Home > 2000 Presidential Documents > pd06mr00 Statement on Emergency Assistance to Fishing Communities...pd06mr00 Statement on Emergency Assistance to Fishing Communities...
February 28, 2000
There has never been a better time to expand our investment in
Amtrak and the Nation's passenger railways. The number of Americans
relying on Amtrak has continued to grow for 3 years in a row. And
through sound financial management, Amtrak continues its movement toward
viability.
Therefore, this year I am asking Congress to increase Amtrak funding
by more than $400 million, or more than 70 percent, in order to make
investments to expand Amtrak
[[Page 401]]
routes and provide even more efficient service, laying the foundation
for high-speed rail. With this major funding increase this year, we can
help ensure a thriving passenger rail system for many years to come.
Note: A portion of the President's statement was also made available on
the White House Press Office Actuality Line.
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[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents]
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[Page 401]
Monday, March 6, 2000
Volume 36--Number 9
Pages 393-451
Week Ending Friday, March 3, 2000
Statement on Floods in Southern Africa
February 28, 2000
I am deeply saddened by the devastation caused by flooding in
southern Africa, which has worsened over the past few days. Almost a
million people in Botswana, Mozambique, South Africa, and Zimbabwe have
lost their homes or their livelihoods, and tens of thousands of people
in Mozambique are stranded in flooded areas and require urgent rescue.
Today we are allocating $1 million, through the U.S. Agency for
International Development, to support aircraft for critical search and
rescue operations and the delivery of relief supplies. In addition, we
have already provided over $1.8 million to fund air transport, prevent
disease, deliver supplies, and support relief efforts. Two aircraft from
the Department of Defense are on the way to deliver shelter materials,
blankets, and other relief supplies. Also, we are dispatching a disaster
assistance response team to the region to determine other ways that we
can help our friends in southern Africa.
The thoughts and prayers of the American people are with the people
of the region as they cope with this disaster.
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[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents]
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[Page 401-405]
Monday, March 6, 2000
Volume 36--Number 9
Pages 393-451
Week Ending Friday, March 3, 2000
Remarks to the Democratic Governors' Association Dinner
February 28, 2000
Thank you very much. Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for the warm
welcome. Thank you for this wonderful book. Governor Patton, Mrs.
Patton, Governor Davis, Governor O'Bannon; to B.J. Thornberry, and all
the officers of the DGA; and especially my great friend Mark Weiner. I
want to acknowledge also the presence--Mark Weiner did a good job
tonight, and all the rest of you did, raising this money. I thank you
for that.
I want to acknowledge the presence in this audience of the man who
was the executive director of the DGA when I was a member, my good
friend Chuck Dolan. I thank you for being here and for all you did for
us. And all my colleagues--I know there are five or six Governors out
there who are former Governors with whom I served--thank you for being
here.
I want to acknowledge the Governors who are retiring. Governor
Rossello, thank you for everything you've done. And Governor Carper and
Governor Carnahan are going to be Members of the United States Senate,
and that will be a good thing for the Senate, a bad thing for the
Governors.
I want to say a special work of thanks to the man who nominated me
to be vice chairman of the DGA in 1979, Governor Jim Hunt, one of the
finest people I ever met in my life. Thank you, Jim Hunt, for what you
did.
You know, I will treasure this book. I have a first edition of
``Profiles in Courage,'' but not one signed by John Kennedy. Hillary
says that the reason I admire John Kennedy so much is he's the only
person to ever serve as President whose handwriting was even harder to
read than mine. [Laughter] But I can recognize the signature, and I
thank you.
President Kennedy once said, ``The party which, in its drive for
unity, discipline, and success, ever decides to exclude new ideas,
independent conduct, or insurgent members is in danger.'' Well, thanks
to the Democratic Governors, to your new ideas, your independent
conduct, and your willingness always to try to do better and to be
different, the Democratic Party is in no danger. We're stronger tonight
than we have been in many, many years, thanks to you.
As President, I have been deeply indebted to my service as Governor.
It has stood me in good stead. And I have been deeply indebted to so
many of you for the friendship, the advice, the counsel you have given
me, and to so many who were members of this organization with me who
continue all during these years to call with a helpful word or sometimes
just a word of friendship and support.
[[Page 402]]
Thanks to our partnership and the hard work of the American people,
our country is in good shape at the dawn of the new millennium. We have
21 million new jobs, the lowest unemployment rate in 30 years, the
lowest welfare rolls in 30 years, the lowest crime rates in 25 years,
the lowest poverty rates in 20 years, the lowest Hispanic- and African-
American unemployment rate ever, and the longest economic expansion in
history. We are well-positioned for this new century.
And I am very proud that there is in this country, embodied in the
service of the Democratic Governors, a new Democratic Party, committed
to new ideas and the old principles of opportunity for all,
responsibility from all, and a community of all Americans. I am proud of
what we have done together.
But you came here tonight because we're raising money for the
elections of 2000. And as dearly as I loved every single word Paul
Patton said, and I'll treasure it for a lifetime, and he'll never be
able to get away from it because, everywhere I go, the White House
Communications Agency captures things on film--I've got a movie, a color
movie of Paul Patton, and the next time he gets mad at me, I'm going to
play it for him. [Laughter] I will treasure everything he said for a
lifetime. As much as I treasure and as much as I have loved being
President, elections are about the future. And in this election season,
those of you who are running and those of you who are serving and not
running must be very active in defining the choices for the future.
Last night at the dinner at the White House, I reminded all the
Governors that we are now in the longest economic expansion in history,
and it's easy to feel comfortable and confident, maybe even a little
complacent. But the last time we had the longest economic expansion in
history was in the decade of the 1960's, between 1961 and 1969.
In 1964, when I graduated from high school, America was still
profoundly sad about the loss of President Kennedy, but very optimistic
and very united behind President Johnson; absolutely convinced we'd just
have high economic growth with low inflation from now on; absolutely
convinced that we would solve the civil rights challenges of our age
through the Congress; absolutely convinced that we would prevail in the
cold war as a united nation.
Within 2 years, we had riots in the streets, and the country was
divided. Within 4 years, Martin Luther King and Robert Kennedy had been
killed, Lyndon Johnson said he wouldn't run for reelection. The country
was split right in two. We had a Presidential election which for the
first time in a long time was about the politics of division. You
remember the election of 1968? Vote with the Silent Majority. And it was
us and them. If you weren't in the Silent Majority, presumably, you were
in the loud minority. I know; I was one of them.
And in just a few months, we lost the longest economic expansion in
history. And we've had decades of us and them elections and us and them
politics in Washington, DC. I ran for President because when I was a
Governor, I could not have survived practicing politics the way it was
done here very day, and I was sick and tired of people all caught up in
the Washington political game, deaf to the voices of the people like
those in Appalachia that Paul Patton introduced me to.
On that hot day in Hazard, Kentucky, which I'll never forget because
it was so hot, I saw people like the people I grew up with. They don't
want much from us. They get up every day and go to work, and they obey
the law, and they pay their taxes. All they want us to do is to work as
hard at our job as they work at theirs and to pay attention to what
their concerns are and to think about how their children are going to do
better.
And I came to Washington determined to do that. I am profoundly
indebted to every Governor who served with me, who helped me, and to all
of you since. But what I want you to remember is elections are about the
future and so is governance. And don't you dare be complacent about
this. I have waited for 35 years for my country to be in shape again to
build the future of our dreams for our children. Our party can lead the
country to do that. We're going in the right direction. We have the
right ideas. We have the right values. And you have to lead to make sure
it happens.
[[Page 403]]
And you have to be willing to do things that may not grab the
headlines all the time. We have to take what Theodore Roosevelt said at
the dawn of the century: ``A growing country with a young spirit should
always take the long look ahead.'' Today some of you came in to see me,
including Governor Carper and former Governor Dukakis who is here
tonight, to talk about my Amtrak budget. Well, that's not a headline
grabber, but it's important to the future that America have a high-speed
rail system that guarantees our energy security and our safety and our
strength. It's part of our long look ahead.
It's part of our long look ahead that we recognize that we've got
the lowest female unemployment rate in 40 years. That is the good news.
The challenge is that nearly every family in nearly every income group
is having some difficulty balancing the burdens of raising their
children and succeeding at work, and whenever this country has to make a
choice--any family--we lose.
And we have to do more to help people to succeed at home and at
work. We have to do more to bring economic opportunity to the people and
places that have been left behind. If we can't bring free enterprise to
Appalachia, to the Mississippi Delta, to the inner cities, and to the
Indian reservations of this country now, we'll never get around to it.
And the Democrats ought to lead the way. Everybody deserves a chance to
work who is willing to do so.
Jim Hunt said something today I want to emphasize. We started out
together in 1979, and we all wanted--especially in the South, where we
knew we had to do it--we all wanted to make education better. But we
really didn't know how to do it, especially with all the kids from all
the different backgrounds, the different economic and racial and
religious and ethnic backgrounds, with all their different burdens that
they carried from home to school.
But we don't have an excuse anymore. Now, we know what works. We
know how to turn around failing schools. We know all our kids can learn.
And we know how to invest in it. We know how to demand high standards.
We know what to do. We in the Democratic Party have to lead America to
excellence in education for every single child in this country, across
all the lines that divide us.
When I became President, there were a lot of people that never
thought the crime rate would go down again. But we know how to do it. We
know you've got to put more police on the street, people who are trusted
by folks in a community, who work with them, who know how to prevent
crime as well as catch criminals. And we know--even in the South, we
know--we've got to do more to keep guns out of the hands of criminals
and away from children. We know what works. The Democratic Party ought
to lead the country to making this the safest big country in the world.
We owe that to our children.
We know that, in the digital economy the Governors came here to talk
about, you do not have to weaken the environment to improve the economy.
In fact, we know that we can improve the environment and the economy at
the same time. There is a $1 trillion market in the world today for
environmental technologies that avoid the worst consequences of global
warming and clean up local air and water systems and preserve the land--
$1 trillion market. We know that. And a lot of our friends in the other
party don't know that yet. The Democratic Party ought to lead the way to
a 21st century economy that proves we can have the strongest economy in
history and the cleanest environment in history. We ought to lead the
way to that sort of future.
And we know, even those of you that come, as I do, from a landlocked
State in the middle of the country, that there is no more artificial
dividing line between foreign policy and domestic policy. We know that
our welfare is tied to the welfare of people all around the world.
That's why I've worked so hard for peace in every region of the world
and why I've worked to expand trade and why I believe we ought to take
advantage of an agreement that finally opens China's markets to us, the
way our markets have been open to China for decades now; why I believe
we ought to continue to work to rid the world of weapons of mass
destruction, chemical and biological terrorism; why we ought to adopt
the test ban treaty--even though the Senate voted against it last year--
because we
[[Page 404]]
have got to make a safer world if we want our kids to live on safer
streets and have a safer future in every State in the United States of
America.
And, finally--you know, I get apprehensive when people start giving
me gifts, even one like this that I treasure. That's the kind of thing
that they ought to do for you when you're not around anymore. I have to
pinch myself; I'm still alive, I'm still here. [Laughter] I hope to be a
useful citizen when I'm no longer living in the White House. But if the
good Lord came to me tonight and said, ``I'm sorry, you can't finish
your term. You're out of here tomorrow morning. And I'll only give you
one wish. I'm not a genie; you get one wish, not three,'' I would set
aside everything I just said to you and pray that America could find a
way to overcome the profoundly ingrained tendency of people everywhere
to distrust people who are different from them by race, by religion,
people who were gay, all these things that are different.
Why? You've been here talking about the Internet economy. I've got a
cousin in Arkansas who plays chess once a week with a guy in Australia
over the Internet. People are being drawn together as never before. I
was in poor villages in Africa where the school buildings had maps that
still had the Soviet Union on it. But because they're getting computer
hookups, pretty soon they'll just be able to print out maps that are
new, and those poor little kids in those little villages will be able to
learn the same geography our kids do in our finest schools.
We are being drawn together as never before, and yet we are
bedeviled by the oldest problems of humankind. Sunday I'm going to Selma
to be with Governor Siegelman and the veterans of the Selma march 35
years ago. For me, particularly because I'm from the South, it is a
signal honor. And we will celebrate all the great things that have
happened in the last 35 years to bring us together.
I see Governor Barnes out there from Georgia. He went in on a great
vote that carried in two African-Americans to statewide elected office
in Georgia, and there are things like that happening all over America.
Governor Locke out there--the first Chinese-American Governor our
country ever had. Governor Cayetano from Hawaii--a Philippine-American.
But it is still true that even in America--we had kids at a Jewish
community center in California, little kids shot at just because they
were Jewish. A Filipino postal worker killed just because he was Asian
and worked for the Federal Government. All those fine people killed in
the middle of the country by that man who said he belonged to a church
that didn't believe in God but did believe in white supremacy. Matthew
Shepard stretched out on a rack in Wyoming.
Now, most of the news in America is good. But I am telling you,
Other Popular 2000 Presidential Documents Documents:
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