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1/9/01 REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT TO THE PEOPLE OF EAST LANSING

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                              THE WHITE HOUSE

                       Office of the Press Secretary
                         (East Lansing, Michigan)
___________________________________________________________________________
                                  ______
    For Immediate Release                              January 9, 2001


                         REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
                       TO THE PEOPLE OF EAST LANSING

                         Michigan State University
                                   East Lansing, Michigan


1:40 P.M. EST


     THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you very much.  Let me say, first of all, how
delighted I am to be here, to be back at Michigan State.  (Applause.)  I
thank President McPherson and the Board of Trustees for letting me come
back.  I think if I were to come back one more time as President, I've been
here so many times I'd owe partial tuition at least.  (Laughter.)  I always
love coming here and I'm delighted to be here.

     I also want to thank Ed Foy for coming out to meet me in 1992, and
sticking with me all the way to the end.  He gave a great speech and he was
a great representative of the working people of Michigan and the United
States, and I thank him.  (Applause.)  I want to thank Senator Carl Levin
for being my friend and being a friend to the people of Michigan.  There is
no member of the United States Senate today who is more respected than Carl
Levin, and you should be very proud of him.  (Applause.)

     Now, your new Senator, Debbie Stabenow, got her start    -- (applause)
-- she got her start in politics when she was still a student and was
elected County Commissioner.  So some of the rest of you might get a few
ideas from that.  I am delighted to welcome her to the Senate.  I'm so
pleased she was elected before I left office.  And she's in a class of
senators which includes some other women that I'm -- (applause) -- I told
Debbie on the way in, she and Hillary and the other senators who were
elected in this last cycle were sworn in last Wednesday.  And when our
daughter, Chelsea and I were just sitting up there like all the other
families in the Senate gallery -- being cautioned not to lean over and put
our hands on the rail -- (laughter) -- I was trying to be on my best
behavior -- I didn't whistle, shout or jump -- but it was, for me, the
happiest day of my life since the day my daughter was born.  And so I'll
always have a special feeling about this election.

     I think that Debbie Stabenow showed a great deal of courage and
character in this election, and she kept on going when a lot of people
thought she couldn't win.  And she'll do you proud there.  I've watched her
in Congress, and she'll be great.  (Applause.)

     I would like to thank so many other members of the Michigan
congressional delegation who aren't here -- Congressman Levin and Conyers,
and Bonior, who lost his father in the last couple of days -- and
especially my good friend, Congressman John Dingell, who's recuperating and
is still up and around.  All the other members of the delegation that
helped me, I'm very grateful.

     I thank Attorney General Jennifer Granholm for being here.
(Applause.)  And all the people from the Michigan legislature who are here,
but especially Representative Kilpatrick, who's been such a good friend of
mine.  (Applause.)  Thank you.  And Mayor Archer, thank you.  Mayor
Hollister, thank you.  (Applause.)

     And I want to say a special word of appreciation to a man who's been
one of my closest allies and best friends in political life for way over a
decade now, your former governor, and a man who served as a great
ambassador to Canada in our administration, Jim Blanchard, and his wife
Janet.  Thank you very much.  (Applause.)

     I'd also like to say that when word got out I was coming here,
everybody in my administration wanted to come with me.  I keep telling
them, we promised to work until the last day in office.  I've still got
some environmental initiatives I want to take -- (applause) -- I've still
got some other things I want to do.  But because I came today to talk about
the economy, what happened over the last eight years and where we're going,
and the relationship of the economy to education, I brought two people who
have been with me every day since I became President -- the Secretary of
Education Dick Riley and the Secretary of Labor Alexis Herman.  Give them a
big hand.  We thank you.  (Applause.)

     Believe it or not, there's one person in this audience with whom I
served 24 years ago in my first elected position as Attorney General of my
state, your former Attorney General Frank Kelly.  Thanks for being here --
for 24 years of friendship.  Thank you.  (Applause.)

     Now, most of all, I want to thank Tom Izzo and the Michigan State
Spartans for being up here with me.  (Applause.)
Usually, the National Championship team comes to Washington.  But I'm sort
of a short-termer, you know, and nothing beats recognizing the team before
14,000 cheering fans.  Also, there's a lot of sense of humor and kidding in
my family, and you may know that my daughter is a senior of Stanford.  So
I'm going to wear that Spartan jersey tonight when I go home and see if I
can provoke some conversation around the dinner table.  (Applause.)

     One of the things that I admire about this team -- and I followed it
very closely last year -- is that there is no quit in it.  I know you --
(applause) -- I know you had a tough game last weekend, but let me tell
you, if you play any game in life long enough, once in a while somebody
will sink a three-point shot, falling backwards with your hand in their
face.  It will happen if you play any game long enough -- the equivalent
will happen to you.  It is not fatal.  The only thing that's fatal is
quitting.  And you've got no quit in that team back there, and that's good.
(Applause.)

     The most important thing I want to do today is to say a simple "thank
you" to the people of Michigan State, Lansing and the state of Michigan,
for supporting me and Hillary and Al and Tipper Gore these last eight
years.  (Applause.)

     You know, my history with Michigan is profoundly important to the
opportunity I've had to serve as President.  It began with the primary
victory here on St. Patrick's Day in 1992.  It included two general
elections in which the people of Michigan were kind enough to give me their
electoral votes -- and thanks for making it three in a row last November.
(Applause.)

     I first visited this campus in 1992.  I've come here for debates,
rallies and whistle-stop tours.  I was the first President since Theodore
Roosevelt to speak here while in office.  I imagine I'm the only one to
speak here twice.  Let me tell you, every time I've come here, I've learned
something.  And even though eight years is longer than it takes most of you
to get a degree, my Michigan State education is just about complete.
(Applause.)

     When I came here -- unbelievably, almost nine years ago now -- our
economy was profoundly troubled and our society was divided.  In 1992 there
were riots in Los Angeles and troubling signs of social division elsewhere.
I talked to college students in my home state of Arkansas who said they
were dropping out of school because they couldn't afford to borrow any more
money and they didn't believe they could get a good job when they got out
and pay their loans back.  I met college students in every state in the
country, including Michigan, who were afraid they wouldn't get a job, even
with their diploma.

     I met union workers who thought they would either never work again, or
if they did, they'd never in their lives get a job paying the same amount
that they were making before they lost their previous job.  Industrial
production had actually declined that year, for the first time in the
history of the United States.  Average family income fell by $1,600 in just
two years.  The federal deficit was $290 billion and rising.  The national
debt had quadrupled over the previous 12 years.  Interest rates were high,
growth was low, the confidence of the American people was shaken.  And just
as bad, it had been 13 years since the Spartans had won a national
championship.  (Laughter.)  It was not the best of times.  (Laughter.)

     And I asked the American people to send me to Washington for a little
while, on a mission -- a mission to build a 21st century America with
opportunity for all, responsibility from all citizens, and a community of
all Americans.  I committed to do my best to build a new kind of national
government, one that would focus on the future and on providing all of our
citizens with the conditions and tools necessary to build their own lives
and make the most of America's future.

     Well, thanks to the good people of Michigan, and people like you
across this country, Al Gore and I got the precious chance to spend eight
years in Washington, putting people first, getting the economy going again,
improving social and environmental conditions, advancing peace, freedom and
prosperity around the world, and building a government ready to make the
most of this new century.

     Now, I want to talk just a little about what happened, because it's
important when you look to the future to know what happened in the recent
past and how it brought us to this present.

     We began with a clear strategy to get the economy going -- it had
three elements:  get the deficit down and get rid of it; in vest more in
our people; sell more American goods and services around the world.  The
American people did the rest.  We are still experiencing the longest
economic expansion in our history.  Our economy is 50 percent bigger than
it was eight years ago.  When I took office, the national unemployment rate
was 7.3 percent, 7.4 here in Michigan; now it is 4 percent.  It's been
below 5 percent for three years, and it's 3.7 percent in Michigan.
(Applause.)

     We have -- that's the lowest overall unemployment rate in 30 years,
even though we've got more of our people participating in the work force.
The lowest female unemployment rate in 40 years; the lowest African
American and Hispanic unemployment rate ever recorded.  (Applause.)  And
unlike some of our previous recoveries, this rising tide is lifting all
boats.
In the last three years, people at all income levels have done better, and
the highest percentage increase in income has come in the lowest 20 percent
of the working population of America in the last three years.  (Applause.)

     Poverty is at a 20-year low; home ownership at an all-time high.  In
1992, Michigan State graduates who found jobs had an average starting
salary of just under $26,000.  The average salary for last year's graduate
was over $36,000.  (Applause.)

     Now, how did this happen?  Well, first, we said we would get rid of
the deficits and begin to attack the debt.  And, keep in mind -- let me
just say this again -- in the entire history of the country, going back to
1776, the debt of America quadrupled in the 12 years before we began to
work.  What's happened since?  We started with a $290-billion deficit; this
year, we had a $240-billion surplus.  (Applause.)  We've had the biggest
back-to-back surpluses in history.  (Applause.)

     By the end of this fiscal year, we will have paid down more than $500
billion in our national debt.  We're on track to be debt-free by the end of
the decade, for the first time since 1835. (Applause.)

     Why should you care whether your government's out of debt?  Here's
why.  Two reasons.  First, economically, if the government is paying down
its debt instead of borrowing money, that means there is more money left
for you at lower interest rates for college loans, car loans, home loans,
more money for business loans at lower interest rates -- means more
businesses more jobs, higher pay raises and a higher stock market.  The
average American homeowner in America is now saving $2,000 a year in lower
home mortgages because we're paying down the debt instead of running it up.
It makes a huge difference to your future which way we're going.
(Applause.)

     The second reason, very important to Michigan State where you've got a
lot of people who depend on student aid, where you compete for research
funds from the federal government -- we spend over 11 cents on the dollar,
nearly 12 cents, and it was headed to 15 cents when I took office -- we
spent almost 12 cents on the dollar of every tax dollar you pay to the
federal government in interest on the debt.  It is the third-biggest item
in the federal budget behind Social Security and defense.

     If we get rid of that 12 percent -- 12 percent of the federal deficit
is a huge amount of money in the federal budget    -- that's 12 cents on
the tax dollar we can either give back to you in tax cuts or invest in our
common future -- in education, in health care, in the environment, in
national defense, in biomedical research in building a better future.
(Applause.)

      So the first thing we say we do is do something about the deficit,
and we did.  And America should keep going until we're debt free.  The
second thing we said we would do is to increase investment in the American
people.  That's pretty hard when you're cutting spending.

     We had to get rid of hundreds of government programs. We reduced the
federal work force by 300,000, to its smallest size since 1960 when Dwight
Eisenhower was President.  But we have, with the passing of this budget,
more than doubled our investment in education and training in the last
eight years.  And I'm very proud of that.  (Applause.)

     We've had the biggest increase in Head Start in history.  We've helped
Michigan hire more than 1,300 teachers to have smaller classes in the early
grades of school.  (Applause.)  We'll have 1.6 million children in
after-school programs this year.  We'll have 3.3 million children in the
Children's Health Insurance Program, leading to the first decline in the
number of people without health insurance in a dozen years.  (Applause.)

     We'll have 13 million Americans taking advantage of the college
tuition tax credits, the HOPE Scholarship and the Lifetime Learning tax
credits, expanded Pell grants and work-study programs, for helping millions
more, including -- listen to this -- more than 115,000 in Michigan,
including some of you in this audience today.  (Applause.)

     I also want to thank Secretary Riley for something else, the Direct
Student Loan Program.  Michigan State was one of the earliest participants
in the Direct Student Loan Program.  It helps students get college loans
more quickly, more cheaply, and gives them more options for paying it back
as a percentage of their income.  Since 1993, college students have saved
$8 billion on their college loans because of the Direct Loan Program, and
college and universities have saved $5 billion.  (Applause.)

     We said that we believed an administration could be pro-business and
pro-worker.  And we've tried to do that.  In the last eight years, we
defeated attempts to repeal prevailing wage laws, to bring back company
unions, to weaken occupational safety standards.  We cracked down on sweat
shops, protected pension funds, passed tough new worker safety rules
against repetitive stress injuries, and raised the minimum wage.  And every
time we did that, somebody said, this is really bad for business.  Every
year, for the last eight years, the United States has set a record for new
small business formations.  And we have more jobs in this eight-year period
than ever before in history. (Applause.)

     We said we believed that the modern economy must be pro-work and
pro-family.  And that's something a lot of the students here probably
haven't thought of very much, but I can tell you, one of the things that I
hear all the time, and I used to hear it even more, from people at all
income levels, including quite high-income levels, is that they are
desperately afraid that they cannot meet their responsibilities at work and
their responsibilities at home.  I hardly know anybody with young kids who
doesn't have at least one or two searing examples every year, where they're
worried about whether they've neglected their work or neglected their kids.

     Now, bringing up children is the most important work of any society,
in any time, by far.  (Applause.)  If we have to make a choice between work
and family, our economic objectives are defeated before we start.  I can
tell you, I've reached the age now when I can tell you from personal
experience, knowing hundreds of people my age, if your kids -- if life
doesn't work out for them, it doesn't make a rip how much money you have.
(Applause.)  It doesn't matter how well you've done in business, nothing
else matters.

     So this is very, very important.  What do we do about it?  That's why
we gave a tax cut, even when we were reducing the deficit, to 15 million
working families at the lowest levels of income, so anybody that worked 40
hours a week could use the tax system to get out of poverty, not be driven
in to it.  That's why we raised the minimum wage.  That's why we passed the
Family and Medical Leave law, which 25 million Americans have been able to
use to take some time off when there was a sick child or a sick parent of a
baby was born without loosing their job.  It's been good for the American
economy.

     Now, we said we would cut crime, and we did.  We put over 100,000
police on the street, working toward 150,000.  We banned assault weapons.
The Brady law background checks have kept 600,000 felons, fugitives and
stalkers from getting guns.  Crime is at a 25-year low.  Violent crime in
Michigan down
21 percent.  (Applause.)

     And I know it was controversial here in Michigan,       but I want to
say again -- I'm on the way out and I'm not running for anything, but let
me tell you something.  I have, in my closet, an honorary jacket with a
lifetime membership from the NRA which I got from working with them --
listen to this -- when I was governor of Arkansas, on hunter education
programs and trying to resolve disputes between retired people who retired
into unincorporated areas and hunters.  I did a lot of work with them.

     But I think this business of trying to convince the voters of any
state in our nation that somebody who wants to keep guns away from
criminals and kids is threatening their right to hunt or their right to
engage in sport shooting is just not so.  (Applause.)  It's not so.  And
I'm telling you something, it's not so.

     Now, you cannot -- there is not a single, law-abiding hunter in the
state of Michigan who missed a day in the woods because of these
initiatives we've taken, nor a single sport shooter that missed a single
contest.  But there's a lot of people alive today because those 600,000
felons, fugitives and stalkers could not get their handguns.  (Applause.)

     We believe -- and it was somewhat controversial even in Michigan when
I said this -- that we not only could, but we had to grow the economy and
improve the environment.  We believed we could break the iron link between
putting more greenhouse gases into the air and increasing the world's
temperature and growing the economy.  We believed that new sources of
energy and new means of energy conservation could provide a whole new
future, not just for the United States, but for the rest of the world.

     Now, what have we done?  The air is cleaner; the water is cleaner.  We
cleaned up 42 toxic waste dumps in Michigan alone, five times as many as
the two previous administrations, in 12 years.  (Applause.)  We're
investing your money in research in clean technology to make homes, cars
and offices more efficient, to create thousands of new, high-tech jobs.

     Just last Friday, Ford unveiled an SUV that gets the equivalent of 40
miles per gallon of gas.  And at the Detroit Auto Show -- right now, right
now -- GM is showing a family sedan that uses electric hybrid technology --
that is, electricity plus fuel -- to get the equivalent of 80 miles a
gallon.  (Applause.)

     These kinds of vehicles will be rolling off the assembly line soon.  I
am proud we supported their development through the Partnership for the
Next Generation of Vehicles that we established with the UAW and the auto
makers back in '93 that the Vice President oversaw for us for eight years.
But it's going to get better.

     We are also funding research at the Department of Agriculture into
biofuels, which most of you know as ethanol.  But you can make fuel out of
anything.  You can make it out of grasses, out of rice hulls, out of any
kind of waste product from farms.  The real problems with it today, it
takes seven gallons of gasoline to make eight gallons of biofuel.  But we
are doing research to try to crack the chemical mystery that is the
equivalent of how we made gasoline from unrefined petroleum, from oil.  And
when we do -- and they're getting very close -- you will be able to make
eight gallons of biofuel with one gallon of
gasoline, which means everybody will be able to get the equivalent of 500
miles to the gallon of gasoline.

     And this environmental issue will me much less formidable than it is
today.  And we will guarantee the future of the auto industry in Michigan
by doing what is right for the environment, not pretending there is no
challenge.  That's what we've got to do.  (Applause.)

     Now, let me say to all of you -- I love all these statistics, it's
just nice to have a good story to tell.  (Laughter.)  But this is about
more than the statistics, it's about more than money.  I think there is a
new feeling in America of possibility, that we are prepared for the 21st
century, that we can meet the big challenges that are still out there, that
we can seize the opportunities that are still out there.  And I hope one
reason is that we understand that we need each other more and we have to
work together more.

     One of the things that really bothered me when I ran for president in
1992 is how much politics had become a matter of subtraction and division
rather than addition and multiplication.  What do I mean by that?
Politicians always assume that they need a wedge issue to divide people,
and then they wanted their supporters to be more inflamed and madder than
the other people's supporters.  And they hoped that the other people's
supporters, if you could attack your opponent enough, would get
disillusioned and wouldn't show up for votes.  So they were trying to
divide and subtract.

     I always thought life worked better when you were trying to add and
multiply, and I still believe that.  I believe that one of the fundamental
facts of the modern world is that we are growing more and more
interdependent within our communities, our nation and beyond our borders.
I believe that, therefore, successful social work, including economics, is
becoming more and more like winning a national basketball championship.
It's a team sport.  I don't care how good a star you are; if the other four
walk off the court, you're whipped.  (Laughter.)  I don't care how good you
are.  (Applause.)  Five on one, the five win.

     Now, we have to think about this more.  I am immensely gratified that
this generation of young people I think understands that better than
they've gotten credit for.  I've never understood all this Generation X
talk and how young people are selfish and self-seeking.  In Michigan State
alone, 150 students have participated in AmeriCorps since we've had that
program, out of 150,000 nationwide.  (Applause.)  We've had more young
people do community service in AmeriCorps and earn some money to go on to
college in six years than we had in the first 30 years of the Peace Corps.
The young people of this country understand that they have to build a
common future together.  They understand that we have to find what's common
about us across all the racial and religious and other lines that divide
us.

     And that's the last thought I want to leave with you.  I've just given
you a speech mostly about economics today and about the related progress
we've made in other areas.  But if somebody said to me, you've got to just
leave America with one wish, believe it or not, more than wanting us to be
continually successful economically, I would say we have to be one America.
We have to reach out across all these lines that divide us.  We have to
celebrate our differences.  (Applause.)  And I hope you will do that.

     Now, one thing I will not claim is to have solved all the problems.
You've got big problems out there, or challenges.  You've got to deal with
the aging of America.  When the baby boomers like me retire, there's going
to be a bunch of us.  And you can't have Social Security and Medicare and
the cost of our retirement bankrupt our children's ability to raise their
grandchildren.  We didn't finish that work, but we made it easier by
putting 25 years on Medicare and putting -- we're up to 54 years with
Social Security now.  We did a good job.  If we save the money that we're
piling up on Social Security, we save 54 years on Social Security.

     So we didn't solve global warming, but we made a good dent in it.  We
haven't solved all the economic problems of the inner cities, the Indian
reservations, the rural communities that have been left behind, but we left
America with the tools to do it.

     And what I want to ask all of you to do is to think about where we are
now and where we were eight years ago.  And then, imagine in your own mind
-- do what I did eight years ago, especially the young people -- imagine
where you would like America to be 10 years from now.  Where would you like
Michigan to be 10 years from now?  What do you think it would take to get
you there?  I can tell you that no matter what strategy you adopt, you will
have to continue to invest in people, to put education first, to care about
balancing work and family, to care about balancing business and labor, to
care about balancing the economy and the environment.

     And if we think about the future with those sorts of basic values and
never forgetting our mutual need for one another, and that America wins
when we treat every single endeavor like a team sport, the best days of
this country are still ahead.

     Thank you and God bless you.  (Applause.)


     END  2:12 P.M. EST


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