Dallas County Democrats
President Clinton's
Farewell Remarks
This site is an ARCHIVE of the website used
for the Dallas County Democratic Party from 2000 to May of 2002, and which was built by the then Chair Bill Howell. Though some information
here will be relevant through the 2002 elections, other pages here are of interest for
history or research. For the
latest updated news about the Dallas County Democratic Party, see their own website at
www.dallasdemocrats.org.
January 19, 2001:
My fellow citizens, tonight is my last
opportunity to speak to you from the
Oval Office as your president.
I am profoundly grateful to you for
twice giving me the honor to serve, to work for you
and with you to
prepare our nation for the 21st century. And I'm
grateful to Vice
President Gore, to my Cabinet secretaries, and to
all those who have
served with me for the last eight years. This has
been a time of dramatic
transformation, and you have risen to every new
challenge. You have
made our social fabric stronger, our families
healthier and safer, our
people more prosperous.
You, the American people, have made our passage into
the global
information age an era of great American renewal.
In all the work I have done as president, every
decision I have made,
every executive action I have taken, every bill I
have proposed and
signed, I've tried to give all Americans the tools
and conditions to build
the future of our dreams, in a good society, with a
strong economy, a
cleaner environment, and a freer, safer, more
prosperous world.
I have steered my course by our enduring values.
Opportunity for all.
Responsibility from all. A community of all
Americans. I have sought to
give America a new kind of government, smaller, more
modern, more
effective, full of ideas and policies appropriate to
this new time, always
putting people first, always focusing on the future.
Working together, America has done well. Our economy
is breaking
records, with more than 22 million new jobs, the
lowest unemployment in
30 years, the highest home ownership ever, the
longest expansion in
history.
Our families and communities are stronger.
Thirty-five million Americans
have used the family leave law. Eight million have
moved off welfare.
Crime is at a 25-year low. Over 10 million Americans
receive more
college aid, and more people than ever are going to
college. Our schools
are better -- higher standards, greater
accountability and larger
investments have brought higher test scores, and
higher graduation rates.
More than three million children have health
insurance now, and more
than 7 million Americans have been lifted out of
poverty. Incomes are
rising across the board. Our air and water are
cleaner. Our food and
drinking water are safer. And more of our precious
land has been
preserved, in the continental United States, than at
any time in 100 years.
America has been a force for peace and prosperity in
every corner of the
globe.
I'm very grateful to be able to turn over the reins
of leadership to a new
president, with America in such a strong position to
meet the challenges
of the future.
Tonight, I want to leave you with three thoughts
about our future. First,
America must maintain our record of fiscal
responsibility. Through our
last four budgets, we've turned record deficits to
record surpluses, and
we've been able to pay down $600 billion of our
national debt, on track
to be debt free by the end of the decade for the
first time since 1835.
Staying on that course will bring lower interest
rates, greater prosperity
and the opportunity to meet our big challenges. If
we choose wisely, we
can pay down the debt, deal with the retirement of
the baby boomers,
invest more in our future and provide tax relief.
Second, because the world is more connected every
day in every way,
America's security and prosperity require us to
continue to lead in the
world. At this remarkable moment in history, more
people live in freedom
that ever before. Our alliances are stronger than
ever. People all around
the world look to America to be a force for peace
and prosperity,
freedom and security. The global economy is giving
more of our own
people, and billions around the world, the chance to
work and live and
raise their families with dignity.
But the forces of integration that have created
these good opportunities
also make us more subject to global forces of
destruction, to terrorism,
organized crime and narco-trafficking, the spread of
deadly weapons and
disease, the degradation of the global environment.
The expansion of trade hasn't fully closed the gap
between those of us
who live on the cutting edge of the global economy
and the billions
around the world who live on the knife's edge of
survival.
This global gap requires more than compassion. It
requires action. Global
poverty is a powder keg that could be ignited by our
indifference.
In his first inaugural address, Thomas Jefferson
warned of entangling
alliances. But in our times, America cannot and must
not disentangle itself
from the world. If we want the world to embody our
shared values, then
we must assume a shared responsibility.
If the wars of the 20th century, especially the
recent ones in Kosovo and
Bosnia, have taught us anything, it is that we
achieve our aims by
defending our values and leading the forces of
freedom and peace. We
must embrace boldly and resolutely that duty to
lead, to stand with our
allies in word and deed, and to put a human face on
the global economy
so that expanded trade benefits all people in all
nations, lifting lives and
hopes all across the world.
Third, we must remember that America cannot lead in
the world unless
here at home we weave the threads of our coat of
many colors into the
fabric of one America. As we become ever more
diverse, we must work
harder to unite around our common values and our
common humanity.
We must work harder to overcome our differences. In
our hearts and in
our laws, we must treat all our people with fairness
and dignity,
regardless of their race, religion, gender or sexual
orientation and
regardless of when they arrived in our country,
always moving toward the
more perfect union of our founders' dreams.
Hillary, Chelsea and I join all Americans in wishing
our very best to the
next president, George W. Bush, to his family and
his administration in
meeting these challenges and in leading freedom's
march in this new
century.
As for me, I'll leave the presidency more
idealistic, more full of hope than
the day I arrived and more confident than ever that
America's best days
lie ahead.
My days in this office are nearly through, but my
days of service, I hope,
are not. In the years ahead, I will never hold a
position higher or a
covenant more sacred than that of president of the
United States. But
there is no title I will wear more proudly than that
of citizen.
Thank you. God bless you, and God bless America.
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