[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 40, Number 45 (Monday, November 8, 2004)]
[Pages 2752-2758]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

<R04>
Remarks in Burgettstown, Pennsylvania

November 1, 2004

    The President. Thank you all. Thank you all for coming. Thanks for 
being here. I am so honored so many came out to say hello. I'm here to 
ask for your vote and ask for your help. It is close to voting time, and 
I'm out here to ask you to get our fellow Republicans and wise 
independents and discerning Democrats here in western Pennsylvania to do 
our duty and go to the polls tomorrow. And remind your friends and 
neighbors, if they want a safer America and a stronger

[[Page 2753]]

America and a better America, to put me and Dick Cheney back into 
office.
    Perhaps the most important reason to put me back in is so that Laura 
will be the First Lady for 4 more years. I regret that she's not here. 
We started----
    Audience members. Aw-w-w!
    The President. I understand. [Laughter] We were campaigning together 
yesterday. * She's off on her own for a while, which is wise use of her 
time. [Laughter] A lot of people have come to know her like I know her. 
She is a warm, compassionate, great First Lady.
    * White House correction.
    I'm proud of my runningmate, Dick Cheney. I really don't intend to 
insult anybody who's follically challenged--[laughter]--but I readily 
concede that the Vice President does not have the waviest hair in the 
race. [Laughter] The people of western Pennsylvania will be pleased to 
know I didn't pick him because of his hairdo. [Laughter] I picked him 
because of his judgment and his experience. He's getting the job done.
    I want to thank Curt and Shonda Schilling for taking time out of a 
busy life to come and endorse my candidacy for President. We all know 
him as a great baseball player. I know him as a great dad, a wonderful 
husband, a man of enormous character and value. I'm proud to have his 
support. And Santorum talks about Shonda lobbying the Congress; she's 
pretty effective about lobbying the President too. [Laughter] I want to 
thank them for their concern, their care, and their compassion. Thank 
you all for coming.
    I want to thank my friend the Senator from Pennsylvania, Ricky 
Santorum. I wish Senator Arlen Specter all the best. When you put me in, 
put him in too. I appreciate Congressman Tim Murphy, his dedication and 
service in the United States Congress. I want to thank Congresswoman 
Melissa Hart for her service. I want to thank all the candidates who are 
here, those running statewide and those running locally. I want to thank 
my friend Lynn Swann for his friendship and leadership.
    I want to thank Mark Wills and Daron Norwood for being here today. 
Both of them are fine singers.
    I want to thank the Wingmen for Bush. They are a coalition of guys I 
served with. I am honored they're here. I appreciate your friendship. 
Thank you all for taking time to come.
    Most of all, I want to thank the grassroots activists for being 
here. I want to thank you for putting up the signs. I want to thank you 
for making the phone calls. I want to thank you for what you have done 
and what you're going to do over the next 24 hours. By turning out the 
vote, by finding people who are concerned about the future of this 
country, we are going to carry Pennsylvania and win a great victory on 
Tuesday.
    Tomorrow the people of this good State and the people of our Nation 
will be heading to the polls. And I'm excited about election day, and 
I'm optimistic about the future of this country. You know, one of my 
favorite sayings comes from a fellow Texan who said this: 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.'' During the course of this campaign, 
my opponent has spent a lot of time talking about the day that is gone. 
I'm talking about the day that's coming.
    I see a great day coming for America. I see a day where prosperity 
reaches every corner of this country. I see a day where every child is 
able to read and write and add and subtract. I see a day in which this 
world becomes more peaceful so our children and our grandchildren can 
grow up in the peace we all want. I see a day that's better for every 
American. And tomorrow, the American people have a chance to bring that 
better day by voting for Bush-Cheney.
    The American President must lead with clarity and purpose. The role 
of the President is not to follow the path of the latest polls. The 
President must lead based on principle and conviction and conscience.
    During these 4 years, I've learned that whatever your strengths are, 
you're going to need them, and whatever your weaknesses are, people will 
notice them. Sometimes I'm a little too blunt. I get that from my 
mother.

[[Page 2754]]

Sometimes I mangle the English language. [Laughter] I get that from my 
dad. [Laughter] But all the time, whether you agree with me or not, you 
know where I stand, what I believe, and where I'm going to lead.
    This election----
    Audience members. Four more years! Four more years! Four more years!
    The President. This election comes down to clear choices on five 
vital issues facing our families. And the first clear choice concerns 
your family's budget. When I ran for President 4 years ago, I pledged to 
lower taxes for American families. And I kept my word. We doubled the 
child credit to help moms and dads. We reduced the marriage penalty. We 
believe the Tax Code ought to encourage, not penalize marriage. We 
lowered taxes on everybody who pays taxes.
    As a result of these policies, our economy is growing at rates as 
fast as any in nearly 20 years. Real after-tax income--the money in your 
pocket--is up by 10 percent since I've been your President. 
Homeownership rate is an alltime high in America, and more minority 
families own a home today than ever before in our history.
    Pennsylvania's farmers are making a living. The entrepreneurial 
spirit is strong. Small businesses are flourishing all across the State. 
We've added 1.9 million new jobs in the last 13 months. The national 
unemployment rate is 5.4 percent. Let me put that in perspective for 
you: That's lower than the average rate of the 1970s, the 1980s, and the 
1990s. And the unemployment rate here in Pennsylvania is 5.3 percent. 
This economy is strong, and it is getting stronger.
    People in western Pennsylvania need to hear this message. I know 
this State depends on a healthy steel and coal economy. And we will keep 
taxes low. We will insist on free and fair trade, and we will make those 
industries strong so the Pennsylvania recovery keeps on creating jobs 
for the Pennsylvania people.
    My opponent has an economic plan.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. Let me remind you of his history. He's been in the 
United States Senate 20 years. He's voted to raise taxes 98 times.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. That's five times for every year he's been in the 
Senate. I would call that a predictable pattern, a leading indicator. 
[Laughter] And when you couple that with the fact that he's promised 2.2 
trillion in new spending----
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. ----you begin to get a sense of his economic plan. 
That's 2.2 trillion with a ``T.'' That is a lot even for a Senator from 
Massachusetts. They asked him how he was going to pay for it. He said 
he'll tax the rich. You have heard that before. You can't raise enough 
money to pay for 2.2 trillion. There is a tax gap. There is a gap 
between what he has promised and what he can deliver, and given his 
record, guess who is going to get to fill that tax gap?
    Audience member. We are!
    The President. Hard-working people of western Pennsylvania. We are 
not going to let him tax you; we're going to carry Pennsylvania and win 
on November the 2d.
    The second clear choice involves the quality of life for your 
families. I ran for President to challenge the soft bigotry of low 
expectations by reforming our public schools. And I have kept my word. 
We passed education reforms to bring high standards to our classrooms. 
Math and reading scores are now on the rise. We're closing the 
achievement gap by helping minority children. My vision for a new term 
is to build on these reforms and extend them to our high schools so that 
no child is left behind in America.
    We'll continue to improve life for our families by making health 
care more affordable and available. We will expand health savings 
accounts. We will allow small businesses to join together so they can 
buy insurance at the same discount that big companies are able to do.
    We will help our families in need, and we will do something about 
these junk lawsuits that are making it hard to find good doctors in 
Pennsylvania. We have a difference of opinion on these lawsuits. My 
opponent has voted against medical liability reform not once, twice, 
three times but 10 times as a Member of the United States Senate.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. He put a personal-injury trial lawyer on the ticket.

[[Page 2755]]

    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. I understand the problem you face here in 
Pennsylvania. I've talked to too many ob-gyns in this State that are 
having problems staying in practice. I've talked to too many expectant 
moms that are worried about their health care. I'm standing with the 
doctors of Pennsylvania. I'm standing with the patients of Pennsylvania. 
I am for medical liability reform--now. In all we do to improve health 
care, we will make sure the decisions are made by doctors and patients, 
not by officials in Washington, DC.
    My opponent takes a different approach. He voted for the education 
reforms but now wants to weaken the accountability standards.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. He's proposed a big-Government health care plan. I 
remember that debate when he looked square in the camera and he said the 
Government didn't have anything to do with it, when he was talking about 
his health care plan. I could barely contain myself. The Government has 
got a lot to do with it. Eighty percent of the people end up on a 
Government-run plan. The wrong prescription for American families is to 
federalize your health care. He can run from his record, but he cannot 
hide.
    The third clear choice involves your retirement. Our Nation has made 
a solemn commitment to America's seniors on Social Security and 
Medicare. When I ran for President 4 years ago, I promised to keep that 
commitment and improve Medicare by adding prescription drug coverage. I 
have kept my word. Seniors are already getting discounts on medicine 
with drug discount cards. And beginning in 2006, all seniors will be 
able to get prescription drug coverage under Medicare.
    My opponent has a record. He voted against the Medicare bill that 
included prescription drug coverage.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. And his campaign is trying to scare our seniors when 
it comes to Social Security. But he forgets to mention that he is the 
one who voted to increase taxes on Social Security benefits eight times.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. I have kept the promise of Social Security, and we 
will always keep the promise of Social Security for our seniors. And 
baby boomers like me and some others out there I see are in good shape 
when it comes to the Social Security trust.
    But we need to to worry about our children and our grandchildren. 
That's why I believe younger workers ought to be able to take some of 
their payroll taxes and set up a personal savings account, an account 
they call their own. In a new term, I will bring people together to 
strengthen Social Security for generations to come.
    The fourth clear choice in this election is on the values that are 
so crucial to keeping our families strong. I want the Democrats and 
Republicans, independents of western Pennsylvania to understand this: I 
stand for marriage and family, which are the foundation of our society. 
I stand for a culture of life in which every person matters and every 
being counts. I proudly signed the ban on partial-birth abortions. I 
stand for the appointment of Federal judges who know the difference 
between personal opinion and the strict interpretation of the law.
    On issue after--on these issues, my opponent and I are miles apart. 
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. There is a mainstream in American politics, and John 
Kerry sits on the far left bank. He can run from his record, but he 
cannot hide.
    The final choice----
    Audience members. Four more years! Four more years! Four more years!
    The President. The final choice in this election is the most 
important of all because it concerns the security of your family. All 
progress in every other issue depends on the safety of our citizens. The 
most solemn duty of the American President is to protect the American 
people. If this country shows uncertainty or weakness during these 
troubled times, the world will drift toward tragedy. This is not going 
to happen on my watch.

[[Page 2756]]

    Our strategy is clear. We are protecting our homeland. Tom Ridge, 
the former Governor of this great State, is doing a wonderful job. We're 
reforming and strengthening our intelligence capabilities. We are 
transforming our All-Volunteer Army. There will be no draft. We are 
determined. We are relentless. We are steadfast. We're staying on the 
offensive. We are fighting the terrorists abroad so we do not have to 
face them here at home.
    We're succeeding. Afghanistan is free and an ally in the war on 
terror. Pakistan and Saudi Arabia are making raids and capturing 
terrorist leaders. Libya is dismantling its weapons program. The army of 
a free Iraq is fighting for freedom. Al Qaida no longer controls 
Afghanistan. We've shut down its camps there. We are systematically 
destroying the Al Qaida network.
    We are making progress on protecting the American people because 
we've got a great military. We will keep it a great military. And I want 
to thank those who wear our Nation's uniform for your service. I want to 
thank the military families who are here for your sacrifice for our 
country. I want to thank the veterans who are here for having set such a 
great example to those who wear the uniform. And I assure you, we'll 
make sure our troops have that which they need to complete their 
missions.
    That's why, in September of 2003, I went to the United States 
Congress and asked for $87 billion to support our troops in combat. It 
was a very important funding request. My opponent said on national TV 
that it would be irresponsible to vote against the funding for our 
troops. And then, because the political polls changed, he changed his 
position, and he did the irresponsible thing, and he voted against 
funding for our troops.
    Audience members. Flip-flop! Flip-flop! Flip-flop!
    The President. And then he entered the flip-flop hall of fame by 
saying this--upon his entry, here is what he said: ``I actually did vote 
for the 87 billion, right before I voted against it.''
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. I doubt many people in western Pennsylvania talk that 
way. [Laughter] He's given a lot of explanations since that vote, but I 
think the most revealing is this. He said, ``The whole thing was a 
complicated matter.'' [Laughter] My fellow citizens, there is nothing 
complicated about supporting our troops in combat.
    Senator Kerry's record on national security has far deeper problems 
than election-year reversals. For 20 years, on the largest national 
security issues, he has been consistently wrong. During the cold war--I 
want the citizens of this--of western Pennsylvania to hear the truth 
here--during the cold war, Senator Kerry voted against critical weapons 
systems and opposed President Ronald Reagan's policy of peace through 
strength.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. History has shown that Senator Kerry was wrong and 
President Ronald Reagan was right.
    When former President Bush assembled an international coalition to 
drive Saddam Hussein from Kuwait, Senator Kerry voted against the use of 
force to liberate Kuwait.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. History has shown that Senator Kerry was wrong and 
former President Bush was right.
    One year after----

[At this point, there was an interruption in the audience.]

    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. One year after the first bombing of the World Trade 
Center, the Senator proposed massive cuts in America's intelligence 
budget, so massive----

[The interruption in the audience continued.]

    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. So massive that his colleague Ted Kennedy opposed 
them. Well, history has shown that Senator Kerry was wrong--and we got 
to be fair--Senator Kennedy was right. [Laughter]
    We have a difference of opinion. And as you gather up the vote, 
remind people about this difference of opinion as to how to better 
secure our Nation's families----

[The interruption in the audience continued.]

    The President. My opponent suggested America must pass a ``global 
test'' before we defend ourselves.
    Audience members. Four more years! Four more years! Four more years!

[[Page 2757]]

    The President. I will always work with our friends and allies, but I 
will never turn over America's national security decisions to leaders of 
other countries.
    Senator Kerry says September the 11th didn't change him much at all. 
It changed me. It changed my outlook about how to better defend this 
country. I remember going to the ruins of the Twin Towers on September 
the 14th, 2001. It's a day I'll never forget. There were workers in 
hardhats there yelling at me at the top of their lungs, ``Whatever it 
takes.'' I remember the man who came out of the rubble, and he grabbed 
me by the arm. He looked me in the eye, and he said, ``Do not let me 
down.'' Ever since that day, I get up every morning trying to figure out 
how to better protect our country. I will never relent in defending this 
country, whatever it takes.
    Over the next 4 years, we will defend this country. We will use 
every asset at our disposal, and one of the most powerful assets we have 
is freedom. I believe in the power of liberty to transform societies.
    I want the youngsters here to realize what has happened in a short 
period of time in Afghanistan. It wasn't all that long ago that young 
girls could not go to school, and their mothers were taken into the 
public squares and whipped and sometimes shot in a sports stadium, 
because the ideologues of hate, the Taliban, had such a dim view of the 
world.
    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 citizens went to the polls to vote for their 
President. The first voter was a 19-year-old woman. Freedom is on the 
march. And free societies help us keep the peace we all want.
    Iraq is still dangerous. That's because that country is headed 
toward democracy. There will be elections in Iraq in January. Think how 
far that country has come from the days of torture chambers and mass 
graves.
    I believe every person wants to live in a free society. I believe 
mothers and dads want to raise their children in a free and peaceful 
world. I believe this not because freedom is America's gift to the 
world; freedom is the Almighty God's gift to each man and woman in this 
world.
    Audience members. Four more years! Four more years! Four more years!
    The President. We are living in historic times, and a lot is at 
stake in this election. The future safety and prosperity of America are 
on the ballot. The truth of the matter is, this election comes down to 
who do you trust--who do you trust to make this country secure? Who do 
you trust to offer leadership and results in a time of challenge to 
America?
    If you believe that taxes should stay low so families can pay the 
bills and small businesses can expand and create jobs, I ask you to come 
stand with me.
    If you believe in high standards for public schools, I ask you to 
come stand with me.
    If you believe that patients and doctors should be in charge of 
health care, I ask you to come stand with me.
    If you believe this Nation must honor the commitments of Medicare 
and strengthen Social Security for generations to come, I ask you to 
come stand with me.
    If you believe that this Nation should honor marriage and family and 
make a place for the weak and the vulnerable, I ask you to come stand 
with me.
    If you believe America should fight the war on terror with all our 
might and lead with unwavering confidence in our ideals, I ask you to 
come stand with me.
    If you are a Democrat who believes your party has turned too far to 
the left this year, I ask you to come stand with me.
    If you are a minority citizen and believe in free enterprise and 
good schools and the enduring values of family and faith, and if you are 
tired of your vote being taken for granted, I ask you to come stand with 
me.
    And if you are a voter who believes that the President of the United 
States should say what he means and do what he says and keep his word, I 
ask you to come stand with me.
    When I traveled your great State 4 years ago, I made a pledge that 
if elected, I would uphold the honor and the dignity of the office. With 
your help, with your hard work, I will do so for 4 more years.
    Thanks for coming. Thank you all.

Note: The President spoke at 9:38 a.m. in the Post-Gazette Pavilion at 
Star Lake. In his remarks, he referred to Curt Schilling, pitcher, 
Boston Red Sox, Major League Baseball, and his wife, Shonda;

[[Page 2758]]

country music entertainers Mark Wills and Daron Norwood; Lynn C. Swann, 
chairman, President's Council on Physical Fitness and Sports; and former 
President Saddam Hussein of Iraq.