[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 40, Number 44 (Monday, November 1, 2004)]
[Pages 2647-2654]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

<R04>
Remarks in Saginaw, Michigan

October 28, 2004

    The President. Thank you all. Thanks for coming out to say hello. I 
got to tell me, you have lifted my spirits, for which I am grateful. 
It's good to be back in Saginaw. I'm grateful so many of you came out to 
say hello.
    Listen, I'm traveling your State asking for the vote and asking for 
your help. It is close to voting day. We have a duty in our country to 
vote. In our free land, free citizens must vote. And so I'm asking you 
to get your friends and neighbors to go to the polls, turn out our 
fellow Republicans, find independents who understand we have a better 
tomorrow ahead of us, and don't overlook discerning Democrats. Tell your 
fellow citizens that if they want a safer country, a stronger country, 
and a better country, to put me and Dick Cheney back in office.
    My only regret is that Laura is not here to see this fantastic 
crowd. She headed off to campaign today in Florida. You know, when I 
asked her to marry me, she said, ``I'll marry you, but make me a 
promise.'' I said, ``What is it?'' She said, ``Promise me I will never 
have to give a political speech.'' [Laughter] I'm sure some of you can 
relate to that. I said, ``Okay, you got a deal.'' Fortunately, she 
didn't hold me to that deal. She is giving a lot of speeches, and when 
she does, the American people see a strong, compassionate, great First 
Lady. Perhaps the most important reason why people ought to put me back 
in office is so that Laura will be the First Lady for 4 more years.
    Audience members. Four more years! Four more years! Four more years!
    The President. I am proud of my runningmate, Dick Cheney. He is 
doing a great job. Although, I admit, he does not have the waviest hair 
in the race. [Laughter] You will be pleased I didn't pick him because of 
his hairdo. I picked him because of his experience. I picked him because 
of his judgment. I picked him because he can get the job done for the 
American people.
    I'm proud to call Dave Camp my friend, and I know you're proud to 
call him Congressman. And I want to thank Terri Lynn Land for joining 
us, the secretary of state for the great State of Michigan. And I wish 
Myrah Kirkwood all the best in her run for the United States Congress. I 
want to thank Betsy DeVos and all the grassroots activists who are here. 
I want to thank the Saline Fiddlers. I want to thank the Saginaw Area 
Band. I want to thank the Wil Gravatt Band for joining us. Thank you for 
entertaining this good crowd.
    Most of all, I want to thank you all. I want to thank you for what 
you have done on behalf of my candidacy and what you're going to do. By 
working the phones, by getting people to--by reminding people of their 
duty to vote, by putting up the signs, by turning out that vote, there 
is no doubt in my mind, we will carry Michigan and win a great victory 
in November.
    Five days from now, the people go to the polls. We are choosing the 
leader of our country at a time of great consequence to our Nation. 
We're at war against a terrorist enemy unlike any we have ever seen. We 
have much more to do to win a decisive victory against the terrorists. 
The most important duty of the American President is to protect the 
American people. If America shows

[[Page 2648]]

uncertainty or weakness in these troubling times, the world will drift 
toward tragedy. This will not happen on my watch.
    Our economy is in the midst of change and challenge. It can be a 
great time of opportunity if we have the right policies that strengthen 
rather than stall our economic growth. We have much more to do to create 
jobs, to improve our children's education, to make health care available 
and affordable, and to strengthen Social Security for our seniors and 
for generations to come. And I am ready for the job.
    My years as your President have confirmed some lessons and have 
taught me some new ones. A President must have a vision. A President 
must set goals and bring people together to achieve those goals. A 
President must surround himself with strong, capable people. And I have 
done so. A President must make America's priorities crystal-clear in 
this uncertain world. I've learned to expect the unexpected, because 
history can deliver sudden horror from a soft autumn sky. I found you 
better know what you believe or risk being tossed to-and-fro by the 
flattery of friends or the chorus of the critics.
    I've been grateful for the lessons I have learned from my parents: 
Respect every person; do your best; and live every day to its fullest. I 
have been strengthened by my faith and humbled by its reminder that my 
life is part of a much bigger story. I've learned firsthand how hard it 
is to send young men and women into battle, even when the cause is 
right. I've been reminded that the world looks to America for leadership 
and that it is crucial for an American President to be consistent.
    Perhaps most of all, I've learned the American President must make 
decisions on principle, core convictions from which you must not waver. 
The issues vary; the challenges are different every day. Tactics and 
strategy must be flexible, but a President's convictions must be steady 
and true. As Presidents from Abraham Lincoln to Franklin Roosevelt to 
Ronald Reagan so clearly demonstrated, a President cannot blow in the 
wind. A President has to make tough decisions and stand by them.
    A President must follow the--must not follow the path of the latest 
polls. A President must lead based on conviction and conscience. 
Especially in a time of war, mixed signals only confuse our friends, 
embolden our enemies. Mixed signals are the wrong signals for the 
American President to send.
    When America chooses a President, you choose not just a set of 
positions on issues or a philosophy or record; you choose a human being 
who comes with strengths and weaknesses. One of the things I've learned 
about the Presidency is, whatever your strengths are, you're going to 
need them, and whatever your shortcomings are, people are going to 
notice them. Sometimes I'm a little too blunt. I get that from my 
mother. Sometimes I mangle the English language. [Laughter] I get that 
from my dad. [Laughter] But Americans have learned that when you 
disagree with me, at least you know what I believe and where I stand.
    Audience members. Four more years! Four more years! Four more years!
    The President. You cannot say that about my opponent. [Laughter] 
Senator Kerry has taken a lot of different positions, but he rarely 
takes a stand. He's run a campaign of contradictions. I think it's fair 
to say consistency is not the Senator's strong suit. [Laughter] He was 
for the PATRIOT Act and the No Child Left Behind Act, until he was 
against key provisions of both of them. He voted to authorize the use of 
force in Iraq and then said I was wrong to use that force.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. When I sent troops into Iraq to remove Saddam Hussein 
from power, he said it was the right decision. Now he says it was the 
``wrong war.''
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. During one of our debates, he said Saddam Hussein was 
a threat. And then a couple of answers later, he said there was no 
threat in Iraq.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. Just last year, American troops in Afghanistan and 
Iraq needed $87 billion for body armor, hazard pay, vehicles, weapons, 
and bullets--necessary funding, funding that would keep a commitment we 
have made to our soldiers and their loved ones. They will have what is 
necessary to

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complete their mission. Something the veterans in this crowd understand, 
the Government must support those in harm's way. And I say thanks to our 
veterans from the bottom of a grateful heart.
    Back to the 87 billion. First Senator Kerry said, ``It would be 
irresponsible to vote against the troops.'' That's what he said on TV, 
national TV. Then he did the irresponsible thing and voted against the 
funding for our troops.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. Now, they asked him about that vote, and you might 
remember perhaps the most famous quote of the 2004 campaign when he 
said, ``I actually did vote for the 87 billion, before I voted against 
it.'' Pressed further to explain his vote, he's given several 
explanations. One of the most interesting was this: ``The whole thing 
was a complicated matter.'' [Laughter] There's nothing complicated about 
supporting our troops in combat.
    You have to wonder why my opponent has taken such different 
positions at different places and different times in this campaign. I 
think you'll find two reasons why. Senator Kerry changes positions 
because he's willing to say anything he thinks will help him politically 
at the time. And he does so to try to obscure a 20-year record, 20 years 
of out-of-the-mainstream votes. That leads to an inescapable conclusion. 
Senator Kerry has been wrong--on the wrong side of the defining national 
security and domestic policy debates for the last two decades. He can 
run from his record, but he cannot hide.
    Several times during the course of this campaign, the Senator has 
changed his positions for political convenience. The Senator recognized 
Saddam Hussein was a threat and authorized force to remove him, until 
his Democratic opponent Howard Dean began gaining ground as an antiwar 
candidate. And then he decided he had to appeal to that wing of his 
party, so he voted against the troops--after voting to put them at risk 
in the first place. See, he looked at the polls and changed positions. 
The Senator was all for removing Saddam Hussein when we went into 
Baghdad. He was very supportive when we captured him. After all, the 
polls showed that that was very popular at the time. When the going got 
tough and when we faced determined opposition and things weren't quite 
so popular, the Senator suddenly wasn't quite so supportive. In fact, he 
changed his mind entirely, deciding it was the ``wrong war at the wrong 
place at the wrong time.''
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. It's important for the citizens of Michigan to think 
about this. What does that lack of conviction say to our troops who are 
risking their lives in a vital cause? What does it say to our allies who 
have joined us in that cause? What does that lack of conviction signal 
to our enemies, that if you make things uncomfortable, if you stir up 
trouble, John Kerry will back off? And that's a very dangerous signal to 
send during this time.
    This week Senator Kerry is again attacking the actions of our 
military in Iraq, with complete disregard for the facts. Senator Kerry 
will say anything to get elected. The Senator's willingness to trade 
principle for political convenience makes it clear that John Kerry is 
the wrong man for the wrong job at the wrong time.
    And there's another reason the Senator changes positions. He doesn't 
want you to know where he really stands. [Laughter] He doesn't want you 
to know where he stands on national security, because he has a record of 
weakness. When Ronald Reagan was confronting the Soviet Union at the 
height of the cold war, Senator Kerry proposed cancellation of critical 
defense weapons systems and said that President Reagan's policy of peace 
through strength was making America less safe.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. History has shown that Senator Kerry was wrong and 
President Ronald Reagan was right.
    Former President Bush led a coalition against Saddam Hussein in 
1991. Senator Kerry voted against using force to liberate Kuwait. If his 
view had prevailed, Saddam Hussein today would dominate the Middle East, 
possess the world's most dangerous weapons. History has shown that John 
Kerry was wrong and former President Bush was right.
    In 1994, just one year after the first bombing of the World Trade 
Center, Senator

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Kerry proposed massive cuts in America's intelligence budgets, cuts so 
extreme that even his Massachusetts colleague, Ted Kennedy, opposed 
them. History has shown that Senator Kerry was wrong and--we have got to 
be fair--Senator Kennedy was right. [Laughter]
    When you are one Senator among 100, you can be wrong without 
consequence. But the President's opinion decides the security and the 
fate of our country. And while the Senator's 20-year record of votes is 
long, it's also lacking of significant reform or achievement. He talks 
about bringing new allies to the war against terror--if somehow 
countries that have not yet been involved might want to join what he 
calls the ``wrong war.'' [Laughter] Yet he has no history of convincing 
even his colleagues in the United States Senate to join him on signature 
reforms or achievements.
    The next 4 years, I will work with our friends and allies. We will 
strengthen our coalition, but I will never turn over America's national 
security decisions to leaders of other countries.
    Audience members. Four more years! Four more years! Four more years!
    The President. The security of our country is at stake. Senator 
Kerry says September the 11th, in his words, ``did not change him much 
at all.'' That's what he said.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. And his policies make that clear. The Senator says 
the war on terror is primarily a law enforcement and intelligence 
gathering operation. He says his goal is to go back to the days of the 
1990s when terrorism was seen as a ``nuisance''----
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. ----fought with subpoenas and cruise missiles.
    Well, September the 11th changed my outlook for the world. It made 
it crystal-clear to me the dangers we face. A few days after the 
attacks, I went to Ground Zero, September 14th, 2001. I stood in the 
ruins of the Twin Towers. It's a day I will never forget. The sights and 
sounds of that day are always in my mind. Workers in hardhats there 
yelling at the top of their lungs, ``Whatever it takes.'' A man coming 
out of the rubble grabbed me by the arm. He looked me in the eye, and he 
said, ``Do not let me down.'' Ever since that day, I wake up every 
morning thinking how to--thinking about how to better protect our 
country. I will never relent in defending America, whatever it takes.
    There are other things about his views and his ideas the Senator 
really doesn't want you to know about. You might remember the debate 
when they asked him about his health care plan. He looked straight in 
the camera and said, ``The Government doesn't have anything to do with 
it.'' I could barely contain myself. [Laughter]
    The Government has got a lot to do with it. Eighty percent of the 
people end up, under his idea, on a Government plan. When you increase 
Medicaid eligibility, it means small businesses will likely stop writing 
insurance because the Government will provide the insurance. That moves 
people from the private sector to the public sector when it comes to 
health care. And see, when the Government starts paying the money, the 
Government starts writing the rules. And when the Government starts 
writing the rules when it comes to your health care, the Government 
starts making decisions for you and decisions for your doctors and 
rationing care. Senator Kerry's plan for health care for America is the 
wrong prescription.
    We will make health care more affordable and available for our 
citizens. We will expand community health centers to help the poor and 
the indigent. We'll make sure our program for low-income children is 
fully subscribed. We'll expand health savings accounts to help our 
businesses and families with innovative ways to manage--so you can 
manage your own health care account. We understand small businesses 
provide important insurance to the workers, and yet, many small 
businesses are having trouble affording health care, so we'll allow 
small businesses to join together so they can buy insurance at the same 
discounts that big companies are able to do.
    And we understand that these frivolous lawsuits are running up the 
cost of health care for small businesses, for patients, and they're 
running good doctors out of practice. You cannot be pro-doctor, pro-
patient and pro-personal-injury-trial-lawyer at the same

[[Page 2651]]

time. You have to make a choice. My opponent made his choice, and he put 
a personal-injury trial lawyer on the ticket.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. I made my choice. I'm standing with the doctors of 
Michigan. I'm standing with the patients of Michigan. I am for medical 
liability reform--now.
    This campaign, the Senator doesn't want you to know where he really 
stands on taxes. He's going to raise them. To be fair, raising taxes is 
one of the few things that he's been consistent about. You might say 
he's made a habit out of it. See, he's been in the United States Senate 
20 years, and he's voted to raise taxes 98 times. That's five times for 
every year he's been in the Senate. I'd call it a predictable pattern, 
an early-warning indicator. [Laughter]
    You know, when we reduced the taxes for our families by raising the 
child credit and doing something about the marriage penalty, he voted 
against it. He voted against that tax relief at a vital time. Plus, he's 
decided to raise $2.2 trillion * in new Federal spending. He's going to 
spend it. That's what he said. He said, ``I'm going to spend 2.2 
trillion new money,'' when you add up all his promises. He doesn't 
really want to clarify that. That's 2.2 trillion with a ``T.'' That's a 
lot. That is a lot even for a Senator from Massachusetts. [Laughter]
    * White House correction.
    And so they asked him, ``How are you going to pay for it?'' They 
said, ``How are you going to pay for it?'' He said, ``Oh, I'm just going 
to tax the rich.'' Now, people in Saginaw, Michigan, have heard that 
before. You see, if you raise the top two brackets, it raises 600 to 800 
billion dollars. That is short of the 2.2 trillion. That's called a tax 
gap. [Laughter] And guess who usually has to fill that tax gap?
    Audience member. We do!
    The President. Yes, you do. The good news is, we're not going to let 
him tax you; we're going to carry Michigan and win a victory.
    No, the Senator doesn't really want to talk about his record, and 
there is a reason why. There is a mainstream in American politics, and 
he sits on the far left bank. I'm a compassionate conservative and 
proudly so. I'm more than happy to travel our country talking about my 
record, talking about a record that has made America a stronger place 
and a safer place and a better place.
    When you're rounding up the vote, remind people what this economy 
has been through. Six months prior to my arrival in Washington, the 
stock market was in serious decline, which foretold a recession. And 
then we had some corporate scandals, passed--we passed tough laws, and 
we have made it abundantly clear that we're not going to tolerate 
dishonesty in the boardrooms of America. And then the attacks came, and 
they cost us about a million jobs in the 3 months after September the 
11th.
    But we acted. I led the Congress to cut the taxes on the American 
people to encourage consumption and investment, to stimulate the small-
business sector of our economy. And our policies are paying off. We're 
growing at rates as fast as any in nearly 20 years. We have added 1.9 
million jobs in the last 13 months. The farmers in Michigan are making a 
living. The small-business owners are alive and well. The 
entrepreneurial spirit is strong. The homeownership rate in America is 
at an alltime high. More minorities own a home than ever before in our 
Nation's history. The national unemployment rate is 5.4 percent. Let me 
put that in perspective for you: That is lower than the average rate of 
the 1970s and the 1980s and the 1990s.
    I understand there are some people hurting in Michigan, but that's 
not a reason to go back to tax and spend. The best way to make sure 
people can find work is to continue to promote a pro-growth, pro-
entrepreneur, pro-small-business economic policy, which is what we have 
done. Our economy is strong, and it is getting stronger.
    When I ran--when I was running for President 4 years ago, I promised 
to do something about the public schools. I told the American people I 
was troubled by a system that would shuffle children through, grade 
after grade, year after year, without teaching the basics. I call that 
the soft bigotry of low expectations. So I promised to reform our 
system. I kept my word. We've increased spending, particularly for 
minority students and poor students. But in return, we've now

[[Page 2652]]

said, ``Show us whether or not a child can read and write and add and 
subtract.'' See, you can't solve a problem until you diagnose the 
problem. And as a result of the system in place, the system that says 
we're going to set high standards for every child, we're diagnosing 
problems and we're solving them. Math and reading scores are up across 
this country. We are closing an achievement gap for minority students. 
And we're not going to go back to the days of mediocrity and excuses for 
failure in our public schools.
    When I ran for President 4 years ago, I promised to improve Medicare 
by adding prescription drugs. I kept my word. You might remember the old 
Medicare debates. They would call it ``Mediscare'' because politicians 
wouldn't talk about it. I came to Washington to solve problems. We had a 
problem in Medicare. Medicare would pay thousands of dollars for the 
heart surgery but not one dime for the prescription drugs that could 
prevent the heart surgery from being needed in the first place. Now 
we've strengthened Medicare. We've modernized Medicare. Beginning in 
2006, all seniors will be able to get prescription drug coverage under 
Medicare.
    My opponent voted against that bill that provided prescription drug 
coverage for our seniors----
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. ----even though AARP and other senior groups 
supported it. As your President the next 4 years, I will defend the 
reforms we put in place for our seniors. We will keep our promise to 
America's seniors with modern medicine.
    When I ran for President, I said we would help those who need help 
in America, we would help those who could not help themselves. I said 
Government should not discriminate against faith-based and community 
groups who provide compassionate care for the broken heart. And now our 
Government welcomes those groups as partners in meeting the needs of 
those who need hope and those who need help.
    I said we would help the poor and the indigent with health care, and 
we've expanded community health centers all across this country, and we 
will continue to do so. We've doubled funding for medical research into 
new cures and diseases, just like I said I would do during the campaign. 
As we pursued threats around the world, as we have used our might to 
protect ourselves and to protect others, we have also delivered American 
compassion. We've dramatically increased funding to combat AIDS and to 
help developing countries who are making good governance decisions and 
investing in their future.
    We're pursuing a forward strategy of freedom around the world. We're 
promoting democracy. I want you to tell your children about what has 
taken place in a brief period of time in this world. You know, it wasn't 
all that long ago that young girls couldn't go to school in Afghanistan 
because the country was run by ideologues of hate called the Taliban. 
And if their mothers didn't toe the line, they would be pulled into the 
public squares and whipped and sometimes shot in a sports stadium. They 
were backward. The society was grim and dark. Because we acted to defend 
ourselves, because we upheld the doctrine that said, ``If you harbor a 
terrorist, you're equally as guilty as the terrorist,'' millions of 
people in Afghanistan went to the polls to vote for a President. And the 
first voter was a 19-year-old woman.
    There will be elections in Iraq in January. Think how far that 
society has come from the days of torture chambers and mass graves. 
Freedom is on the march. Liberty will transform societies. I believe 
everybody yearns to be free. I believe this not because freedom is 
America's gift to the world, I believe this because freedom is the 
Almighty God's gift to each man and woman in this world.
    The role of a President is to confront problems, not to pass them on 
to future generations and future Presidents. That is how I have led, and 
that is how I will continue to lead our great Nation. We will keep your 
taxes low so this economy continues to grow. We will work on the 
education reforms and take them to our high schools. We will expand Pell 
grants for low- and middle-income families so more of our children can 
start their career with a college degree. We'll make sure that health 
decisions are made by doctors and patients, not by officials in 
Washington, DC.

[[Page 2653]]

    We'll keep the promise of Social Security for our seniors. You might 
remember the 2000 campaign. Perhaps the same thing is happening in this 
campaign. It's kind of the old, tired scare tactics. They said, ``If 
George W. gets elected, our seniors aren't going to get their checks.'' 
That's what they said 4 years ago. Please tell your friends and 
neighbors, George W. did get elected, and our seniors did get their 
checks. Our seniors will continue to get their checks. Baby boomers like 
me and a couple others out there I see--we're in pretty good shape when 
it comes to the Social Security trust.
    But we need to worry about our children and our grandchildren. We 
need to worry about whether or not a--Social Security will be available 
for them when they retire. I believe younger workers ought to be able to 
take some of their payroll taxes and set up a personal savings account, 
a personal savings account that earns a better rate of return than the 
Social Security trust, an account they call their own, an account the 
Government cannot take away.
    Over the next 4 years, I'm going to work with Republicans and 
Democrats to do something about the Tax Code. It is a complicated mess. 
It is a million pages long. We need to make the Tax Code easier to 
understand and more fair for the American people.
    Over the next 4 years, I will defend the values that are important 
for our families and our Nation. Marriage and family are the foundations 
of our society, and we will keep them strong. I believe that this 
society must promote a culture of life. I was proud to sign the ban on 
partial-birth abortion. I stand and will continue to stand for the 
appointment of Federal judges who know the difference between personal 
opinion and the strict interpretation of the law.
    My opponent and I differ on these issues. Look at his record. He 
voted against the Defense of Marriage Act and voted against the ban on 
partial-birth abortion.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. He said he--he said there would be a litmus test for 
his judges. And at one point in this campaign, he said that you can find 
the heart and soul of America in Hollywood.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. The heart and soul of America is found in caring 
communities like Saginaw, Michigan.
    Now, I'm looking forward to the rest of this campaign. I like 
talking about what we have done to make it clear to the American people 
I intend to do what I say I'm going to do during the next 4 years. I got 
a hopeful vision for this country. I see a better day coming. That 
stands in contrast with my opponent, who has offered a long litany of 
complaints without a significant record.
    One of my favorite quotes that I hope helps you understand how I 
feel about our great country comes from a fellow Texan named Tom Lea. He 
said, ``Sarah and I live on the east side of the mountain. It's the 
sunrise side, not the sunset side. It is the side to see the day that is 
coming, not to see the day that is gone.'' During the course of this 
campaign, my opponent has spent much time talking about the day that is 
gone. I'm talking about the day that is coming.
    I see a prosperous America where people are able to realize their 
dreams. I see an education system that challenges our children so that 
no child is left behind. I see a compassionate health care system run by 
you, where doctors aren't being sued every day. I see a world that is 
free and therefore peaceful. I see the peace that we all long for our 
children and our grandchildren.
    When I traveled your State 4 years ago, I made you this pledge, that 
if I was elected, I would uphold the honor and the dignity of the 
office. With your help and 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 9:16 a.m. at the Dow Event Center. In his 
remarks, he referred to Myrah Kirkwood, candidate for Congress in 
Michigan's Fifth Congressional District; Betsy DeVos, chairman, Michigan 
Republican Party; the Saline Fiddlers, a student musical group from 
Saline High School, Saline, MI; and former President Saddam Hussein of 
Iraq.

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