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to do more to ask her country to be a community and to adopt 
responsible, commonsense legislation to protect people from the kind of 
madness that she and her family suffered. And Michael Forbes, under even 
more difficult political circumstances, changed parties because he 
couldn't believe that the majority party in Congress, in the face of the 
American Medical Association and 200 consumer groups, would continue to 
walk away from a Patients' Bill of Rights, and walk away from its 
responsibility to educate all of our children for the 21st century. I 
thank them both, and I think they represent the future of America.
    Now, the reason I say that is, you took us on faith. And then in 
1996 New York was very good to Bill Clinton and Al Gore again, because 
you had a little more evidence. [Laughter] Now it's not even open to 
doubt. It's our record against their arguments. And we now have over 19 
million new jobs and the highest homeownership in history and the 
fastest business growth in history and the lowest minority unemployment 
rate ever recorded and the lowest crime rate in 26 years, the lowest 
welfare rolls in 32 years.
    And even when they have fought us along the way, we've continued to 
stand up for peace and freedom and justice all around the world. And the 
politics of inclusion works--America has not been hurt or weakened 
because we've asked for every law-abiding American, without regard to 
their race or their gender or their sexual orientation, to be treated 
like decent human beings in this country, to end hate crimes, to end 
abuse, to end bigotry. This is a stronger country because of it.
    So there is no argument anymore. That's the first thing I want to 
say. If people ask you why you showed up here tonight, say, ``Well, I 
took a chance in '92, but there's no argument anymore--it works. Why 
weren't you there? That's why I was.'' If anybody asks you why you were 
here, you ask them why weren't they here? Because there is no argument 
about that.
    The second thing I would like to say is, all elections are about 
tomorrow, and they should be. I remember one time when I was trying to 
run for a fifth term as Governor. I went out to the State Fair in 
Arkansas, and this old boy in overalls came to me, and he said, ``Bill, 
are you going to run again?'' [Laughter] I said, ``I don't know, but if 
I do, will you vote for me?'' He said, ``Yeah, I guess so. I always 
have.'' [Laughter] And I said, ``Well, aren't you sick of me after all 
these years?'' He said, ``No, I'm not, but everybody else I know is.'' 
[Laughter] And I said, ``Well, don't you think I've done a good job?'' 
He said, ``Sure, but that's what we hired you to do.'' He said, ``You 
drew a check every 2 weeks, didn't you?'' Interesting point. All 
elections are about tomorrow, and they should be.
    Now, we have a record. You don't have to guess about us. But every 
one of us, starting with Vice President Gore, all the other Democrats as 
far as I know running for any

[[Page 1672]]

office--certainly including Hillary--are dealing with what I think are 
the most important big questions of the future. And I'll tell you what I 
think they are--and I'm not running for anything--but I don't want to 
see all this work we've done derailed. And I don't want to see all the 
progress my country has made sacrificed. And believe me, there is still 
a war going out there for the conscience, the soul, and the future of 
this country.
    You know, the country is working now. So what are we going to do 
with this prosperity? I think we have an obligation as Americans, those 
of us who are of age, to think about the children who are here and the 
long-term challenges facing America. We have never had a chance like 
this in my lifetime. And we've still got some big, long-term challenges. 
I'll just mention three or four. The aging of America: twice as many 
people over 65 in 30 years; under present circumstances, Medicare goes 
broke in 15 years, Social Security in 34 years. The children of America: 
over 53 million children in our schools this year, the most diverse 
student population ever, the highest percentage whose first language is 
not English. It is a godsend of opportunity in a global economy if we 
give them all a good education. Keeping the economy going, and that 
means two things, one of which Hillary already mentioned--bringing 
opportunity to people and places that haven't had it yet.
    Do you know that upstate New York, if it were a separate State, 
would rank in the bottom five in this country in job growth in the last 
6 years? And I'm not proud of that; I've worked hard to drive 
unemployment down everywhere. But there are small towns in New York; 
there are inner-city neighborhoods in every big urban area in the 
country; there are Indian reservations; there's the Mississippi Delta; 
there are places that have not felt this prosperity. If we get 
investment there and growth there, we will have more growth without 
inflation.
    The other thing we have to do is to keep paying this debt down 
instead of driving interest rates up with that tax cut that they have 
proposed. You know, people say, ``Oh, they never have any big ideas.'' 
Here's a big idea: We can be out of debt in 15 years for the first time 
since 1835, and our grandchildren will have lower interest rates and 
more prosperity and a more harmonious society as a result of it. That is 
a big idea, and it is worth hanging on to.
    So I say this to you because, yes, we have done a good job the last 
6\1/2\ years and, no, you don't have to guess anymore. But we need to 
focus on the future. So when you leave here, and they ask you why you 
came, tell them, ``I took a chance on those rascals, and it worked out 
just fine.'' [Laughter] Tell them that they don't have to guess anymore. 
And tell them you care about your children's and your grandchildren's 
future.
    The last thing I want to tell you is, when I met Hillary in 1971, we 
started a conversation about this stuff that was going on at 1:30 last 
night, 28 years later. [Laughter] And we were walking yesterday, we took 
a walk and I said, ``You know, I hope you're not tired of this after all 
these years.'' She said, ``No, I still--it's very interesting to me.'' 
She said, ``You may be a lot of things, but you're not boring, which I 
appreciate.'' [Laughter]
    So, I want to tell you something. Here's what I want to tell you: I 
have known thousands of people in public life, literally. I probably 
know more people in public life than anybody else here. I have known--
I've served with over 150 Governors. I have known lots of Senators. I've 
known lots of House Members. I've known State representatives and 
mayors. I still believe it is a noble calling, being in public service. 
And you should not even judge all Republicans--I'll say this for Michael 
Forbes' benefit--by the tone set by the leadership of their party in the 
Congress. Most people I've known in public life were honest, hardworking 
people who got up every day and did what they thought was right, to the 
best of their abilities.
    But there is a genuine big debate. If you want somebody that's 
thought about this stuff and worked hard and always tried to do it for 
other people for 30 years, who has more heart, more intelligence, more 
ability, and more commitment than any person I have every known, of all 
the thousands I have known, then you ought to send her to the Senate and 
give her a chance to serve.
    Thank you, and God bless you.

[[Page 1673]]

Note: The President spoke at 6:45 p.m. in a private residence. In his 
remarks, he referred to dinner hosts Liz Robbins and Doug Johnson; 
singer Phoebe Snow; and former Gov. Roy Romer of Colorado, general 
cochair, Joseph J. Andrew, national chair, Beth Dozoretz, national 
finance chair, and Andy Tobias, treasurer, Democratic National 
Committee.


<DOC>
[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents]
 [frwais.access.gpo.gov]
                         

[Page 1673-1675]
 
Monday, September 6, 1999
 
Volume 35--Number 35
Pages 1669-1687
 
Week Ending Friday, September 3, 1999
 
Remarks at a Saxophone Club Reception in East Hampton

August 28, 1999

    Thank you. First of all, I would like to thank Wyclef and the band; 
they were magnificent. Weren't they unbelievable? Let's give them 
another hand. [Applause]
    You were up there doing your thing, and I was sitting here thinking 
about what I was going to say. And I couldn't concentrate for wishing I 
was 25 and out there again. [Laughter] You were terrific! Thank you so 
much.
    I want to thank all the leaders of the Democratic Party who are 
here. I want to thank Judith Hope. You know, people always say, ``Well, 
you know, Hillary, is she going to run, is she not going to run?'' Well, 
she spent all these years in Arkansas. Judith Hope was 20 years old 
before she ever left Arkansas; we're just following her lead. [Laughter]
    I want to say, also, how very grateful I am to all the Members of 
Congress--Senator Lautenberg, Senator Torricelli, Congresswoman 
McCarthy, and Congressman Forbes--for being here. I think it says a lot 
about Long Island and the State of New York that the two most prominent 
people to switch from the Republican to the Democratic Party in the last 
couple of years are Carolyn McCarthy and Michael Forbes from Long
Island.
    One switched--you know, we're having a good time tonight, so nobody 
wants to talk too much about issues, but Michael Forbes switched because 
the Republicans are killing the Patients' Bill of Rights, and patients 
are getting the shaft out there in the health care system all across 
America; and because they have a budget and tax plan which will cut 
education spending when we should be investing more in the education of 
our children.
    And Carolyn McCarthy quit because after her intense personal agony, 
she just got sick and tired of their leadership killing commonsense 
things like closing the loophole that stops us from doing background 
checks when criminals buy guns at gun shows and flea markets, and it's 
wrong.
    And I say that to make this point. I am so profoundly grateful to 
the people of New York for being so good to me and Hillary and to Al and 
Tipper Gore and two Presidential elections and one magnificent 
convention and one very bracing primary in 1992. The people of New York 
have been good to me and have made it possible for us to do what we have 
worked hard to do in the last 6\1/2\ years.
    And I want you to think about just a couple of things, especially 
the younger people here. I'm not running for anything. [Laughter] Kind 
of hate it, actually--I wish I still could, but I can't. [Laughter] But 
I have worked all my life to try to bring people together and move 
people forward and bring out the best in people. And when New York took 
a chance on me and Al Gore in 1992, that's exactly what it was. We said, 
``Vote for us. We'll take the country in a different direction. We'll 
ask the Democrats to be for fiscal responsibility and bringing the crime 
rate down and changing the welfare culture and having a humane trade 
policy. And we'll ask the Republicans to stop badmouthing the Government 
and dividing people by race and gender and sexual orientation and other 
things. And we'll try to bring this country together and move it 
forward.''
    But you couldn't know. You took a chance. And we've been down there 
working for 6\1/2\ years now. And the first point I want to make is, 
you're not taking a chance anymore. You know we have the longest 
peacetime expansion in history, the highest homeownership in history, 
the lowest minority unemployment in history, the lowest crime rate in 26 
years, the lowest welfare rolls in 32 years. This country is moving in 
the right direction. You took a chance, and you were right. And the 
Democratic Party has moved this country forward.
    The second thing I want to say is--even more important--is that we 
just made the

[[Page 1674]]

country work again. But there are huge questions facing the 21st 
century. The number of people over 65 will double in 30 years. We 
already have the largest number of children in school in history--for 
the first time, a group bigger than the baby boomers, and they are far, 
far more diverse; many more of their first languages are not English. 
And that is a godsend in this great, rich, textured global economy.
    But it means we have no business, at this point of maximum 
prosperity and confidence, walking away from the big challenges. How are 
we going to save Medicare and Social Security so that the children of 
the baby boomers don't have to support their parents, and can support 
their kids instead? How are we going to give every child in this country 
a world-class education? How are we going to bring the economic 
opportunity that so many of you have enjoyed to all the little towns in 
upstate New York and all the neighborhoods in the inner cities and the 
Mississippi Delta and the Indian reservations, to people who haven't had 
it?
    And before we go back to the failed economic policies of the past 
and pass a tax cut that will force us to cut education and cut the 
environment and cut our investment in the future and put us right back 
in the hole we were in and raise your interest rates and take your tax 
cut away from you, let's get this country out of debt for the first time 
since 1835 and give the children here a generation of economic 
prosperity.
    Now, these are big issues. But it's not like 1992. We're not asking 
you to take us on faith anymore. We're asking you to go with what you 
know works, in your mind and in your heart.
    And the last point I want to make is this. If I could wave a magic 
wand and get America just to do one thing--just one--it wouldn't even be 
all the things I just said. I would have the American people lay down 
their hatreds and their division, their anger and their pettiness, their 
legitimate grievances and their phonied-up gripes. I would have this 
country no longer divided by race, by religion, by sexual orientation, 
by politics, by region.
    You know, most of the people I've known in public service over 25 
years, now, have been honest, decent, hardworking people who tried to do 
what they thought was right. And this is crazy, what the leadership of 
the Congress has tried to do in Washington these last few years--trying 
to keep the country in a turmoil all the time, all torn up and upset, 
telling everybody how terrible their enemies are, trying to make sure 
you could divide the population up, first one way and then another, and 
then being in the grip of these interest groups that are keeping us from 
becoming one community, by doing things we know we ought to do in 
education, on the Patients' Bill of Rights, on sensible gun control 
measures. This is wrong.
    You think of all the time I have spent trying to make peace in the 
Middle East, end tribal wars in Africa, stop the slaughter in Bosnia and 
Kosovo, bring peace to Northern Ireland--all these things. What is at 
the root of all this? People believing that the only way they can get 
and keep power is to turn people against one another, to harden their 
hearts.
    And I'm telling you, the Democratic Party stands for opportunity, 
for facing the big challenges of the future, and for one American 
commmunity where we are united by our common humanity.
    So I am grateful for all those who have joined our cause, because 
they share our values and our ideas, and they know the record is 
incontestable. Congressman Forbes took a big chance doing what he did. I 
wish he had done it a year or 2 earlier. [Laughter] But I was raised a 
Southern Baptist; we believe in deathbed conversions, and he is a long 
way from the deathbed. So you all give him another hand for doing the 
right thing. [Applause] Congresswoman Carolyn
McCarthy has changed this country for the better and immeasurably 
enriched our party in the Congress because of what she did.
    And I will say, as I've said many times, of all the hundreds, 
indeed, all the thousands of the people I have known, the woman I have 
shared the last--well, since we met--27 years with is the most 
passionate, the most committed, the most able, the most consistent 
public citizen I have ever known, and New York would do well to send her 
to the United States Senate.
    So I thank you. I'm not running for anything. [Laughter] I'm going 
to work hard for

[[Page 1675]]

you for another year and a half. I am grateful that this country is in 
the shape it's in. I am proud of the friendship and partnership I've 
shared with Al Gore, the friendship and partnerships I've shared with 
the Members of Congress. But most important, I am humble and grateful 
for the kind of support that the people of New York have given. And all 
I ask you in return is to keep on going in this direction. You were 
right when you took a chance on us in 1992. You were right when you 
ratified what we were doing in 1996. You were right to send Chuck 
Schumer to the Senate in 1998. Just stay on, keep leading America into a 
new century.
    Thank you, and God bless you.

Note: The President spoke at 11 p.m. in a hangar at the Executive 
Terminal at East Hampton Airport. In his remarks, he referred to 
entertainer Wyclef Jean; and New York State Democratic Party Chair 
Judith Hope.


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