Home > 1998 Presidential Documents > pd08jn98 Remarks to the Democratic Leadership Council National Conversation...pd08jn98 Remarks to the Democratic Leadership Council National Conversation...
Wisconsin, and California. And it's a completely thankless job except to
people who understand that the future of the country is in large measure
riding on our ability to be competitive in a lot of these races. So I
want to say--I make a lot of fun of Martin barking at me, but I love him
for doing it. And I thank you, sir, for what you've done.
I'd also like to remind everybody that this is not just an election
year; it's an election in which there are high stakes and important
issues. I have done my best to not only turn the country around but to
do it with a Democratic Party that was rooted in our oldest values and
pointed toward the 21st century. A lot of you in this room have helped
me to do that. I'd like to say a particular word of appreciation to Bill
White for what he's done as chairman of the Democratic Party here and
what he did in my administration. And a thank you for over 25 years of
friendship to my friend Billie Carr, who is just celebrating her 70th
birthday, but she doesn't look it. And I love you for it.
Keep in mind what people--what the Republicans used to say about the
Democratic Party. In 1992, when I ran for President, I thought they
might get away with it one more time. You know, they, after 12 years of
stewardship of the country, we had to quadruple the national debt, and
they said, ``Well, it's only because of the Congress,'' even though the
Democratic Congress had, in fact, appropriated slightly less money then
the Presidents had asked for in the previous 12 years. But they had one-
half the country convinced that we couldn't be trusted with the economy;
we couldn't be trusted with the deficit; we couldn't be trusted with
taxes; we couldn't be trusted with welfare, or crime, or the management
of the foreign policy of the country, or anything else that amounted to
anything to a lot of Americans.
And when I presented my economic program in which then Treasury
Secretary Lloyd Bentsen was spearheading in 1993, a lot of the leaders
of the Republican Party, including a certain Senator from Texas, said
that if you do this, it will bring on a recession; it will increase the
deficit. Well, we're about to have the first surplus since Lyndon
Johnson was President, and it's not an accident that he was a Democrat,
too.
So the first thing I want to say is that all the people here who
helped me--Mayor Brown, who was my drug czar; Bill was in the Energy
Department; a lot of you just helped in the Congress and the
administration--you should be proud of the fact that no one can now say,
with the lowest unemployment rate in 28 years, the first balanced budget
and surplus in 30 years, the lowest interest rates in 32 years, the
lowest welfare rolls in 27 years, and the lowest crime rates in 25
years, the biggest expansion of trade in American history--no one can
say that the Democrats cannot be trusted with the economy or with social
policy or with the safety of our streets.
And all of you played a role in that. And I'm proud of the success
that the country has had, but I think it's also important to say that as
we look ahead we have to say, what else still needs to be done for the
21st century? Because elections are always about the future, and the
fact that you did a good job in the time you were given, all that means
is that that's some evidence that you might do a good job if you get
another term.
So we have to continue to press our agenda for the future. And I'd
just like to remind you that these are important things that affect
every American. There are people up in Washington that want to spend the
surplus before it's materialized. I don't want to spend one red cent of
it until I know that we have saved the Social Security system for the
21st
[[Page 1019]]
century so we don't bankrupt our kids when the baby boomers like me
retire. That's an important thing to do.
I believe, and I think you believe, that we will never have the
America we want, where everybody can participate in this prosperity,
until we can offer every child a world-class education. That means we
have to continue to work on our schools.
We now can say that one of the achievements of this administration
is we've now opened the doors of college to everybody who will work for
it, with the tax credits, the scholarships, the grants, the work-study
program, the AmeriCorps program. We've done that. Now what we have to do
is to improve our public schools and give our kids the tools they need
to succeed.
We've got an agenda, of smaller classes and more teachers, and
higher standards and computer technology for everyone. That's our
agenda. And we're fighting, and there are differences between the
parties on this issue. We have a health care agenda. We ought to pass
the Patients' Bill of Rights, and I am impatient that it hasn't already
passed through this Congress.
I was telling the folks around our table at lunch today I did an
event in Washington this week with a woman from Minnesota, a perfectly
beautiful woman who came--I had never met her before--and she got up and
talked about how she had a lump in her breast 2 years ago. And she asked
her HMO to have it checked out, and they took x rays but no biopsy. And
they said, ``You're fine.'' Two years later, the lump is still there.
She paid for her own biopsy 5 weeks ago--stage two breast cancer.
She's going to go in and have surgery, and they say, ``You can't have a
breast specialist. You can only have a general surgeon.'' She makes 123
phone calls--123 phone calls--no satisfaction; finally hires her own
breast specialist. And when she's under the knife, in surgery, she gets
a call finally from the HMO saying, ``Well, we'll cover this procedure,
but we're probably not going to cover your chemotherapy.''
Now, I personally believe it's a good thing that we've gotten into
better management of our health care resources. We couldn't continue to
have health care costs go up at 3 times the rate of inflation. It would
have consumed all the money in the country. But every change we adopt
has to be rooted in basic values and the kind of decent things that
allow people to build a life, build a family, and hold the society
together. That's why we need the Patients' Bill of Rights. That's part
of our agenda that we're trying to pass. And it's worth doing.
And I think--if you look at how many people there are in America
today that are retired early, some of them have been forced into early
retirement, and they can't buy any health insurance. We've got a
proposal that doesn't cost the Medicare Trust Fund one red cent to let
people who are over 55 years of age, who, through no fault of their own,
lost their health insurance, buy into it--or their kids can help them
buy into it. At least they'll have access to some insurance. That's a
part of our program.
We've got an environmental proposal before the country that
everybody in Texas ought to be for now, because you've been eating all
this smoke from these fires that are the direct consequence of El Nino
and the climate warming up. And we're going to have more of these unless
we prove that we can continue to grow our economy while we reduce the
things we do that heighten the temperature of the Earth.
In the 1990's, in this decade alone, the 5 hottest years since 1400
have occurred. This is not some bogus scare issue, this whole issue of
climate change. We don't need to be panicked; we need to change our
patterns of production in a way that will help us to grow the economy
while we reduce greenhouse gas emissions. But also, parenthetically, it
would be very good for the natural gas industry in Texas. But that's not
why I'm saying it. It's the right thing to do, and we can do it and grow
the economy. We have an initiative on that. That's good for the economy,
not bad for the economy.
And finally, let me just mention, if I might, two other things. I
think it is unconscionable that we have not already passed comprehensive
legislation to protect our kids from the problems that are associated
with the fact that one-third, now almost, of teenagers are smoking
tobacco even though it's illegal. It's
[[Page 1020]]
the biggest public health problem in America. More people die from
tobacco-related illnesses than all other conventional forms of problems
every year combined. It's illegal for every kid in the country to be
able to buy cigarettes. We've got a program before the Congress that
passed 19 to 1 out of a Senate committee, and we can't seem to get a
vote on it. And they've promised to kill it in the House. I believe if
we could pass it out of the Senate, we could pass the bill in the House,
and we can do something historic for public health and for our
children's future.
And I don't understand why this is a political issue. Republicans
have children just like Democrats. This is not a political issue; this
is an American issue. And I hope you will make your voices heard and
say, ``We may not understand every detail. We may not be able to write
every line of this bill, but the American people are smart enough to
know that we are either going to do something, or not.'' And I am
determined in this Congress to see that we do something on this tobacco
issue. We've been fooling with it for 3 years, and the time has come to
act.
Now, that's what we're for. So we've got a good record. The things
they used to say about us in Texas so most people thought they could
never vote for us aren't true anymore. And we've got the best program
for the future. And that's what you're contributing to.
And I just want to leave you with this thought: Many of these
Members of Congress and I just came from a neighborhood health center
here in Houston, in Gene Green's district, where we met with Hispanics,
African-Americans, Asian-Americans, plain old white Anglo-Saxon
Protestants like me, a lot of people that look like Houston, and that
look like America. We talked about the census. I've already said what I
have to say about that. We just ought to get an honest count; we ought
not to politicize it.
But I was looking at that crowd today and thinking, this is the
future of America, and in a world that is smaller and smaller and
smaller, where we're only 4 percent of the world's population, and we've
got 20 percent of the wealth. So if we want to keep it, we've got to be
dealing with the other 96 percent of the people--it is a Godsend that we
are growing more diverse--if we can get along with each other and avoid
the kind of group think and group resentment that's caused so much
trouble elsewhere in the world.
And in some ways maybe that's the most important reason to be a
Democrat today. My heart was rejoicing when the land of my ancestors in
Ireland voted for the peace process that a lot of us worked very hard to
bring to fruit. What did they have to do? They had to give up group
resentments. You now have to read about Kosovo every day in the
newspaper like you used to have to read about Bosnia. What's it about?
Albanians and Serbs believing that they can't trust each other, and
there is group resentment. That's what Bosnia was about. Fundamentally
what's holding up the next step of the Middle East peace process? A lack
of trust between the two groups. Fundamentally what happened in Africa
when 800,000 people were slaughtered in a matter of weeks in Rwanda?
Tribal resentments.
I'm telling you, now that we have stripped off the veneer of the
cold war, there's still some people that are just miserable if they're
not hating somebody for something. And there are a lot of people who
don't believe they matter unless they've got somebody to look down on.
And then, to be fair, there are a lot of real problems out there that
people have had for a long time that would make it hard for you if you
were in their shoes to trust people who were different.
Our ability to be a great nation in the 21st century consists in no
small measure in our ability to live together here at home. So when
people look at us, they do not see the same devils that are tearing
their own hearts out. And if we want people to listen to us, in other
countries, in other parts of the world, we have to be able to hold up to
them a shining light of America where people are judged, as Martin
Luther King said, by the content of the character, not the color of
their skin, not their religion, not anything else other than whether
they show up every day and do their best. That's another thing that our
party stands for, and I'm proud of it. And God willing, with your
efforts, the American people will ratify it this November.
Thank you very much.
[[Page 1021]]
Note: The President spoke at 2:44 p.m. at a private residence. In his
remarks, he referred to reception hosts Richard and Ginni Mithoff; Texas
Attorney General candidate Jim Maddox; former Gov. Ann Richards of
Texas; Texas Land Commissioner Garry Mauro; former Senator Lloyd
Bentsen, and his wife B.A.; Representative Martin Frost, chairman,
Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee; President Boris Yeltsin of
Russia; and Mayor Lee Brown of Houston.
<DOC>
[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents]
[frwais.access.gpo.gov]
[Page 1021-1024]
Monday, June 8, 1998
Volume 34--Number 23
Pages 1003-1056
Week Ending Friday, June 5, 1998
Remarks at a Democratic National Committee Dinner in Dallas, Texas
June 2, 1998
Thank you very much. Thank you. First of all, Ray--can you hear me?
I feel rather pathetic even needing a microphone after the last
demonstration of music we had. [Laughter] Let me begin by saying that I
know I speak for all of us when I say a profound word of thanks to Ray
for welcoming us into his home and for bringing his art into this tent
and bringing the wonderful music here. This has been a magnificent
night, and I have loved it. I love the time you and your daughters took
to show me through your home to see your art.
Once many years ago, before I ever could have known I would be here
and you would be here, we would be doing this, I visited you in your
office, and you showed me some of your wonderful artwork. And I thank
you for being a great citizen and for helping us by having us all here
tonight. Thank you so much.
I'd like to thank my good friend of many, many years, Roy Romer, for
being here. He is not only the senior Governor in the United States but
most people believe the best one. And it is our great good fortune to
have him as our chair of the Democratic Party. I thank Len Barrack, who
has come all the way from Philadelphia to be here, our finance chairman,
tonight; Congressman Martin Frost; my friend of more than 25 years,
Garry Mauro; Bill White; and all the cochairs. I thank you. And I'd like
to say a special word of thanks to all the people who performed tonight.
They were magnificent. And to you, my friend Denise Graves, thank you
for being here. I wish I could stay in Fort Worth and hear your concert.
You know, Ray was talking about the support that Hillary and I have
tried to give to the arts. Tomorrow night I'm going back to Washington
to have the annual PBS ``In Performance'' night at the White House.
We've had all different kinds of music there. We've had jazz and blues
and classical music. One year, we had women in country. Tomorrow night--
you can see this on educational television--tomorrow night we're having
a gospel fest. And tomorrow night, unlike all the others, I actually
picked some of the performers and some of the music. So if you don't
like it, you can partially blame me as well.
But I was thinking--and I saw all those wonderful performers who
came from little towns in America, as they were introduced--I don't know
if that wonderful man really did come from a town called Resume Speed,
South Dakota, but it's a great story. [Laughter] And I intend to tell it
as if it were true for the rest of the year. [Laughter]
But anyway, I was thinking about what Ray said, about the support
that Hillary and I have tried to give the arts. We're celebrating the
millennium in 2000. It will be the last year of my Presidency. We have
devised this great national endeavor called ``Honoring the Past and
Imagining the Future,'' and among the things we're trying to do are to
preserve the great treasures of our natural and national heritage, like
the Constitution, the Bill of Rights, the Declaration of Independence.
We're trying to get record amounts of research into biomedical and other
critical areas of research. And we're trying to preserve and elevate the
role of the arts in our lives at the very time when many leaders in the
other party still seem determined to de-fund the National Endowment for
the Arts and the National Endowment for the Humanities.
But I don't really want to talk about the funding issue tonight. I
want to talk about what lies behind all this. Why do we get a thrill out
of seeing some young man or woman stand up and sing as they sang
tonight? What is it that moves us when we look at this art, when we walk
out there among the magnificent pieces of sculpture? Why do we like it
better when we feel elevated and when we feel sort of united by a common
[[Page 1022]]
bond of humanity that we feel coming back to us from a piece of artistic
genius? Because we know that we feel more alive and we feel better about
ourselves, better about other people, and better about life in general
when we're feeling and being and reaching big, rather than when we're
feeling and being and digging small.
And if you think about a lot of what I have to do as President, a
lot of what I try to do, what I really tried to do when I got here was
to clean away a lot of the underbrush that was holding America back and
to try to create the conditions and give people the tools to make the
most of their own lives and to build good families and strong
communities and make our Nation stronger and reach out to the rest of
the world, so that we could be our better selves.
And it may sound kind of corny and old-fashioned and Pollyanna, but
Other Popular 1998 Presidential Documents Documents:
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