Dallas County Democrats
President Clinton's Remarks In Dallas September 27, 2000
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REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
AT LUNCHEON FOR THE DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL COMMITTEE
GAY/LESBIAN LEADERSHIP COUNCIL
Private Residence,
Dallas, Texas
1:15 P.M. CDT
THE PRESIDENT: You've got to calm down now, we've got work to
do. (Laughter.) But I thank you for that welcome. And I want to thank
Chuck and Jim for welcoming us. This is a really beautiful place. I
love the art, I love the architecture, I love the light. This is the
first time I've ever gotten to give a speech under Betty Davis eyes.
(Laughter and applause.) I bet I hear about that one. (Laughter.)
Thank you, Julie and Kay. I'd like to thank Ed Rendell for
agreeing, after he left the mayor's job, to do this old part-time job as
chair of the DNC. And my friend of many, many years, Andy Tobias, who
has really done a wonderful job in more ways than most people know.
Thank you, Elizabeth. I thank Julian Potter, my White House liaison.
(Applause.) And the others who are here from the White House today.
I also want to thank Brian Bond, who is the Director of the
Gay and Lesbian Victory Fund. And we have one very important candidate
for Congress here, Regina Montoya Coggins -- (applause.) And, Molly
Beth Malcolm, thank you for being here, for getting on that --
(applause) -- what was that talk show you were on last night, taking up
for our side? That guy just talks louder when he starts losing
arguments. You hung in there really well. (Laughter.) You did a good
job.
I want to say to all of you that this is an interesting time
for America, a time of enormous progress and prosperity, but a time of
real ferment, too. And people are trying to come to grips with all the
currents of change that are running through America. The Fort Worth
City Council voted to extend discrimination protection to gays and
lesbians -- (applause.) Gay Dallas city councilman changes party.
(Applause.) Good deal. Regina wants to represent the community, and
the congressman says he doesn't -- not sure he does. (Laughter.) It's
a big deal. We're debating all these things.
Hate Crimes
I'm honored to have had the chance to be President at a time
when all these issues were coming to the fore, and to have a record
number of members of the gay community in my administration. We are
fighting for the hate crimes bill, and basically, we now have a
bipartisan majority in both Houses for it. We've got all the Democrats
but one and about, I don't know, 12 or 13 Republicans in the Senate
voted for the hate crimes bill. And we have 41 Republicans in the House
who voted with about 200 of our crowd to instruct the conferees on the
defense bill to leave it in there.
I was asked just before I left Washington -- a couple of you
mentioned it to me -- that one of -- someone in the leadership of the
Republican Congress said that he didn't think this would get to be law
this year. Well, if it doesn't get to be law, it's because the
leadership doesn't want it, because we've got a majority of the votes
for it. So I would urge you do to whatever you can.
There's been a sea change movement. Gordon Smith, who is the
Republican Senator from Oregon and an evangelical Christian, gave an
incredibly moving speech in the Florida Senate for it. I don't know if
you saw it, but there was a Republican state representative from Georgia
who gave a decisive speech in the Georgia legislature for the hate
crimes bill. And I don't know if you've circulated that, but it's an
overwhelmingly powerful speech. And I think it could have, if we can
get it around, an impact on some more members in the House. But we've
got the votes; it's just a question of whether the leadership of the
Republican Party in the Congress stays to the right of the country on
this issue.
A Unifying Approach
The same thing is true of the employment nondiscrimination
legislation. I actually hope that we might pass that this year. There
are big majorities across the country for this. It is not just a
Democratic issue. It is not just a liberal issue. It's not even just a
gay rights issue. It's a fundamental fairness issue in America. And we
get a few changes in the Congress, that will pass next time too,
assuming the election for President works out all right.
So we're moving in the right direction. But we're dealing
with this -- this election, in some fundamental way, I think, is a
referendum about whether the whole approach we've taken to our national
problems in our national life is the right one. I ran for President
partly because I just got sick of seeing my country held back by the
politics of division; by a sense of political and economic and cultural
entitlement, almost, on the part of the people who had been running
things for a long time, with absolute confidence that they could divide
the American electorate in ways that made their opposition look like
they were out of the mainstream and not part of ordinary American life.
And it seemed to me that it gave us bad economic policies, bad
social policies, ineffective crime and welfare policies, and a lot of
hot air and not much results. So, when the people gave Al Gore and me a
chance to serve, we tried to adopt a unifying approach that would bring
the American people together, and that would not make choices that were
essentially phony.
The Economy
We believed we could cut the deficit and invest more in
education and the American people. And, sure enough, it worked. Today,
before I came here, I announced that we would have this year a $230
billion surplus, the biggest in the history of the United States; that
we would, when I left office, have paid off $360 billion of the national
debt. Keep in mind, the annual deficit was supposed to be $450 billion
this year when I took office. So it's gone from $450 billion projected
deficit to a $230 billion actual surplus. (Applause.)
And yesterday we released the annual poverty figures which
show that poverty is at a 20-year low. Last year we had the biggest
drop in child poverty since 1966; the biggest drop in minority poverty
in the history of the country since we've been measuring the statistics;
2.2 million people moved out of poverty last year alone; all income
groups experienced roughly the same percentage increase in their income.
But in America. And the bottom 20 percent actually had slightly the
higher percentage increase, which is good because they've been losing
ground for many years while working hard.
So I think it makes sense to have economic and social policies
that bring people together. And it's rooted in an essential Democratic
belief that everybody counts, everybody ought to have a chance, and we
all do better when we help each other. It's not complicated, and it
turns out to be good economics.
Crime
And it turns out to be quite effective social policy. If you
look -- we said that we ought to put more police on the street, punish
people who are particularly bad, but do more to prevent crime in the
first place, and keep guns out of the hands of criminals and kids. And,
lo and behold, it worked. Now, that hasn't stopped people from fighting
us, because they're driven by ideology and control, not by evidence.
One thing I respect about our opponents, they are totally
undeterred by the evidence. (Laughter.) I mean, in a way you've sort
of got to admire that -- I don't care what works, this is what I
believe. (Laughter.) So what if they've got the longest economic
expansion in history and 22 million new jobs and the lowest minority
unemployment rate recorded and the lowest female unemployment rate in 40
years -- I don't care, I still want to go back to running the deficit
and having a big tax cut.
So what if keeping a half a million felons, fugitives and
stalkers from getting handguns, and not interrupting anybody's day in
the deer woods, and putting 100,000 police on the street has given us
the lowest crime rate in 27 years. I still don't want to close the gun
show loophole and I want to get rid of the 100,000 COPS program. That's
their position. It's not just about guns, it's about police -- they do
not favor the federal program that is now putting 150,000 police on the
street. And they have promised to get rid of it. And I could go on and
on.
So what if 18 million Americans every single year are delayed
or denied coverage by an HMO when a doctor is pleading for it, I'm still
not for the patients' bill of rights.
A More Decent And Just Society
Now, I could just go on and on, but the point I want to make
is this election is about way more than gay rights. I have a unifying
theory of how America ought to work -- I've tried to build one America.
I'm elated when the Human Genome Project revealed we are all 99.99
percent the same genetically. (Laughter.)
I've been touting to a lot of people this new book by Robert
Wright called "Nonzero." He wrote an earlier book called "The Moral
Animal." The essential argument of the book is that notwithstanding all
the depravity of the 20th century, and the Nazis and the communists,
that essentially society is moving to higher and higher levels of
decency and justice, because it's becoming more complex and we're
becoming more interdependent. And the more interdependent people
become, and the more they recognize it, the more they are forced to try
to find solutions to their disagreements, in game theory parlance, which
are nonzero sum solutions as opposed to zero sum solutions -- those are
where in order for somebody to win, somebody has got to lose.
It's not a naive book. I mean, we're going to have a race for
President; it's a zero sum race, one will win, one will lose. But the
general idea is that we ought to organize society in such a way that we
more and more and more look for solutions in which, in order for me to
win you have to win, too. We have to find respectful ways to
accommodate each other so that we can honor our differences, but be
united by our common humanity.
So, for me, cutting the welfare rolls in half; adding a couple
million kids to the rolls of children with health insurance; being for
the hate crimes bill and the employment nondiscrimination bill; being
for New Markets legislation to expand opportunity to people and places
left behind; and continuing to get the country out of debt so interest
rates stay low and prosperity stays high, so the rest of the country is
secure enough to reach out to people who are different from them, which
is easier to do when you're secure than when you're insecure -- to me,
this is all part of a unified strategy.
Our Common Humanity
And I guess what I would like to ask you to do is to continue
to reach out and to keep working. Never allow yourselves to be
marginalized or divided against your friends and neighbors. Because the
progress we're making is because more and more people are identifying
with our common humanity. As horrible as it was when young Mathew
Shepherd was stretched out on that rack to die in Wyoming, it got a lot
of people's attention. And when that police commissioner from Wyoming
stood up and said, I was against hate crimes legislation before, and I
was wrong, the experience of knowing this young man's family, knowing
his friend, knowing what his life was like, and understanding the nature
of this crime and why the people committed it has changed my life --
seeing his parents stand up and talk -- obviously, not exactly a liberal
Democratic activist living out there in Wyoming -- (laughter) -- talking
about this whole issue in profoundly human terms has helped to change
America. And they are trying to redeem their son's life by making sure
that his death was not in vain.
And the American people are fundamentally good people. They
nearly always get it right once they have the chance to have personal
experience, if they have enough information and they have enough time to
absorb it.
Now, that's why, in this election, it's important that you
keep reaching out and understand that clarity is our friend. I just get
so tickled watching this presidential campaign, maybe because it's
interesting for me; I'm not part of it now. (Laughter.) Except as I
often say, now that my party has a new leader and my family has a new
candidate, I'm now the Cheerleader-In-Chief of the country. (Laughter
and applause.)
But it's sort of like -- one week we read in the press
that there is something wrong with one of the candidates. Then, the
next week, oh, there's something wrong with the other. And let me tell
you something. I totally disagree with that whole thing. I think we
ought to posit the fact that we have two people running for president
who are fundamentally patriotic, good, decent people who love their
country, but who have huge differences that tend to be obscured by the
daily and weekly coverage of this or that flap.
Our Economic Future
And sometimes, I get the feeling that the flaps are being
deliberately used to obscure the underlying reality. Now, the
underlying reality is that these people have huge differences on
economics -- huge. And the Republican position would basically take an
enormous percentage of the non-Social Security surplus, roughly
three-quarters of it, and spend it on a tax cut. Then, if you partially
privatize Social Security, that's another trillion bucks, you're into
the Social Security surplus, and that's before you have kept any of your
spending promises. That means higher interest rates.
We just got a study which said that the Gore plan would keep
interest rates roughly a percent a year lower, over a decade, and that's
worth -- there's some dispute about it, but somewhere between $300
billion and $390 billion over 10 years in lower home mortgages, and $30
billion in lower car payments, and $15 billion in lower student loan
payments. That's a big tax cut.
It also keeps the economy going. There are huge differences
in economic policy. Big differences in education policy. Even though
both say they're for accountability, I would argue that the Democratic
program on accountability is stronger, because it says, we favor
voluntary national exams; we favor identifying failing schools, and then
having to turn them around, shut them down, or put them under new
management. So there are real consequences here.
And we favor, in addition to that, which they don't, putting
100,000 teachers out there to make smaller classes, and rebuilding or
building a lot of schools -- because you've got kids just running out of
these buildings, and a lot of school districts just can't raise property
taxes any more.
Health Care
There are huge differences in health care -- a patient's bill
of rights, Medicare drug program. You know, all this medicine flap, it
obscures -- what is the underlying reality here? The underlying reality
is, we have the money to give senior citizens who cannot afford it
otherwise a drug benefit through Medicare. And our position is that we
ought to do it, and that over the long run, it will keep America
healthier, make lives longer and better, and keep people out of the
hospital. It's a simple position -- that if we were creating Medicare
today, there's no way in the world we would do it without a prescription
drug program.
Their position is, we ought to do that for the poorest
Americans and everybody else ought to buy insurance. Now, half of the
seniors who cannot afford their medical bills are not in the group of
people they propose to cover, number one. Number two, even the health
insurance companies, with whom I've had my occasional disputes, if
you've noticed, I've got to hand it to them. They have been perfectly
honest in this. They have said, we cannot write a policy that makes
sense for us that people can afford to buy.
Nevada passed the bills that the whole Republican
establishment is for, and you know how many health insurance companies
have offered people drug coverage under it? Zero. Now, so the evidence
is not there. But like I said, I've got to give it to them. They are
never deterred by evidence. (Laughter.)
Now, what's the deal here? What's the real deal? The real
deal is, the drug companies don't want this. Why don't they want it?
You would think they would want to sell more medicine, wouldn't you?
They don't want it because -- I can't believe we just don't read these
things -- they don't want it because they believe if Medicare provides
this many drugs to this many seniors, they will acquire too much market
power and require them, through market power, not price controls --
there are no price controls in this, this is totally voluntary -- that
they believe they will have so much market power, they will be able to
get down the price of these drugs a little bit and cut the profit
margin.
Well, we can argue about how much more expensive drugs are
here than drugs made here are in other countries -- and it's different
from drug to drug, but instead of getting into one of these sort of
nitpicking deals, let's look at the big picture. The big picture is,
you can go to Canada and buy medicine made in America cheaper in Canada.
Why? Because all these other -- and Europe -- because they impose
limits on the price.
So we all, Americans, we have to pay for all the research and
development for the medicine. Now, we've got great drug companies, we
want the drugs to be developed. I personally think we ought to be
willing to pay a premium. But I don't think there's a living person who
needs the drugs who should not be able to get them. And we can do this
for seniors on Medicare now -- the fastest-growing group of people in
America are people over 80.
So it's not just about gay rights. It's about seniors' needs;
it's about kids' needs to be in decent schools; it's about what works to
make our streets safer. And then, there are the environmental issues.
The Environment
Now, it's not like we don't have any evidence here. We've got
the toughest clean air standards in history. We've got cleaner water,
safer drinking water, safer food. And we set aside more land than any
administration in history except the two Roosevelts, and now we've got
the longest economic expansion in history. So that's the evidence,
right?
We also know, in terms of the present energy crisis, that
we've been trying for years to get this Congress to give tax credits to
people to buy presently available energy conservation technologies and
products, and that, off the shelf today, there are available products
that would dramatically increase the efficiency of our energy uses.
We've tried to put more and more money into research for new fuels, new
engines, fuel cells, the whole nine yards, without success.
What's their approach? They still say, don't bother me with
the evidence. You cannot grow the economy and improve the environment,
so put us in there: We will reverse President Clinton's order setting
aside 43 million acres, roadless acres in the national forests; we will
review even the national monuments, may get rid of some of them; we will
relax the clean air standards -- because you can't do it. Don't bother
me with the evidence. This is about the air gay and straight people
breathe. (Laughter.)
What I'm saying to you is, this is a big deal. I get so
frustrated because I wish -- that's why I hope these debates serve to
clarify this. I mean, I know it's hard for them, because it's hard for
them to get up and say, I'm sorry, I just think we ought to have dirtier
air. I mean, it's hard -- (laughter) -- I understand it's a hard sell.
I understand that.
Campaign Promises
But you've got to understand, there are differences here that
will affect the lives of real people, that will affect the kind of
America this young man grows up in. That's what these elections ought
to be about. And I'm perfectly prepared to posit that they're all good
people. And I'm sick and tired of everybody trying to pick them both
apart. That's not the issue. The issue is that people -- study after
study, after study, after study shows that people who run for president,
by and large, do what they say they will do.
And, by the way, there was one independent study that showed
that in my first term, even before all the stuff I've done in my second
term, I had already kept a higher percentage of my promises to the
American people than the last five Presidents. (Applause.)
Now, you couldn't possibly win a Pulitzer Prize or a Niemann
fellowship if you said that. But we ought to be better. We do not need
to jump on our opponent's personally. But we do need to make darn sure
that every single person knows what the differences are. And these
Congress -- I'm telling you, every House seat, every Senate seat is
pivotally important to the future of this country. That's one example
-- assume they are honorable people in the Senate and the House and the
people running for the White House.
One of them believes in Roe v. Wade, one of them doesn't.
There's going to be two to four judges on the Supreme Court coming up.
Why wouldn't they each do the honorable thing, that is, what they
believe is right? Now, we ought to have -- we've never had a time like
this in my lifetime. We may never have another time where we've got so
much peace and so much prosperity, where people are secure enough to
talk about a lot of things we used to not talk about.
Clarify The Choices
I mean, let's face it. Here we are in Dallas, Texas, having
this event, right? Because America has come a long way. Your friends
and neighbors have. Your fellow citizens have. This is a different
country than it was eight years ago. So now we've got to decide, what
do we propose to do with all this? You have friends all over the world.
Most of you have friends in virtually every state in America. I am
imploring you to talk to people every day between now and the election.
Regina will win if people understand exactly what the choices
are. The Vice President will be elected if people understand exactly
what the choices are. Hillary will be elected to the Senate if people
understand exactly what the choices are. And yet so much of what passes
for political discourse is designed to obscure, rather than clarify, the
differences. Somebody doesn't agree with me, let them stand up and say
what they think the differences are, but let's talk about the things
that will affect other people.
Most people I've known in politics have been good people who
worked harder than most folks thought they did, and did the best they
could to do what they thought was right. But we have honest differences
-- in health care, education, the economy, human rights, gay rights,
foreign policy. One side is for the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, and
the other isn't. You talk about something that could have huge
consequences on your kid's future.
So I am imploring you. I thank you for this money. We'll do
our best to spend it well. We need it. They're going to out-spend us,
but we proved in '98 we could win at a $100-million deficit. But
there's some deficit at which we can't win, because we've got to have
our message out there, too. So we'll be less in the hole because of
what you've done today.
But you just remember this. There are a significant number of
undecided voters -- that's why these polls bounce up and down like they
do -- and they're having a hard time getting a grip on the election, the
undecided voters are, partly because there's not enough clarity of
choice.
So I implore you. You wouldn't be here today if you didn't
have a certain amount of political and citizen passion and courage, and
if you didn't have clarity of choice about some issues that are very
important to you. So I ask you, take a little time between now and the
election, every day, and try to find somebody somewhere that will make a
difference, and give them the same clarity that you have.
Thank you very much. (Applause.)
END 1:42 P.M. CDT
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