REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT AT RECEPTION FOR REPRESENTATIVE CORRINE BROWN
                                THE WHITE HOUSE

                              Office of the Press Secretary
                         (Jacksonville, Florida)
___________________________________________________________________________
______
For Immediate Release                                        October 4,
2000


                            REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
                 AT RECEPTION FOR REPRESENTATIVE CORRINE BROWN

                        Prime Osborne Convention Center
                                       Jacksonville, Florida


3:40 P.M. EDT


     THE PRESIDENT:  Now, listen, we're going to forgive you for that minor
election year exaggeration.  (Laughter.)  Let me tell you folks, were you
all -- you weren't in the rally, were you?

     AUDIENCE:  No.

     THE PRESIDENT:  Well, we had a good one, and I thank you for making it
possible.  I just want to say more briefly what I said in there.  I am
grateful to the people of Florida for the opportunity they've given to me
and Hillary, and to our administration to serve.  The first victory I won,
of any kind, running for President was the December 1991 straw poll at the
Florida Democratic Convention, and I'm very grateful.  (Applause.)

     We almost won here in '92 and spent no money.  And I had a big fight
within our own camp.  I kept telling them, we can win in Florida.  So when
we didn't win in '92, I said, there will be no debate in '96.  We're going
all out.  In the meanwhile, of course, we had the Summit of the Americas
here, we moved the Southern Command here, we saved the Everglades.  We
helped to bring the economy back, and we got a big victory in Florida in
1996.  And what Corrine said was true -- when it came on the television
early on election eve that Bill Clinton and Al Gore had carried Florida,
everybody said, Katie bar the door, it's over, and all that.  And I would
like it if you would send that message again on the night of November 7th.
(Applause.)

     I also want to say that if I have been able to help our country, it's
important to me that you understand that it wouldn't have been possible had
it not been for the support of people like Alcee Hastings and Corrine
Brown.  And she has done a great job in Congress, she does deliver.
(Applause.)  As a matter of fact, she works me to death.  (Laughter.)  When
people see her coming in the White House, if she wants something, we
finally decided just go on and tell her yes before we even hear what it is
-- (laughter) -- because we know if we don't, we just know she'll wear us
out until we're all exhausted and we'll wind up saying yes anyway.
(Laughter.)  So we just say yes on the front end now.  (Laughter.)

     She has done a really good job for you and she deserves to be
reelected.  (Applause.)  And in a larger sense, her election and every
election this year, from anybody who has been involved in the last eight
years, is a decision by the people about whether to keep changing in the
direction we're going, or whether to turn back around and go back to where
we were, and change in another direction.

     And I can only tell you again -- I don't want to repeat everything I
said out there, but there are huge differences.  I thought the Vice
President did an excellent job in that debate last night.  I am very proud
of him.  (Applause.)  But it's important to me that you understand that --
like I said, I'm not running for anything.  We've got another candidate in
my house now -- (laughter) -- and she's going to win I think.  (Applause.)
But it's important to me that you understand that everything that I have
tried to do this last eight years to turn the country around, to bring the
country together, to get it moving forward, is sort of like setting the
table for a banquet, but the banquet hasn't been held yet.

     And I can give you -- we're paying off the debt, but we're not debt
free.  We've had the longest economic expansion in history, but it hasn't
extended to everybody who's willing to work.  We've reduced, just this last
year, the number of uninsured people, for the first time in a dozen years,
but there are still working families with children out there that need
health insurance, and senior citizens that need medicine.

     We've got -- the test scores in our schools are going up, and the
dropout rate's going down, and the college-going rate is at an all-time
high.  There's been a huge increase, two-thirds, in the number of our kids
taking advanced placement courses; 500 percent increase in the number of
African American children taking advanced placement courses for college in
the last decade.  But we're not anywhere near where we need to be yet.

     So the question is, what is it that we propose to do?  We've got the
country turned around, pulled together, moving in the right direction.
We're going to change.  The question is, how are we going to change.  And
the point I've tried to hammer home -- and I want to, by the way, before I
go any further, I want to acknowledge the presence in the audience of
someone else who hasn't been introduced here, your former Lt. Governor, my
Special Envoy to the Americas, Buddy MacKay.  I want to thank him for the
great job he's done.  (Applause.)

     But there's a big difference in the Republican and Democratic economic
approaches.  You heard a little bit of it last night.  But just to
simplify, basically, they want a tax cut that's three times as big as ours,
the one that the Vice President and Corrine support, and a partial
privatization of Social Security, which would cost another trillion dollars
to fund.  And that's before they keep any of their spending promises.  So
that puts them into spending the Social Security money, or into a deficit,
the way we talk about it.

     That's why the Vice President says, I'd like to give you one that big,
but I can't, not responsibly, because we've got to have money for
education, for health care, and we've got to keep paying the debt down.

     But what you should understand is -- every time I go to one of these
big dollar fundraisers where we've got a bunch of rich people, I say, why
are you for us?  You know, if you go to them, he's going to give some of
you millions.  Why are you for us?  And I make them say what I'll say to
you, what they always say is because your deal worked.  It's better to have
low interest rates, where businesses can borrow money and expand, the stock
market grows, people can be hired, incomes go up.  (Applause.)  And I'd
rather pay a little more money on a higher income than less money on a
lower income, where more people are working and the economy's growing.
This is a huge, huge idea difference here.

     You know, they really believe if you lower taxes, mostly on
upper-income people, and you give them more money to invest, it will grow
the economy, even if the government's in deficit.  We really believe that
if you have a government that's in deficit, and you're growing the debt,
you're going to have high interest rates, it's going to stagnate the
economy, and nothing else is going to work very well.  Plus which low
interest rates is the best middle class tax cut in the world.

     I have an economic study which indicates that the difference between
our plan and theirs would keep interest rates a percent lower for a decade.
That's $390 billion in lower home mortgages, $30 billion in lower car
payments, $15 billion in lower college loan payments.  That's a $435
billion tax cut, in the form of lower interest rates.  And you get that for
free by paying down the debt.  So it's a huge choice.  You've got to
decide.

     We have big differences in health care.  We're for a patient's bill of
rights, they're not.  We think all Americans ought to have -- all seniors
ought to have access to affordable, voluntary prescription drug coverage,
and they don't.  We think that this Children's Health Insurance Program,
which has insured 2.5 million kids, should be expanded to include the
working parents of those kids.  That would take care of 25 percent of all
the people without health insurance in this country.  It would also, by the
way, dramatically alleviate the burden on hospitals today for uncompensated
medical care.

     We believe that families ought to have a long-term care tax credit to
take care of their elderly or disabled family members.  More and more
people are doing that, and more and more people are going to have to do
that because we're all living longer.  If you live to be 65 in America,
your life expectancy is 82.  And with the Human Genome Project -- I said to
a woman's group I just met with, and I'll tell you again -- I believe that
the young women who are still having kids in this audience, within the next
10 years will be coming home with babies that will have a life expectancy
of 90 years.  But it means we have to plan for this, we have to prepare for
this, we have to adjust our society for this.

     So these are big differences.  There are big health care differences.
In education, both our sides are for accountability.  I think our
accountability plan is a little better than theirs, and I won't go into why
now because you don't have all day to talk about it.  But the difference
is, in addition to accountability, we want to help people meet the
standards.

     So I'll just give you one example.  When Al Gore started leading our
efforts to hook all the classrooms and schools up to the Internet, 3
percent of the classrooms and 11 percent of the schools were connected.
Today, 65 percent of the classrooms and 95 percent of the schools are
connected to the Internet.  We want to put 100,000 teachers out there, for
smaller classes in the early grades, and make sure they're certified to
teach what they're teaching, qualified.  (Applause.)

     We want to build -- provide states with tax relief on school bonds to
build 6,000 new schools or radically remodel them, and to repair another
5,000 a year for five years.  Huge issue in Florida.  You've got people in
all the house trailers, and coming out of the windows in these old schools,
and there are more kids then ever before in the schools, but a smaller
percent of the parents owning property and being in the -- elections than
ever before.  And I think that we've got the money, we ought to have some
tax relief here and some direct funding to help repair these schools and
modernize them.  It's a big issue.  I think it's important.  (Applause.)

     So, we're for that, and they're not.  So there are big differences in
the economy, health care, education.  Big differences in the environment.
Big differences in crime.  Big differences in how we go about living
together on equal terms.  We're for strengthening the equal pay for equal
work law for women.  (Applause.)  We're for a hate crimes bill that covers
everybody, and they're not.

     So I believe, on all these issues, in addition to what Corrine does
for the district, she's right, and they're not.  That's what I believe.  If
you believe that, and if you believe the same about the presidential race,
then it's very important that between now and election, you give her some
more money if you can, because she's being out-spent.  (Applause.)  But,
beyond that, you think about all the people you come in contact with every
day who are your friends -- some are Democrats, some are Republicans, some
are independents --nearly every one of them intends to vote.  Almost none
of them come to things like this.  Is that right?  Most of your friends
never come to events like this, and would never have a chance to have an
encounter like this.

     So I think it's very important that in addition to everything else, if
you just make up your mind that part of the duties of citizenship for you
-- since you came here, you heard this, you know something about it
already, otherwise you wouldn't be helping her -- is that every day between
now and the election you're going to take a little time to talk to
somebody.  You might make the difference in whether they vote or not.  You
might make the difference in the person they vote for.

     Because the most important thing -- I've always believed if the
American people have enough time and enough information, they nearly always
get it right.  Otherwise, we wouldn't still be here as the oldest democracy
in the world.  We'd be on the ash can of history.  We'd be history.  And
the reason we're still here doing better is, not necessarily -- not
primarily because of the leaders, but primarily because people are pretty
smart, and they're fundamentally good, and our system is fundamentally
wise.  And freedom works, but for it to work, people have to have enough
information, and enough time to digest it, and they have to understand what
the differences are, and the nature of their choice.

     So the way I want you to think about this is, confusion about the
choice helps them; clarity about the choice helps us.  I believe that with
all my heart.  I think if people say, I want somebody that will meet the
big challenges of the future, I want somebody that understands the future,
I want somebody that supported the right kind of change in the past, and
here are the choices before me, in the economy and education and health
care, the environment, crime, the whole nine yards -- we win, if they
understand.

     You can help that.  So I want to ask you for her, for Al Gore and Joe
Lieberman, for Bill Nelson, go out there and make sure people understand
with clarity the choice before them.  If you do, trust the people will have
a great celebration the night of November 7th.

     Thank you and God bless you all.  (Applause.)

                         END                          3:54 P.M. EDT


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