[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 40, Number 38 (Monday, September 20, 2004)]
[Pages 1981-1987]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

<R04>
Remarks in Greenwood Village, Colorado

September 14, 2004

    The President. Thank you all. Thanks for coming. Thank you all for 
coming. Listen, I'm here in Colorado asking for the vote. I'm proud to 
be back in this beautiful State. Matter of fact, it's nice to be out 
West, where the cowboy hats outnumber the ties. I appreciate you being 
here. I'm honored to be introduced by the man who led ``the drive.'' Now 
I'm glad he's helping my drive. [Laughter] John Elway is a class act. 
I'm proud to call him friend, and I'm proud to call him supporter.
    I'm also here asking for your help. See, I think we have a duty in 
this country to vote. I'm asking you to register your friends and 
neighbors to vote. And as you register people to vote, make sure you 
don't overlook discerning Democrats like Zell Miller. There's a lot of 
Democrats and independents understand that when you put Dick Cheney and 
me back in office, this country is going to be safer, stronger, and 
better for every American.
    I'm sorry Laura is not here. She's a wonderful wife, a great mom. 
You know, when I asked her to marry me, she was a public school 
librarian in Texas. She said, ``Fine, I'll marry you, so long as I don't 
have to give any political speeches.'' [Laughter] I said, ``Okay, you 
won't have to give any.'' Fortunately, she didn't hold me to my word. 
[Laughter] She gave a great speech in New York City. The American people 
saw her heart, her compassion, her steady demeanor, her calm. I love her 
dearly. 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.
    I want to thank my friend Governor Bill Owens. He's one of the 
finest Governors in the State of--in this country, and he's represented 
the State of Colorado so well. I'm honored First Lady Frances Owens is 
with us today as well. Frances, thank you for coming. We're proud to 
call you friend.
    I want to thank my friend Ben Nighthorse Campbell for being here. I 
was a little hot at old Ben when I heard he was retiring, because he's 
such a fine Senator, but I feel a lot better knowing that Pete Coors is 
going to be the U.S. Senator following him.
    Audience members. Pete! Pete! Pete!
    The President. I want to thank Lieutenant Governor Jane Norton. 
Speaking about Nortons, Gale Norton is doing a heck of a good job in my 
Cabinet. I appreciate so very much the wonderful job she's doing. She 
was here in Colorado yesterday designating our newest national park, the 
Great Sand Dunes National Park. Doing a fine job.
    I want to thank Mayor Nancy Sharpe for coming today. Madame Mayor, I 
appreciate you coming. Thank you for serving. I want to thank Senator 
Hank Brown. Appreciate him being here. He's a fine man.
    I thank all the statehouse folks who are here and the courthouse 
folks who are here. Thanks for coming. Thanks for serving. I want to 
thank John Lynch of the mighty Denver Broncos for joining us today. 
Danny Kanell is with us today. I appreciate Danny coming. I want to 
thank Tom Nalen, center of the Denver Broncos, for joining us today. I 
want to thank my fellow Texan Dan Neil for joining us today. I don't 
know if you remember me when I was the Governor, but I remember you. 
[Laughter] Great to see you again.
    Most of all, I want to thank you all for coming. I want to thank the 
grassroots activists. I want to thank the party officials who worked 
hard to put up the signs and make the phone calls. I urge you and 
encourage you to continue to work hard. With your help, we will carry 
Colorado again and win a great victory in November.
    I'm looking forward to this campaign. I like to get out amongst the 
people. 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 that every child can learn and every school must teach. I 
went to Washington to challenge the soft bigotry of low expectations. So 
we're raising standards. We're measuring early so we can solve problems 
before they're too late. We're closing an achievement gap in America, 
and we're not turning back.
    I believe we have a moral responsibility to honor our seniors with 
good health care.

[[Page 1982]]

I went to Washington to fix problems. Medicare was not modernizing the 
way medicine was. See, we would pay for a $100,000 heart surgery in 
Medicare but would not pay for the prescription drugs that could prevent 
the heart surgery from being needed in the first place. That didn't make 
any sense for our seniors, and it didn't make any sense for our 
taxpayers. We have strengthened Medicare for our seniors, and we're not 
turning back.
    I believe in the energy and innovation and spirit of our small-
business owners, our farmers and ranchers and our workers. And that's 
why we unleashed that energy with the largest tax relief in a 
generation.
    When you're out rounding up the vote, remind people that our economy 
has been through a lot. We've been through a recession. We had corporate 
scandals. We passed tough laws, by the way, in Washington that make it 
abundantly clear, we will not tolerate dishonesty in the boardrooms of 
America. The attacks on our country hurt our economy.
    But we're overcoming those obstacles. Our economy is strong, and it 
is getting stronger. We've been growing at rates as fast as any in 
nearly 20 years. We've added 1.7 million new jobs since August of '03. 
The national unemployment rate is 5.4 percent. That's lower than the 
average rate of the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s. The unemployment rate in 
your State is 5.1 percent. This economy is strong, and we're not turning 
back.
    I believe a President must 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 is why, 
with your help, we're going to win a great victory in November.
    I'm proud of my runningmate, Dick Cheney. I appreciate the fact that 
he's out there every day gathering the vote. I admit he doesn't have the 
waviest hair in the race. [Laughter] I didn't pick him because of his 
hairdo. [Laughter] I picked him because of his judgment, his experience. 
I picked him because he can get the job done.
    When you're out rounding up the vote, remind people I understand the 
world in which we live in changing. You know, when our dads were coming 
up, people had one job, one career for one company. Today, that's 
different. People are changing jobs often. They're changing careers. In 
the old days women stayed at home. Today, women are in the workplace. 
They're working in the home and outside the home. These are changing 
times we live in, different times.
    And yet, the most fundamental systems of our Government, the Tax 
Code, health coverage, pension plans, worker training, were created for 
the world of yesterday, not tomorrow. In a new term, I will work with 
the Congress to transform these systems so that all citizens are 
equipped, prepared, and thus truly free to make your own choices so you 
can pursue the American Dream.
    A hopeful society has a growing economy. I've got a plan to keep 
this economy moving forward. To create more jobs in America, America 
must be the best place in the world to do business. That means we've got 
to reduce the regulatory burden on our small-business owners. To create 
jobs here, we've got to stop these junk lawsuits that threaten 
employers.
    To create jobs here at home, we need an energy plan. Listen, I 
submitted a plan to the United States Congress 2 years ago. It's stuck, 
of course, because of politics. But it's a plan that encourages 
conservation, encourages the use of renewables like ethanol and 
biodiesel, encourages clean coal technology, and uses technology to 
wisely explore for natural gas here in our own hemisphere. What I'm 
telling you is, in order to keep jobs here, we must become less 
dependent on foreign sources of energy.
    To make sure this economy grows and to keep jobs here, we've got to 
open up markets

[[Page 1983]]

overseas for our products. See, we open up our markets for foreign 
goods, and that helps you. It helps you because when you have more 
choices in the marketplace, you're likely to get that which you want at 
a better price and higher quality. So I tell the Chinese, for example, 
``You treat us the way we treat you.'' And I do that because I know 
American workers and farmers and ranchers and small-business owners can 
compete with anybody, anytime, anywhere so long as the rules are fair.
    In order to make sure jobs stay here, we've got to be wise about how 
we spend your money in Washington, and we've got to keep your taxes low. 
Taxes are an issue in this campaign. See, I'm running against a fellow 
who has had a history of voting for higher taxes.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. And thus far in the campaign, he's proposed over $2 
trillion of new Federal spending.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. And so they said, ``Well, how are you going to pay 
for it?'' He said, ``That's easy. I'm just going to tax the rich.''
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. Now, first of all, you can't tax the rich enough to 
pay for his new spending, so there's a tax gap. And secondly, you've 
heard that rhetoric before, haven't you?
    Audience members. Yes!
    The President. Yes. ``Elect me. I'm going to tax the rich.'' But the 
rich hire lawyers and accountants for a reason--to stick you with the 
bill. But we're not going to let him tax you. We're going to win in 
November.
    Audience members. Four more years! Four more years! Four more years!
    The President. See, something else about taxes. Our Tax Code is a 
complicated mess. It is full of special interest loopholes. Americans 
spend about 6 billion hours a year on the taxes. It's got over a million 
words in the code. In a new term, I'll call Republicans and Democrats 
together to simplify the Federal Tax Code.
    A changing economy means many new jobs require new skills. A 
changing economy and a growing economy creates new opportunities for our 
workers, but oftentimes, the worker doesn't have the skills necessary to 
fill the jobs. That's why I'm a strong proponent of community colleges. 
That's why I believe we ought to promote a lifetime of learning for 
America's workers, so they can match their skills with the jobs which 
exist.
    I also understand most new jobs are filled by people with at least 2 
years of college. That's--when I say changing worlds, that's one of the 
aspects of a changing world. Yet, only one in four of our students gets 
there. That's why in our high schools, we'll fund early intervention 
programs to help at-risk students. We'll place a new focus on math and 
science. Over time, we'll require a rigorous exam before graduation. By 
raising performance in our high schools and expanding Pell grants for 
low- and middle-income families, we will help more Americans start their 
career with a college diploma.
    In a time of change, we need to reform our health care system. 
Health care costs are rising rapidly. They're burdening our economy. 
They're leaving too many people uninsured. I have a commonsense, 
practical plan to make high-quality health care more affordable and more 
accessible. More than one-half of the uninsured today are small-business 
employees and their families. That's why I believe small firms ought to 
be allowed to join together to purchase insurance at the discounts 
available for big companies.
    I met Gail Lindley. She is a small-business owner from Denver. She 
is worried about her employees, and she's worried about the cost of 
health care. She understands how powerful association health care plans 
will be for small businesses. She said this, ``My employees would be 
thrilled. They would be paying lower premiums. I would have more money 
to invest back in my company.'' Washington needs to understand that we 
need to help small businesses when it comes to health care here in 
America.
    We need to expand tax-free health savings accounts. We will help 
small businesses with health savings accounts so they can provide them 
for their employees. Today I met Jeff Cheley. He runs a small business 
here. He runs Cheley Colorado Camps, CCC. He has an HSA. He's planning 
to provide them for his workers. He says, ``It helps us cover our 
workers and lower overall costs. For a small family business like ours, 
it's a good deal.'' What I'm telling you is we've got a practical

[[Page 1984]]

plan to help people who are uninsured and to help our small-business 
owners.
    We're going to expand community health centers so poor citizens have 
access to preventative and primary care. As a matter of fact, I believe 
every poor county in America ought to have a community health center. 
We're going to make sure that we bring technology into medicine to lower 
costs. But most of all, what we need to do is to make sure that we stop 
these frivolous lawsuits that are running up the cost of your medicine 
and driving good docs out of business.
    I don't think you can pro-doctor, pro-patient, pro-hospital, and 
pro-trial-lawyer at the same time. See, I think you have to choose. My 
opponent made his choice. He put him on the ticket. I made my choice. 
I'm standing with the docs and patients. I am for medical liability 
reform--now.
    There is a difference of opinion when it comes to health care in 
this campaign. I'm running against a fellow who has proposed a massive, 
complicated blueprint to increase Government control over your health 
care.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. They estimated the cost of his plan yesterday at 1.5 
trillion new dollars. And that's a lot, even for a Senator from 
Massachusetts. [Laughter] I believe that we--I believe America is better 
suited for our commonsense plan that says health decisions will be made 
by doctors and patients, not by bureaucrats in Washington, DC.
    In changing times, it helps to bring stability in people's life if 
they own something. We're going to continually promote an ownership 
society in America. Do you realize the homeownership rate in America, 
under my administration, is at an alltime high? It's a fantastic 
statistic, isn't it? During the next term, we'll continue to promote 
ownership to every corner of this country. I love the fact that more and 
more people from all walks of life are opening the place where they 
live--open that door up where they live, saying, ``Welcome to my home. 
Welcome to my piece of property.''
    I think we need to extend the concept of ownership to the retirement 
systems. If you're a senior citizen, Social Security is going to pay 
what they said they're going to pay. I don't care what the politicians 
in Washington tell you; the promise will be kept. If you're a baby 
boomer like me, we're in good shape when it comes to Social Security.
    But we need to worry about our children and our grandchildren, see? 
That's where the bind comes. That's where the problems will exist in 
Social Security, not for our seniors who've retired, not for those of us 
who are near retirement, but for the kids. We need to think differently 
when it comes to our pension plans. I believe younger workers ought to 
be allowed to take some of their own tax money and set it aside in a 
personal savings account to make sure Social Security meets the promise.
    No, these are--it's a changing world. There's a clear difference of 
opinion. We're running against some fellows who want to expand the reach 
of Government. We want to expand opportunity. We want people to be able 
to realize their dreams. We want people to be able to realize the great 
promise of this country. In this world of change, some things don't 
change, the values we try to live by, courage and compassion, reverence 
and integrity. In times of change, we must support the institutions that 
give our lives direction and purpose, our families, our schools, our 
religious congregations.
    We stand for a culture of life in which every person matters and 
every person counts. We stand for marriage and family, which are the 
foundations of society. We 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 that 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. We're 
transforming our military. We're reforming and strengthening our 
intelligence services. We're staying on the offensive. We'll strike the 
terrorists abroad so we do not have to face them here at home.
    We will work to advance liberty in the broader Middle East and 
throughout the

[[Page 1985]]

world, and we'll prevail. Our strategy is succeeding. Four years ago, 
Afghanistan was 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, the Government of a free Afghanistan is fighting 
terror; Pakistan is capturing terrorist leaders; Saudi Arabia is making 
raids and arrests; Libya is dismantling its weapons programs; the army 
of a free Iraq is fighting for freedom; and more than three-quarters of 
Al Qaida's key members and associates have 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 and even using weapons of mass destruction. And we 
know 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. So I went to the Congress. The 
Congress looked at the intelligence I had looked at. They remembered the 
history of Saddam just the way I remembered him, and they saw a threat. 
My opponent looked at the same intelligence. He came to the same 
conclusion I did, that Saddam was a threat, and voted ``yes'' when it 
came to the authorization of force.
    Before the Commander in Chief commits troops into harm's way, we 
must try all of our options to solve a problem. I was hoping diplomacy 
would work. I was really hoping diplomacy would work. And that's why I 
went to the United Nations, and I spoke to the United Nations. And when 
I went to the United Nations----

[At this point, there was a disturbance in the audience.]

    Audience members. Four more years! Four more years! Four more years!
    The President. And so I went to the United Nations. The United 
Nations looked at the same intelligence I did. They had the debate. They 
remembered the history I remembered and voted 15 to nothing in the 
United Nations Security Council, saying to Saddam Hussein, ``Disclose, 
disarm, or face serious consequences.'' I believe that when the world 
says something, it must mean it in order to make the world more 
peaceful. I believe when the American President speaks, he must mean 
what he says in order to make the world more peaceful.
    Saddam Hussein had no intention of listening to the demands of the 
free world. As he had for over a decade, he ignored the resolution. As a 
matter of fact, when they sent inspectors into his country, he 
systematically deceived the inspectors. So I had a choice to make at 
this point in our history. I realized diplomacy wasn't going to work. Do 
I trust a madman, forget the lessons of September the 11th, or take 
action to defend our country? Given that choice, I will defend America 
every time.
    Audience members. Four more years! Four more years! Four more years!
    The President. Because we acted to defend our country, 50 million 
people live in freedom. In Afghanistan, young girls now go to school for 
the first time. Their mothers are no longer taken in the public square 
and whipped because they don't toe the line with the backward Taliban. 
Because we acted, 10 million citizens, 41 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. Our 
country is safer because we made tough decisions.
    Free societies in the Middle East will be hopeful societies which no 
longer feed resentments and breed violence for export. Free governments 
in the Middle East will fight terrorists, instead of harboring them. Our 
mission in Afghanistan and Iraq is clear. We'll help new leaders to 
train their armies so that the citizens of Afghanistan and Iraq can 
defend themselves against the few who want to stop the hopes of the 
many. We'll help them move toward elections. We'll get them on the path 
of stability and democracy as quickly as possible, and then our troops

[[Page 1986]]

will return home with the honor they have earned.
    I'm proud of our military. We've got a great military. I've had the 
privilege of meeting with the service men and women who defend our 
country and sacrifice for our security. I know their unselfish courage 
and their great decency. I want to thank the veterans who are here who 
have set such a great example for those who wear the uniform. I want to 
thank the military families who are here today for coming.
    I want to assure you, our Federal Government will support our 
troops. We will give them what they need to complete their missions. 
That's why I went to the Congress a year ago and asked for $87 billion 
of supplemental funding. This money was to go to our troops in combat in 
Afghanistan and Iraq. It was a really important funding. We received 
great bipartisan support. As a matter of fact, the support was so strong 
that only 12 Members of the United States Senate voted against it----
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. ----2 of whom are my opponent and his runningmate.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. When you're out gathering the vote, remind people 
there's only four United States Senators who voted to authorize the use 
of force and then didn't vote to fund the troops--only four, two of whom 
are my opponent and his runningmate. So they asked him why. He said, 
``Well, I actually did vote for the $87 billion, before I voted against 
it.''
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. Now, I've spent some time in Colorado. The people out 
here don't talk like that. He said he was proud of his vote. They kept 
pressing him. And he finally said, ``The whole thing was a complicated 
matter.'' There's nothing complicated about supporting our troops in 
combat.
    Before 2000, Senator Kerry once said, ``It would be naive, to the 
point of grave danger, not to believe that if left to his own devices, 
Saddam Hussein will provoke, misjudge, or stumble into a future, more 
dangerous confrontation with the civilized world.'' That was his opinion 
during the time of my predecessor's Presidency. In 2002, you know, he 
voted for the war, then voted against the funding for our troops. When 
the heat got on the Democrat primary, he declared himself the antiwar 
candidate. Then several months later, earlier this summer, he said he 
would still have voted to go to war, even knowing everything we know 
today. Last week, he adopted the language of his onetime rival Howard 
Dean, saying, ``It's the wrong war at the wrong time,'' even though he 
earlier said it was the right decision and he supported it.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. So here's the latest wrinkle. Here's the latest 
twist. He's now decided we're spending too much money in Iraq, even 
though on national TV last summer, he criticized us for not spending 
enough.
    Audience members. Flip-flop! Flip-flop! Flip-flop!
    The President. The American President must be clear in his thinking 
and must be clear in his speaking in order to make this world a freer 
place.
    I appreciate the contributions of our friends and allies. During the 
next 4 years, we'll continue to work to strengthen our alliances. 
There's nearly 40 countries involved in Afghanistan, some 30 in Iraq. 
But as we strengthen alliances, I'll assure you, 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 
liberty can change nations. I believe liberty has the capacity to take a 
nation that has been plagued and tortured by a tyrannical thug into a 
partner in peace. I believe that, in part, because I've had a great 
experience with Prime Minister Koizumi of Japan. You know, it wasn't all 
that long ago in the march of history that my dad and your dads or 
granddads were fighting the Japanese as a sworn enemy.
    Yet, after World War II, Harry Truman and many American citizens 
believed that liberty could transform an enemy into an ally. I know a 
lot of people doubted it then. A lot of people doubt that concept now. 
But because they stayed true to what we believe, Japan became a 
democracy, and now I sit at the same table with Prime Minister Koizumi 
talking about the peace. And that's what we want. We understand in the 
short

[[Page 1987]]

term, we'll stay on the offensive. In the long term, we'll spread 
liberty to make the world a more peaceful place, a chance for our 
children and grandchildren to grow up in a more peaceful world.
    You see, I believe that if given the chance, the people of the 
Middle East, who plead in silence for their liberty, will embrace the 
most honorable form of government ever devised by man. I believe women 
in the Middle East long for a chance to realize their dreams and their 
God-given talents. I believe that freedom is powerful. I believe all 
these things, not because freedom is America's gift to the world; I 
believe it because freedom is the Almighty God's gift to every man and 
woman in this world.
    Audience members. Four more years! Four more years! Four more years!
    The President. This century will be liberty's century. By promoting 
freedom at home and 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 our country. We'll pass the enduring values of our 
country to a new generation. We will continue to lead the world to make 
it more free and more peaceful.
    For all Americans, these years in our history will always 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. This is a time 
that requires firm resolve, clear vision, and a deep faith in the values 
that makes us a great country.
    None of us will ever forget that week when one era ended and another 
began. Three years ago today, on September the 14th, 2001, I stood in 
the ruins of the Twin Towers. It's a day I'll never forget. There were 
workers there in hardhats yelling at me at the top of their lungs, 
``Whatever it takes.'' I remember a guy grabbed me by the arm, a big old 
burly firefighter--I guess he was a firefighter--he said, ``Do not let 
me down.'' I have a responsibility that goes on. I wake up every morning 
thinking about how to better protect our country. I will never relent in 
defending America, whatever it takes.
    Four years ago, as I traveled your beautiful State and our great 
land, I made a pledge to our fellow citizens that I would uphold the 
honor and the dignity of the office to which I had been elected. With 
your help, with your hard work, I will do so for 4 more years.
    Thanks for coming. God bless. Thank you all.

Note: The President spoke at 8:51 a.m. at the Coors Amphitheatre. In his 
remarks, he referred to pro football Hall of Famer John Elway, who 
introduced the President; Senator Zell Miller of Georgia, who made the 
keynote address at the Republican National Convention; Gov. Bill Owens 
of Colorado and his wife, Frances; Lt. Gov. Jane Norton of Colorado; 
Mayor Nancy Sharpe of Greenwood Village, CO; former Senator Hank Brown 
of Colorado; John Lynch, safety, Danny Kanell, quarterback, Tom Nalen, 
center, and Dan Neil, offensive guard, Denver Broncos; Prime Minister 
Ayad Allawi of the Iraqi Interim Government; former Democratic 
Presidential candidate Howard Dean; and Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi 
of Japan.