Minister, a National Council, and national elections are scheduled in 
January. We're standing with the people in those countries, because when 
America gives its word, America must keep its word. And by standing with 
them, we're also serving a vital and historic cause that will make our 
country safer. See, free societies in the Middle East will be hopeful 
societies which no longer feed resentments or breed violence for export. 
Free governments in the Middle East will fight terrorists instead of 
harboring them, and that helps us keep us safe.
    So our mission in Afghanistan and Iraq is clear: We will help the 
new leaders train their police and their armies, so the people of 
Afghanistan and Iraq can do the hard work of defending freedom. We will 
help them move toward elections. We'll get them on the path of stability 
and democracy as quickly as possible, and then our troops will come home 
with the honor they have earned.
    We've got a great United States military, people like Lance Corporal 
Russell Bullock, who's with us today. I've had the honor of meeting 
people like Russell, men and women who wear our uniform. I've seen their 
great decency and unselfish courage. I want to thank the veterans who 
are with us today for having set such a great example.
    And I believe the Government has a commitment, has an obligation to 
those who wear our uniform. They must have all the resources they need 
to complete their missions. That's why a year ago I went to the United 
States Congress and proposed $87 billion of supplemental funding to 
support our troops in combat in both Iraq and Afghanistan. It was a very 
important piece of legislation. As a matter of fact, most Members of the 
United States Congress understood its importance. We had great 
bipartisan support for this request, so strong that only 12 Members of 
the United States Senate voted against it, 2 of whom are my opponent and 
his runningmate.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. When you're out gathering the vote, when you're out 
convincing people to go to the polls, remind them that only four United 
States Senators voted to authorize the use of force and then voted 
against funding our troops, and two of those four are my opponent and 
his runningmate.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. They said, ``Why did you do that?'' And he said, 
``Well, I actually did vote for the $87 billion, before I voted against 
it.'' Now, I know Holland, Michigan, well enough to know not many people 
talk like that around here. [Laughter] And they kept pressing him. They 
kept pressing him. He said he was proud of his own--he finally just

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said, ``The whole thing is a complicated matter.'' There is nothing 
complicated about supporting our troops in combat.
    The Commander in Chief must have clear vision and mean what he says 
when he speaks. When it comes to Iraq, my opponent has more different 
positions than all his colleagues in the Senate combined. Senator Kerry 
once said, ``It would be naive, to the point of grave danger, not to 
believe that left to his own devices Saddam Hussein will provoke, 
misjudge, or stumble into a future, more dangerous confrontation with 
the civilized world.'' Then, in 2002 he voted for the war, but then 
voted against funding for our troops. When the heat got on in his 
Democrat primary, he declared himself the antiwar candidate. Then, 
later--earlier this summer he said he would have still voted to go to 
war even knowing everything we know today. Then, about 10 days ago he 
adopted the language of his one-time rival, Howard Dean, saying it was 
``the wrong war at the wrong time,'' even though he said earlier it was 
the right decision and he supported it.
    Here's the latest wrinkle--I'm trying to figure out what he 
believes. He said we're spending too much money in Iraq, even though he 
earlier criticized me for not spending enough. One thing about his 
position is clear. If he had had his way, Saddam Hussein would still be 
in power and would be a threat to our security and peace in the world.
    Listen, I want to thank our friends and neighbors--friends and 
allies for their contributions. I've spent a lot of time doing that. I 
appreciate the fact--we've got nearly 40 nations involved in 
Afghanistan, some 30 nations involved in Iraq helping us to spread 
freedom and peace. But I will never--as I build coalitions over the next 
4 years, as I continue to work with friends and neighbors, I will never 
turn over America's national security decisions to leaders of other 
countries.
    I believe in the transformational power of liberty. I believe the 
wisest use of American strength is freedom.
    I like to share stories of my time with different leaders around the 
world, and one of them is--one of the leaders I admire a lot is Prime 
Minister Koizumi of Japan. Think about that--one of the people with whom 
I have good relations is the leader of a country that my dad was at war 
with. Your dads or granddads, husbands, grandfathers were at war with 
them. We had a bloody war with Japan, a violent war.
    So World War II was over, after we had won. My predecessor Harry 
Truman and other Americans believed that liberty could transform enemies 
into allies. They stood the line. There was a lot of skepticism during 
those times. But they stood strong for the values that we believe in. 
And as a result of helping Japan become a democracy, today I sit down at 
the table with Prime Minister Koizumi talking about the peace, talking 
about how to make the world a more hopeful place, talking about working 
together to spread the peace we all yearn for. Someday, an American 
President will be sitting down with a duly elected leader of Iraq 
talking about the peace. And our children and grandchildren will be able 
to grow up in a much better world.
    I believe that millions in the Middle East want to be free. I 
believe women in the Middle East long for a day of their freedom. I 
believe that if given the chance, they will embrace the most honorable 
form of government ever devised by man. I believe these things, because 
I understand freedom is not America's gift to the world; freedom is the 
Almighty God's gift to each man and woman in this world.
    This young century will be liberty's century. By promoting freedom 
at home and freedom abroad, we'll build a safer world and a more hopeful 
America. By reforming our systems of government, we'll help more 
Americans realize their dreams. We'll spread ownership and opportunity 
to every corner of this country. We'll pass the enduring values of our 
country on to a new generation. We'll continue to make the world a more 
free and, therefore, a more peaceful place.
    For all Americans, these years in our history will stand apart. 
There are quiet times in the life of a nation when little is expected of 
its leaders. This isn't one of those times. It's a time that requires 
firm resolve, clear vision, and a deep faith in the values that make us 
a great nation.
    None of us will ever forget that week when one era ended and another 
began. On September the 14th, 2001, I stood in the ruins

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of the Twin Towers. It's a day I'll never forget. There were workers in 
hardhats there yelling at the top of their lungs, ``Whatever it takes.'' 
I remember trying to console the people coming out of the rubble. A guy 
looked me in the eye, bloodshot eyes, and he said, ``You do not let me 
down.'' Ever since that day, I've woken up--I wake up every morning, 
ever since that day, thinking about how better to protect our country. I 
will never relent in defending America, whatever it takes.
    Four years ago, as I traveled this great country and your wonderful 
State asking for the vote, I made a pledge. I said that if you gave me a 
chance to serve, I would uphold the dignity and the honor of the office 
to which I had been elected. With your help, with your hard work, I will 
do so for 4 more years.
    God bless. Thank you all for coming. Thank you all.

Note: The President spoke at 1:21 p.m. at the Ottawa County Fairgrounds. 
In his remarks, he referred to Senator Zell Miller of Georgia, who made 
the keynote address at the Republican National Convention; Mayor Albert 
H. McGeehan of Holland, MI; Diane Hoekstra, wife of Representative Peter 
Hoekstra; Betsy DeVos, chairman, Michigan Republican Party; country 
music entertainers the Bellamy Brothers; Prime Minister Ayad Allawi of 
the Iraqi Interim Government; former Democratic Presidential candidate 
Howard Dean; and Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi of Japan.