President Bill Clinton
CLINTON: Mr. Chairman, Mr. Vice President, my fellow
Democrats, and my fellow Americans, thank you for your
nomination. I...
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... don't know if I can find a fancy way to say this, but I
accept.
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Thank you.
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So many -- so many have contributed to the record we have
made for the American people, but one above all: My partner, my
friend, and the best vice president in our history -- Al Gore.
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Tonight -- tonight, I thank the city of Chicago, its great
mayor and its wonderful people for this magnificent convention.
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I love Chicago for many reasons -- for your powerful spirit,
your sports teams, your lively politics, but most of all for the
love and light of my life -- Chicago's daughter, Hillary.
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CLINTON: I love you.
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You and I set forth on a journey to bring our vision to our
country, to keep the American dream alive for all who are
willing to work for it, to make our American community stronger,
to keep America the world's strongest force for peace and
freedom and prosperity.
Four years ago, with high unemployment, stagnant wages,
crime, welfare and the deficit on the rise, with a host of unmet
challenges and a rising tide of cynicism, I told you about a
place I was born, and I told you I still believed in a place
called Hope.
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Well, for four years now, to realize our vision, we have
pursued a simple but profound strategy -- opportunity for all,
responsibility from all, a strong united American community.
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Four days ago...
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... as you were making your way here, I began a train ride to
make my way to Chicago through America's heartland.
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CLINTON: I wanted to see the faces, I wanted to hear the
voices of the people for whom I have worked and fought these
last four years. And did I ever see them.
I met an ingenious businesswoman who was once on welfare in
West Virginia; a brave police officer shot and paralyzed, now a
civic leader in Kentucky.
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An auto worker in Ohio, once unemployed, now proud to be
working in the oldest auto plant in America to help make America
number one in auto production again for the first time in 20
years.
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I met a grandmother fighting for her grandson's environment
in Michigan.
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And I stood with two wonderful little children proudly
reading from their favorite book, "The Little Engine That
Could."
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At every stop large and exuberant crowds greeted me and,
maybe more important, when we just rolled through little towns
there were always schoolchildren there waving their American
flags, all of them believing in America and its future.
I would not have missed that trip for all the world. For
that trip showed me that hope is back in America. We are on the
right track to the 21st century.
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Look at the facts. Just look at the facts: 4.4 million
Americans now living in a home of their own for the first time.
Hundreds of thousands of women have started their own new
businesses.
CLINTON: More minorities own businesses than ever before.
Record numbers of new small businesses and exports.
Look at what's happened. We have the lowest combined rates
of unemployment, inflation and home mortgages in 28 years.
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Look at what happened. Ten million new jobs, over half of
them high-wage jobs. Ten million workers getting the raise they
deserve with the minimum wage law.
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Twenty-five million people now having protection in their
health insurance because the Kennedy-Kassebaum bill says you
can't lose your insurance anymore when you change jobs even if
somebody in your family's been sick.
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Forty million Americans with more pension security, a tax cut
for 15 million of our hardest working, hardest pressed Americans
and all small businesses. Twelve million Americans -- 12
million of them taking advantage of the Family and Medical Leave
Law so they could be good parents and good workers.
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Ten million students have saved money on their college loans.
We are making our democracy work.
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We have also passed political reform, the line-item veto
bill, the motor voter bill, tougher registration laws for
lobbyists, making Congress live under the laws they impose on
the private sector, stopping unfunded mandates to state and
local government.
We've come a long way. We've got one more thing to do. Will
you help me get campaign finance reform in the next four years?
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We have increased our investments in research and technology.
We have increased investments in breast cancer research
dramatically. We are developing a supercomputer, a
supercomputer that will do more
calculating in a second than a person with a hand-held
calculator can do in 30,000 years.
More rapid development of drugs to deal with HIV and AIDS and
moving them to the market quicker have almost doubled life
expectancy in only four years, and we are looking at no limit in
sight to that.
We'll keep going until normal life is returned to people who
deal with this.
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CLINTON: Our country is still the strongest force for peace
and freedom on earth. On issues that once before tore us apart,
we have changed the old politics of Washington. For too long,
leaders in Washington asked, "Who's to blame?"
But we asked, "What are we going to do?"
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On crime, we're putting 100,000 police on the streets.
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We made three-strikes-and-you're-out the law of the land. We
stopped 60,000 felons, fugitives and stalkers from getting
handguns under the Brady Bill.
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We banned assault rifles.
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We supported tougher punishment and prevention programs to
keep our children from drugs and gangs and violence.
Four years now -- for four years now, the crime rate in
America has gone down.
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On welfare, we worked with states to launch a quiet
revolution. Today, there are 1.8 million fewer people on welfare
than there were the day I took the oath of office.
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We are moving people from welfare to work.
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We have increased child support collections by 40 percent.
The federal workforce is the smallest it's been since John
Kennedy. And the deficit has come down for four years in a row
for the first time since before the Civil War -- down 60
percent, on the way to zero.
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We will do it.
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We are on the right track to the 21st century. We are on the
right track, but our work is not finished.
What should we do? First, let us consider how to proceed.
Again, I say the question is no longer, "Who's to blame?"
but "What to do?"
CLINTON: I believe that Bob Dole and Jack Kemp and Ross
Perot love our country. And they have worked hard to serve it.
It is legitimate, even necessary, to compare our record with
theirs, our proposals for the future with theirs. And I expect
them to make a vigorous effort to do the same.
But I will not attack. I will not attack them personally, or
permit others to do it in this party if I can prevent it.
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My fellow Americans, this must be...
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This must be a campaign of ideas, not a campaign of insults.
The American people deserve it.
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Now, here's the main idea. I love and revere the rich and
proud history of America. And I am determined to take our best
traditions into the future. But with all respect, we do not
need to build a bridge to the past. We need to build a bridge
to the future.
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And that is what I commit to you to do.
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So tonight, let us resolve to build that bridge to the 21st
century, to meet our challenges and protect our values.
Let us build a bridge to help our parents raise their
children, to help young people and adults to get the education
and training they need, to make our streets safer, to help
Americans succeed at home and at work, to break the cycle of
poverty and dependence, to protect our environment for
generations to come, and to maintain our world leadership for
peace and freedom.
Let us resolve to build that bridge.
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Tonight, my fellow Americans, I ask all of our fellow
citizens to join me and to join you in building that bridge to
the 21st century.
CLINTON: Four years now -- from now -- just four years from
now -- think of it. We begin a new century full of enormous
possibilities. We have to give the American people the tools
they need to make the most of their God-given potential. We
must make the basic bargain of opportunity and responsibility
available to all Americans, not just a few. That is the promise
of the Democratic Party, that is the promise of America.
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I want to build a bridge to the 21st century in which we
expand opportunity through education. Where computers are as
much a part of the classroom as blackboards. Where highly
trained teachers demand peak performance from their students.
Where every eight-year-old can point to a book and say I can
read it myself.
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By the year 2000 the single most critical thing we can do is
to give every single American who wants it the chance to go to
college.
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We must make two years of college just as universal in four
years as a high school education is today. And we can do it.
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We can do it and we should cut taxes to do it.
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I propose a $1,500 a year tuition tax credit for Americans, a
Hope Scholarship for the first two years of college to make the
typical community college education available to every American.
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I believe every working family ought also to be able to
deduct up to $10,000 in college tuition costs per year for
education after that.
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CLINTON: I believe the families of this country...
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... ought to be able to save money for college in a tax-free
IRA, save it year in and year out...
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... withdraw it for a college education without penalty.
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We should not tax middle income Americans for the money they
spend on college. We'll get the money back down the road...
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... many times over.
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I want to say here before I go further that these tax cuts
and every other one I mention tonight are all fully paid for in
my balanced budget plan, line by line, dime by dime...
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... and they focus on education.
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Now, one thing so many of our fellow Americans are learning
is that education no longer stops on graduation day. I have
proposed a new GI Bill for American workers -- a $2,600 grant
for unemployed and underemployed Americans so that they can get
the training and the skills they need to go back to work at
better-paying jobs, good high- skill jobs for a good future.
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But we must demand excellence at every level of education.
We must insist that our students learn the old basics we learned
and the new basics they have to know for the next century.
Tonight let us set a clear national goal. All children
should be able to read on their own by the third grade.
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When 40 percent of our eight-year-olds cannot read as well as
they should, we have to do something. I want to send 30,000
reading specialists and National Service Corps members to
mobilize a volunteer army of one million reading tutors for
third graders all across America.
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CLINTON: They will teach our young children to read.
Let me say to our parents: You have to lead the way. Every
tired night you spend reading a book to your child will be worth
it many times over. I know that Hillary and I still talk about
the books we read to Chelsea when we were so tired we could
hardly stay awake. We still remember them. And, more important,
so does she.
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But we're going to help the parents of this country make
every child able to read for himself or herself by the age of
eight, by the third grade. Do you believe we can do that?
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Will you help us do that?
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We must give parents, all parents, the right to choose which
public school their children will attend and to let teachers
form new charter schools with a charter they can keep only if
they do a good job. We must keep our schools open late so that
young people have some place to go and something to say yes to
and stay off the street.
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We must require that our students pass tough tests to keep
moving up in school. A diploma has to mean something when they
get out.
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We should reward teachers that are doing a good job, remove
those who don't measure up. But, in every case, never forget
that none of us would be here tonight if it weren't for our
teachers. I know I wouldn't. We ought to lift them up, not
tear them down.
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We need schools that will take our children into the next
century. We need schools that are rebuilt and modernized with
an unprecedented commitment from the national government to
increase school construction, and with every single library and
classroom in America connected to the information superhighway
by the year 2000.
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CLINTON: Now folks, if we do these things, every
eight-year-old will be able to read, every 12-year-old will be
able to log in on the Internet, every 18-year-old will be able
to go to college and all Americans will have the knowledge they
need to cross that bridge to the 21st century.
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I want to build a bridge to the 21st century in which we
create a strong and growing economy to preserve the legacy of
opportunity for the next generation by balancing our budget in a
way that protects our values and ensuring that every family will
be able to own and protect the value of their most important
asset, their home.
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Tonight, let us proclaim to the American people we will
balance the budget, and let us also proclaim we will do it in a
way that preserves Medicare, Medicaid, education, the
environment, the integrity of our pensions, the strength of our
people.
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Now, last year -- last year when the Republican Congress sent
me a budget that violated those values and principles, I vetoed
it, and I would do it again tomorrow.
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I could never allow cuts that devastate education for our
children, that pollute our environment, that end the guarantee
of health care for those who are served under Medicaid, that end
our duty or violate our duty to our parents through Medicare. I
just couldn't do that.
As long as I'm president, I'll never let it happen.
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And it doesn't matter -- it doesn't matter if they try again,
as they did before, to use the blackmail threat of a shutdown of
the federal government to force these things on the American
people. We didn't let it happen before. We won't let it happen
again.
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CLINTON: Of course, there is a better answer to this
dilemma. We could have the right kind of balanced budget with a
new Congress.
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A Democratic Congress.
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I want to balance the budget with real cuts in government and
waste. I want a plan that invests in education as mine does, in
technology and yes, in research -- as Christopher Reeve so
powerfully reminded us we must do.
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And my plan gives Americans tax cuts that will help our
economy to grow. I want to expand IRAs so that young people can
save tax free to buy a first home. Tonight I propose a new tax
cut for home ownership that says to every middle income working
family in this country, if you sell your home you will not have
to pay a capital gains tax on it ever, not ever.
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I want every American to be able to hear those beautiful
words: Welcome Home.
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Let me say again. Every tax cut I call for tonight is
targeted, it's responsible and it is paid for within my balanced
budget plan. My tax cuts will not undermine our economy. They
will speed economic growth. We should cut taxes for the family
sending a child to college, for the worker returning to college,
for the family saving to buy a home or for long term health care
and a $500 per child credit for middle income families raising
their children who need help with child care and what the
children will do after school. That is the right way to cut
taxes: Pro-family, pro-education, pro-economic growth.
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Now, our opponents have put forward a very different plan --
a risky $550 billion tax scheme that will force them to ask for
even bigger cuts in Medicare, Medicaid, education and the
environment than they passed and I vetoed last year.
CLINTON: But even then, they will not cover the cost of
their scheme. So that even then this plan will explode the
deficit, which will increase interest rates -- by two percent
according to their own estimates last year.
It will require huge cuts in the very investments we need to
grow and to grow together, and at the same time, slow down the
economy. You know what higher interest rates mean. To you it
means a higher mortgage payment, a higher car payment, a higher
credit card payment. To our economy it means businesspeople will
not borrow as much money, invest as much money, create as many
new jobs, create as much wealth, raise as many raises.
Do we really want to make that same mistake all over again?
CROWD: No.
CLINTON: Do we really want to stop economic growth again?
CROWD: No.
CLINTON: Do we really want to start piling up another
mountain of debt?
CROWD: No.
CLINTON: Do we want to bring back the recession of 1991 and
'92?
CROWD: No.
CLINTON: Do we want to weaken our bridge to the 21st
century?
CROWD: No.
CLINTON: Of course, we don't.
We have an obligation, you and I, to leave our children a
legacy of opportunity, not a legacy of debt. Our budget would
be balanced today -- we would have a surplus today -- if we
didn't have to make the interest payments on the debt run up in
the 12 years before the Clinton-Gore administration...
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... took office.
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Thank you.
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CHANT: Four more years.
CLINTON: Let me say -- let me say...
CHANT: Four more years.
CLINTON: This is one of those areas in which I respectfully
disagree with my opponent.
CLINTON: I don't believe we should bet the farm, and I
certainly don't believe we should bet the country. We should
stay on the right track to the 21st century.
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Opportunity alone is not enough. I want to build an America
in the 21st century in which all Americans take personal
responsibility for themselves, their families, their communities
and their country.
I want our nation to take responsibility to make sure that
every single child can look out the window in the morning and
see a whole community getting up and going to work.
We want these young people to know the thrill of the first
paycheck, the challenge of starting that first business, the
pride in following in a parent's footsteps.
The welfare reform law I signed last week gives America a
chance, but not a guarantee, to have that kind of new beginning.
To have a new social bargain with the poor, guaranteeing health
care, child care and nutrition for the children, but requiring
able-bodied parents to work for the income.
Now I say to all of you, whether you supported the law or
opposed it -- but especially to those who supported it -- we
have a responsibility, we have a moral obligation to make sure
the people who are being required to work have the opportunity
to work.
We must make sure the jobs are there.
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There should be one million new jobs for welfare recipients
by the year 2000. States under this law can now take the money
that was spent on the welfare check and use it to help
businesses provide paychecks.
I challenge every state to do it soon. I propose also to
give businesses a tax credit for every person hired off welfare
and kept employed.
CLINTON: I propose to offer private job placement firms a
bonus for every welfare recipient they place in a job who stays
in it.
(APPLAUSE)
And, more important, I want to help communities put welfare
recipients to work right now, without delay, repairing schools,
making their neighborhoods clean and safe, making them shine
again.
There's lots of work to be done out there. Our cities can
find ways to put people to work and bring dignity and strength
back to these families.
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My fellow Americans, I have spent an enormous amount of time,
with our dear friend, the late Ron Brown, and with Secretary
Kantor and others, opening markets for America around the world.
And I'm proud of every one we opened.
But let us never forget the greatest untapped market for
American enterprise is right here in America, in the inner
cities, in the rural areas, who have not felt this recovery.
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With investment and business and jobs they can become our
partners in the future. And it's a great opportunity we ought
not to pass up.
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I propose more empowerment zones, like the one we have right
here in Chicago to draw business into poor neighborhoods.
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I propose more community development banks, like the
Southshore Bank right here in Chicago to help people in those
neighborhoods start their own small businesses -- more jobs,
more incomes, new markets for America, right here at home making
welfare reform a reality.
(APPLAUSE)
Now, folks, you cheered and I thank you. But the government
can only do so much.
The private sector has to provide most of these jobs. So I
want to say again, tonight I challenge every business person in
America who has ever complained about the failure of the welfare
system to try to hire somebody off welfare.
CLINTON: And try hard.
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Thank you.
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After all...
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After all, the welfare system you used to complain about is
not here anymore. There is no more "who's to blame?" on
welfare.
Now the only question is what to do. And we all have a
responsibility, especially those who have criticized what was
passed and who have asked for a change and who have the ability
to give poor a chance to grow and support their families.
I want to build a bridge to the 21st century that ends the
permanent underclass, that lifts up the poor and ends their
isolation, their exile, and they are not forgotten anymore.
(APPLAUSE)
Thank you.
CROWD: Four more year! Four more years! Four more years!
Four more years!
CLINTON: I want to build a bridge to the 21st century where
our children are not killing other children any more. Where
children's lives are not shattered by violence at home or in the
schoolyard. Where a generation of young people are not left to
raise themselves on the streets.
With more police and punishment and prevention the crime rate
has dropped for four years in a row, now. But we cannot rest,
because we know it's still too high. We cannot rest until crime
is a shocking exception to our daily lives, not news as usual.
Will you stay with me until we reach that good day?
CROWD: Yes!
(APPLAUSE)
CLINTON: My fellow Americans, we all owe a great debt to
Sarah and Jim Brady and I'm glad they took their wrong turn and
wound up in Chicago. I was glad to see them.
(APPLAUSE)
It is to them we owe the good news that 60,000 felons,
fugitives and stalkers couldn't get hand guns because of the
Brady bill.
CLINTON: But not a single hunter in Arkansas or New
Hampshire or Illinois...
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... or anyplace else...
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... missed a hunting season.
(APPLAUSE)
But now I say we should extend the Brady bill because anyone
who has committed an act of domestic violence against a spouse
or a child...
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... should not buy a guy.
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And we must ban -- we must ban those cop-killer bullets.
They are designed for one reason only...
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... to kill police officers.
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We ask the police to keep us safe. We owe it to them to help
keep them safe...
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... while they do their job for us.
(APPLAUSE)
We should pass a victims' rights constitutional amendment
because victims deserve to be heard. They need to know when an
assailant is released. They need to know these things, and the
only way to guarantee them is through a constitutional
amendment.
(APPLAUSE)
We have made a great deal of progress. Even the crime rate
among young people is finally coming down. So it is very, very
painful to me that drug use among young people is up.
Drugs nearly killed my brother when he was a young man and I
hate them.
He fought back. He's here tonight with his wife. His little
boy is here. And I'm really proud of him.
(APPLAUSE)
But I learned something...
(APPLAUSE)
... I learned something in going through that long nightmare
with our family. And I can tell you, something has happened to
some of our young people. They simply don't think these drugs
are dangerous anymore.
Or they think the risk is acceptable.
So beginning with our parents and without regard to our
party, we have to renew our energy to teach this generation of
young people the hard, cold truth.
CLINTON: Drugs are deadly. Drugs are wrong. Drugs can cost
you your life.
(APPLAUSE)
General Barry McCaffrey, the four-star general who led our
fight against drugs in Latin America, now leads our crusade
against drugs at home -- stopping more drugs at our borders,
cracking down on those who sell them, and most important of all,
pursuing a national anti-drug strategy whose primary aim is to
turn our children away from drugs.
I call on Congress to give him every cent of funding we have
requested for this strategy and to do it now.
(APPLAUSE)
There is more we will do. We should say to parolees, we will
test you for drugs. If you go back on them, we will send you
back to jail. We will say to gangs, we will break with the same
anti- racketeering law we used to put mob bosses in jail.
You're not going to kill our kids anymore or turn them into
murderers before they're teenagers.
(APPLAUSE)
My fellow Americans, if we're going to build that bridge to
the 21st century, we have to make our children free -- free of
the vise grip of guns and gangs and drugs; free to build lives
of hope.
I want to build a bridge to the 21st century with a strong
American community beginning with strong families. An America
where all children are cherished and protected from destructive
forces, where parents can succeed at home and at work.
Everywhere I've gone in America, people come up and talk to
me about their struggle with the demands of work and their
desire to do a better job with their children.
The very first person I ever saw fight that battle was here
with me four years ago. And tonight, I miss her very, very
much. My irrepressible, hardworking, always optimistic mother
did the best she could for her brother and me, often against
very stiff odds.
CLINTON: I learned from her just how much love and
determination can overcome. But from her and from our life, I
also learned that no parent can do it alone. And no parent
should have to.
She had the kind of help every parent deserves from our
neighbors, our friends, our teachers, our pastors, our doctors
and so many more.
You know, when I started out in public life with a lot of my
friends from the Arkansas delegation down here...
(APPLAUSE)
... there used to be a saying we'd hear from time to time,
that every man who runs for public office will claim that he was
born in a log cabin he built with his own hands.
(LAUGHTER)
Well, my mother knew better. And she made sure I did too.
Long before she even met Hillary my mother knew it takes a
village. And she was grateful for the support she got.
As Tipper Gore and Hillary said on Tuesday, we have, all of
us in our administration, worked hard to support families in
raising their children and succeeding at work. But we must do
more. We should extend the Family and Medical Leave Law to give
parents some time off to take their children to regular doctors
appointments or attend those parent-teacher Conferences at
school. That is a key determination of their success.
(APPLAUSE)
We should pass a flex-time law that allows employees to take
their overtime pay in money, or in time off, depending on what's
better for their family.
(APPLAUSE)
The FDA has adopted new measures to reduce advertising and
sales of cigarettes to children.
(APPLAUSE)
The vice president spoke so movingly of it last night.
CLINTON: But let me remind you, my fellow Americans, that is
very much an issue in this election, because that battle is far
from over and the two candidates have different views.
I pledge to America's parents that I will see this effort all
the way through.
(APPLAUSE)
Working with the entertainment industry, we're giving parents
the V-chip. TV shows are being rated for content so parents
will be able to make a judgment about whether their small
children should see them. And three hours of quality children's
programming every week on every network are on the way.
(APPLAUSE)
The Kennedy-Kassebaum law says every American can keep his or
her health insurance if they have to change jobs, even if
someone in their family's been sick. That is a very important
thing. But tonight, we should spell out the next steps.
The first thing we ought to do is to extend the benefits of
health care to people who are unemployed. I propose in my
balanced budget plan, paid for, to help unemployed families keep
their health insurance for up to six months.
(APPLAUSE)
A parent may be without a job, but no child should be without
a doctor. And let me say again as the first lady did on
Tuesday, we should protect mothers and newborn babies from being
forced out of the hospital in less than 48 hours.
(APPLAUSE)
We respect the individual conscience of every American on the
painful issue of abortion, but believe as a matter of law that
this decision should be left to a woman, her conscience, her
doctor and her God.
(APPLAUSE)
CLINTON: But...
(APPLAUSE)
But abortion...
(APPLAUSE)
... should not only be -- abortion should not only be safe
and legal, it should be rare. That's why I helped to establish
and support a national effort to reduce out-of-wedlock teen
pregnancy, and that is why we must promote adoption.
Last week...
(APPLAUSE)
Last week, the minimum wage bill I signed contained a $5,000
credit to families who adopt children -- even more, if the
children have disabilities.
It put an end to racial...
(APPLAUSE)
... discrimination in the adoption process.
(APPLAUSE)
It was a good thing for America.
(APPLAUSE)
My fellow Americans, already there are tens of thousands of
children out there who need a good home with loving parents. I
hope more of them will find it now.
(APPLAUSE)
I want to build a bridge to the 21st century with a clean and
safe environment. We are making our food safer from pesticides.
We're protecting our drinking water and our air from poisons.
We saved Yellowstone from mining. We established the...
(APPLAUSE)
... largest national park south of Alaska in the Mojave
Desert in California.
(APPLAUSE)
We are working to save the precious Florida Everglades.
(APPLAUSE)
And when the leaders of this Congress...
(APPLAUSE)
... when the leaders of this Congress invited the polluters
into the back room to roll back 25 years of environmental
protections that both parties had always supported...
(BOOS)
... I said no.
(APPLAUSE)
But we must do more.
CLINTON: Today 10 million children live within just four
miles of a toxic waste dump. We've cleaned up 197 of those
dumps in the last three years, more than in the previous 12
years combined.
In the next four years, we propose to clean up 500 more --
two- thirds of all that are left and the most dangerous ones.
(APPLAUSE)
Our children should grow up next to parks, not poison.
(APPLAUSE)
We should make it a crime even to attempt to pollute. We
should freeze the serious polluter's property until they clean
up the problems they create.
We should make it easier foso they can do more to protect
their own children. These are the things that we must do to
build that bridge to the 21st century.
(APPLAUSE)
My fellow Americans, I want to build a bridge to the 21st
century that makes sure we are still the nation with the world's
strongest defense, that our foreign policy still advances the
values of our American community in the community of nations.
Our bridge to the future must include bridges to other
nations, because we remain the world's indispensable nation to
advance prosperity, peace and freedom and to keep our own
children safe from the dangers of terror and weapons of mass
destruction.
We have helped to bring democracy to Haiti and peace to
Bosnia. Now, the peace signed on the White House lawn between
the Israelis and the Palestinians must embrace more of Israel's
neighbors.
The deep desire for peace that Hillary and I felt when we
walked the streets of Belfast and Derry must become real for all
the people of Northern Ireland, and Cuba must finally join the
community of democracies.
(APPLAUSE)
Nothing in our lifetimes has been more heartening than when
people of the former Soviet Union and Central Europe broke the
grip of communism.
CLINTON: We have aided their progress and I am proud of it.
And I will continue our strong partnership with a democratic
Russia.
(APPLAUSE)
And we will bring some of Central Europe's new democracies
into NATO so that they will never question their own freedom in
the future.
(APPLAUSE)
Our American exports are at record levels. In the next four
years, we have to break down even more barriers to them,
reaching out to Latin America, to Africa, to other countries in
Asia, making sure that our workers and our products -- the
world's finest -- have the benefit of free and fair trade.
(APPLAUSE)
In the last four years, we have frozen North Korea's nuclear
weapons program. And I'm proud to say that tonight there is not
a single Russian nuclear missile pointed at an American child.
(APPLAUSE)
Now, now we must enforce and ratify without delay measures
that further reduce nuclear arsenals, banish poison gas and ban
nuclear tests once and for all.
(APPLAUSE)
We have made investments, new investments in our most
important defense asset: Our magnificent men and women in
uniform.
(APPLAUSE)
By the year 2000 we also will have increased funding to
modernize our weapons systems by 40 percent.
CLINTON: These commitments will make sure that our military
remains the best trained, best equipped fighting force in the
entire world.
(APPLAUSE)
We are developing a sensible national missile defense, but we
must not, not now, not by the year 2000, squander $60 billion on
an unproved, ineffective Star Wars program that could be
obsolete tomorrow.
(APPLAUSE)
We are fighting terrorism on all fronts with a three-pronged
strategy. First, we are working to rally a world coalition with
zero- tolerance for terrorism. Just this month I signed a law
imposing harsh sanctions on foreign companies that invest in key
sectors of the Iranian and Libyan economies.
(APPLAUSE)
As long as Iran trains, supports and protects terrorists, as
long as Libya refuses to give up the people who blew up Pan Am
103, they will pay a price from the United States.
(APPLAUSE)
Second, we must give law endorsement the tools they need to
take the fight to terrorists. We need new laws to crack down on
money laundering and to prosecute and punish those who commit
violent acts against American citizens abroad; to add chemical
markers or taggants to gunpowder used in bombs so we can track
the bombmakers.
(APPLAUSE)
To extend the same power police now have against organized
crime to save lives by tapping all the phones that terrorists
use. Terrorists are as big a threat to our future, perhaps
bigger, than organized crime. Why should we have two different
standards for a common threat to the safety of America and our
children?
(APPLAUSE)
CLINTON: We need, in short, the laws that Congress refused
to pass. And I ask them again -- please, as an American, not a
partisan, matter, pass these laws now.
(APPLAUSE)
Third, we will improve airport and air travel security. I
have asked the vice president to establish a commission and
report back to me on ways to do this. But now we will install
the most sophisticated bomb detection equipment in all our major
airports. We will search every airplane flying to or from
America from another nation -- every flight, every cargo hold,
every cabin, every time.
(APPLAUSE)
My fellow Democrats and my fellow Americans, I know that in
most election seasons, foreign policy is not a matter of great
interest in the debates in the barbershops and the cafes of
America, on the plant floors and at the bowling alleys.
But there are times -- there are times when only America can
make the difference between war and peace, between freedom and
repression, between life and death.
We cannot save all the world's children, but we can save many
of them. We cannot become the world's policeman, but where our
values and our interests are at stake, and where we can make a
difference, we must act and we must lead.
That is our job and we are better, stronger and safer because
we are doing it.
(APPLAUSE)
My fellow Americans, let me say one last time. We can only
build our bridge to the 21st century if we build it together,
and if we're willing to walk arm-in-arm across that bridge
together.
CLINTON: I have spent so much of your time that you gave me
these last four years to be your president worrying about the
problems of Bosnia, the Middle East, Northern Ireland, Rwanda,
Burundi. What do these places have in common?
People are killing each other and butchering children because
they are different from one another. They share the same piece
of land, but they are different from one another. They hate
their race, their tribe, their ethnic group, their religion.
We have seen the terrible, terrible price that people pay
when they insist on fighting and killing their neighbors over
their differences.
In our own country, we have seen America pay a terrible price
for any form of discrimination. And we have seen us grow
stronger as we have steadily let more and more of our hatreds
and our fears go, as we have given more and more of our people
the chance to live their dreams.
That is why the flame of our Statue of Liberty, like the
Olympic flame carried all across America by thousands of citizen
heroes, will always, always burn brighter than the fires that
burn our churches, our synagogues, our mosques, always.
(APPLAUSE)
Look around this hall tonight. And there are fellow
Americans watching on television. You look around this hall
tonight. There is every conceivable difference here among the
people who are gathered.
(APPLAUSE)
If we want to build that bridge to the 21st century, we have
to be willing to say loud and clear: If you believe in the
values of the Constitution, the Bill of Rights, the Declaration
of Independence, if you're willing to work hard and play by the
rules, you are part of our family. And we're proud to be with
you.
(APPLAUSE)
CLINTON: You cheer now because you know this is true. You
know this is true. When you walk out of this hall, think about
it. Live by it.
We still have too many Americans who give in to their fears
of those who are different from them. Not so long ago,
swastikas were painted on the doors of some African-American
members of our Special Forces at Ft. Bragg.
Folks, for those of you who don't know what they do, the
Special Forces are just what the name says. They are special
forces. If I walk off this stage tonight and call them on the
telephone and tell them to go halfway around the world and risk
their lives for you and be there by tomorrow at noon, they will
do it.
They do not deserve to have swastikas on their doors.
(APPLAUSE)
CROWD: Four more years! Four more years! Four more years!
Four more years!
CLINTON: Look around here.
(APPLAUSE)
Look around here. Old or young, healthy as a horse or a
person with a disability that hadn't kept you down, man or
woman, Native American, native born, immigrant, straight or gay
-- whatever...
(APPLAUSE)
... the test ought to be I believe in the Constitution, the
Bill of Rights, and the Declaration of Independence.
CLINTON: I believe in religious liberty. I believe in
freedom of speech. I believe in working hard and playing by the
rules. I'm showing up for work tomorrow. I'm building that
bridge to the 21st century.
(APPLAUSE)
That ought to be the test.
(APPLAUSE)
My fellow Americans...
(APPLAUSE)
My fellow Americans...
(APPLAUSE)
... 68 nights from tonight the American people will face once
again a critical moment of decision. We're going to choose the
last president of the 20th century and the first president of
the 21st century.
(APPLAUSE)
But the real choice is not that. The real choice is whether
we will build a bridge to the future or a bridge to the past;
about whether we believe our best days are still out there or
our best days are behind us; about whether we want a country of
people all working together, or one where you're on your own.
(APPLAUSE)
Let us commit ourselves this night to rise up and build the
bridge we know we ought to build all the way to the 21st
century.
(APPLAUSE)
Let us have faith...
(APPLAUSE)
And let us have faith, faith, American faith, American faith
that we are not leaving our greatness behind. We're going to
carry it right on with us into that new century. A century of
new challenge and unlimited promise.
Let us, in short, do the work that is before us, so that when
our time here is over we will all watch the sun go down as we
all must, and say truly, we have prepared our children for the
dawn.
CLINTON: My fellow Americans, after these four good, hard
years I still believe in the place called Hope -- a place called
America.
(APPLAUSE)
Thank you.
(APPLAUSE)
God bless you.
(APPLAUSE)
And good night.
(APPLAUSE)
END
COPYRIGHT 1996 BY FEDERAL DOCUMENT CLEARING HOUSE, INC. NO PORTION OF THIS TRANSCRIPTION MAY BE COPIED, SOLD OR RETRANSMITTED WITHOUT THE EXPRESS WRITTEN AUTHORITY OF FEDERAL DOCUMENT CLEARING HOUSE, INC.
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