Press Briefing by Joe Lockhart (7/26/00)
                              THE WHITE HOUSE

                       Office of the Press Secretary

                                                                  For
Immediate Release                             July 26, 2000


                              PRESS BRIEFING
                                    BY
                               JOE LOCKHART

                     The James S. Brady Briefing Room


2:45 P.M. EDT


     MR. LOCKHART:  Good afternoon, everyone.  I think for those of you who
didn't get a chance to listen to the President's statement and lengthy Q
and A, he covered most of the math, but if there are any other subjects, I
will be glad to take them on.

     Q    Joe, one of the things the President did say was that
individually some of the Republicans tax bills have a lot of appeal.  We
didn't follow up on it, but do any of them have enough appeal to pursue
without a deal on prescription drugs individually?

     MR. LOCKHART:  Well, I mean, if you look at some of the things -- if
you could fix the targeting of the tax proposal so that it isn't so heavily
weighted towards the wealthiest of Americans, there are good public policy
reasons for parts of these tax.  I mean, if you look at the pension bill,
there is certainly -- it's a good public policy goal to try to enhance
personal saving.

     But you have to look at both how they do the individual bills and how
they all add up.  And the problem is, by and large, in almost every piece
of tax legislation they say they're going to send down here it is poorly
targeting, it provides a massive amount of tax relief for the top 1 percent
of Americans and very little tax relief for the rest, the middle class, in
this country.

     And when you take them all as a whole it completely spends the surplus
and leaves us in a position, having worked so hard to get to a position of
surpluses and paying off the national debt, unable to meet that goal.

     Q    You must mentioned the pensions bill, is that one that -- pardon
me, because I don't know enough about it -- but is it targeted enough to
please you?  I mean, does that work for you?

     MR. LOCKHART:  I think if you look at that bill there are significant
problems in how the targeting is constructed.  But I think the President
indicated he's willing to work with the Congress.  We have a very robust
tax cut program that provides tax relief, that is very well targeted and is
affordable and allows us to provide for prescription drugs, make the
investments we need to in education, and even provides some insurance
against things that we can't expect at this point.  That's the right way to
do it.  But we're willing to work with Congress if they want to come in an
do this in a real way, as opposed to the way they've chose to move forward
in this session.

     Q    Joe, if the President got an acceptable tax cut does he still
need to see the whole picture of what the final end game will be before he
can sign one?  Or if he got a fairly substantial, say, marriage tax penalty
cut, could he sign that without knowing everything that's going on in the
budget picture?

     MR. LOCKHART:  Listen, I think the president said that he was will to
sign marriage tax if they could couple it with the prescription drugs.
Because that way we could provide relief, although it isn't as targeted as
well as it could be, but also move on a significant part of the President's
agenda, which is prescription drugs within the medicare system.

     But I think if these are going to continue to come down in the way
that they are they don't have much chance of getting the President's
approval for the very reason that we have no way of knowing how they all
fit together and how they all add up.

     Q    I don't understand that answer completely.  I mean, you said that
that exchange that he offered with prescription drugs and marriage tax
penalties, okay.  But what I'm wondering is if there is an individual tax
cut that he thinks is a good idea,  would he sign that without seeing how
everything adds up?

     MR. LOCKHART:  Well, he -- I think the President indicated that he's
not interested in having a total tax cut plan that they put forward, both
in the last two Congresses, come down piece by piece.  Each of the pieces
of legislation that they've passed are not acceptable, both for the overall
drain on the surplus and because of the way they're constructed and the way
they're targeted.  If they have some different ideas the best thing for
them to do would be to come down here, we can talk about them and move
forward.

     Q    Joe, it seems like the President is sort of saying, to use the
colloquial phrase, "my way or the highway," that he wants everything
together, except if you won't give me that, I'll take marriage penalty
along with prescription drugs, and I'll take emerging markets or new
markets relief, as well, but just these ones I won't take and these ones --
do you think it's a consistent position the President is taking?

     MR. LOCKHART:  Listen, the President -- Congress has taken the view
that things don't have to add up, that they can just pass things one at a
time, and hopefully it will all work out.  The President doesn't have that
luxury.  The President is the one person who has to make sure that it does
add up.  And I'll harken back to recent history when other presidents
didn't take that view and we had $5 trillion in national debt because of
it.

     This President has taken a different view, he's held the line against
either -- whether it be risky tax cuts or spending that we can't afford,
and we have trillions of dollars in surplus now projected to show for it.
So I think you could reverse that question and say, why aren't the
Republicans willing to come down and work with us, why is it their way or
the highway.  We're going to find out in the next couple of months whether
they are willing to work with us to provide real tax relief, more on the
lines that target it to the people in this country who deserve tax relief,
and not target it to the top 1 percent of this country.  We'll find out
whether they're willing to do that.

     Q    Joe, other than the pensions bill, which of the other bills, the
other individual tax bills do you think might be most amenable to
renegotiation and, therefore, to an outcome that you might be able to
accept?

     MR. LOCKHART:  Listen, we have our own marriage penalty proposal that
we believe targets -- is affordable and is targeted to those who actually
pay a marriage penalty.  The Republican bill puts marriage penalty in the
title so that they can disguise the fact that they're providing another tax
break for not only people who pay the marriage penalty, but the people who
actually get a marriage bonus.  It's a disguised way of just playing around
with the tax code.  So we have our own proposal on that.  We've sent up
pension ideas that we think make more sense than what the Republican
leadership has sent down, and there's a whole series of other -- I mean,
look at the President's own tax proposal from the budget and from the State
of the Union.  There's targeted relief in there for a series of things:
long-term care, college education -- these are things that we would like to
work with Congress on to get passed.

     Q    Joe, do you want to go back to the math and how it all adds up?
The President emphasized that if you take this year's plus last year's, it
adds up to $1.8 trillion, and that's too much.

     MR. LOCKHART:  Right.

     Q    But if you look at last year's, a big chunk of last year's is an
across-the-board tax deduction of almost $500 billion.  I don't hear anyone
on the Hill talking about an across-the-board tax increase.  So isn't it
kind of disingenuous for him to take this year's and last year's and
include items that are not even hot on the Hill right now?

     MR. LOCKHART:  I don't think so.  Listen, if we wanted to take a
bigger number, we could take George W. Bush's tax cut, which is even bigger
than this, even riskier and even less affordable.  These are what they have
put forward.  And one of the things you've got to look at -- and we've
talked about how it doesn't add up -- they've currently got several pieces
of legislation that undercut each other in their Social Security tax repeal
bill.

     They talk about how they're going to put money back in Medicare
because that money will be available, but if they pass all their tax cuts,
that money wouldn't be available; so the money isn't there.  That's why
he's saying, let's take a step back, let's look at all of the bills
together, let's look at a budget.  I mean, what's going on in
Appropriations should give everyone pause, because they're taking money and
they're already playing the shell games that we saw from last year, where
they're taking money out of other areas, but we don't know from what yet,
and let's see how it all adds up and then we can provide tax relief.

     Q    But, Joe, isn't it a little misleading?  I mean, the American
people hear the number $1.8 trillion and, yet, that includes tax cuts that
the Republicans have no intention of ever sending to them.

     MR. LOCKHART:  They've already sent it to us -- they passed this, and
this is what they want.  We happened to veto it.

     Q    They passed it, but it's not on the table this year.  It includes
billions of dollars, hundreds of billions of dollars that's just not on the
table this year.

     MR. LOCKHART:  I don't think it's misleading.  We're looking at what
they've done in this Congress, and this is what they've said their priority
is, and we're taking them at their word.

     Q    Yes, but, Joe, you can't veto a bill that isn't in existence, and
you're including in this $1.8 trillion or whatever the amount is --

     MR. LOCKHART:  Listen, we're including --

     Q    Isn't that playing politics, too?  You are using a number that
really does not exist in legislation.

     MR. LOCKHART:  Well, there's legislation that came down here that
didn't become law because the President wouldn't let it happen.

     Q    From last year.

     MR. LOCKHART:  That is correct.  And that's why we said, this
Congress.

     Q    Also, the Treasury-Postal -- apparently there's some deal being
struck to add the telephone excise tax repeal and minimum wage hike to that
appropriations as a sweetener.  Would the President consider signing such
spending?

     MR. LOCKHART:  Well, listen, we're going to have to see what deal
they're thinking of cutting.  But I'll tell you, like I said, it should
give some pause.  Because they're talking about adding a billion dollars or
more to that.  The question is, where is that going to come from in the
end?  Is that going to come out of cops money?  Is that going to come out
of school construction money?  Is that going to come out of money that we
use to protect the environment?  We don't know that, and before -- until
and unless we get answers to that, we can't make a decision.

     Q    Joe, the Republicans in Congress obviously think that the
piecemeal approach, offering up these bite-size tax cuts -- for the estate
taxes, the marriage penalty, the pension -- is good politics.  Is the
President confident that if the Republicans do send that stuff down here,
he can win the political battle by --

     MR. LOCKHART:  I think the President's confident that the public
understands the value of fiscal discipline, because they're reaping the
benefit of it now in lower interest rates on their homes, on their cars; in
strong economic growth, 21 million new jobs.  And they recognize that
because they'll be able to do the math.  And our task here is to -- if the
Republicans want to disguise the math, our job is to expose the math.  And
that's what the President was doing today, and that's what we'll continue
to do.

     Q    A question on the ADA.  Is the President in any way concerned
about the way the law has been applied, or its impact on small businesses?

     MR. LOCKHART:  I'm not aware of any concern on that particular front
from the President.

     Q    There's a bill up on the Hill that would require people to give
90 days notice before filing a lawsuit.  It's designed to combat people
that have filed more than 100 lawsuits over signs and parking lots and
things like that.  Do you know if the administration supports that?

     MR. LOCKHART:  I don't know.  I can check on that.

     Q    Joe, the community reinvestment act, the version in the Senate,
sponsored by Santorum and Lieberman, Sperling and Podesta yesterday said
the clause in that regarding faith-based charities is a little too broad.
Is there any specific, you know -- what specific part of that is too broad?
What are you specifically worried about?

     MR. LOCKHART:  I'm not familiar with the particulars within CRA, but I
know we did a lot of work in a bill that the House passed yesterday on New
Markets where we believe there is a limited role to pursue this policy with
these kinds of groups.  But that if it's not drawn in a very distinct way
it raises constitutional questions.  So I am certain that the work that
needs to be done on that is along the same lines as New Markets.

     Q    And do you think you'll be able to accomplish that before --

     MR. LOCKHART:  Well, we were certainly able to accomplish it to both
our satisfaction and Congressional leaders in the House, as far as New
Markets.  So certainly that should serve as some kind of road map or guide
map to doing it.

     Q    Back on the ABA, Clint Eastwood says that lawyers can too easily
take advantage of a law saying, for example, that they can collect fees the
day that suit is filed.  Do you think the law can, or should be, amended to
--

     MR. LOCKHART:  Listen, we should look at legitimate complaints that
are raised here.  But I don't know on this particular legislation.  I know
that he was in town some months ago testifying on this.  But I don't know
exactly what form the legislation has taken, or where we are on that.

     Q    Joe, back on the CRA, you said you worked closely with the House
on the specific part of the New Markets initiative.  Do you anticipate that
you will be able to work just as well with the Senate on this one, so that
you can get it passed by the end of September?

     MR. LOCKHART:  Well, certainly, CRA is an important program that the
President has staked a lot on in the past.  So I expect we will work hard
on that.

     Thank you very much.

                            END                 2:55 P.M. EDT



President and First Lady | Vice President and Mrs. Gore
Record of Progress | The Briefing Room
Gateway to Government | Contacting the White House | White House for Kids
White House History | White House Tours | Help
Privacy Statement

Help

Site Map

Graphic Version

T H E   W H I T E   H O U S E