For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
February 7, 2002
President Bush, Sen Lieberman Discuss Armies of Compassion
Remarks by the President and Senator Lieberman in Photo Opportunity After Meeting on Armies of Compassion
The Oval Office
2:05 P.M. EST
THE PRESIDENT: I want to welcome Senator Lieberman and
Senator Santorum and the delegation of U.S. senators from both parties
here at the Oval Office, to herald a great accomplishment, which is an
agreement to move a faith-based initiative out of the United States
Senate.
All of us in this room share a priority and insist that people who
don't have hope can find hope, people who wonder about the American
Dream will realize the American experience is meant for
them. And one way to ensure that is to unleash these
fantastic armies of compassion which exist all across the country.
And government ought to stand on their side. We're in
complete agreement that government should not discriminate against
faith-based programs, but it should encourage them to
flourish. And so I welcome so very much the senators here to
get this really important piece of legislation through.
This legislation will not only provide a way for government to
encourage faith-based programs to exist without breaching the
separation of church and state, it will also encourage charitable
giving as well. And we have an opportunity to capture the
compassion of the country, focus it in the right
direction. And because of the senators here, we're taking a
big step in that direction.
So Senator Lieberman, the lead sponsor, thank you for being here.
Appreciate you coming.
SENATOR LIEBERMAN: Thank you, Mr.
President. Thanks for your leadership on this, and thanks to
Senator Santorum and all our colleagues and our staffs that worked very
hard on this. I have always believed that faith, right from
the beginning of this country, was one of the great unifiers of the
American people. And faith has been strong enough to unify
all of us as we went forward to find a constitutionally appropriate way
to have a faith-based initiative, to help people who want to do good
works and whose desire to do good works is motivated by their faith.
This proposal really will matter to people. It creates
some very important tax incentives for greater charitable giving,
including saying to nonitemizers and -- Mr. Secretary, you correct me
-- but I think something like 75 percent of taxpayers do not itemize.
SECRETARY O'NEILL: That's right.
SENATOR LIEBERMAN: And it will give individuals an
additional $400 deduction for charitable giving and couples an
additional $800. That's a lot stronger, with all respect,
than the comparable House bill, and I think it really will motivate
more charitable giving. There are other tax incentives, as
well.
We also have an agreement to increase funding for a group of social
service programs, including, particularly, the social service block
grant program, which is very important to our states and very important
to a lot of nonprofit organizations, including faith-based
organizations that now use it to do good works. We have also
here -- and I mention this is constitutionally appropriate -- but we
have responded here in this proposal to the evidence presented by your
faith-based office, John DiIulio last summer, I believe, and the study
that showed that there was some sense of not fair play totally toward
faith-based groups as they applied for government funding.
And this says that if you qualify otherwise, you can't be
discriminated against in applying for a grant to do social service
work, if you have a cross on the wall or a mezzuzah on the door, or if
you praise God in your mission statement, and that's the way it ought
to be. So this is a real step forward.
I remember when we stood together last year over in Anacostia on
the day you announced your desire to have this faith-based initiative,
I was proud to support you. And I said then, because we were
talking in general terms, that the devil -- if I may use that term
advisedly -- (laughter) -- would be in the details. The
details along the way, Congress being what it is, turned out to be
quite devilish. But in the end here today, I think we've put
the good Lord right into the details.
THE PRESIDENT: Yes, thank you.
SENATOR LIEBERMAN: And I'm proud to be part of
it. I thank you.
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you, sir. Thank you
all. See you a little later on.
END 2:10
P.M. EST
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