[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 42, Number 45 (Monday, November 13, 2006)]
[Pages 2000-2006]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

<R04>
Remarks at a Kansas Victory 2006 Rally in Topeka, Kansas

November 5, 2006

    The President. Thank you all very much. It's an honor to be here. 
Thanks for coming out tonight. So Jim Ryun says, ``Do you want a race?'' 
I said, ``No, but I want you reelected to the United States Congress.'' 
I appreciate you coming. I'm proud to be here with Jim Ryun. He's a 
decent, honorable man who works hard on behalf of the people from 
Kansas. He deserves to be reelected Congressman.
    He is a compassionate conservative. He has run his own business. By 
the way, we've got plenty of lawyers in Washington. [Laughter] Send 
somebody up there who has made a payroll. He started Sounds of Success, 
that helped children with hearing difficulties realize their full 
potential. He doesn't need a poll or a focus group to tell him what to 
believe.
    I thank you for being here, and I'm asking you to send this good man 
back to the United States Congress. I'm not the only one in my family 
who feels this way; Laura feels this way. Some guy just yelled, ``Happy 
anniversary.'' That's what I was supposed to say today. You know, no 
better way to spend your anniversary--your 29th anniversary--with 
somebody you love, than being here asking for the vote for Jim Ryun. She 
sends her very best to Jim and Anne.
    I'm proud to be here, as well, with Senator Sam Brownback of the 
great State of Kansas. More importantly, his wife, Mary, is here. Proud 
to be here with Congressman Todd Tiahrt, who you just heard from, and 
his wife, Vicki; Jim Barnett, running for Governor, and he needs your 
vote; Susan Wagle, running for Lieutenant Governor; she could use your 
vote as well.
    I appreciate very much that Chuck Ahner is with us. He's running for 
the Third Congressional District here in the State of Kansas. We've got 
your attorney general for the great State of Kansas here, who's asking 
for the vote. Secretary of State Ron Thornburgh is with us today.
    Most importantly, I want to say thanks to the grassroots activists 
who are here. You're the folks who put up the signs, make the phone 
calls, and get your fellow citizens to the polls. I want to thank you 
for what you have done, and I want to thank you for what you're going to 
do over the next 48 hours.
    We're heading to the finish line, and we're asking for your help. 
Whatever you do, don't pay attention to the prognosticators, the 
pundits. See, a bunch of them have already decided that the verdict's 
in, but they forgot that the folks of Kansas hadn't got to the polls 
yet. But this isn't the first time this has happened. You might remember 
in 2004--some of the folks in Washington were listening to the 
prognosticators, and then they starting picking out their offices in the 
West Wing. [Laughter] And then the people actually voted; the movers 
weren't needed.
    When you turn out the vote and vote yourself and put Jim Ryun back 
in the United States Congress, we're going to control the House, and 
we'll control the United States Senate as well. And there's a reason why 
we're going to win: One, we got you behind us, but also we're going to 
win because we share the values and the priorities of the American 
people.
    And we've got a record to run on. We've delivered results. One of 
the things that Jim and I talk about is the need to make sure our farm 
economy is strong. See, we believe if the ag sector is doing well, the 
entire U.S. economy does well.
    We also understand that if you become dependent--if you stay 
dependent on foreign

[[Page 2001]]

oil, it creates a national security risk. And so, therefore, Jim Ryun 
has worked to make sure that we encourage renewable fuel standards. In 
other words, we're going to use Kansas products to power our automobiles 
so we become less dependent on oil. If you're somebody who makes a 
living because of agriculture, it is in your economic interest to send 
Jim Ryun back to the United States Congress.
    Jim Ryun is a strong, strong supporter of programs to make sure our 
veterans' health care benefits work. See, he believes in supporting our 
veterans just like he believes in supporting those who wear the uniform 
today. If you're involved with defense here in this congressional 
district, I strongly urge you to support Jim Ryun.
    I also want to talk about Jim's belief in family values. He lives 
them. He not only believes in family values, he practices family values. 
And he is working to prevent the institution of marriage being redefined 
by activist judges.
    I want to talk about two issues that divide Republicans from 
Democrats. One of them is taxes, and the other one is the defense of 
this homeland. Let me start with taxes. We believe that you can spend 
your money better than the Federal Government can. I don't care what 
they're telling you here at home; Democrats believe they can spend your 
money better than you can.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. We also believe that if you have more money in your 
pocket, more of your own money in your pocket to save, spend, or invest, 
the economy benefits. That is our philosophy, but you don't expect us to 
be in Washington philosophizing. You expect us to be doing something 
about it. That is why I signed the largest tax cuts since Ronald Reagan 
was the President.
    We cut the taxes on everybody who pays income taxes. We doubled the 
child tax credit. We reduced the marriage penalty. We cut taxes on small 
businesses. We cut taxes on capital gains and dividends to encourage 
investment. And for the sake of our family businesses and for the sake 
of our farmers and for the sake of our ranchers, we put the death tax on 
the road to extinction.
    We had a spirited debate in Washington over these tax cuts. You 
might remember some of the Democrats' predictions. They said if we had 
tax cuts it wouldn't create jobs; if we had tax cuts, it would not 
increase wages; if we had tax cuts, it would cause the Federal deficit 
to explode. Well, the facts are in. The tax cuts have led to a strong 
and growing economy. Last Friday we got more good news about the 
economy. The national unemployment rate is down to 4.4 percent. In the 
last 3 months, we've added 470,000 new jobs. Real wages rose 2.4 percent 
over the past year, and we cut the deficit in half, 3 years ahead of 
schedule. If the Democrats' election predictions are as good as their 
economic predictions, we're going to have a good day on November the 
7th.
    If you live in this congressional district or in any other district 
around the country, you must understand that if you vote Democrat, 
you're voting for a tax increase.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. Now understand that in a campaign like this, that the 
Democrats don't want you to know their plans. Listen to the words of the 
leading Democrat in the House of Representatives, a woman who thinks 
she's going to be the Speaker, but she's not. She said--when they asked 
about tax cuts, she said, ``We love tax cuts.'' Well, given her record, 
she must be a secret admirer. [Laughter] She and her party voted against 
every single one of the tax cuts we passed. If this is their definition 
of love, I'd sure hate to see what hate looks like.
    If the tax cuts we passed are allowed to expire, if the tax cuts we 
passed are not extended, if the tax cuts we passed are not made 
permanent, you get a tax increase. That's how it's going to work. And so 
they asked the person who thinks he's going to be chairman of the House 
Ways and Means Committee, ``Can you think of any of the tax cuts we've 
passed that ought to be extended?'' And see, the Ways and Means 
Committee is the tax-writing committee in the House. They said, ``Can 
you think of one?'' He said, ``I can't think of one tax cut that should 
be extended.'' In other words, every one of the tax cuts we passed ought 
to lapse, which means your taxes go up.

[[Page 2002]]

    I'll give you an example. If the tax cuts are not extended or made 
permanent, the child tax credit will go from $1,000 a child to $500 a 
child, see.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. So when you get home this evening and you're sitting 
around the table--anybody here got four kids? I'll use you as an 
example. There you are at the table--you got five, okay. Five, okay. 
She's got five kids. So when you get home: one, two, three, four, five 
times 500. That's $2,500. That's your tax increase if you vote Democrat. 
That's your tax increase if the Democrats take over the House of 
Representatives. That 2,500 may not seem like a lot to people in 
Washington, but it seems like a lot to me and Jim Ryun, and that's why 
we're going to keep your taxes low.
    This election is taking place in an historic time for our country, 
and when our children and grandchildren look back on this period, one 
question will overwhelm all the rest: Did we do everything in our power 
to win the war on terror? I wish I could report to you that we were not 
at war, but we are. We face a brutal enemy that has no conscience, an 
enemy that does have an ideology.
    People in our country wonder why an enemy would want to attack a 
compassionate people like those of us in the United States, and the 
answer is because we thwart their ambitions to spread their dark vision 
around the world. They believe--we believe in freedom; they don't. We 
believe in liberty; they don't. They understand America won't change.
    You cannot negotiate with these people. You can't hope for the best 
from these people. The best way to do our most important job--is to 
protect you--is to defeat them overseas so we do not have to face them 
here at home.
    Part of our strategy is to stay on the offense. The other part of 
our strategy is to protect you on the homeland. Now the problem we face 
is that the enemy has to be right one time, and we have to be right 100 
percent of the time. So I went to Congress and said, here are some vital 
tools that are necessary to protect the American people.
    Let me give you three examples: One, there was a wall that separated 
our intelligence folks from sharing information with our law enforcement 
people. Now that's probably hard for you to understand, but that was the 
reality. In this new kind of war, we must have good intelligence, and 
the people who are responsible for protecting you must be able to act on 
it. So I asked the Congress to pass the PATRIOT Act, and the PATRIOT Act 
made sure that folks had the tools necessary to protect you. And when 
that bill came up for reauthorization, the vast majority of Democrats in 
the House and the Senate voted against it.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. It's important for people in this district and around 
the country to understand there is a different mindset. You cannot wait 
to respond to an attack. You got to act before the attack.
    I felt like if Al Qaida was making a phone call into the United 
States from outside the United States, we better understand why. If our 
job is to protect you, we've got to have the tools necessary to do so. 
When this bill came up in front of the House of Representatives, the 
vast majority of Democrats voted against it. I felt like it was 
important that when we picked somebody up off the battlefield, we better 
understand what that person is thinking.
    Let me give you an example. We captured Khalid Sheikh Mohammed. Our 
intelligence officers believe he was the mastermind of the September the 
11th attacks. My attitude is, if he knew about one attack, he might know 
about another attack, and we better find out why and what he knows.
    The vast majority of Democrats voted against giving our CIA 
professionals the tools necessary to question detainees. There is a 
different mindset in Washington. The best way to protect you is to make 
sure our professionals have the tools necessary to do so, and the best 
way to make sure they do is to send Jim Ryun back to the United States 
Congress.
    We are in a global war against an enemy that wants to strike us. And 
this war is fought on a variety of fronts. One of the lessons of 
September the 11th is that when we see a threat overseas, we must take 
each threat seriously, before it comes to hurt us. It's a lesson that 
every President must understand in

[[Page 2003]]

this new world we live in. I saw a threat in Saddam Hussein; Members of 
the Congress from both political parties saw the same threat; the United 
Nations saw the threat in Saddam Hussein. The decision I made to remove 
Saddam Hussein was the right decision, and the world is better off for 
it.
    And today we witnessed a landmark event in the history of Iraq. 
Saddam Hussein was convicted and sentenced to death by the Iraqi High 
Tribunal. Saddam Hussein's trial is a milestone in the Iraqi people's 
efforts to replace the rule of a tyrant with the rule of law. It's a 
major achievement for this young democracy. We congratulate the Iraqi 
people, and as I do so, I congratulate the men and women who wear the 
uniform of the United States for their hard work. Without their courage 
and skill, this verdict never would have happened.
    Iraq is the central front in this war on terror. Oh, I've heard all 
the lines, and I know you have as well. ``No, it's a distraction in the 
war on terror,'' the Democrats say in Washington. Well, that's not what 
I think, and that's not what our troops think, and that's not what Usama 
bin Laden thinks. Usama bin Laden has called this fight the third world 
war. He has said that victory for the terrorists in Iraq will mean 
America's defeat and disgrace forever. They just think different in 
Washington. You just got to know that. When you go in the booth to vote, 
you all got to understand that people don't see this world the way I do. 
I understand that.
    I want you to hear the words of the Democrat--leading Democrat in 
the House. She said, ``The President says that fighting them there makes 
it less likely we will have to fight them here.'' I do say that because 
I believe that. She went on to say, ``The opposite is true. Because 
we're fighting them there, it may become more likely we will have to 
fight them here.''
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. Iraq is not the reason the terrorists are at war with 
us. We were not in Iraq when they bombed the World Trade Center in 1993. 
We were not in Iraq when they blew up the Embassies in Kenya and 
Tanzania. We were not in Iraq when they bombed the USS Cole. And we were 
not in Iraq when they attacked us on September the 11th, 2001. You do 
not create terrorists by fighting the terrorists. The best way to 
protect you is to stay on the offense and bring them to justice before 
they can hurt us again.
    Our goal is victory in Iraq. That is our goal, and we got a plan to 
achieve victory. And victory means a government that can sustain itself, 
govern itself, defend itself, and serve as an ally in the war against 
these extremists and radicals and terrorists.
    We got a plan to do just that, but the enemy has got a plan to 
prevent us. See, they kill innocent men, women, and children, knowing 
that those images will be on our TV screens. And they believe that the 
United States does not have the will or the capacity to stay in the 
fight for the long run. And they recognize that these images, which 
justifiably horrify many of our citizens, will cause us to leave before 
the job is done. But they don't understand this administration, nor do 
they understand millions of our citizens. We're not going to run from 
thugs and assassins.
    Our goal remains the same. Our tactics constantly shift. I have 
given our commanders on the ground all the flexibility they need and all 
the tools necessary to achieve victory. And we got great assets for us. 
We have a plan for victory that will work, and we got a fantastic United 
States military.
    Any time--first of all, no matter what your view about the decisions 
I have made to protect America, you owe, and everyone owes, a debt of 
gratitude for the men and women in the United States military. And those 
of us in Government owe the men and women in uniform all the support 
necessary, all the pay, all the training, so they can do the job we've 
asked them to, and Jim Ryun is a strong supporter for the United States 
military.
    There's something else going for us in terms of victory in Iraq, and 
that's the Iraqis themselves. They have suffered unspeakable violence, 
yet they are committed to a government of, by, and for the people. You 
know, I was pleased--I was pleased when nearly 12 million people went to 
the polls saying, ``We want to live in a free society,'' but I wasn't 
surprised. And the reason I wasn't surprised is I believe a gift from 
the Almighty to each man, woman, and child on the face

[[Page 2004]]

of the Earth is the desire to be free--is liberty.
    And I believe in the universality of freedom. And I believe it's in 
our interests to help this young democracy survive. It's in our 
interests to help them on the political track and on the economic track. 
And at the same time, we're training Iraqis so they can take the fight 
to the enemy. We'll succeed. Let me tell you this: If I didn't think 
we're succeed and if I didn't think the cause was noble and just, I'd 
pull our troops out.
    I can't look at the eyes of a mother or wife or husband or dad of a 
troop in combat if I didn't believe it was essential to the security of 
this country. As a matter of fact, the only way we won't succeed is if 
we leave before the job is done. If people go to the polls, I want you 
to think about the Democrats' plan for victory: There isn't one.
    Iraq is the central front on this war, and yet they have no plan for 
victory. Oh, some of them say we ought to pull out now. Others say we 
ought to pull out on a fixed date, even though the job hadn't been done. 
One of the leaders in the House of Representatives--one of the Democrat 
leaders said--well, they're going to move the troops 5,000 miles away to 
an island. Nineteen people in the House said, ``We're going to cut off 
the funds right now.'' In other words, they're all over the lot, but 
they agree on one thing: Get out before the job is done.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. Listen, I'm not saying these people are unpatriotic; 
I'm just saying they're wrong. You can't win a war unless you're willing 
to fight the war. The Democrats have taken a calculated gamble in this 
election that--they think they can win by just criticizing. That's what 
they believe. You know, if you happen to run into a Democrat candidate, 
you might want to ask them the simple question: What's your plan?
    See, if they say they want to protect the homeland but opposed the 
PATRIOT Act, ask them: What's your plan? If they say they want to 
uncover terrorist plots but opposed listening in on terrorists' 
conversations, just go ahead and ask them: What is your plan? If they 
say they want to stop new attacks on our country but oppose letting the 
CIA detain and question the terrorists who might know about what those 
plots are, ask them this question----
    Audience members. What's your plan?
    The President. If they say they want to win the war on terror but 
call for America to pull out of what Al Qaida says is the central front 
in the war on terror, ask them this question----
    Audience members. What's your plan?
    The President. They don't have a plan. Harsh criticism is not a plan 
for victory, and second-guessing is not a strategy. We have a plan, and 
part of our plan is to send Jim Ryun back to the United States Congress.
    Retreat from Iraq before the job is done will make this country more 
vulnerable to attack. This is a different kind of war. If we were to 
leave before the job is done, the enemy would follow us here. Leaving 
before the job is done would embolden the extremists and the radicals 
and would dash the hopes of millions of people in the Middle East who 
want to live a peaceful life.
    Leaving before the job is done would dishonor the sacrifice of the 
men and women who have worn the uniform of the United States. The 
consequences of leaving before the job is done will be felt for 
generations. The enemy has made it clear that they want to establish 
safe haven in order to launch further attacks, just like the safe haven 
they had in Afghanistan.
    They have made it clear that they want to drive us out of the Middle 
East to topple moderate governments as a part of spreading their dark 
vision of the future throughout the Middle East. They have made it clear 
that they would like to control resources like energy in order to 
extract economic blackmail from the West.
    Imagine if these enemy were able to control countries and said, 
``We're going to pull a bunch of oil off the market to run up the price 
of your oil unless you abandon your alliances''--alliances with Israel, 
for example--or, ``unless you withdraw from the Middle East.'' Coupled 
with all this is a country which doesn't like us trying to possess a 
nuclear weapon. Thirty years from now, people would look back, if this 
were to happen, and say, ``What happened the folks in 2006? How

[[Page 2005]]

come they couldn't see the impending danger? What clouded their vision--
which caused them not to do their duty?''
    I want to assure you, I see the impending danger. I see the threats 
to a future for our children. Therefore, we will fight in Iraq, and we 
will win in Iraq.
    We got one other thing going for us, and that is the power of 
liberty. I don't know if you all remember, but recently Laura and I took 
then-sitting Prime Minister of Japan to Elvis's place in Memphis. 
[Laughter] I'd never been there. [Laughter] Koizumi wanted to go there. 
See, he loved Elvis.
    But I also want to tell an interesting story about the power of 
liberty. After the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor, my dad and many of 
your relatives said, ``I want to go defend this country,'' and they 
signed up by the thousands. By the way, the same thing is happening now. 
And these Americans fought the Japanese as a sworn enemy in a bloody, 
bloody war.
    And yet I'm on Air Force One, flying down to Memphis, talking about 
how to keep the peace. Isn't that interesting? My dad fought the 
Japanese, and his son is talking to the leader of the Japanese--the 
leader of the former enemy--talking about North Korea, what we can do to 
work together to prevent the North Korea peninsula from having nuclear 
weapons.
    We were talking about the fact that Japan had 1,000 troops in Iraq. 
See, the Prime Minister knows what I know. In this ideological struggle 
of the 21st century, when you find a young democracy--a form of 
government which defeats the radicals and extremists--you got to support 
it. We talked about, ``To whom much is given, much is required,'' and 
therefore, we'll continue to lead the fight against HIV/AIDS on the 
continent of Africa.
    My dad fought them, and I'm working to keep the peace with the 
leader of the very same country. Something happened; what happened was, 
Japan adopted a Japanese-style democracy. The message is, liberty has 
got the capacity to change an enemy into an ally, and liberty has got 
the capacity to change a region of the world that is resentful and 
hopeless to a region of the world that has got hope and optimism. 
Someday--someday, American leaders will be sitting down with duly 
elected leaders from the Middle East talking about the peace, and a 
generation of Americans will be better off for it.
    And these are the stakes in this election. And I thank you for 
coming out and giving me a chance to tell you what's on my mind. In 48 
hours, our citizens around this country are headed into the box, and 
they've got clear choices to make. If you believe that your health care 
decisions ought to remain in the hands of bureaucrats, vote Democrat. If 
you believe that you and your doctors should control your health care 
decisions, vote Republican.
    If you think trial lawyers should be allowed to continue driving 
good doctors and honest job creators out of business, vote Democrat.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. But if you believe that we should rein in the trial 
lawyers and protect our physicians and small-business owners from junk 
lawsuits, you vote Republican. You think activist judges should be 
allowed to redefine our country and issue new laws from the bench, vote 
Democrat.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. But if you believe that the role of the judge is to 
strictly interpret the Constitution and leave the legislating to the 
legislators, vote Republican.
    If you think Medicare was serving our seniors just fine and did not 
need to be reformed, vote Democrat. But if you believe we were right to 
expand choices for our seniors and provide better access to affordable 
prescription drugs, you vote Republican.
    You think your family budget can afford more taxes, vote Democrat.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. If you believe you pay more than enough in taxes as 
it is, and if you believe that you can spend your money better than the 
Federal Government can, vote Republican.
    And finally, if you think the way to protect America and win the war 
on terror is to criticize your opponents and offer no plan of your own, 
vote Democrat.
    Audience members. Boo-o-o!
    The President. But if you believe that the way to win the war on 
terror is to stay on the offense, and if you believe it is necessary

[[Page 2006]]

to lay the foundation of peace for generations to come, you vote 
Republican.
    I thank you for coming. Go vote. Get your neighbors and friends to 
vote. And send Jim Ryun back to the United States Congress.
    God bless. And God bless America.

Note: The President spoke at 6:10 p.m. at the Kansas Expocentre. In his 
remarks, he referred to Anne Ryun, wife of Representative Jim Ryun; 
Kansas State Attorney General Phill Kline; former President Saddam 
Hussein of Iraq; Usama bin Laden, leader of the Al Qaida terrorist 
organization; and former Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi of Japan.