Remarks of the President in Louisville, Kentucky (10/31/00)
                                THE WHITE HOUSE

                         Office of the Press Secretary
                             (Louisville, Kentucky)
      ______________________________________________________________
                 For Immediate Release    October 31, 2000


                            REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
                    TO KENTUCKY DEMOCRATIC PARTY SUPPORTERS

                           duPont Manual High School
                                  Louisville, Kentucky


3:45 P.M. EST


     THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you very, very much.  Thank you.  (Applause.)
Let me say first of all, did Eleanor give a good speech, or what?  Amazing.
(Applause.)  You know, I have some passing experience at these kinds of
events.  (Laughter.)  And I was sitting there thinking, this girl is good.
She is really good.  (Applause.)

     I want to say more about her in a moment, but I also want to tell you
how honored I am to be back in Kentucky with your great Governor, Paul
Patton, and his wife, Judi, who have been such good friends of mine.
(Applause.)  My longtime friend who had so much to do with much of the good
things that Al Gore and I were able to accomplish in Washington -- Senator
Wendell Ford.  We miss you.  Thank you.  (Applause.)  With your great Mayor
who owes some of his success to the fact that he and I were born in the
same little town in Arkansas -- Hope, Arkansas.  Thank you so much, Dave
Armstrong, for doing a good job here.  (Applause.)

     I thank your State Party Chair, Nikki Patton, for being here, and for
all you Democrats who have showed up to hear a guy who is not running for
anything this year.  (Laughter.)  I want to thank our young president of
the School Young Democrats here, Rashid Sheth.  Didn't he do a good job
today?  (Applause.)

     And I want to thank Charlie Owen for chairing the Gore-Lieberman
campaign.  But I'm especially here, as all of you know, to support Eleanor
Jordan.  She represents the best in our party, the best in our country and
what we need for the future of our Congress.  (Applause.)

     You know, Kentucky has been awfully good to me.  I was standing up
here on the stage thinking about the first time I came to Kentucky as a
governor -- listen to this -- in 1979.  I served with six Kentucky
governors, counting Governor Patton, who has been with me this whole time
in the White House, and I love this state, and you have been so good to me.
(Applause.)

     You've been so good to me and Hillary and Al and Tipper Gore.  You
voted for us twice, given us a chance to serve America.  And you know, the
temptation in a rally like this where it's hot and we're all committed --
(laughter) -- is just sort of give one of these hallelujah speeches and go
on and get out of here, you know, because we all know that we're for
Eleanor and we're for Al and Joe and we know why we're here.

     But let's face it.  All over America and here in Kentucky, these races
are close.  And I believe they're close because times are good and people
are relaxed, and everybody running seems like  a nice person and they all
sound good.

     We've taken a lot of the poison out of America's life.  And I'm proud
of that and I'm glad that we're not having all that poison.  (Applause.)
But nonetheless, it is quite important that we acknowledge that, not just
Democrats but Republicans are good people who love their country and will
do what they think is right, and we ought to be in a good humor in this
election year, because we're a better country and a stronger country and a
healthier country than we were eight years ago.

     But that does not mean that just because things are going so well and
we're all being nice that there are no differences, that there are no
consequences, and that we don't have to show up on election day.

     So what I would like to ask you to do is just indulge me one more time
for a few minutes and let me make the arguments that I hope you will go out
across this district and across this great state, and to your friends
beyond the borders of Kentucky and share with them between now and election
day why they ought to vote, what the stakes are, and what the consequences
are.  Because I believe in profound ways that this election is every bit as
important as the one which sent Al Gore and me to the White House eight
years ago.  (Applause.)

     Why do I say that?  Because we've done everything we could do to turn
the country around and move it forward, to pull it together.  But all the
best things are still out there.  We have a chance for the first time in my
lifetime to conduct a national referendum on our dreams.

     Eleanor talked -- had that wonderful quote -- about dreams.  We have
never in my lifetime had this much prosperity, this much social progress,
the absence of domestic crisis and foreign threat to our security.  We can
use this election to dream our dreams and decide how to get there.  But in
order to do it, we have to be quite clear not on saying our opponents are
bad folks, but saying we have honest differences.  And here are the
consequences to those decisions.  So then the people can go and vote, and
all of us can accept the result happily as democracy working.

     But those of us who have strong convictions about who should be
President, who should be Vice President, who should be senator or
congressman, we can't let the next seven days go by without doing
everything we can to make sure that all of our fellow citizens understand
how important it is that they go to the polls and how important it is that
they understand the real and honest differences.

     Now, look at eight years ago, when you gave Al Gore and me a chance to
go to Washington.  We had an economy in terrible trouble, a society
profoundly divided, a political system that was paralyzed.  And we asked
you to give us a chance to go up there and give the government back to you.
To provide opportunity for every responsible citizen.  To create a society
in which we were more of a community, in which we didn't run our national
politics trying to divide one group against another, but saying that we all
have to go forward together.  In which we reached out to this amazing new
world we're living in and had America as a friend and a supporter of peace
and freedom and prosperity everywhere, and where it would help us here at
home.
And I think you'd all agree it's worked pretty well.  (Applause.)

     In 1993, when I took the oath of office, unemployment in Kentucky was
6.3 percent; today it's 3.8 percent.  (Applause.)  As Eleanor said, we have
nationally over 22 million new jobs, over 300,000 here in Kentucky; the
lowest poverty rate in 20 years, child poverty reduced by a third, the
lowest unemployment in 30 years, the lowest African American unemployment
ever recorded, the lowest female unemployment in 40 years, the longest
economic expansion in history, and the highest home ownership ever.  That
is the difference in now and eight years ago.  (Applause.)

     Question number one:  Should we keep this prosperity going and extend
it to people in places that are left behind?  (Applause.)  What is the
Gore, Lieberman, Jordan proposal?  Keep paying down the debt; keep interest
rates low; keep the economy going; take what's left, invest it in education
and health care and give the people a tax cut we can afford.  (Applause.)

     Now, Eleanor's opponent and the others, they say we've got a surplus
-- we'll give three-quarters in a tax cut, and spend a lot of money and
privatize Social Security, and well, so what if we go into deficit a little
bit.  I'll tell you what, so what.  If we keep paying this debt down,
interest rates will be a percent lower every year for a decade.  Do you
know what that's worth to the American people -- $390 billion in lower home
mortgages, $30 billion in lower car payments, $15 billion in lower college
loan payments, lower business loans, more jobs, more growth, a stronger
economy.  It's a clear choice.  (Applause.)  If you want to keep the
prosperity going, vote for Eleanor Jordan for Congress.  (Applause.)

     This is about more than money, and more than economics.  We have the
lowest welfare rolls in 32 years, the lowest crime rates in 26 years.  Teen
pregnancy and drug abuse are down.  There are fewer people without health
insurance for the first time in a dozen years, thanks to the Children's
Health Insurance Program that was in the balanced budget law that we fought
so hard for.

     Our schools are getting better, the dropout rate is down, math and
reading scores are up all over the country -- with Kentucky leading the
way, I might add -- failing schools are turning around.  Thank you,
Governor Patton.  (Applause.)  We have opened the doors of the first two
years of college to everybody with the HOPE scholarships and the biggest
increase in college aid since the G.I. Bill and the college-going rate is
at an all-time high.

     And while we've had record economic growth, the environment has
steadily gotten better.  The air is cleaner, the water is cleaner, 43
million more Americans breathing air that meets federal standards -- 43
million.  (Applause.)  The drinking water is safer, the food is safer,
we've cleaned up three times as many toxic dumps as the previous
administration did in 12 years, and we've set aside more land than any
administration since Theodore Roosevelt nearly 100 years ago.  Now, that's
the record.  (Applause.)

     So, the second big question.  Should we build on this record of
progress with -- on the environmental record with a long-term energy
strategy that gets us out of the fix we've been worried about the last few
months, with new sources of energy and more conservation.  Should we build
on the health care strategy by giving health insurance to the children's
parents that we've insured; if we've insured the children, shouldn't their
parents be able to have insurance?  (Applause.)

     Shouldn't we have a patients' bill of rights?  Shouldn't we have a
Medicare drug program that all our seniors can afford?  (Applause.)
Shouldn't we open the doors of four years of college education; shouldn't
every state have to do what Kentucky does, which is to turn around their
failing schools or put them under new management so that all of our kids
can learn?  Shouldn't we provide more teachers for our classrooms and
modern schools?  In other words, should we build on this progress, or
should we say, well, who cares if we've gotten results, we're going to
change the crime policy, we're going to weaken the environmental laws,
we're going to abandon the education strategy, and we're going to abandon
the health care strategy.  This is a clear choice.  I think we should build
on the progress.  That's why you need Eleanor Jordan and Al Gore and Joe
Lieberman.  (Applause.)

     Then there's a different larger question which is harder to put into
words, but I thin it's important, which is are we going to become a
stronger community?  Are we going to keep growing together?  We have put an
end to the idea that there ought to be class divisions or economic
divisions or gender divisions or any other kind of divisions in America.
My whole theory is if somebody shows up and says, I'm willing to work hard
and I'm willing to obey the law, that's good enough for me.  I don't have
to know anything else.  You're part of America.  (Applause.)

     So every day we get a chance to advance the goal of one America.
That's why we ought to raise the minimum wage.  That's why we ought to pass
the bill to enforce the equal pay laws for women more strongly.
(Applause.)  That's why we ought to pass the hate crimes legislation.  I
think it's important -- and end racial -- (applause.)

     Now, let me tell you what this election is not about.  It is not about
whether the Democrats are for big government.  They all talk about that big
government thing -- let me just tell you that -- you heard it all in the
debates and all that.  Here's the record.  Under Al Gore's leadership for
the reinventing government program we have reduced the size of the
bureaucracy by 300,000.  It's the smallest it's been since 1960.  That's
the fact.  (Applause.)  We have reduced -- yes, we're for this ergonomics
rule, and I'll say more about that in a minute.  But we've gotten rid of
16,000 pages of unnecessary government regulations.  We have reduced by
two-thirds the number of regulations the states and the school districts
have to deal with under the Federal Aid to Education Act alone.

     So when you hear people talking about this is big government versus
little government, man, they're talking about something that didn't happen.
(Applause.)  In fact, government will be smaller under our proposal than
under theirs.  Why?  Because the third biggest item in the federal budget
is what -- interest on the debt.  There's Social Security, defense,
interest on the debt.  We spend more on interest on the debt than we spend
on Medicare, or education, or the environment.

     If we get rid of the debt, which is what       the Democrats want to
do -- that's the Gore-Lieberman program -- you won't be spending that 12
cents on the dollar.  That leaves a lot of money for education, health
care, tax relief, and smaller government.  (Applause.)

     The second thing this thing is not about -- this election is not about
whether we're not bipartisan and they are, and they want to bring everybody
together and we don't.  Look, we have -- you know, I'm pretty easy to get
along with.  I'm an easy-going guy.  (Laughter.)  After the people elected
a Republican majority in Congress, look what we did.  We adopted a
bipartisan welfare reform law.  We adopted a bipartisan balanced budget.
We adopted a bipartisan telecommunications law that created thousands of
businesses, hundreds of thousands of jobs, and had the Vice President's
e-rate program, which has allowed us to connect 95 percent of the schools,
even the poorest ones, to the Internet.  We've done a lot of stuff in a
bipartisan way.

     We just had a bipartisan bill for the biggest amount of funds ever to
buy lands to protect them forever in the history of the country.  We do a
lot of things in a bipartisan way.  (Applause.)  But being bipartisan to me
means getting together and making an honorable compromise.  It doesn't mean
being run over by partisan, polarizing policies.  (Applause.)

     Now, last night, after we made a lot of progress in this session, last
night I had to veto the bill that funds the Congress and the White House.
And I'll tell you why.  (Applause.)  I did not want to sign a bill that
funded the White House and the Congress when they won't send me a bill that
funds our schools, our children, our education, and our future.
(Applause.)

     I want you to play close attention to this because this is what this
election is about -- especially right here in Louisville.  A couple of days
ago, at 1:00 a.m. in the morning, the Democrats and the Republicans reached
an agreement on an education and a labor budget.  It was an historic
agreement.  It would have provided the biggest increase ever for more
teachers, smaller classes, modernized schools, hooking up the rest of our
schools to the Internet, double the funds for after-school programs so that
all of our latch-key kids can be in school learning and doing something
constructive, put more funds in to help other states follow Kentucky's lead
to identify failing schools and turn them around or put them under new
management.  It's a fabulous bill.

     And the Republicans wanted some things and we went along with them.
Also had a huge increase in college aid.  Now, they had some things in
there we didn't like, and when the House passed this bill, Eleanor's
opponent put on a proposal to block a worker safety rule that I want to put
in, that would protect workers from stress related management.  Now, they
say this is going to cost business a lot of money.  But the truth is that
600,000 people lose time from work every year because of repetitive stress
injuries on the job.  And that costs business about $50 billion a year.

     Who are these people?  The worker who types on a keyboard eight hours
a day; the cashier who scans your food in a neighborhood grocery store.
Today there are some workers with us who suffer from repetitive stress
injury, after years of service as keyboard operators at Bell Atlantic.
They're here today.  Raise your hands.  Thank you for being here.
(Applause.)

     There's also a cashier who suffers from carpal tunnel syndrome after
years at the register.  Now, there are 600,000 people like this.  They're
your fellow citizens.  Our proposal, which Eleanor supports, would save
these businesses $9 billion a year.  It wouldn't cost them money, it would
save them money because with better work rules they wouldn't be injured and
they'd be there working every day.  And it would also save workers the pain
and suffering associated with 300,000 injuries every single year.

     This is not about money alone.  It's about a mother who can no longer
pick up her child, a father who can't toss a baseball with his son anymore.
So we're fighting for this worker safety rule.

     Now, here's what happened.  They come and say, you can't have your
education money unless you agree to killing this worker safety rule.  So we
said, this is ridiculous.  We're having an election.  The Democrats are for
this, the Republicans are against it.  We offered an honorable compromise.
We said if they would give us some more money for education I would put in
the rule, but we would delay its impact.  So if they can convince the
American people this is a terrible thing, they would then have a few months
after the beginning of the year to try to undo the rule -- which they can
do, but then they have to show evidence that they're right.  They can't
just do it kind of when nobody is looking.

     I said, if you're going to undo this, do it in the daylight where
everybody can see what's going on here, and let's hear the argument.
(Applause.)  But, look, I'll be out of there by January 20th, and the
Republicans will be elated -- (laughter) -- and we're having an election.
So, okay, I'll put it in, but I know you can undo it, so I'll just delay
the impact of it for a few months, and if you want to undo it, you can, but
do it in the ordinary course of business.

     And the Republicans said, okay.  So they said, you do this for us,
we'll give you your school money.  We shook hands on it at 1:00 a.m. in the
morning.  Everybody was as happy as a clam.  The next day, the Republicans
go to the Republican caucus, and Mr. DeLay, their leader, who says -- says
no, no, no, we can't do this; our lobbyists are hysterical.  Never mind the
52 million school kids and what they get out of this, our lobbyists don't
like this and we will not do it.  We want it exactly like Eleanor's
opponent put it in.  And if we can't get what Eleanor's opponent wants,
then the 52 million school kids can't get their help.

     AUDIENCE:  Booo!

     THE PRESIDENT:  Now, this is the way it works in Washington -- not the
way it works out here.  And I'm not blaming all the Republicans.  The
people that negotiated that with us deserve the thanks of their country.
They did it in good faith.  And I'm telling you, we've got -- look, we've
got a bipartisan agreement on the minimum wage, but it's not law yet.  We
got a bipartisan agreement on the patients' bill of rights.  We could get a
bipartisan majority for a Medicare prescription drug program.  I could go
on and on and on.  But the leadership won't let it happen.

     The leadership is sticking with Eleanor's opponent, and says that the
52 million school children of this country, including every one of them
here in Louisville, including everyone standing on this stage with me
today, if they need this help, that's too bad.  You do it our way or no
dice -- after we made an agreement with them.

     So you have to know that's the way it works there.  So when you vote
for Eleanor Jordan, if just six more congressional districts do what you
did, then we won't have to worry about Mr. DeLay anymore running the United
States Congress.  (Applause.)  And look, I want to say again, this is not
about bipartisanship.  I won't be there, but the Democrats will work with
the Republicans.  We're not right about everything; they're not wrong about
everything.  A lot of Americans vote with them, too.  We've got to work
together.  But you've got to understand that the leadership in Congress is
way to the right of Republicans in the country that would ever work with
the Democrats and the independents to get things done.

     And if they get a call from one of those big lobbyists that says, I'm
sorry, you can't do this, they say, I'm sorry, we can't do this.  And they
said, we've got to have it just like Eleanor's opponent wanted it or no
dice for the school kids of America.  Now, that's what they said.

     So you remember that.  And you go out -- I wouldn't keep that a secret
from the voters in this congressional district for the next week if I were
you.  I believe you ought to go out there and tell them.  If you want to
protect the worker safety and health, and if you want to promote the
education of our children, you better send Eleanor Jordan to Congress, and
make sure we have different leaders in the United States Congress in the
next two years.  (Applause.)

     Look, when Vice President Gore says in these speeches, you ain't seen
nothing yet, I expect maybe some Americans hear that and they think, well,
that sounds political, you know, he wants to be President.  But I'm not
running for anything, and I believe that.  I believe that.  I believe if
you vote to keep the prosperity going and expand it to people who aren't
part of it, instead of voting to reverse economic course and go back to the
bad old days of deficits, I believe if you vote to build on this evidence
of progress in every area of our society, instead of reverse the policies
that have helped us achieve it, you will be free to think about the big
things.  I think we can save Social Security and Medicare for the baby boom
generation, and add that prescription drug benefit, and not bankrupt the
baby boomers' children and grandchildren.  (Applause.)

     I believe we can give the largest and most diverse group of school
kids in American history ever the finest education.  There need be no more
failing schools.  We now know something we didn't know 20 years ago, when I
started working on this.  We know how to turn these schools around.  I
believe that we can provide health insurance to working families in this
country and to people who retire at 55 and can't get Medicare yet.  And I
believe we can have this Medicare drug program.  I believe we can get this
country out of debt for the first time since 1835, and keep this thing
going.  We can do this.  (Applause.)

     We can solve these long-term energy and environment problems.  We can
do more to balance work and family.  We can have a tax cut that helps
people with child care and retirement and paying for their kids' college
education.  We can continue to build one America.  We can do these big, big
things.  But we have to make the right decisions on the basic questions:
Are we going to build on the prosperity or reverse course?  Are we going to
build on the progress or take down the policies that achieved it?  Are we
going to continue to grow as one America, or are we going to have the
policies of division, no matter how soothing the rhetoric is?

     These are the big challenges before America.  You look at Eleanor
Jordan.  I want to tell you something.  She'd be the second former welfare
recipient in the United States Congress.  (Applause.)  America -- we say
we're a country that believes in giving everybody a chance.  She got one
and she took it.  (Applause.)  She's got her family members here, including
her sister who worked in our administration.  This is a family that proves
that America's promise can be alive and real.  And her great burden for
which they called her those bad political names is that she simply believes
everybody ought to have the same chance that God gave her in life, that
America gave her.  (Applause.)

     Folks, I will say again, I know I could stand up here and give you all
those hoop-di-doo lines, but you need to think about this.  This is a close
race.  And it's a close race nationally.  And every one of you has friends
that may or may not vote.  Every one of you has lots of friends who have
never been to an event like this.  Am I right?  Never been to hear a
President talk or a governor talk, or somebody running for Congress.  But
they love their country, they consider themselves patriots.  If they have a
good reason they'll go vote, or they're going to vote, but they may not
know what the differences are yet.

     So you've got seven days.  Seven good days, that every day you can
find somebody to say, you know why you ought to vote for Eleanor Jordan and
Al Gore and Joe Lieberman?  Because we want to keep the prosperity going.
We don't want to reverse it, because we want to build on the progress of
the last eight years, we don't want to abandon it.  Because we want to go
forward together.  Because all the best stuff is still out there.  But
you've got to make the big decisions right.  You go tell them those three
things, she'll be celebrating next week.

     Thank you and God bless you.  (Applause.)


END                                                   4:14 P.M. EST


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