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I'll tell you a little more about that in a minute. [Laughter] But they
also know that oftentimes at these midterm elections, the people who
always vote in presidential elections, a lot of them don't vote in
midterm elections. And they tend to be our voters. Why? Well, they're
young parents on modest incomes; they have to worry about how to juggle
child care and work, and voting on a work day is another hassle. A lot
of them live in cities and don't own cars and have transportation
problems. And how are they going to get to work and to the polling
place? And that extra effort is hard to make.
I tell you, my friends, our enemy is complacency. It is not
adversity. Adversity is forcing us to focus on what is important and
what we believe in and what we're prepared to fight for. And while I
think it's a wonderful thing that all these good things are happening in
our country, you know there are still some people in Philadelphia who
have not felt the benefits of the things that have been done, and you
know there's more to do.
I want you to know that a long way away from here, in the high
plains of America, people that work hard to feed you on the farm don't
know there's been a recovery because they have to export a lot of their
products, and they've been flooded out or burned out or had diseases.
They've had all kinds of problems. And now the Asian markets, where they
sell their food, are closed to them because the folks don't have any
money over there. We could lose 10,000 family farmers in America this
year, at a time of greatest prosperity for the country as a whole in a
generation.
So we have challenges at home. And I've always believed that when
times are good, the worst thing you can do is kick back and relax. You
have to see that as an obligation to look at the real challenges facing
the country and take them on. That's what we've tried to do.
[[Page 1967]]
So we, the Democrats, have gone before the American people and we
said, ``Look, we have a program for this election, and we think it's
worth your voting for. We know that the other side has tried to offer
you--for most of you--a modest tax cut. Right here, before the election,
they want to spend the surplus. And we've given you a harder message.''
We've said, ``Look, we've waited for this for 29 years. We worked for it
for 6 years. Shouldn't we let the red ink turn to black and let's let it
dry for a day or two before we squander it?''
At a time when there's so much financial turmoil throughout the
world, shouldn't we set a good example to stabilize the global economy?
And even more important, knowing as we all do--every person in this room
knows that while Social Security is absolutely stable for the people who
are now on it and the people who are about to go on it, when all the
baby boomers get in it is not sustainable under the present
circumstances, because there will only be two people working for every
one person drawing Social Security.
Everybody in this room between the ages of 52 and 34 is a baby
boomer. And everybody I know at least my age--and I'm the oldest of the
baby boomers--we're all profoundly worried that if we don't do something
about this now, when with modest changes now we can have huge impacts
down the road, that the time will come when we'll retire and our country
will be confronted with two terrible choices. Either we'll have to put a
whopping tax increase on our kids to maintain the system as it is,
undermining their ability to raise our grandchildren, which none of us
want to do; or, we'll have to take a whopping cut in Social Security
benefits, which today keeps one-half of the senior citizens in America
out of poverty.
So I say, tempting though it is before an election to shovel up a
little tax cut, let's show a little restraint and a little knowledge of
the last 29 years and say, ``No, no, we're going to save Social Security
first before we spend it.'' I believe that's an issue worth voting on.
And, believe me, the elections will send a message to the Congress about
which path you wish to take.
There is a second issue I think is important. I talked about it all
day today, and I never thought I'd come to Philadelphia or go anyplace
in America in a political election and say, ``The big issue is, are we
going to fund the IMF?'' Most Americans don't know what the IMF is.
Sounds like those people that make bowling equipment. [Laughter] The
International Monetary Fund is a fund to which we and others contribute
that helps countries that are poorer and developing, who have good
policies, to try to grow their economy. Or when they get in trouble, it
tries to help them work out of trouble without just being absolutely
destroyed.
For 8 months I've been trying to get America to make its fair share
of contribution. Why? Because we can't lead the world--and you know the
troubles that Asia has; you know the troubles in Russia; you see the
impact, how it echoes in Latin America, our fastest growing market for
American products. You see people say when the stock market changes here
that that has something to do with this financial trouble overseas.
We have an obligation not only to others throughout the world but to
our own economy. Thirty percent of this growth we've enjoyed has come
from selling things to people overseas who had enough money to buy them.
And when they get in trouble, eventually we will suffer from that. And
already, I've told you, our farmers are.
And so I say to you, if you want to keep the American economic
recovery going, if you like the way it's gone the last 6 years, and
you'd like to have a few more years of it, then America has to lead the
world away from the brink of the worst financial crisis in decades. And
that means we have to pay our fair share to the fund that will do it.
And I think that's something worth voting for.
The third issue worth voting for is education. For 8 months I have
had before the Congress an education program. We have succeeded in
getting bipartisan agreement in the balanced budget for tax credits for
all students to go to college, for the deductibility of interest on
student loans, for more Pell grants. Our Democrats put that before the
Republicans, and we were able to get bipartisan agreement--and now for
Congressman Fattah's High Hopes program. That's great.
[[Page 1968]]
But you all know that we don't yet have a world-class elementary and
secondary education system that will guarantee to every child, without
regard to race or neighborhood or income, a chance to be able to take
advantage of those college opportunities. And until we do, America will
never be everything it ought to be.
And so I came before the Congress and I said, ``Okay, we've listened
to the educators. I, personally, and Hillary and I have been going into
the schools for 20 years now listing and watching and learning, and
here's our program. It's pretty straightforward.'' Number one, in the
balanced budget, paid for, put up enough money for school districts
across America to hire 100,000 teachers to take average class size down
to 18 in the early grades. It will make a difference.
Number two, provide--provide a tax incentive that will help to build
or repair 5,000 school buildings. I went to Jupiter, Florida, and saw a
dozen house trailers outside a school because the population is growing
so fast. The mayor took me to a school building in Philadelphia that was
over 65 years old. It was one of the most beautiful buildings I've ever
seen, but it wasn't in good shape because there's not enough money to
repair all those buildings. And all over America in the cities, I see
people say, ``Oh, our children are the most important things in the
world to us.'' What does it say to them if they walk up the steps every
day to a school where the windows are broken or a whole floor is closed
down? Very often, people can't even look out the window in some of these
places, because they can't afford to heat and cool them, so they just
board them up. Five thousand school buildings--that's the second thing
it does.
The third thing it does is to give funds to cities for after-school
and summer school programs to help kids who are in trouble. I don't
believe kids should be promoted endlessly if they don't learn what
they're supposed to learn. But I don't think the children should be
branded failures because the system fails them. So give them those
after-school programs and the summer school programs and the mentors
they need to learn what they need to learn. That's a part of our program
as well.
The fourth thing it does is provide funds to hook every classroom in
the country up to the Internet by the year 2000. Now, I think those are
things that are worth voting for--I think they're worth voting for.
And finally, there's the Patients' Bill of Rights, the health care
HMO bill of rights. Here's what it says: If you walk out of this room
tonight and, God forbid, you get hit by a car, and you're covered by an
HMO plan, a managed care plan, you ought to be able to go to the nearest
emergency room, not one clear across town because that's the one that
happens to be covered by your plan. It says if your doctors tells you
that he or she can't help you and you need to see a specialist, you
ought to be able to see one. It says if your employer changes HMO
providers while you're going through a certain medical treatment, you
ought to be able to finish with it.
Now, let me just tell you what that means. How would you feel if you
were 7 months pregnant and somebody came to you and said, ``I'm sorry,
your employer changed providers; you've got to give up your
obstetrician, and here's Dr. Jones''? How would you feel if someone in
your family was undergoing chemotherapy--I've been through this, a lot
of you have, and you know it's a pretty traumatic thing for families. I
remember when my mother went through it--we sat around and tried to make
jokes about whether she'd lose her hair and what kind of wig she'd buy.
You get real nervous about whether your loved one is going to get so
sick they can't eat. Now, this is serious; this happens. How would you
feel if you were two-thirds of the way through a chemotherapy protocol
and somebody said, ``I'm sorry, you've got to change your doctor''? This
is big stuff. And I think it's worth voting for--I think it's worth
voting for.
The Congress--the House passed a bill that didn't guarantee any of
those things and what little it did guarantee left out 100 million
Americans. Then it went to the Senate, and our crowd had a right to
bring our bill up in the Senate, and they couldn't keep it away. So you
know what the leader of the Senate did? He shut the Senate down for 4
hours. I mean, turned out the lights. Everybody got under the desks.
Why? Because
[[Page 1969]]
they didn't want to be recorded as voting against this, but they didn't
want to make angry the insurance companies who oppose it. This is the
symbol of the difference between the two parties today, make no mistake
about it. And I think it's a big deal.
Now, what have they done with their year in the majority? Except for
this higher education bill, I can't think of much. They killed the
minimum wage. They killed campaign finance reform. They killed tobacco
legislation reform that would have protected our children from the
dangers of tobacco. They killed the Patients' Bill of Rights. They have
continued their assault on the environment. They have gone backwards on
paying for the International Monetary Fund; they've taken no action on
it. And they've taken no action on the education bill, and they went
backwards on saving Social Security first when the House passed their
tax plan. It's over in the Senate now. There is this huge difference.
And what I want you to do--I thank you for coming here tonight. I
thank you for these contributions. We need the money, and we'll spend it
well. But you have to go out and tell people, there is this cynical idea
that you won't vote and that good times makes you less likely to vote.
And I know it's more trouble for a lot of people you know to vote. But
if you believe that America ought to be about not what goes on in
Washington, DC, but what goes on in the neighborhoods of Philadelphia,
in Boston, and in rural North Dakota and in rural Nebraska--if that's
what you believe--if you believe in saving Social Security first, if you
believe in the Patients' Bill of Rights, if you believe in education as
our top investment priority, if you believe in keeping our economic
recovery going, then you should support our party--not just tonight but
on election day.
And I want every one of you to go out every day between now and then
and stir it up among your friends, and make sure that we surprise the
cynics on election day.
Thank you, and God bless you.
Note: The President spoke at 7:25 p.m. in Room 201 at Philadelphia City
Hall. In his remarks, he referred to Mayor Edward Rendell of
Philadelphia; and Roy C. Afflerbach, candidate for Pennsylvania's 15th
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 1969-1974]
Monday, October 12, 1998
Volume 34--Number 41
Pages 1965-2025
Week Ending Friday, October 9, 1998
Remarks at a Democratic National Committee Dinner in Philadelphia
October 2, 1998
Thank you very much. I kind of hate to follow Rendell tonight.
[Laughter] It's a true story, that story you heard about me asking if he
modeled for these sculptures. [Laughter] You know, he did so well
tonight, I think he sort of halfway talked himself into believing it. It
was great. [Laughter]
I tell you, I would just like to say one serious thing about the
mayor. I remember when we walked the street here in 1992, when he took
me into a neighborhood where the gangs and the drugs had been cleared
out. I remember when we shot baskets together. He won. [Laughter] I
think I've demonstrated to the whole world that I'm not always very
smart, but I was smart enough to know I shouldn't win that basketball
game in '92. [Laughter] I knew the only score I was trying to win was in
November and that it would help if I took a well-considered dive.
[Laughter] No, he beat me fair and square, actually.
But I want you to know that to me it's just literally thrilling to
come here to this city to see what has been done, to see the whole sort
of spirit of the place, to see the neighborhoods that have come back, to
see the people that are working, to see the projects that are on line.
And when I became President, I believed that we needed in Washington
to find a way to reduce the deficit until we balanced the budget, to
reduce the size of Government, to reduce the burden of regulation, to
reduce the plethora of programs in a lot of these areas, but to be more
active in creating the conditions and giving people the tools to solve
their problems at the grassroots level.
And every tool that we put out there, Ed Rendell used as well or
better as anyone in America. And it is an awesome thing to see. And I
just want to thank him for proving through this city that this great
country can solve its problems, meet its challenges, and work in a
stunning fashion. I am very grateful
[[Page 1970]]
to him, not only for this friendship and support but for what he's done
for you and for our country as mayor.
I would like to thank Congressman Bob Borski and Congressman Bob
Brady and Congressman Chaka Fattah for being with me tonight and for
being with me in Washington, where it really counts and where they have
counted for you. I would like to thank our State party chair, Tina
Tartaglione, a member of the legislature, I know; and Senator Fumo,
thank you for coming, and all the other public officials who are here.
I'd like to thank my good friend Marjorie Margolies-Mezvinsky for
running for Lieutenant Governor and being my friend.
Tonight Hillary is finishing a trip to Uruguay, where they had one
of a series of conferences that she's done around the world. The last
one was in Northern Ireland. They're called Vital Voices conferences,
where she goes to places and gets together women who are working for
peace and reconciliation and development, and dealing with health and
family related problems. And Marjorie has helped her a lot on that, and
I'm very, very grateful to her, and for so much else.
Finally, let me say I want to thank Len Barrack for doing a fabulous
job as the finance director of the DNC. The job has been good for him.
He's even wearing three-button suits now. [Laughter] Taken years off his
life. Looks so much younger.
Let me say very briefly, Ed talked about some of these issues
tonight, but I would like to try to put this in some historical
perspective. In 1992, when the citizens of this city gave Al Gore and me
a great vote of endorsement and helped us to win the State of
Pennsylvania, which was pivotal in our victory, we ran on a platform of
change that said we didn't like very much what was going on in
Washington and just the constant, endless, partisan bickering and
rhetoric and setting up the American people against each other--business
against labor, the economy against the environment, dividing the races,
dividing present citizens against immigrants--all these things were
going on as if there were no way out of these boxes that would build
America, that would bring us together and move us forward.
And we said, among other things, if you vote for us we'll give you a
Government that's smaller but more active. We'll reduce the deficit and
balance the budget, but we'll invest more money in education and medical
research and the environment. We said we would try to deal with some of
the challenges in the health care system and extend coverage to more
Other Popular 1998 Presidential Documents Documents:
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