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day in which each of us understand we're responsible for the decisions
we make in life. We're responsible for loving our children, if you're
lucky enough to be a mom or a dad. You're responsible for the quality of
life in the community in which you live. You're responsible for loving
your neighbor like you'd like to be--self. If you're running corporate
America, you're responsible to tell the truth to your employees and your
shareholders.
This great country is responding to the evil done. I'm an optimistic
guy, because I believe America can achieve anything it sets it mind to,
believe we can achieve peace, and I believe we can help eliminate the
pockets of despair and make sure this country remains such a beacon of
hope for everybody, for every citizen who is fortunate enough to live in
this great land.
The reason I believe that way is I understand that America is the
greatest nation, full of the finest people, on the face of our Earth.
God bless you all, and may God bless America.
Note: The President spoke at 11:26 a.m. in the Plaza Ballroom at the
Adam's Mark Hotel. In his remarks, he referred to candidate Bob
Beauprez's wife, Claudia, and his parents, Joe and Maria Beauprez; Bob
Benson, chair, Republican Party of Colorado; Gov. Bill Owens of
Colorado, and his wife, Frances; former Senator William L. Armstrong of
Colorado; Ramzi bin al-Shibh, an Al Qaida operative suspected of helping
to plan the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, who was captured in
Karachi, Pakistan; and President Saddam Hussein of Iraq. Bob Beauprez is
a candidate for Colorado's Seventh Congressional District. This item was
not received in time for publication in the appropriate issue.
<DOC>
[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents]
[frwais.access.gpo.gov]
[Page 1645-1650]
Pages 1639-1697
Week Ending Friday, October 4, 2002
Remarks at a Rally for Congressional Candidate Rick Renzi in Flagstaff,
Arizona
September 27, 2002
The President. Thank you all for coming. It's such an honor to be
here. Well, we're working on the drought. [Laughter] I love the rain.
Thanks for standing out here. It's such an honor to be here. I
appreciate you all enduring the weather.
It is my honor to be here for the next Congressman from this
district, Rick Renzi. He's a good fellow. He's a good man. He believes
in family values. After all, he's got 12 kids. I want to thank Roberta
for standing by him as he takes his message to the people, that he works
hard to let the people know what's
[[Page 1646]]
in his heart. And he's a good-hearted man. He cares deeply about the
people of this district. I'm here to endorse his candidacy because I
think he'll be the right thing for Arizona, and I know he'll do the
right thing for America.
I appreciate very much also being here with the next Governor of the
State of Arizona, Matt Salmon. Matt is a commonsense fellow. One thing
he understands, that when it comes to spending money at the State level,
he's not spending the Government's money, see. He's spending the
people's money. He's from the people. And I look forward to working with
Matt when he becomes the Governor of this great State.
I'm also honored to be traveling with Senator Jon Kyl. He's a stand-
up kind of guy. He is rock-solid. He's strong on the defense of our
country. And I look forward to continuing to work with him to make sure
the judicial nominees I send up to the United States Senate get a fair
hearing.
I named the other day a great lady from Texas to the bench, named
Priscilla Owen. But they played politics with her nomination. She got
the highest ranking of the ABA. She was one of the top in her law school
classes. But they didn't give her a fair hearing. They distorted her
record. See, they want judges that use the bench from which to
legislate. We want judges to strictly interpret the Constitution of the
United States.
I appreciate so very much working with Senator John McCain from the
State of Arizona. John's a true patriot, a true patriot who's standing
strong as we try to keep the peace here in the world. I appreciate very
much being with my friend Jane Dee Hull. I used to be a Governor, and I
got to know her, as a Governor of Texas. I'm proud to call her friend.
I'm proud of the job she's done for the State of Arizona. Thank you,
Jane Dee, for being here.
I want to thank all of you all who care about your community and all
of you all who are in what we call grassroots politics: the people who
turn out the vote; the people who make the phone calls; the people who
go to the coffee shops and tell people the truth about the candidates
running for office. I want to thank you for your supporting this good
ticket. And I want to thank you for loving your country.
Audience members. U.S.A.! U.S.A.! U.S.A.!
The President. I look forward to working with Rick on some important
issues that matter. One important issue that matters, we've got to make
sure we keep our people working. As we work hard to secure the homeland,
we've also got to remember, a secure America is an America where people
can find work. So long as somebody who is looking for a job can't find a
job, I think we have a problem. And so we've always got to keep working
to expand the job base. We want people being able to put food on the
table here in America. We want people being able to make a living. And
that starts with fighting off this slowdown with letting people keep
more of their own money.
See, here's the debate that takes place in Washington. The debate
is, is that either you let people have more of their own money, or you
don't. If the economy is slow and you let a person keep more of their
own money, they're likely to spend it. And when they spend it, it means
they're demanding something. They're demanding a good or a service. And
when that demand is there, somebody is likely to produce the good or a
service. And when somebody produces a good or service, guess what's more
likely to happen. Somebody is going to be able to find a job. The tax
cuts were important for the American economy. They're important for
small business. They're important for the entrepreneurs. They're
important for job creation. We need to make the tax cuts permanent.
You've got to remember that money we're spending up there in
Washington isn't the Government's money, like I said; it's the people's
money. It's your money. We need to make sure we don't overspend. Listen,
they don't have a budget in the United States Senate--no fault of
Senator Kyl. They don't have a budget. If you don't have a budget, guess
what's likely to happen. Every idea sounds like a good idea up there.
[Laughter] Those ideas run into the billions. If you don't have a
budget, it's hard to hold people to account. We need fiscally
responsible people in Washington, like Rick. We need people who will
[[Page 1647]]
set priorities and make sure we don't overspend your money. A deficit
will hurt economic vitality. I submitted a budget that shows how we can
reduce the deficit, how we can get to surplus, but it's going to require
fiscal sanity in Washington, DC.
We need a commonsense policy in Washington. And the forest policy of
the United States is not commonsensical. It doesn't make any sense to
allow--to not thin our forests. It doesn't make any sense to fight off
the beetles. It doesn't make any sense not to thin them out. It doesn't
make any sense to allow kindling to pile up underneath good wood. It
doesn't make any sense. For the sake of a commonsense environmental
policy, for the sake of making sure our forests remain healthy in the
long term, let's get some people like Rick in Washington, DC, with whom
I can work, to get good forest policy in America.
I also appreciate being here on behalf of Matt Salmon. Matt's a
good, solid man. He's a guy who keeps his word. See, he's one of these
fellows that said, ``I'm going to run for Congress. I'm only going to
serve three terms.'' And then when his term came up, he said, ``I'm
going home.'' That doesn't happen a lot in politics. It should happen
more, by the way, where people do what they say they're going to do,
that when they look at the people, they're going to do what they say.
That's why you can trust him as your Governor. When he says he's not
going to raise your taxes, he means he's not going to raise your taxes.
I also look forward to working with Matt to make sure that we help
people who need help. We've got people on welfare in the State of
Arizona who need help to learn how to work. See, we're getting ready to
reauthorize the welfare law. And I urge Congress to make sure that as we
do so, that we keep work as the cornerstone of good welfare policy.
Helping a man learn to work, helping a lady find a job, helping people
have the skills necessary to be able to provide for their family is a
part of making sure somebody has got dignity in their life. And I look
forward to working with Governor Matt Salmon to make sure that the
welfare policy of Arizona is a compassionate yet conservative welfare
policy.
I want you to know that I am constantly thinking about our economy
and trying to work with Congress to improve the job base. But my most
important job is to protect America from another attack. That's my most
important job, because there's still an enemy out there which hates
America. And they hate us because of what we love. We love freedom. We
love the idea that people can worship an almighty God any way they
choose in America. We good--we value the idea that people are free to
express their opinions, that we have a free press. We love freedom in
America. And so long as we love our freedoms, the enemy will hate us.
But guess what. We're never going to forget our freedoms. We're
always going to hold those freedoms dear. And so long as we do, the
enemy will be there. And so we've got to hunt them down, and we've got
to protect the homeland. There's a lot of good people, a lot of good
people working hard on your behalf to protect the homeland. Anytime
we're getting a hint, anytime we get an idea, anytime we get a scintilla
of evidence that somebody might be thinking about doing something to
America, we're moving on it. And I say we're moving on it; it's at the
Federal level and the State level and the local level. Our biggest
responsibility is to prevent the killers from coming to hurt America
again.
And that's why I went to Congress and asked them to join me in
setting up what they call the Department of Homeland Security. Listen,
there's over 100 agencies in Washington, DC, that have got something to
do with protecting the homeland. That's 100 agencies full of good, hard-
working people. But they're scattered everywhere. It seemed to make
sense to me to put them under one umbrella, so that the--we could set
priorities, so that we could change cultures, if necessary, within the
agencies, to make the number one priority your protection.
And we're making progress up there. The House of Representatives
voted a good bill out, but it seems to be stuck in the Senate, because
the Senate wants to micromanage the executive branch of Government. The
Senate wants a thick book of rules on how to defend the homeland.
[[Page 1648]]
And let me just give you some examples. The Customs Service, for
example, wanted to require its inspectors at our Nation's 301 ports of
entry to wear radiation detecting devices. See, that made sense. You
wear a radiation detection device to make sure nobody is trying to bring
a weapons of mass destruction into America. Yet, the union that
represents the Customs workers objected. They sought to invoke
collective bargaining, which would have taken at least a year to solve.
See, we don't need those kind of rules that bind the executive branch
from doing what you want us to do, which is to protect the homeland.
Let me give you another example. Let me give you another example of
what we're trying to cut out of the new Department, this kind of stuff
that doesn't make any sense. I know it doesn't make any sense to the
people of Flagstaff. I can assure you it doesn't make any sense to the
people of Crawford, Texas, either. [Laughter] In order to locate
employees in cases of emergency, the Customs Service sought to have
employees provide their home addresses and telephone numbers to the
Customs Service. In other words, if we had an emergency, we want to know
where to call. The union objected and said such a request would violate
the privacy rights of the workers. Now, that doesn't make any sense.
Listen, I strongly believe workers ought to be able to join a union
if that's what they want to do. They ought to be able to have collective
bargaining rights, if that's what they choose. But for the sake of our
national security, this President and future Presidents needs the
flexibility necessary to put the right people at the right place at the
right time, to protect the American people.
But the best way to defend the homeland is to hunt the killers down,
one at a time, and bring them to justice. That's the best way to defend
this homeland. It's a different kind of war we fight. It's important you
know that it still goes on, though. It's a different kind of war. In the
past, people would say, ``Well, we're making progress. We destroyed the
enemy's tanks,'' or, ``We're making progress if he no longer has any
ships.'' These people don't have tanks. They don't have ships. They've
got hate. These leaders are the ones that hide in caves or the dark
recesses of some cities, and they send youngsters to their suicidal
death. These are the folks who hijacked a great religion and take
innocent life without any hesitation. See, they don't value life like we
do. In America, everybody counts. Every life has worth. Every life is
precious. That's not the way the enemy thinks. The enemy doesn't care.
They've got these designs on America, because we love freedom.
And so we're going to look at every cave we can find. It don't
matter how long it takes, my fellow Americans. It doesn't matter how
long it takes; we're going to hunt them down, one by one. We owe it to
our children, and we owe it to our children's children.
And we're making progress. The doctrine that says, ``Either you're
with us, or you're with the enemy,'' still stands. And there's a lot of
good folks around the world who are working with us, working with us to
hunt these killers down before they hit us again. We've hauled in over a
couple thousand of them. As a matter of fact, one of them the other day
who wanted to have been the 20th hijacker popped his head up, and he's
no longer a threat to the United States of America or our friends and
allies.
There's a lot of good folks in a lot of nations around the world
working with us to find these and to bring them to justice. We don't
seek revenge. We seek justice. About like number hadn't been quite as
lucky as the ones who have been detained or arrested. So we're making
progress, slowly but surely--slowly, surely, and methodically. This
great Nation is doing everything we can to protect our people.
That's why I've asked Congress for the largest increase in defense
spending since President Reagan was the President. I did so for two
reasons: One, anytime we put our youngsters into harm's way, they
deserve the best pay, the best training, and the best possible
equipment; and secondly, I wanted to send a message to friend and foe
alike that we're in this deal for the long haul, that when it comes to
talking about something we hold dear, our freedom, we're not going to
quit until we succeed.
[[Page 1649]]
When it comes to defending the homeland, this great Nation--the will
of this Nation has been aroused by an enemy which inflicted serious,
serious damage on our people. No, they--when they hit us, they thought
we might file a lawsuit or two. [Laughter] But they realized they hit a
mighty nation and a good nation and a decent nation and a nation that
loves the values that we hold dear. It's going to be some rough sledding
ahead at times--it really is--in order to defend ourselves. We're
fighting a resourceful group of people. We're fighting people who know
no fear.
We've also got some other tasks, because there are some madmen in
the world who have got weapons of mass destruction. We've got people who
torture their own people. If there's dissent, they kill them. They've
gassed their own people with weapons of mass destruction. The man in
Iraq has attacked two countries. He lied to the world. He's deceived us.
I went to the United Nations, and I said as clearly as I could, ``In
order for you to be an effective organization, you must deal with him.
If you don't, we will lead a coalition which will.'' We cannot allow the
world's worst leaders--[applause]. There's no negotiation. There's no
discussion. This man must disarm like he said he would do. After 11
years of deceit, this man must disarm.
For the sake of peace, for the sake of peace not only in our--in his
neighborhood but in ours, he must disarm. And if he does not, it's his
choice to make. It's his and the United Nations' choice to make. Our
last choice is to commit our troops to harm's way, but if we have to, to
defend our freedoms, if we have to, the United States will lead a
coalition and do so.
And there are a lot of good people, a lot of good people on both
sides of the political aisle who understand the task ahead, a lot of
good people who are working with the administration to come up with a
common resolution to send a strong message to the world that this great
Nation, this great Nation will not stand by and allow the world's worst
leaders to threaten us with the world's worst weapons.
I want you all to understand that as we work to peace--as we work
for peace--and that's my goal--we must also work to make America a
better place, a better place for all of us, a better place for each
person which lives in this country. That starts with making sure that
every child is educated and not one child is left behind. I want you to
know that it's important for all of us to challenge the soft bigotry of
Other Popular 2002 Presidential Documents Documents:
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