[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 40, Number 44 (Monday, November 1, 2004)]
[Pages 2660-2667]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

<R04>
Remarks in Westlake, Ohio

October 28, 2004

    The President. Thank you all for coming. Thank you all for being 
here today. I am so honored so many came out to say hello. You've lifted 
my spirits. I am here in Westlake, Ohio, asking for your vote and your 
help. I am asking you during the next couple of days to get on the 
telephone, to tell your friends and neighbors we have a duty in our free 
society to vote. We have an obligation to vote. Tell them they need to 
go to the polls, and when you get them headed to the polls, tell them 
that if they want a safer America, a stronger America, and a better 
America, to put me and Dick Cheney back in office.
    I am so honored you are here. My only regret on this beautiful day 
is that Laura is not here to see the size of this crowd.
    Audience members. Aw-w-w!
    The President. I know it. That is generally the reaction. [Laughter] 
``Why didn't you stay at home and send her?'' [Laughter] I don't know if 
you know this or not, but Laura and I went to the seventh grade 
together, San Jacinto Junior High. By the way, she went to the same high 
school at the same time that Tommy Franks did, in Midland, Texas. He's 
older, and she's prettier. [Laughter] And so, I met her again--we became 
reacquainted--and she was a public school librarian when I did so. And 
she said--I said, ``Will you marry me?'' She said, ``Fine, 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 said, ``You got a 
deal.'' Fortunately, she didn't hold me to that promise. She's giving a 
lot of speeches--she's speaking in Florida today--and when she does, the 
American people see a strong, compassionate, great First Lady.
    I'm proud of my runningmate, Dick Cheney. I readily concede he does 
not have the waviest hair in the race. [Laughter] You'll be happy to 
hear I did not pick him because of his hairdo. [Laughter] I picked him 
because of his judgment. I picked him because of his experience, and he 
is getting the job done for the American people.
    I'm proud and I am honored to be supported by General Tommy Franks. 
America is safer and the world is better off because of the leadership 
of this fine American. God bless you, Tommy. And I'm proud to be here 
with Senator Bob Dole and all the retired officers who are on this stage 
who represent

[[Page 2661]]

hundreds of people, former military leaders who are supporting my 
candidacy. It means a lot. It means a lot to be standing on the stage 
with people who have served our country so courageously. Thank you all 
for coming today, and thank you for your support.
    I've been traveling today with a fine United States Senator in 
George Voinovich. Send him back to Washington. He's doing a great job 
for you. And so is Mike DeWine. I'm proud to call him friend. I know 
you're proud to call him United States Senator.
    I want to thank Lieutenant Governor Jennette Bradley. I want to 
thank Mayor Hruby for joining us. And guess who else is with us today, a 
buddy of mine I've been traveling with across the State of Ohio, the 
Democrat mayor of Youngstown, Ohio, George McKelvey. He represents a lot 
of Democrats that are supporting my candidacy. There are a lot of people 
who understand and remember the great Democrat tradition of Franklin 
Roosevelt and Harry Truman and John Kennedy, of standing strong in times 
of crisis. As the mayor puts it, he didn't leave the Democrat Party; the 
Democrat Party under John Kerry left him. And I welcome every Democrat 
to my campaign, and I'm honored you're here.
    I want to thank all the State and local officials. I appreciate so 
very much the Fraternal Order of Police folks who are here today. I want 
to thank you for the endorsement of my candidacy for President.
    I know the great Cleveland Indian, Bob Feller, is with us today. I'm 
honored you're here. I appreciate my friend Sammy Kershaw for being here 
today. Thank you, Sammy and Lorrie Morgan, his wife, for coming; thanks 
for entertaining everybody.
    But most of all, thank you all. I'm here to thank you for what you 
have done and what you're going to do over the next 5 days. Get on that 
phone. Tell your friends and neighbors to vote. There's no doubt in my 
mind, with your help, we will carry Ohio again and win a great victory 
on November the 2nd.
    When people go to the polls, we'll be choosing the leader of our 
country at a time of great consequence in our world. We're at war 
against the terrorist enemy unlike any we have seen. We have much more 
to do to win this war on terror. The primary job of the President of the 
United States is to protect the American people. If America shows any 
uncertainty or weakness in these troubling times, the world will drift 
toward tragedy. This is not going to happen on my watch.
    Our economy is in the midst of change and challenge. It can be a 
time of great opportunity if we have the right policies to strengthen, 
rather than stall, the economic recovery. We have more to do to make 
sure people can find work in places like Ohio, more to do to improve our 
children's education, more to do to make sure health care is available 
and affordable, more to do to strengthen Social Security for a 
generation to come, and I am ready for the job.
    My 4 years as your President have confirmed some lessons and taught 
me some new ones. The President must have a vision. You must understand 
where you're going in order to lead this Nation. A President must set 
clear goals and bring people together to achieve those goals. A 
President must surround himself with good, capable, strong people, and I 
have done so.
    I have learned to expect the unexpected. History can deliver sudden 
horror from a soft autumn sky. I've found you better know what you 
believe or you 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've 
learned from my parents, respect every person, do your best, 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 have 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 
America's President to be consistent. I've learned America's President 
must base decisions on principle, core convictions from which you will 
not waver. The issues vary; the challenges are different every day as 
your President. Tactics and strategy will be flexible, but a President's 
convictions must be steady, and they must be true.
    As Presidents from Abraham Lincoln to Franklin Roosevelt to Ronald 
Reagan so

[[Page 2662]]

clearly demonstrated, a President cannot blow in the wind. A President 
has to make tough decisions and stand by them. That is how I have led 
our country, and that is how I will continue to lead our country for 4 
more years.
    Audience members. Four more years! Four more years! Four more years!
    The President. The President must not follow the path of the latest 
polls. The 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 an 
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 are going to 
need them, and whatever your shortcomings are, people are going to 
notice them. [Laughter] Sometimes I'm a little too blunt. I get that 
from my mother. [Laughter] Sometimes I mangle the English language. I 
get that from my father. [Laughter] But Americans have learned that even 
when you disagree with me, at least you know what I believe and where I 
stand.
    You cannot say that about my opponent. Senator Kerry has taken a lot 
of different positions, but he rarely takes a stand. He has run a 
campaign of contradictions. I think it's fair to say consistency has not 
been the Senator's strong suit. 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. When I sent troops to Iraq to remove Saddam 
Hussein from power, he said it was the right decision. Now he says it's 
the wrong war. During one of our debates, he said Saddam Hussein was a 
threat. Then a couple of answers later, he said there was no threat in 
Iraq.
    This last year, American troops in Afghanistan and Iraq needed $87 
billion to support them in their missions. First, Senator Kerry said on 
national TV, ``It would be irresponsible to vote against the troops.'' 
Then he did that irresponsible thing and voted against the troops.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. You might remember perhaps the most famous quote of 
the 2004 campaign when they asked him about that vote, when he said 
this: ``I actually did vote for the 87 billion, before I voted against 
it.'' I haven't spent nearly as much time in these parts as you have, 
but I think you're going to have trouble finding anybody in Westlake who 
talks that way.
    He's given a lot of answers about that vote. One of the most 
interesting ones of all is when he said, ``The whole thing was a 
complicated matter.'' My fellow Americans, there's nothing complicated 
about supporting our troops in combat.
    You have to wonder why he's taken such dramatically different 
positions in different places in different times in this campaign. Well, 
here's two reasons why, and it's important for the Ohio voters to 
understand this. 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 of out-of-the-mainstream 
votes that leads to this conclusion: Senator Kerry has been on the wrong 
side of defining national security and domestic policy debates for the 
last two decades. That is his record. He can run, but he cannot hide.
    Several times during the course of this campaign, the Senator has 
changed his position for political convenience. The Senator recognized 
Saddam Hussein was a threat and authorized the use of force, until his 
Democratic opponent Howard Dean began gaining ground as an antiwar 
candidate. The Senator 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. The Senator was all for removing Saddam Hussein when 
we went into Baghdad and very supportive when we captured him. After 
all, the polls showed that was popular at the time. [Laughter] When the 
going got tough, when we faced determined opposition and things were not 
quite so popular, the Senator suddenly wasn't quite so supportive. In 
fact, he changed his mind entirely, deciding it was

[[Page 2663]]

the ``wrong war at the wrong place and the wrong time.''
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. The voters of Ohio must ask these questions. What 
does that lack of conviction say to our troops who are risking their 
lives in the vital cause? What does it say to our allies who have joined 
that cause? And what does his 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 in a world of 
grave threats. The President must be consistent. The President must 
stand for something.
    Just this week, Senator Kerry showed his willingness to put politics 
ahead of the facts and the truth. He criticized our military's handling 
of explosives in Iraq, when his own advisers admitted he did not know 
what had happened. His spokesman has now had to acknowledge that the 
explosives may have been moved before our troops ever arrived. A 
President needs to get all the facts before jumping to politically 
motivated conclusions. 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 why the Senator changes positions. He 
doesn't want you to know where he really stands. 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 said President Reagan's policy of 
peace through strength was making America less safe. History has shown 
that Senator Kerry was wrong, and President Ronald Reagan was right.
    When former President Bush led a coalition against Saddam Hussein in 
1991, Senator Kerry voted against using force to liberate Kuwait. 
History has shown that Senator Kerry was wrong, and former President 
Bush was right.
    In 1994, just one year after the first bombing of the World Trade 
Center, Senator Kerry proposed massive cuts in America's intelligence 
budget, cuts so extreme that even his Massachusetts colleague, Ted 
Kennedy, opposed them. History has shown that Senator Kerry was wrong 
and--we've got to be fair--[laughter]--Senator Kennedy was right. When 
you are one Senator among 100, you can be wrong without consequence. The 
President's opinion--the President's decision decides the security and 
the fate of our country.
    My opponent and I have a different view about how to protect you, 
about how to make this country secure. He's got a limited, narrow view 
of the war on terror. Senator Kerry said September the 11th did not 
change him much at all.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. Those are his words, not mine. And his policies make 
that clear. The Senator says the war on terror is primarily a law 
enforcement and intelligence gathering operation.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. My outlook was changed by September the 11th. I 
clearly see the threats that we face. A few days after the attack, I 
stood where the buildings fell. I'll never forget the evil of the enemy 
and the suffering of our people. I remember that day--clearly remember 
that day. I remember the sights and sounds. I remember the workers in 
hardhats yelling at me at the top of their lungs, ``Whatever it takes.'' 
I remember looking in the eyes of a man coming out of that rubble who 
said to me, ``Do not let me down.'' Ever since that day, I've waken up 
every morning trying to figure out how to better protect our country. I 
will never relent in defending America, whatever it takes.
    There are other things about my opponent's views he doesn't want you 
to know. I don't know if you remember that in one of those debates. He 
looked square in the camera when they asked him about his health care 
plan, and he 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 his health care plan. Eighty percent of the people would 
end up on Government insurance. If you increase the Medicaid limits, it 
provides an incentives for small businesses not to provide insurance for 
their employees, because

[[Page 2664]]

the Government is going to provide insurance for their employees. You're 
moving people from the private sector to the Government when it comes to 
health insurance, and when the Government writes the checks, the 
Government makes the rules. And when it comes to your health care, when 
the Government makes the rules, the Government starts making decisions 
for you and starts deciding for your doctors. The wrong prescription for 
our families' health care is the Federal control of health care.
    I have got a better idea. We'll take care of the poor and the 
indigent through community health centers. We'll make sure low-income 
children are fully subscribed into the health programs aimed for them. I 
understand that most of the uninsured work for small businesses. Small 
businesses ought to be allowed to pool risk so they can buy insurance at 
the same discounts that big companies can do. We'll expand health 
savings accounts to help our small businesses and our families. And to 
make sure health care is available and affordable, we will do something 
about the junk lawsuits that are running good docs out of practice and 
running your bills up.
    I was in Canton a while ago and met ob-gyns that could no longer 
deliver babies. They had to get out of practice because these lawsuits 
had run their insurance up so high they couldn't afford to stay in 
practice. I've met too many women around our country who are worried 
about their baby. They're worried that they can't get the quality of 
health care that they need. Too many people are driving too far to get 
good health care because these lawsuits are ruining medicine, as far as 
I'm concerned. You can't be pro-doctor and pro-patient and pro-personal-
injury-trial-lawyer at the same 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 have made my choice. I'm standing with the doctors 
of Ohio. I'm standing with the patients of Ohio. We are for medical 
liability reform.
    The Senator doesn't want you to really know where he stands on 
taxes, because he's going to raise them. Listen, to be fair, raising 
taxes is one of the view things that he has been consistent about. 
[Laughter] You might say he's made a habit out of it. He's been in the 
Senate 90--he's been in Senate 20 years, and he's voted to raise your 
taxes 98 times.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. That's five times every year he's been in the Senate. 
I would call that a predictable pattern--[laughter]--a leading 
indicator--tells you what he thinks about your wallet. He's also 
proposed $2.2 trillion in new spending. That's a lot. That's a lot even 
for a Senator from Massachusetts. So they asked him, ``How are you going 
to pay for it?'' And he threw out that same old tired line, you know, 
``We're just going to tax the rich.'' Well, the problem is, is that by 
running up the top two brackets you raise between 600 and 800 billion 
dollars, and that's far short of the 2.2 trillion worth of promises. I 
would call that a tax gap. That would be the gap between what he's 
promised and what he can deliver. And guess who usually fills the tax 
gap.
    Audience member. We do!
    The President. The good news is we're not going to let him tax you. 
We're going to carry Ohio and win on November the 2d.
    The Senator's record is clear. There is a mainstream in American 
politics, and he sits on the far left bank. I'm a compassionate 
conservative and proudly so. I am glad to talk about my record. You 
know, when I ran for office, I said we would cut the taxes on the 
American people, and I kept my word. We increased the child credit. We 
reduced the marriage penalty. We believe that the Tax Code ought to 
encourage marriage, not penalize marriage. We created a 10-percent 
bracket to help our working families. We cut the taxes on everybody who 
pays taxes. We're helping our small businesses, and our economic 
policies are paying off. This economy is strong, and it is getting 
stronger.
    You remind your friends and neighbors, when you're out gathering the 
vote, what we have been through. Six months prior to my arrival in 
Washington, DC, the stock market was in serious decline. That foretold a 
recession. Then we had some corporate scandals. We passed good law that 
make it abundantly clear we're not going to tolerate dishonesty

[[Page 2665]]

in the boardrooms of America. And finally, those attacks cost us about a 
million jobs in the 3 months after September the 11th.
    But our plans are working. We've added 1.9 million new jobs since 
August of 2003. Homeownership rate is at an alltime high in America. 
More minorities own a home today than ever before in our Nation's 
history. Ohio's farmers are making a living. The entrepreneurial spirit 
is strong in the State of Ohio. Our small businesses are creating jobs.
    I know there's pockets of problems here in this State. I understand 
that. I've been traveling your State. I know it well. But I want to 
remind you, in the month of September, the unemployment rate went from 
6.3 percent to 6 percent in the State of Ohio. You added 5,500 new jobs 
in this State. We're making progress. We're going forward, and we're not 
going to go back to the days of tax and spend.
    No, I'm proud to run on my record. When I campaigned for President 4 
years ago, I promised to challenge the soft bigotry of low expectations 
in our public schools. I kept my word. We passed the No Child Left 
Behind Act, which is a fine piece of legislation. In return for 
increased Federal spending, we're now measuring. You know why? Because 
we believe every child can learn in America, and we expect every school 
to teach. You cannot solve a problem unless you diagnose the problem, 
and we're now diagnosing problems all across America, and our children 
are learning to read and write and add and subtract. The math scores are 
up. The English scores are up. We're closing an achievement gap among 
minority students, and we are not going to back to the day of low 
standards and mediocrity in our classrooms.
    When I ran for President 4 years ago, I promised to improve Medicare 
by adding prescription drug coverage for our seniors. I kept my word. 
Medicine was changing, and Medicare wasn't. We pay thousands of dollars 
for heart surgery but not one dime for the prescription drugs that could 
prevent the heart surgery from being needed in the first place. I 
brought Republicans and Democrats together. We have strengthened and 
modernized Medicare. Beginning in 2006, all seniors will be able to get 
prescription drug coverage under Medicare.
    Now that you've got me on a roll, let me talk about Social Security. 
[Laughter] I promised our seniors we would keep the promise of Social 
Security, and we did. In the 2000 campaign, I remember those--some of 
those television ads, the fliers that went out to our seniors that said, 
``If George W. gets elected, our seniors are not going to get their 
checks.'' You might remember those, the shameless scare tactics. Well, 
George W. did get elected, and our seniors got their checks. And our 
seniors will continue to get their checks. And baby boomers like me--I 
see a few of us out there--don't admit it--[laughter]--we're going to 
get our checks.
    But we need to worry about our children and our grandchildren. We 
need to worry about whether Social Security will be there for them when 
they need it. That's why I think younger workers ought to be allowed to 
take some of their payroll taxes and set up a personal savings account, 
a personal savings account they call their own, that the Government 
cannot take away.
    During the debate, I remember my opponent standing up there saying, 
well, he's going to protect Social Security. But what he forgot to tell 
you was, he voted eight times to raise taxes on Social Security 
benefits.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. The good thing about a campaign is, you can run, but 
you cannot hide.
    He also offered nothing for the younger generation. The job of a 
President is to confront problems, not to pass them on to future 
Presidents and future generations. In a new term, I will bring 
Republicans and Democrats together to make sure the Social Security 
system is strengthened for generations to come.
    There's more work to be done. I'm here to ask for the vote and let 
you know I want to make sure education systems continue to work. We'll 
expand the high standards to our high schools and expand Pell grants for 
low- and middle-income families so more children can start their career 
with a college degree. We'll continue to expand our economy and create 
an environment for the entrepreneur to flourish, by keeping your taxes 
low and

[[Page 2666]]

doing something about regulations and lawsuits. We're going to make sure 
that the compassion of America continues to be unleashed through our 
faith-based and community-based initiatives. And we'll work hard to make 
sure this country is secure, by not only chasing the terrorists abroad 
so we do not have to face them here at home but by spreading freedom and 
liberty.
    I want to thank you all for bringing your children here today. I 
want to tell the children something, and I hope parents reinforce this. 
We--we're changing the world because of our belief in liberty. It wasn't 
all that long ago in Afghanistan where young girls could not go to 
school. Think about a society that way. Think about how barbaric and 
backward the Taliban were. And if their mothers didn't toe their 
ideological line of hatred, they would be pulled in the public square 
and whipped; some cases, killed in a sports stadium.
    We acted in our own self-interest in Afghanistan. We acted to uphold 
a doctrine that I explained to the world, that said, ``If you harbor a 
terrorist, you're equally as guilty as the terrorist.'' When the 
President says something, he needs to speak clearly and mean what he 
says in order to keep the peace. And I meant what I said, and Tommy knew 
I meant what I said. We acted in our interest and removed the Taliban--
Al Qaida can no longer train there--but in so doing, millions of people 
voted in a Presidential election. The first voter in the Afghanistan 
Presidential election was a 19-year-old woman. Think about that. Think 
about how that society has gone from darkness to light because of 
freedom.
    Iraq will hold elections in January. Think how far that society has 
come from the days of torture chambers and mass graves. Freedom is on 
the march, and America is more secure because of it. And freedom will 
stay on the march so long as I am your President. I believe everybody 
yearns to be free. Freedom is not America's gift to the world; freedom 
is the Almighty God's gift to each man and woman in this world.
    Over the next 4 years, we will work to protect and defend the values 
that make our country such a unique place. I stand for judges who know 
the difference between personal opinion and the strict interpretation of 
the law. I stand for a culture of life in which every being matters and 
every person counts. I proudly signed the ban on partial-birth abortion. 
I stand strongly for marriage and family, which are the foundations of 
our society.
    My opponent and I disagreed on these issues. He voted against the 
ban on partial-birth abortion.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. He voted against the Defense of Marriage Act.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. As a matter of fact, at one time during this 
campaign, he actually said he thought you could find the values--find 
the heart and soul of America in Hollywood.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. The heart and soul of America is found right here in 
places like Westlake, Ohio.
    It's an important election. I want to thank you all for coming out 
and giving me a chance to encourage you to vote and to work the crowd, 
work the folks--work the folks in your neighborhood and communities--
community centers and your coffee shops. Tell the people we have an 
obligation, and when you're talking to them, tell them I see such a 
bright future for America. I see a great day ahead for our citizens.
    One of my favorite quotes is written by a fellow Texan named Tom 
Lea. Here's what he said. He said, ``Sarah and I live on the east side 
of the mountain. It is 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.'' 
The course of this campaign, my opponent has spent much of the time 
talking about the day that is gone. I'm talking about the day that's 
coming, a better day for all Americans, a prosperous America, an 
educated America, a compassionate America, and a peaceful world that we 
all want.
    You know, when I campaigned across your State 4 years ago, I made 
you this pledge, that if I got elected, I would uphold the honor and the 
integrity of the office. With your help, with your hard work, I will do 
so for 4 more years.

[[Page 2667]]

    God bless. Thank you all for coming. Thank you all.

Note: The President spoke at 2:50 p.m. at the Westlake Recreation 
Center. In his remarks, he referred to Gen. Tommy R. Franks, USA, 
(Ret.), former combatant commander, U.S. Central Command; former Senator 
Bob Dole; Mayor Jerry N. Hruby of Brecksville, OH; and Baseball Hall of 
Fame pitcher Bob Feller.