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pd06ap98 Statement on House Action Against Legislation Proposing a Uniform...


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    The President. If you write that, make sure you say he did it, not 
me.
    Q. But make sure you say the President was smiling.
    Q. Mrs. Clinton, have you enjoyed it?
    Mrs. Clinton. Oh, very much.

Note: The President spoke at 9:55 a.m. at Chobe National Game Park. In 
his remarks, he referred to former Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin of 
Russia. A tape was not available for verification of the content of this 
exchange.


<DOC>
[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents]
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[Page 540-541]
 
Monday, April 6, 1998
 
Volume 34--Number 14
Pages 525-568
 
Week Ending Friday, April 3, 1998
 
Statement on Legislation Proposing a Uniform Standard Blood-Alcohol 
Level

March 30, 1998

    Although my trip to Africa precludes me from joining Congresswoman 
Nita Lowey, Congressman Charles Canady, and others gathered in the 
Roosevelt Room, I want to state once more my strong support for 
legislation to put the brakes on drunk driving.
    Setting a uniform limit for impaired driving at .08 blood alcohol 
content (BAC) will help us crack down on drunk driving nationwide. At a 
time when crime all across America is going down, we still lose an 
American to drunk driving every 30 minutes--every half hour a family is 
shattered, a child, a parent, a neighbor is lost forever.
    By establishing a strong but sensible limit on blood alcohol 
content, we could save as many as 600 lives a year. And a uniform drunk 
driving standard would still allow

[[Page 541]]

adults to drink responsibly and moderately--since the .08 BAC standard 
is not reached until a 170-pound man has had more than four drinks in an 
hour, and three for a typical woman.
    This should not be a partisan issue. Indeed, the bipartisan work of 
Congresswoman Lowey and Congressman Canady and Senators Lautenberg and 
DeWine, proves that when leaders from both parties come together, we can 
set aside political differences to save lives and serve America. It is 
my fervent hope that the majority of the House will join the large 
bipartisan majority in the Senate and send me legislation that will make 
our streets safe, our drivers sober, and our laws more sensible.


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[Page 541]
 
Monday, April 6, 1998
 
Volume 34--Number 14
Pages 525-568
 
Week Ending Friday, April 3, 1998
 
Letter to the Speaker of the House of Representatives on Campaign 
Finance Reform Legislation

March 30, 1998

Dear Mr. Speaker:

    The Congress has an obligation and an opportunity to strengthen our 
democracy by passing comprehensive campaign finance reform. Instead, the 
Congressional leadership is attempting to derail serious, bipartisan 
campaign finance reform through procedural means.
    The bipartisan plan proposed by Representatives Christopher Shays 
and Martin Meehan is genuine, tough reform, supported by a large number 
of lawmakers of both parties. It would address serious flaws in the 
campaign finance system, by banning unregulated ``soft money'' raised by 
both parties, addressing backdoor campaign spending by outside 
organizations, and strengthening disclosure. This bipartisan measure is 
the best chance in years to reduce the role of special interests, give 
voters a louder voice, and treat fairly incumbents and challengers of 
both parties. This measure has the support of a majority of the Senate, 
and I believe that if it were allowed to come for a vote, it would have 
the support of a majority of the House as well.
    Instead, the House leadership has determined to thwart serious 
reform. It has refused to allow the Shays-Meehan bill even to come up 
for a vote. Instead, it has offered a plan stocked with proposals--
including the so-called ``Paycheck Protection'' and ``Election 
Integrity'' provisions--that are harshly partisan and plainly 
unacceptable.
    Behind the blizzard of proposals and procedural complications, one 
thing is clear: this is a transparent effort to block reform. I call on 
the House of Representatives to rise to its responsibility, bring the 
Shays-Meehan bill to an up-or-down vote, and give the American people 
the reform they deserve.
    Sincerely,
                                            William J. Clinton

Note: An original was not available for verification of the content of 
this letter.


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[Page 541-544]
 
Monday, April 6, 1998
 
Volume 34--Number 14
Pages 525-568
 
Week Ending Friday, April 3, 1998
 
Interview With Ebony, Jet, and the American Urban Radio Network in Cape 
Town

March 27, 1998

Slavery

    Q. Mr. President, you've made it emphatically clear that you will 
not apologize for slavery. Do you understand why there's such 
controversy around the issue, and are you prepared for Goree Island?
    The President. Oh, yes. I think--it was interesting, because after I 
spoke in Ghana and then in Uganda, and when I spoke in Uganda about how 
wrong we were to be involved in the slave trade, some people in America 
said, ``Well, why did you do this in Africa,'' and ``Why haven't you 
done the same thing in America?'' But most of my African-American 
friends and advisers don't believe that we should get into what was 
essentially a press story about whether there should be an apology for 
slavery in America. They think that that's what the 13th, 14th, and 15th 
amendment was; they think that's what the civil rights legislation was; 
and they think we need to be looking toward the future.
    But when an American President comes to Africa for the first time 
and makes a serious trip and a serious commitment to the future, I think 
recognizing the fact that we did a bad thing in being part of the slave 
trade, I think, is important here. So I think

[[Page 542]]

we've drawn the right balance, and I feel good about it.

Africa-U.S. Trade

    Q. Mr. President, does the United States see African-American 
businesses as a part of the national strategy for participation and 
partnering with South Africa?
    The President. Absolutely. Because, in part, I think African-
American businesses are more likely to see the opportunities. There are 
going to be a lot more other kinds of businesses, all kinds of American 
businesses here, I predict to you, in the next few years, both selling 
here, buying from here to sell in the American market, and investing 
here.
    But this is really an incredible opportunity for the African-
American business community to get on the ground floor of what I believe 
will be an explosion of economic activity in the years ahead.
    One of the things we're doing here is dedicating the Ron Brown 
Commercial Center in Johannesburg, and Ron told me years ago, shortly 
after he became Commerce Secretary, that there was a new Africa emerging 
and that we needed to be a part of it; we needed to be in on the ground 
floor. So that's what we're trying to do.

Ron Brown

    Q. Do you miss him especially now?
    The President. Especially now. I just--I'd give anything if he could 
have made this trip.

Africa-U.S. Trade

    Q. Well, Mr. President, speaking of the Africa package, a different 
version of that, fast track--are you planning on reproposing it again or 
introducing that before Chile?
    The President. Well, I don't think we can pass it before Chile, so 
it's not important. We know we have the votes to pass it in the Senate, 
and we know we don't yet have the votes to pass it in the House. So I'm 
just going to keep working on it until I think we've got the votes to 
pass it in the House. It should pass.
    But I don't think that that should deter us from passing the Africa 
trade and investment bill. It's passed in the House now. We certainly 
have the votes in the Senate to pass it, so it's really a question of 
getting it up on the Senate calendar. They're not meeting many days this 
year, and they seem to be, for reasons I don't quite understand, 
bringing up a lot of issues that are highly contentious and don't have a 
big impact on the future. So I'm hoping I can cut through the Senate 
agenda and get--persuade Senator Lott and others to bring it up, because 
I think the Africa trade bill should pass this year, and I think it will 
if we can just bring it up.
    Q. Mr. President, will there be any consideration by your 
administration similar to the Gray amendment concept, in an effort to 
mobilize the entire American business community? And are there any 
concrete plans that we can begin to talk about?
    The President. Well, we've announced here that we would be involved 
in financing support--or supporting, if you will, the financing of 
American business deals here in Africa through the Overseas Private 
Investment Corporation. And we've already helped to finance the two 
significant ones here in South Africa in transportation and 
telecommunications. So we will have way over half a billion dollars 
worth of support for financing new business investment in Africa. And I 
think that will get a lot of people involved quickly. I hope it will.

President's Race Initiative

    Q. Mr. President, there is word that the race initiative will end in 
September, formally. Now, the conclusion--is that because of the fact 
that the momentum is not there, that you thought it could be? And there 
was word from some White House staffers that the initiative could last 
as long as the end of your term.
    The President. I don't think we've decided. I think, for one thing, 
in some form or fashion the initiative will last until the end of my 
term, regardless, because I want to--I think we have to continue to work 
on this in a very conscious way, to close the opportunity gaps and also 
to prepare for living in an increasingly multiracial society. I mean, 
soon there will be no particular ethnic group that has a majority in 
America. So it will continue in one form or fashion, regardless.
    And insofar as how the Advisory Board should conclude its activities 
and when, I

[[Page 543]]

haven't made a final decision on that. So there isn't--you know, my 
staff may be of different views on it, but I haven't heard from any of 
them, and we haven't made a final decision on it. We still have a lot of 
work to do on the agenda that has already been laid out just for this 
board. And we've got several things planned. When I get back, we're 
going to do kind of a townhall meeting on ESPN, with a lot of athletes, 
which should be very interesting.
    Q. Michael Jordan?
    The President. I don't know if they've signed up yet. As bad as he 
beat me when we played golf together, he sort of owes me one, so maybe I 
can get him to do it.
    And we are going to have a serious discussion on public television, 
which I think will be very, very interesting--the PBS. We're going to 
get some really bright people in and talk about where we're going on 
that, with the race matters. And then we're going to have a week in 
which we attempt to have a serious discussion of race on every college 
campus in America. So those are our next big things coming up when I get 
home.
    Q. So April seems to be a real month for your race----
    The President. April is a big month. April will be a big month for 
it, but we're still rolling out policies. We've got some significant 
things that are in budget process which will have a huge impact on the 
opportunity gap issues. We've got a provision in our budget to more than 
double the number of empowerment zones. Secretary Cuomo has got some 
very impressive proposals to set up development banks and other things 
to create jobs in inner cities and other isolated areas where the 
unemployment rate is high still.
    So we've got a lot to do this year, and we'll see along about 
September where we are and in what form we should proceed. But I haven't 
made a final decision.

President's Visit to Africa

    Q. The minority community seems to be really in your favor at all 
times, and especially now. In the African-American community, there 
seems to be the biggest love for President Bill Clinton ever, especially 
with this Africa trip. What is this Africa trip meant to send to the 
African-American community as well as the Latino community and the Asian 
community?
    The President. Well, I think that the trip has special meaning for 
African-Americans. But if I can first say, I think all Americans should 
strongly support this trip. There are 700 million people living in sub-
Saharan Africa. Within 25 years, the population will nearly double. This 
is a huge place. It's bigger than the United States and Canada put 
together--considerably bigger. And the population has been kept down in 
the past because of disease, primarily, and abject poverty.
    Now, better health care, better investment, better education, and 
better economic growth are going to increase the importance of Africa to 
every country and all kinds of people. And America's ties to Africa need 
to be strengthened and deepened. So I hope every American supports it.
    But African-Americans in particular should take a lot of pride in 
this. And I found it inconceivable when I took office that no American 
President had ever taken a long, comprehensive trip to Africa. And when 
I go to Poland, Polish-Americans identify with that. When I go to 
Ireland and there's over 100,000 people in the streets in Dublin, the 
Irish-Americans identify with that. And I think that it's high time that 
African-Americans had this same opportunity that other Americans enjoy 
to know that their ethnic heritage has a present meaning and a future 
for the United States and African nations in partnership.
    Q. Mr. President, it's been noted that you are very, very tired. Why 
did you put so much on the front end of the trip? I mean, we've watched 
you in some of the shots--I mean, you look like you are about ready to 
just fall out.
    The President. Well, I just have so--it's a long way from America, 
and I have so little time, and I just am trying to make the most of it. 
And we've had some--the days have been very long, and we arranged to 
travel a lot late at night. And I try to sleep when I'm on the plane; 

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