William Jefferson Clinton
State of the Union 1995 - delivered version
24 January 1995
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Mr. President, Mr. Speaker, members of the 104th
Congress, my fellow Americans: Again we are here in the
sanctuary of democracy, and once again, our democracy
has spoken. So let me begin by congratulating all of
you here in the 104th Congress, and congratulating you,
Mr. Speaker.
If we agree on nothing else tonight, we must agree that
the American people certainly voted for change in 1992
and in 1994. And as I look out at you, I know how some
of you must have felt in 1992.
I must say that in both years we didn't hear America
singing, we heard America shouting. And now all of us,
Republicans and Democrats alike, must say: We hear you.
We will work together to earn the jobs you have given
us. For we are the keepers of the sacred trust, and we
must be faithful to it in this new and very demanding
era.
Over 200 years ago, our founders changed the entire
course of human history by joining together to create a
new country based on a single powerful idea: "We
hold these truths to be self- evident, that all men are
created equal, endowed by their Creator with certain
inalienable rights, and among these are life, liberty
and the pursuit of happiness."
It has fallen to every generation since then to
preserve that idea -- the American idea -- and to
deepen and expand its meaning to new and different
times: To Lincoln and his Congress, to preserve
the Union and to end slavery. To Theodore Roosevelt
and Woodrow Wilson, to restrain the abuses and excesses
of the Industrial Revolution, and to assert our
leadership in the world. To Franklin Roosevelt, to
fight the failure and pain of the Great
Depression, and to win our country's great struggle
against fascism. And to all our presidents since, to
fight the Cold War.
Especially, I recall two who struggled to fight that
Cold War in partnership with congresses where the
majority was of a different party. To Harry Truman, who
summoned us to unparalleled prosperity at home, and who
built the architecture of the Cold War. And to Ronald
Reagan, whom we wish well tonight, and who exhorted us
to carry on until the twilight struggle against
communism was won.
In another time of change and challenge, I had the
honor to be the first president to be elected in the
post-Cold War era, an era marked by the global economy,
the information revolution, unparalleled change and
opportunity and insecurity for the American people.
I came to this hallowed chamber two years ago on a
mission -- to restore the American Dream for all our
people and to make sure that we move into the 21st
century still the strongest force for freedom and
democracy in the entire world. I was determined then to
tackle the tough problems too long ignored. In this
effort I am frank to say that I have made my mistakes,
and I have learned again the importance of humility in
all human endeavor. But I am also proud to say tonight
that our country is stronger than it was two years ago.
Record numbers -- record numbers of Americans are
succeeding in the new global economy. We are at peace
and we are a force for peace and freedom throughout the
world. We have almost six million new jobs since I
became president, and we have the lowest combined rate
of unemployment and inflation in 25 years. Our
businesses are more productive and here we have worked
to bring the deficit down, to expand trade, to put more
police on our streets, to give our citizens more of the
tools they need to get an education and to rebuild
their own communities.
But the rising tide is not lifting all boats. While our
nation is enjoying peace and prosperity, too many of
our people are still working harder and harder, for
less and less. While our businesses are restructuring
and growing more productive and competitive, too many
of our people still can't be sure of having a job next
year or even next month. And far more than our material
riches are threatened; things far more precious too us
-- our children, our families, our values.
Our civil life is suffering in America today. Citizens
are working together less and shouting at each other
more. The common bonds of community which have been the
great strength of our country from its very beginning
are badly frayed. What are we to do about it?
More than 60 years ago, at the dawn of another new era,
President Roosevelt told our nation,"New conditions
impose new requirements on government and those who
conduct government." And from that simple
proposition, he shaped the New
Deal, which helped to restore our nation to
prosperity and define the relationship between our
people and their government for half a century.
That approach worked in its time. But we today, we face
a very different time and very different conditions. We
are moving from an Industrial Age built on gears and
sweat to an Information Age, demanding skills and
learning and flexibility. Our government, once a
champion of national purpose, is now seen by many as
simply a captive of narrow interests, putting more
burdens on our citizens rather than equipping them to
get ahead. The values that used to hold us all together
seem to be coming apart.
So tonight, we must forge a new social compact to meet
the challenges of this time. As we enter a new era, we
need a new set of understandings, not just with
government, but even more important, with one another
as Americans.
That's what I want to talk with you about tonight. I
call it the New Covenant. But it's grounded in a very,
very old idea -- that all Americans have not just a
right, but a solid responsibility to rise as far as
their God-given talents and determination can take
them; and to give something back to their communities
and their country in return. Opportunity and
responsibility: They go hand in hand. We can't have one
without the other. And our national community can't
hold together without both.
Our New Covenant is a new set of understandings for how
we can equip our people to meet the challenges of a new
economy, how we can change the way our government works
to fit a different time, and, above all, how we can
repair the damaged bonds in our society and come
together behind our common purpose. We must have
dramatic change in our economy, our government and
ourselves.
My fellow Americans, without regard to party, let us
rise to the occasion. Let us put aside partisanship and
pettiness and pride. As we embark on this new course,
let us put our country first, remembering that
regardless of party label, we are all Americans. And
let the final test of everything we do be a simple one:
Is it good for the American people?
Let me begin by saying that we cannot ask Americans to
be better citizens if we are not better servants. You
made a good start by passing that law which applies to
Congress all the laws you put on the private sector,
and I was proud to sign it yesterday.
But we have a lot more to do before people really trust
the way things work around here. Three times as many
lobbyists are in the streets and corridors of
Washington as were here 20 years ago. The American
people look at their capital and they see a city where
the well-connected and the well-protected can work the
system, but the interests of ordinary citizens are
often left out.
As the new Congress opened its doors, lobbyists were
still doing business as usual -- the gifts, the trips,
all the things that people are concerned about haven't
stopped. Twice this month you missed opportunities to
stop these practices. I know there were other
considerations in those votes, but I want to use
something that I've heard my Republican friends say
from time to time -- there doesn't have to be a law for
everything. So tonight, I ask you to just stop taking
the lobbyists' perks. Just stop!
We don't have to wait for legislation to pass to send a
strong signal to the American people that things are
really changing. But I also hope you will send me the
strongest possible lobby reform bill, and I'll sign
that, too.
We should require lobbyists to tell the people for whom
they work what they're spending, what they want. We
should also curb the role of big money in elections by
capping the cost of campaigns and limiting the
influence of PACs.
And as I have said for three years, we should work to
open the airwaves so that they can be an instrument of
democracy, not a weapon of destruction by giving free
TV time to candidates for public office.
When the last Congress killed political reform last
year, it was reported in the press that the lobbyists
actually stood in the halls of this sacred building and
cheered. This year, let's give the folks at home
something to cheer about.
More important, I think we all agree that we have to
change the way the government works. Let's make it
smaller, less costly and smaller -- leaner, not meaner.
I just told the Speaker the equal time doctrine is
alive and well.
The New Covenant approach to governing is as different
from the old bureaucratic way as the computer is from
the manual typewriter. The old way of governing around
here protected organized interests. We should look out
for the interests of ordinary people. The old way
divided us by interest, constituency or class. The New
Covenant way should unite us behind a common vision of
what's best for our country. The old way dispensed
services through large, top- down, inflexible
bureaucracies. The New Covenant way should shift these
resources and decision-making from bureaucrats to
citizens, injecting choice and competition and
individual responsibility into national policy.
The old way of governing around here actually seemed to
reward failure. The New Covenant way should have
built-in incentives to reward success. The old way was
centralized here in Washington. The New Covenant way
must take hold in the communities all across America.
And we should help them to do that.
Our job here is to expand opportunity, not bureaucracy;
to empower people to make the most of their own lives;
and to enhance our security here at home and abroad. We
must not ask government to do what we should do for
ourselves. We should rely on government as a partner to
help us to do more for ourselves and for each other.
I hope very much that as we debate these specific and
exciting matters, we can go beyond the sterile
discussion between the illusion that there is somehow a
program for every problem on the one hand, and the
other illusion that the government is a source of every
problem we have. Our job is to get rid of yesterday's
government so that our own people can meet today's and
tomorrow's needs. And we ought to do it together.
You know, for years before I became president, I heard
others say they would cut government and how bad it
was. But not much happened. We actually did it. We cut
over a quarter of a trillion dollars in spending, more
than 300 domestic programs, more than 100,000 positions
from the federal bureaucracy in the last two years
alone. Based on decisions already made, we will have
cut a total of more than a quarter of a million
positions from the federal government, making it the
smallest it has been since John Kennedy was president,
by the time I come here again next year.
Under the leadership of Vice President Gore, our
initiatives have already saved taxpayers $63 billion.
The age of the $500 hammer and the ashtray you can
break on David Letterman is gone. Deadwood programs,
like mohair subsidies, are gone. We've streamlined the
Agriculture Department by reducing it by more than
1,200 offices. We've slashed the small business loan
form from an inch thick to a single page. We've thrown
away the government's 10,000-page personnel manual. And
the government is working better in important ways:
FEMA, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, has gone
from being a disaster to helping people in disasters.
You can ask the farmers in the Middle West who fought
the flood there or the people in California who have
dealt with floods and earthquakes and fires, and
they'll tell you that. Government workers, working hand
in hand with private business, rebuilt Southern
California's fractured freeways in record time and
under budget. And because the federal government moved
fast, all but one of the 5,600 schools damaged in the
earthquake are back in business.
Now, there are a lot of other things that I could talk
about. I want to just mention one because it will be
discussed here in the next few weeks. University
administrators all over the country have told me that
they are saving weeks and weeks of bureaucratic time
now because of our direct college loan program, which
makes college loans cheaper and more affordable, with
better repayment terms for students, costs the
government less, and cuts out paperwork and bureaucracy
for the government and for the universities. We
shouldn't cap that program. We should give every
college in America the opportunity to be a part of it.
Previous government programs gather dust. The
reinventing government report is getting results. And
we're not through. There's going to be a second round
of reinventing government. We propose to cut $130
billion in spending by shrinking departments, extending
our freeze on domestic spending, cutting 60 public
housing programs down to three, getting rid of over 100
programs we do not need, like the Interstate Commerce
Commission and the Helium Reserve Program. And we're
working on getting rid of unnecessary regulations and
making them more sensible. The programs and regulations
that have outlived their usefulness should go. We have
to cut yesterday's government to help solve tomorrow's
problems.
And we need to get government closer to the people its
meant to serve. We need to help move programs down to
the point where states and communities and private
citizens in the private sector can do a better job. If
they can do it, we ought to let them do it. We should
get out of the way and let them do what they can do
better.
Taking power away from federal bureaucracies and giving
it back to communities and individuals is something
everyone should be able to be for. It's time for
Congress to stop passing on to the state the cost of
decisions we make here in Washington.
I know there are still serious differences over the
details of the unfunded mandates legislation, but I
want to work with you to make sure we pass a reasonable
bill which will protect the national interests and give
justified relief where we need to give it.
For years, Congress concealed in the budget scores of
pet spending projects. Last year was no different.
There was a $1 million to study stress in plants, and
$12 million for a tick removal program that didn't
work. It's hard to remove ticks; those of us who have
had them know. But, I'll tell you something; if you'll
give me the line-item veto, I'll remove some of that
unnecessary spending.
But I think we should all remember, and almost all of
us would agree, that government still has important
responsibilities. Our young people -- we should think
of this when we cut -- our young people hold our future
in their hands. We still owe a debt to our veterans.
And our senior citizens have made us what we are.
Now, my budget cuts a lot. But it protects education,
veterans, Social
Security and Medicare, and I hope you will do the
same thing. You should, and I hope you will.
And when we give more flexibility to the states, let us
remember that there are certain fundamental national
needs that should be addressed in every state, north
and south, east and west -- immunization against
childhood disease, school lunches in all our schools,
Head Start, medical care and nutrition for pregnant
women and infants. All these things are in the national
interest.
I applaud your desire to get rid of costly and
unnecessary regulations. But when we deregulate, let's
remember what national action in the national interest
has given us: safer foods for our families, safer toys
for our children, safer nursing homes for our parents,
safer cars and highways, and safer workplaces, clean
air and cleaner water. Do we need common sense and
fairness in our regulations? You bet we do. But we can
have common sense and still provide for safe drinking
water. We can have fairness and still clean up toxic
dumps, and we ought to do it.
Should we cut the deficit more? Well, of course, we
should. Of course, we should. But we can bring it down
in a way that still protects our economic recovery and
does not unduly punish people who should not be
punished, but instead should be helped.
I know many of you in this chamber support the balanced
budget amendment. I certainly want to balance the
budget. Our administration has done more to bring the
budget down and to save money than any in a very, very
long time. If you believe passing this amendment is the
right thing to do, then you have to be straight with
the American people. They have a right to know what
you're going to cut and how it's going to affect them.
We should be doing things in the open around here. For
example, everybody ought to know if this proposal is
going to endanger Social Security. I would oppose that,
and I think most Americans would.
Nothing is done more to undermine our sense of common
responsibility than our failed welfare system. This is
one of the problems we have to face here in Washington
in our New Covenant. It rewards welfare over work. It
undermines family values. It lets millions of parents
get away without paying their child support. It keeps a
minority, but a significant minority of the people on
welfare trapped on it for a very long time.
I worked on this problem for a long time, nearly 15
years now. As a governor I had the honor of working
with the Reagan administration to write the last
welfare reform bill back in 1988. In the last two years
we made a good start in continuing the work of welfare
reform. Our administration gave two dozen states the
right to slash through federal rules and regulations to
reform their own welfare systems, and to try to promote
work and responsibility over welfare and dependency.
Last year I introduced the most sweeping welfare reform
plan ever presented by an administration. We have to
make welfare what it was meant to be -- a second
chance, not a way of life. We have to help those on
welfare move to work as quickly as possible, to provide
child care and teach them skills if that's what they
need for up to two years. And after that, there ought
to be a simple hard rule: anyone who can work must go
to work. If a parent isn't paying child support, they
should be forced to pay. We should suspend drivers'
licenses, track them across state lines, make them work
off what they owe. That is what we should do.
Governments do not raise children, people do. And the
parents must take responsibility for the children they
bring into this world.
I want to work with you, with all of you, to pass
welfare reform. But our goal must be to liberate people
and lift them up, from dependence to independence, from
welfare to work, from mere childbearing to responsible
parenting. Our goal should not be to punish them
because they happen to be poor.
We should -- we should require work and mutual
responsibility. But we shouldn't cut people off just
because they're poor, they're young, or even because
they're unmarried. We should promote responsibility by
requiring young mothers to live at home with their
parents or in other supervised settings, by requiring
them to finish school. But we shouldn't put them and
their children out on the street.
And I know all the arguments, pro and con, and I have
read and thought about this for a long time. I still
don't think we can in good conscious punish poor
children for the mistakes of their parents. My fellow
Americans, every single survey shows that all the
American people care about this without regard to party
or race or region. So let this be the year we end
welfare as we know it. But also let this be the year
that we are all able to stop using this issue to divide
America.
No one is more eager to end welfare. I may be the only
president who has actually had the opportunity to sit
in a welfare office, who's actually spent hours and
hours talking to people on welfare. And I am telling
you, people who are trapped on it know it doesn't work.
They also want to get off. So we can promote together
education and work and good parenting. I have no
problem with punishing bad behavior or the refusal to
be a worker or a student, or a responsible parent. I
just don't want to punish poverty and past mistakes.
All of us have made our mistakes, and none of us can
change our yesterdays. But every one of us can change
our tomorrows.
And America's best example of that may be Lynn Woolsey,
who worked her way off welfare to become a
congresswoman from the state of California.
I know the members of this Congress are concerned about
crime, as are all the citizens of our country. And I
remind you that last year, we passed a very tough crime
bill -- longer sentences, three strikes and you're out,
almost 60 new capital punishment offenses, more
prisons, more prevention, 100,000 more police. And we
paid for it all by reducing the size of the federal
bureaucracy and giving the money back to local
communities to lower the crime rate.
There may be other things we can do to be tougher on
crime, to be smarter with crime, to help to lower that
rate first. Well, if there are, let's talk about them
and let's do them. But let's not go back on the things
that we did last year that we know work; that we know
work because the local law enforcement officers tell us
that we did the right things, because local community
leaders who have worked for years and years to lower
the crime rate tell us that they work.
Let's look at the experience of our cities and our
rural areas where the crime rate has gone down and ask
the people who did it how they did it. And if what we
did last year supports the decline in the crime rate --
and I am convinced that it does -- let us not go back
on it. Let's stick with it, implement it. We've got
four more hard years of work to do to do that.
I don't want to destroy the good atmosphere in the room
or in the country tonight, but I have to mention one
issue that divided this body greatly last year. The
last Congress also passed the Brady Bill and, in the
crime bill, the ban on 19 assault weapons. I don't
think it's a secret to anybody in this room that
several members of the last Congress who voted for that
aren't here tonight because they voted for it. And I
know, therefore, that some of you who are here because
they voted for it are under enormous pressure to repeal
it. I just have to tell you how I feel about it.
The members of Congress who voted for that bill and I
would never do anything to infringe on the right to
keep and bear arms to hunt and to engage in other
appropriate sporting activities. I've done it since I
was a boy, and I'm going to keep right on doing it
until I can't do it anymore. But a lot of people laid
down their seats in Congress so that police officers
and kids wouldn't have to lay down their lives under a
hail of assault weapon attack -- and I will not let
that be repealed. I will not let it be repealed.
I'd like to talk about a couple of other issues we have
to deal with. I want us to cut more spending, but I
hope we won't cut government programs that help to
prepare us for the new economy, promote responsibility
and are organized from the grass roots up, not by
federal bureaucracy. The very best example of this is
the National Service Corps -- AmeriCorps.
It passed with strong bipartisan support. And now there
are 20,000 Americans, more than ever served in one year
in the Peace
Corps, working all over this country, helping
people person to person in local, grass-roots volunteer
groups, solving problems and, in the process, earning
some money for their education. This is citizenship at
its best. It's good for the AmeriCorps members, but
it's good for the rest of us, too. It's the essence of
the New Covenant, and we shouldn't stop it.
All Americans, not only in the states most heavily
affected, but in every place in this country, are
rightly disturbed by the large numbers of illegal
aliens entering our country. The jobs they hold might
otherwise be held by citizens or legal immigrants. The
public service they use impose burdens on our
taxpayers. That's why our administration has moved
aggressively to secure our borders more by hiring a
record number of new border guards, by deporting twice
as many criminal aliens as ever before, by cracking
down on illegal hiring, by barring welfare benefits to
illegal aliens.
In the budget I will present to you we will try to do
more to speed the deportation of illegal aliens who are
arrested for crimes, to better identify illegal aliens
in the workplace as recommended by the commission
headed by former Congresswoman Barbara Jordan.
We are a nation of immigrants. But we are also a nation
of laws. It is wrong and ultimately self-defeating for
a nation of immigrants to permit the kind of abuse of
our immigration laws we have seen in recent years, and
we must do more to stop it.
The most important job of our government in this new
era is to empower the American people to succeed in the
global economy. America has always been a land of
opportunity, a land where, if you work hard, you can
get ahead. We've become a great middle class country.
Middle class values sustain us. We must expand that
middle class, and shrink the underclass, even as we do
everything we can to support the millions of Americans
who are already successful in the new economy.
America is once again the world's strongest economic
power, almost six million new jobs in the last two
years, exports booming, inflation down, high-wage jobs
are coming back. A record number of American
entrepreneurs are living the American Dream. If we want
it to stay that way, those who work and lift our nation
must have more of its benefits.
Today, too many of those people are being left out.
They're working harder for less. They have less
security, less income, less certainty that they can
even afford a vacation, much less college for their
kids or retirement for themselves. We cannot let this
continue.
If we don't act, our economy will probably keep doing
what it's been doing since about 1978, when the income
growth began to go to those at the very top of our
economic scale and the people in the vast middle got
very little growth, and people who worked like crazy
but were on the bottom then fell even further and
further behind in the years afterward -- no matter how
hard they worked.
We've got to have a government that can be a real
partner in making this new economy work for all of our
people; a government that helps each and every one of
us to get an education, and to have the opportunity to
renew our skills. That's why we worked so hard to
increase educational opportunities in the last two
years -- from Head Start to public schools, to
apprenticeships for young people who don't go to
college, to making college loans more available and
more affordable. That's the first thing we have to do.
We've got to do something to empower people to improve
their skills.
The second thing we ought to do is to help people raise
their incomes immediately by lowering their taxes. We
took the first step in 1993 with a working family tax
cut for 15 million families with incomes under $27,000;
a tax cut that this year will average about $1,000 a
family. And we also gave tax reductions to most small
and new businesses.
Before we could do more than that, we first had to
bring down the deficit we inherited, and we had to get
economic growth up. Now we've done both. And now we can
cut taxes in a more comprehensive way. But tax cuts
should reinforce and promote our first obligation -- to
empower our citizens through education and training to
make the most of their own lives.
The spotlight should shine on those who make the right
choices for themselves, their families and their
communities. I have proposed the Middle Class Bill of
Rights, which should properly be called the Bill of
Rights and Responsibilities because its provisions only
benefit those who are working to educate and raise
their children and to educate themselves. It will,
therefore, give needed tax relief and raise incomes in
both the short run and the long run in a way that
benefits all of us.
There are four provisions. First, a tax deduction for
all education and training after high school. If you
think about it, we permit businesses to deduct their
investment, we permit individuals to deduct interest on
their home mortgages, but today an education is even
more important to the economic well-being of our whole
country than even those things are. We should do
everything we can to encourage it. And I hope you will
support it.
Second, we ought to cut taxes, $500 for families with
children under 13.
Third, we ought to foster more savings and personal
responsibility by permitting people to establish an
Individual Retirement Account and withdraw from it tax
free for the cost of education, health care, first-time
home-buying or the care of a parent.
And fourth, we should pass a G.I. Bill for America's
workers. We propose to collapse nearly 70 federal
programs and not give the money to the states, but give
the money directly to the American people; offer
vouchers to them so that they, if they're laid off or
if they're working for a very low wage, can get a
voucher worth $2,600 a year for up to two years to go
to their local community colleges or wherever else they
want to get the skills they need to improve their
lives. Let's empower people in this way. Move it from
the government directly to the workers of America.
Now, any one of us can call for a tax cut, but I won't
accept one that explodes the deficit or puts our
recovery at risk. We ought to pay for our tax cuts
fully and honestly.
Just two years ago, it was an open question whether we
would find the strength to cut the deficit. Thanks to
the courage of the people who were here then, many of
whom didn't return, we did cut the deficit. We began to
do what others said would not be done. We cut the
deficit by over $600 billion, about $10,000 for every
family in this country. It's coming down three years in
a row for the first time since Mr. Truman was
president, and I don't think anybody in America wants
us to let it explode again.
In the budget I will send you, the Middle Class Bill of
Rights is fully paid for by budget cuts in bureaucracy,
cuts in programs, cuts in special interest subsidies.
And the spending cuts will more than double the tax
cuts. My budget pays for the Middle Class Bill of
Rights without any cuts in Medicare.
And I will oppose any attempts to pay for tax cuts with
Medicare cuts. That's not the right thing to do.
I know that a lot of you have your own ideas about tax
relief, and some of them I find quite interesting. I
really want to work with all of you. My test for our
proposals will be: Will it create jobs and raise
incomes? Will it strengthen our families and support
our children? Is it paid for? Will it build the middle
class and shrink the underclass? If it does, I'll
support it. But if it doesn't, I won't.
The goal of building the middle class and shrinking the
underclass is also why I believe that you should raise
the minimum wage. It rewards work. Two and a half
million Americans -- 2.5 million Americans, often women
with children, are working out there today for $4.25 an
hour. In terms of real buying power, by next year that
minimum wage will be at a 40-year low. That's not my
idea of how the new economy ought to work.
Now, I've studied the arguments and the evidence for
and against a minimum wage increase. I believe the
weight of the evidence is that a modest increase does
not cost jobs, and may even lure people back into the
job market. But the most important thing is, you can't
make a living on $4.25 an hour. Especially if you have
children, even with the working families tax cut we
passed last year. In the past, the minimum wage has
been a bipartisan issue, and I think it should be
again. So I want to challenge you to have honest
hearings on this; to get together; to find a way to
make the minimum wage a living wage.
Members of Congress have been here less than a month,
but by the end of the week, 28 days into the new year,
every member of Congress will have earned as much in
congressional salary as a minimum wage worker makes all
year long.
Everybody else here, including the President, has
something else that too many Americans do without, and
that's health care. Now, last year, we almost came to
blows over health care. But we didn't do anything. And
the cold, hard fact is that, since last year, since I
was here, another 1.1 million Americans in working
families have lost their health care. And the cold,
hard fact is that many millions more, most of them
farmers and small businesspeople and self-employed
people, have seen their premiums skyrocket, their
co-pays and deductibles go up. There's a whole bunch of
people in this country that, in the statistics have
health insurance, but really what they've got is a
piece of paper that says they won't lose their home if
they get sick.
Now, I still believe our country has got to move toward
providing health security for every American family.
But I know that last year, as the evidence indicates,
we bit off more than we could chew. So I'm asking you
that we work together. Let's do it step by step. Let's
do whatever we have to do to get something done. Let's
at least pass meaningful insurance reform so that no
American risks losing coverage for facing skyrocketing
prices. That nobody loses their coverage because they
face high prices or unavailable insurance, when they
change jobs and lose a job, or a family member gets
sick.
I want to work together with all of you who have an
interest in this -- with the Democrats who worked on it
last time, with the Republican leaders like Senator
Dole who has a longtime commitment to health care
reform and made some constructive proposals in this
area last year. We ought to make sure that
self-employed people in small businesses can buy
insurance at more affordable rates through voluntary
purchasing pools. We ought to help families provide
long-term care for a sick parent or a disabled child.
We can work to help workers who lose their jobs at
least keep their health insurance coverage for a year
while they look for work. And we can find a way -- it
may take some time, but we can find a way -- to make
sure that our children have health care.
You know, I think everybody in this room, without
regard to party, can be proud of the fact that our
country was rated as having the world's most productive
economy for the first time in nearly a decade. But we
can't be proud of the fact that we're the only wealthy
country in the world that has a smaller percentage of
the work force and their children with health insurance
today than we did 10 years ago, the last time we were
the most productive economy in the world. So let's work
together on this. It is too important for politics as
usual.
Much of what the American people are thinking about
tonight is what we've already talked about. A lot of
people think that the security concerns of America
today are entirely internal to our borders. They relate
to the security of our jobs and our homes, and our
incomes and our children, our streets, our health and
protecting those borders. Now that the Cold War has
passed, it's tempting to believe that all the security
issues, with the possible exception of trade, reside
here at home. But it's not so. Our security still
depends upon our continued world leadership for peace
and freedom and democracy. We still can't be strong at
home unless we're strong abroad.
The financial crisis in Mexico is a case in point. I
know it's not popular to say it tonight, but we have to
act. Not for the Mexican people, but for the sake of
the millions of Americans whose livelihoods are tied to
Mexico's well-being. If we want to secure American
jobs, preserve American exports, safeguard America's
borders, then we must pass the stabilization program
and help to put Mexico back on track.
Now let me repeat: it's not a loan, it's not foreign
aid, it's not a bail out. We will be given a guarantee
like co- signing a note with good collateral that will
cover our risks. This legislation is the right thing
for America. That's why the bipartisan leadership has
supported it. And I hope you in Congress will pass it
quickly. It is in our interest, and we can explain it
to the American people, because we're going to do it in
the right way.
You know, tonight, this is the first State of the Union
address ever delivered since the beginning of the Cold
War when not a single Russian missile is pointed at the
children of America. And along with the Russians, we're
on the way to destroying the missiles and the bombers
that carry 9,000 nuclear warheads. We've come so far so
fast in this post-Cold War world that it's easy to take
the decline of the nuclear threat for granted. But it's
still there, and we aren't finished yet.
This year I'll ask the Senate to approve START
II, to eliminate weapons that carry 5,000 more
warheads. The United States will lead the charge to
extend indefinitely the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty; to enact a comprehensive
nuclear test ban; and to eliminate chemical weapons. To
stop and roll back North Korea's potentially deadly
nuclear program, we'll continue to implement the
agreement we have reached with that nation. It's smart;
it's tough; it's a deal based on continuing inspection
with safeguards for our allies and ourselves.
This year I'll submit to Congress comprehensive
legislation to strengthen our hand in combatting
terrorists -- whether they strike at home or abroad. As
the coward's who bombed the World Trade Center found
out, this country will hunt down terrorists and bring
them to justice.
Just this week, another horrendous terrorist act in
Israel killed 19 and injured scores more. On behalf of
the American people and all of you, I send our deepest
sympathy to the families of the victims. I know that in
the face of such evil, it is hard for the people in the
Middle East to go forward. But the terrorists represent
the past, not the future. We must and we will pursue a
comprehensive peace between Israel and all her
neighbors in the Middle East.
Accordingly, last night I signed an executive order
that will block the assets in the United States of
terrorist organizations that threaten to disrupt the
peace process. It prohibits financial transactions with
these groups. And tonight I call on our allies and
peace-loving nations throughout the world to join us
with renewed fervor in a global effort to combat
terrorism. We cannot permit the future to be marred by
terror and fear and paralysis.
From the day I took the oath of office, I pledged that
our nation would maintain the best-equipped,
best-trained and best- prepared military on Earth. We
have, and they are. They have managed the dramatic
downsizing of our forces after the Cold War with
remarkable skill and spirit. But to make sure our
military is ready for action, and to provide the pay
and the quality of life the military and their families
deserve, I'm asking the Congress to add $25 billion in
defense spending over the next six years.
I have visited many bases at home and around the world,
since I became president. Tonight, I repeat that
request with renewed conviction. We ask a very great
deal of our Armed Forces. Now that they are smaller in
number, we ask more of them. They go out more often to
more different places and stay longer. They are called
to service in many, many ways. And we must give them
and their families what the times demand and what they
have earned.
Just think about what our troops have done in the last
year, showing America at its best -- helping to save
hundreds of thousands of people in Rwanda, moving with
lightning speech to head off another threat to Kuwait,
giving freedom and democracy back to the people of
Haiti.
We have proudly supported peace and prosperity and
freedom from South Africa to Northern Ireland, from
Central and Eastern Europe to Asia, from Latin America
to the Middle East. All these endeavors are good in
those places, but they make our future more confident
and more secure.
Well, my fellow Americans, that's my agenda for
America's future: Expanding opportunity, not
bureaucracy; enhancing security at home and abroad;
empowering our people to make the most of their own
lives. It's ambitious and achievable, but it's not
enough. We even need more than new ideas for changing
the world or equipping Americans to compete in the new
economy; more than a government that's smaller, smarter
and wiser; more than all the changes we can make in
government and in the private sector from the outside
in.
Our fortunes and our posterity also depend upon our
ability to answer some questions from within -- from
the values and voices that speak to our hearts as well
as our heads; voices that tell us we have to do more to
accept responsibility for ourselves and our families,
for our communities, and, yes, for our fellow citizens.
We see our families and our communities all over this
country coming apart. And we feel the common ground
shifting from under us. The PTA, the town hall meeting,
the ball park -- it's hard for a lot of overworked
parents to find the time and space for those things
that strengthen the bonds of trust and cooperation. Too
many of our children don't even have parents and
grandparents who can give them those experiences that
they need to build their own character and their sense
of identity.
We all know that while we here in this chamber can make
a difference on those things, that the real differences
will be made by our fellow citizens -- where they work
and where they live. And it will be made almost without
regard to party. When I used to go to the softball park
in Little Rock to watch my daughter's league, and
people would come up to me, fathers and mothers, and
talk to me, I can honestly say I had no idea whether 90
percent of them were Republicans or Democrats. When I
visited the relief centers after the floods in
California -- Northern California -- last week, a woman
came up to me and did something that very few of you
would do -- she hugged me and said, "Mr. President,
I'm a Republican, but I'm glad you're here."
Now, why? We can't wait for disasters to act the way we
used to act every day. Because as we move into this
next century, everybody matters; we don't have a person
to waste. And a lot of people are losing a lot of
chances to do better. That means that we need a New
Covenant for everybody.
For our corporate and business leaders, we're going to
work here to keep bringing the deficit down, to expand
markets, to support their success in every possible
way. But they have an obligation when they're doing
well to keep jobs in our communities and give their
workers a fair share of the prosperity they generate.
For people in the entertainment industry in this
country, we applaud your creativity and your world-wide
success, and we support your freedom of expression. But
you do have a responsibility to assess the impact of
your work and to understand the damage that comes from
the incessant, repetitive, mindless violence and
irresponsible conduct that permeates our media all the
time.
We've got to ask our community leaders and all kinds of
organizations to help us stop our most serious social
problem: the epidemic of teen pregnancies and births
where there is no marriage. I have sent to Congress a
plan to target schools all over this country with
anti-pregnancy programs that work. But government can
only do so much. Tonight, I call on parents and leaders
all across this country to join together in a national
campaign against teen pregnancy to make a difference.
We can do this, and we must.
And I would like to say a special word to our religious
leaders. You know, I'm proud of the fact the United
States has more houses of worship per capita than any
country in the world. These people who lead our houses
of worship can ignite their congregations to carry
their faith into action; can reach out to all of our
children, to all of the people in distress, to those
who have been savaged by the breakdown of all we hold
dear. Because so much of what we've done must come from
the inside out, and our religious leaders and their
congregations can make all the difference. They have a
role in the New Covenant as well.
There must be more responsibility for all of our
citizens. You know, it takes a lot of people to help
all the kids in trouble stay off the streets and in
school. It takes a lot of people to build the Habitat
for Humanity houses that the Speaker celebrates on his
lapel pin. It takes a lot of people to provide the
people power for all of the civic organizations in this
country that made our communities mean so much to most
of us when we were kids. It takes every parent to teach
the children the difference between right and wrong and
to encourage them to learn and grow; and to say no to
the wrong things, but also to believe that they can be
whatever they want to be.
I know it's hard when you're working harder for less,
when you're under great stress to do these things. A
lot of our people don't have the time or the emotional
stress they think to do the work of citizenship.
Most of us in politics haven't helped very much. For
years, we've mostly treated citizens like they were
consumers or spectators, sort of political couch
potatoes who were supposed to watch the TV ads, either
promise them something for nothing or play on their
fears and frustrations. And more and more of our
citizens now get most of their information in very
negative and aggressive ways that are hardly conducive
to honest and open conversations. But the truth is, we
have got to stop seeing each other as enemies, just
because we have different views.
If you go back to the beginning of this country, the
great strength of America, as de Tocqueville pointed
out when he came here a long time ago, has always been
our ability to associate with people who were different
from ourselves and to work together to find common
ground. And in this day, everybody has a responsibility
to do more of that. We simply cannot wait for a
tornado, a fire, or a flood to behave like Americans
ought to behave in dealing with one another.
I want to finish up here by pointing out some folks
that are up with the First Lady that represent what I'm
trying to talk about -- citizens. I have no idea what
their party affiliation is or who they voted for in the
last election. But they represent what we ought to be
doing.
Cindy Perry teaches second graders to read in
AmeriCorps in rural Kentucky. She gains when she gives.
She's a mother of four. She says that her service
"inspired" her to get her high school
equivalency last year. She was married when she was a
teenager. Stand up, Cindy. She was married when she was
a teenager. She had four children, but she had time to
serve other people, to get her high school equivalency.
And she's going to use her AmeriCorps money to go back
to college.
Stephen Bishop is the police chief of Kansas City. He's
been a national leader -- stand up -- He's been a
national leader in using more police in community
policing, and he's worked with AmeriCorps to do it. And
the crime rate in Kansas City has gone down as a result
of what he did.
Corporal Gregory Depestre went to Haiti as part of his
adopted country's force to help secure democracy in his
native land. And I might add, we must be the only
country in the world that could have gone to Haiti and
taken Haitian-Americans there who could speak the
language and talk to the people. And he was one of
them, and we're proud of him.
The next two folks I've had the honor of meeting and
getting to know a little bit, the Reverend John and the
Reverend Diana Cherry of the AME Zion Church in Temple
Hills, Maryland. I'd like to ask them to stand. I want
to tell you about them. In the early '80s, they left
government service and formed a church in a small
living room in a small house. Today that church has
17,000 members. It is one of the three or four biggest
churches in the entire United States. It grows by 200 a
month. They do it together. And the special focus of
their ministry is keeping families together.
Two things they did made a big impression on me. I
visited their church once, and I learned they were
building a new sanctuary closer to the Washington,
D.C., line in a higher crime, higher drug rate area
because they thought it was part of their ministry to
change the lives of the people who needed them.
The second thing I want to say is, that once Reverend
Cherry was at a meeting at the White House with some
other religious leaders, and he left early to go back
to his church to minister to 150 couples that he had
brought back to his church from all over America to
convince them to come back together, to save their
marriages, and to raise their kids. This is the kind of
work that citizens are doing in America. We need more
of it, and it ought to be lifted up and supported.
The last person I want to introduce is Jack Lucas from
Hattiesburg, Mississippi. Jack, would you stand up?
Fifty years ago, in the sands of Iwo Jima, Jack Lucas
taught and learned the lessons of citizenship. On
February the 20th, 1945, he and three of his buddies
encountered the enemy and two grenades at their feet.
Jack Lucas threw himself on both of them. In that
moment, he saved the lives of his companions, and
miraculously in the next instant, a medic saved his
life. He gained a foothold for freedom, and at the age
of 17, just a year older than his grandson, who is up
there with him today, and his son, who is a West Point
graduate and a veteran, at 17, Jack Lucas became the
youngest Marine in history and the youngest soldier in
this century to win the Congressional Medal of Honor.
All these years later, yesterday, here's what he said
about that day: "It didn't matter where you were
from or who you were, you relied on one another. You
did it for your country."
We all gain when we give, and we reap what we sow.
That's at the heart of this New Covenant --
responsibility, opportunity and citizenship. More than
stale chapters in some remote civics book; they're
still the virtue by which we can fulfill ourselves and
reach our God-given potential and be like them; and
also to fulfill the eternal promise of this country --
the enduring dream from that first and most sacred
covenant.
I believe every person in this country still believes
that we are created equal, and given by our Creator,
the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of
happiness. This is a very, very great country. And our
best days are still to come.
Thank you, and God bless you all.
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