For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
October 2, 2004
President's Remarks to the National Association of Home Builders
Greater Columbus Convention Center
Columbus, Ohio
10:01 A.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you all very much. Thank you all.
AUDIENCE: Four more years! Four more years! Four more years!
THE PRESIDENT: Thanks a lot. Thanks for the warm welcome. I
appreciate being with the home builders from all across our country --
it's a good way to spend a Saturday morning. (Laughter.) I'm proud to
be back in the state capital of Ohio. I don't know if you know this or
not, but my great grandfather built a home right here in Columbus, on
Roxbury Road. (Applause.) The home builder they hired did a good
job. (Laughter.) The house still stands. (Laughter and applause.)
My grandfather was born in this city back in 1895, so I hope a
month from now the Ohio voters will send a home boy back to
Washington. (Applause.)
For millions of our citizens, the American Dream starts with owning
a home. (Applause.) Home ownership gives people a sense of pride and
independence and confidence for the future. When you work hard, like
you've done, and there are good policies coming out of our nation's
capital we're creating a home -- an ownership society in this country,
where more Americans than ever will be able to open up their door where
they live and say, welcome to my house, welcome to my piece of
property. (Applause.)
I was in Florida this week. And I've been there quite often
because of the hurricanes, and I want to thank you for the good work
that the home builders are doing for the people of that state. Home
builders have collected donations of cash and building materials for
families that have lost so much. They've established an online
disaster contractor network to help put homeowners in touch with
licensed contractors and with government officials who can help those
people that have been hurt by these storms.
The federal government is also doing its part, along with state and
local authorities. Florida has been through a terrible time. And so
have many communities here in Ohio, that have suffered severe flooding
caused by the hurricanes. We've issued disaster declarations for 20
counties in Ohio, making residents whose homes have been damaged or
destroyed eligible for assistance. In Florida, Ohio, and other
storm-damaged -- ravaged states, we will not rest until life is back to
normal, the damage repaired, and the homes are rebuilt. (Applause.)
Laura sends her best. (Applause.) When I asked her to marry me,
she was a public school librarian in Texas. (Applause.) There you
are. Just wanted to see if any of the home-state folks are here.
(Laughter.) I know Conine is here. (Laughter.) She said: Fine, I'll
marry you, just so long as I never have to give a political speech.
(Laughter.) I said, okay. (Laughter.) Fortunately, she didn't hold
me to that promise. The American people are learning what I know:
She's a compassionate, decent, strong First Lady for our country.
(Applause.)
I want to thank -- I want to thank Bobby Rayburn and Annette for
their invitation and their leadership of this important group. I
appreciate the board of directors who are here today. I want to thank
the guests who are here today.
I'm traveling today with Senator Mike DeWine, from the state of
Ohio, who is a fine United States Senator. I appreciate you coming,
Mike. (Applause.) Congressman Dave Hobson and Carolyn are with us
today. Thank you for coming, Congressman, I appreciate you being
here. (Applause.) Congressman Pat Tibieri is here. Thank you for
coming, Pat, I'm proud you're here. (Applause.) He brought his
mother, Rina, with him.
Yesterday I was in New Hampshire speaking, and mother showed up.
(Laughter.) Just wanted to make sure she could continue giving me some
instructions. (Laughter.) Tibieri, my only advice to you is do what I
do, and that's listen to your mother. (Laughter.) I appreciate your
dad, Joe, being here, and your sister.
I want to thank the Lieutenant Governor from this state being here,
Jenette Bradley. And happy birthday to you, Governor, I appreciate
it. (Applause.) Betty Montgomery, the state auditor is here. I know
there's other local officials and state officials. We all appreciate
you being here today.
Today when I landed at the airport, I met Karen Kindron. You've
probably never heard of Karen, but let me tell you about her. She is
an active volunteer in what's called Rebuilding Together of Columbus.
She is a soldier in the army of compassion. She is the kind of person
who's heard the universal call to love a neighbor. She represents the
true strength of America, which is the hearts and souls of our
citizens. The program for which she volunteers helps low-
income, elderly and disabled homeowners. They help them obtain
services such as weatherization and repair work. Since founded in
1988, over 2 million volunteers have rehabilitated 87,000 homes and
facilities. America can change one heart and one soul at a time for
the better because of the volunteers all across our country who are
making a difference. (Applause.)
And I want to thank Karen. Where are you, Karen? She's
somewhere. Anyway, she's here and I thank her for setting such a good
example. Thank you, Karen, appreciate it. (Applause.)
We're nearing an historic national election in 31 days -- who's
counting? (Laughter.) Americans will go to the polls to determine
the direction of this great nation for the next four years. I'm
looking forward to these final weeks of the campaign. I really am. I
like to get out amongst the people. And I'm going to tell you where I
stand, and what I believe, and where I'll lead this nation.
(Applause.)
I believe it is the job of a President to confront problems, not
pass them on to future Presidents and future generations. (Applause.)
And in the last four years, we have faced some problems. We faced a
recession, corporate scandal. We passed tough laws now to make it
abundantly clear, we will not tolerate dishonesty in the boardrooms of
America. (Applause.)
We faced a terrorist attack and war. Because we confronted these
challenges with focus and resolve, our nation is on the path to a
better future. If America shows weakness or uncertainty in this
decade, the world will drift toward tragedy. This is not going to
happen on my watch. (Applause.)
We're going after the terrorists. We will hunt them down where
they plot and plan, and we're making progress. Today, more than
three-quarters of al Qaeda's key members and associates have been
brought to justice. (Applause.) I have the solemn duty to protect the
homeland, and we'll do everything we can here at home to protect you.
But the best way to protect the homeland is to stay on the offensive,
fighting the terrorists overseas so we do not have to face them here in
America. (Applause.)
But I understand this: to make sure our children and grandchildren
grow up in a hopeful, peaceful world, this country must continue to
spread freedom and liberty. Freedom in Afghanistan -- 10 million
citizens in that country that was once ruled by the barbarians, the
Taliban, have registered to vote, 41 percent of whom are women, in the
upcoming presidential elections. Freedom is on the march. (Applause.)
We'll continue to work for a free society in Iraq. It's hard work
there. You know it's hard, and I know it's hard. It's hard for a
reason -- because the terrorists fear freedom. Liberty will transform
societies. Some day, an American President will be sitting down with a
duly elected leader of Iraq talking about the peace, and our children
and grandchildren will be able to grow up in a more peaceful world. In
the long-run, our interests are served by spreading freedom and
liberty, and, therefore, spreading peace.
There are clear differences in this campaign. In the debate
Thursday night, my opponent continued his pattern of confusing
contradictions on Iraq. After voting for the war, after saying my
decision to remove Saddam Hussein from power was the right decision, he
now says it was all a mistake. Then he was asked if our troops were
dying for a mistake. He said, no. You can't have it both ways. You
can't say it's a mistake and not a mistake. You can't be for getting
rid of Saddam Hussein when things look good, and against it when times
are hard. You can't claim terrorists are pouring across the border
into Iraq, yet at the same time try to claim that Iraq is somehow a
diversion from the war against terrorism. A President cannot keep
changing his mind, a President must be consistent, a President must
speak clearly, and a President must mean what he says. (Applause.)
In the debate -- in the debate, Senator Kerry also said something
revealing when he laid out the Kerry doctrine. He said -- he said that
America has to pass a global test before we can use American troops to
defend ourselves.
AUDIENCE: Booo!
THE PRESIDENT: That's what he said. (Laughter.) Think about
this, Senator Kerry's approach to foreign policy would give foreign
governments veto power over our national security decisions. I have a
different view. (Applause.) When our country is in danger, the
President's job is not to take an international poll. The President's
job is to defend America. (Applause.) I'll continue to work every day
with our friends and allies for the sake of freedom and peace. But our
national security decisions will be made in the Oval Office, not in
foreign capitals. (Applause.) We have hard work ahead to do our
duty. But by being steadfast and resolved, we will prevail.
(Applause.)
And as we defend our great country we will continue strengthening
our nation here at home. To grow this economy and unleash the spirit
of enterprise, to overcome the obstacles I described earlier, we passed
the largest tax relief in a generation. (Applause.) And that tax
relief has made a big difference for a lot of you all. See, many home
builders are small businesses. Many home builders are -- represent the
great entrepreneurial spirit of America. Among the members of the
National Association of Home Builders, 63 percent of you are either
subchapter-S or sole proprietorships, which means you pay your taxes at
the individual income tax rate. (Applause.) Just like a lot of other
small businesses in America do.
And so when we passed tax relief by cutting rates on everybody who
pay taxes, we helped our small businesses; we helped our -- our home
builders. We helped you with resources to build or grow and expand and
hire more workers. By cutting taxes on dividends and capital gains, we
encouraged savings and investment, which is crucial to your industry.
Tax relief left more money in the hands of American workers so they
could save, spend, invest and help drive this economy forward.
The economic recovery plan of ours is working. The results are
clear for all to see. Over the past year, America has added 1.7
million jobs. We've added 107,000 manufacturing jobs since January.
The national unemployment rate is down to 5.4 percent, nearly a full
point below the rate in the summer of 2003, and below the average of
the 1970s, 1980s, and the 1990s. (Applause.)
Inflation is low. Mortgage and interest rates are near historic
lows. Our economy is growing at rates as fast as any in nearly 20
years, spreading opportunity and prosperity across this country. And
the home builders of America have helped lead the recovery in America.
(Applause.)
The tax relief has helped many be able to put money down to buy a
home. As well, my administration has worked to expand home ownership
in other ways. Last December, I signed the American Dream Down Payment
Act, which will help thousands of low-income families afford the down
payment and closing costs on their first home. We want people in every
corner of America owning a home. (Applause.)
We've doubled funding for education and counseling services to help
first-time home buyers navigate the lending process, understand the
fine print, and avoid predatory lenders. Home ownership rates are an
all-time high in America, nearly 70 percent. I love that statistic.
(Laughter.) Think about that. More and more people own a home in
America. More and more people have a chance to realize the great dream
of our country. Minority home ownership is at record levels, as well.
In 2002, I set a clear goal, 5.5 million new minority homeowners by the
end of the decade. And in just two years, more than 1.6 million
minorities have become homeowners. (Applause.)
America is a stronger country every single time a family moves into
a house of their own. (Applause.) The fundamental question in this
campaign is how do we make the -- the recovery lasting -- to lasting
prosperity. To create more jobs in America, to make sure people can
find work, America must be the best place in the world to do business.
(Applause.) That means less regulations on the entrepreneurs.
(Applause.) To create jobs here, Congress needs to pass my energy
plan. It's a plan that encourages conservation and renewable sources,
but it's a plan that uses technology so we can burn coal and explore
for natural gas. To make sure our economy remains strong and people
can find work in America, we must become less dependent on foreign
sources of energy. (Applause.)
To make sure this economy remains strong, we've got to reject
economic isolationism. We have opened up our markets for products from
overseas, and that's good for the consumer. If a person has more
choices, he or she is likely to get the product they want at better
quality and lower price. That's how the marketplace works. So I'm
saying to other countries like China and elsewhere, treat us the way we
treat you. Open up your markets for our farmers, ranchers and
entrepreneurs. We can compete with anybody, anytime, anywhere, so long
as the rules are fair. (Applause.)
To make sure that jobs exist here in America people can find work,
we've got to protect our small business owners and workers from the
junk lawsuits that threaten jobs across America. (Applause.) I don't
think you can be pro-home builder, pro-small business, pro-entrepreneur
and pro-trial lawyer at the same time. (Applause.) I think you have to
choose. My opponent made a choice: He put a trial lawyer on the
ticket. I made my choice: I'm for legal reform to make sure this
economy continues forward. (Applause.)
I've worked with Congress to create opportunity zones, which will
provide extra tax relief and regulatory relief and other incentives for
businesses to help our communities that have lost manufacturing and
textile and other jobs to get back on their feet. We'll keep this
economy growing until prosperity reaches every corner of America.
And I've set another great goal, and that's to build an ownership
society, where everyone has a chance to own a home and a retirement
account or health care plan, and to gain a permanent stake in the
American Dream. I believe expanded ownership is necessary for a lot of
reasons, and one of the main reasons is because the times in which we
live and work are changing dramatically. Think about our society
today, compared to the society of our grandparents and parents. The
workers of our parents' and grandparents' generation typically had only
one job, one skill, one career, often with one company that provided
health care and a pension. Today, people are changing jobs and careers
quite often, and the workforce has changed. Women work inside the
house and now outside the house. Yet, the fundamental systems of
government -- the health care plans, the pension plans, the tax code,
the worker training programs -- were designed for yesterday, not for
tomorrow.
I'm running for office to help people be able to realize their
dreams by changing the fundamental systems of government. And in times
of change, I understand that ownership brings stability to our
neighborhoods and security to our families. In changing times, it
helps if you own something. It helps bring security to you. By paying
a mortgage instead of rent, by putting money into your own retirement
plan, you're storing up wealth for your family. And that nest egg
grows in value and you can pass it on to your children and
grandchildren.
To build an ownership society, we'll help even more Americans buy
homes. Some families are more than able to pay a mortgage, but just
don't have the savings to put money down. We'll continue to help them
realize their dreams with a down payment. So I'm asking Congress to
pass my Zero Down Payment Initiative. We should remove the 3 percent
down payment rule for first time home buyers with FHA-insured
mortgages. (Applause.) This change could help as many as 150,000
people become homeowners in the first year alone.
To help low- to moderate-income rural families purchase homes, I've
requested $2.7 billion in loan guarantees, and $1.1 billion for direct
loans to low-income borrowers that can't get bank loans. These
initiatives will help thousands in rural communities across America
achieve the dream of home ownership. Adding more qualified buyers
won't accomplish much if there are no affordable homes to buy. My
administration has set a goal of 7 million more affordable homes in the
next 10 years. To help reach that goal, I've asked Congress to pass
the single family housing affordable tax credit to help you build
between 40 and 50 thousand new affordable homes every year.
(Applause.)
I understand that the regulatory barriers at the federal, state,
and local levels can add as much as 35 percent of the cost to the
homes. In order to make sure there's more affordable homes, we must
remove the regulatory barriers on our home builders. (Applause.)
I understand -- I understand there's a need for sensible
regulation, but when you have overlapping regulations that send
confusing signals, when you have the federal government, the state
government, the local governments creating obstacles for home building,
it is time to reduce those regulations. (Applause.)
Finally, I believe that the mortgage interest deduction enables
more Americans to achieve the goal of home ownership. It is an
important part of our tax code. (Applause.)
To build an ownership society, we should help our fellow citizens
get health care, especially coverage for themselves. More than
one-half of the uninsured in America are small business employees and
their families. To make sure they get help, we must allow small firms
to join together through association health plans so they can purchase
insurance for their employees at the same discounts that big businesses
are able to do so. (Applause.)
And I appreciate -- I appreciate your home builders -- the home
builders for supporting this initiative. We will offer a tax credit to
encourage small businesses and their employees to set up health savings
accounts. We'll provide help -- direct help for low-income Americans
to purchase health savings accounts. Health savings accounts -- and I
urge you to look into them -- give workers the security of insurance
against major illness, the opportunity to save tax-free for routine
health expenses, and the freedom of knowing that you own your own
account that you can take with you wherever you -- whenever you change
jobs. (Applause.)
And finally, in order to make sure -- another practical commonsense
way to make sure health care is available and affordable, is to stop
these frivolous lawsuits that are running good docs out of business and
running up the cost of your health care. (Applause.) By making this
medical liability issue a significant part of the campaign, by talking
about every single stop, by reminding people about what these lawsuits
do to -- to their health care, I am confident that in the next four
years, we'll get medical liability reform out of the United States
Senate and the House of Representatives. (Applause.)
In all we do to improve health care, we'll make sure the decisions
are made by doctors and patients, not by bureaucrats in the nation's
capital. (Applause.)
To build an ownership society, we've got to reform and strengthen
our retirement system. I remember campaigning in 2000 and people tell
me where they saw the TV ad they were running that said if George W.
gets elected, our seniors aren't going to get their Social Security
checks. So I'm going around the country reminding the seniors they got
their checks. (Laughter.)
With the baby boomer generation approaching retirement, many of our
children and grandchildren understandably worry whether Social Security
will be there when they need it. Social Security is in good shape for
our seniors and Social Security is in good shape for baby boomers like
me. But we need to worry about our children and grandchildren. And so
I believe we ought to strengthen Social Security by allowing younger
workers to save some of their taxes in a personal account, a nest egg
they can call their own that the government cannot take away.
(Applause.)
In all these proposals, we seek to provide not just a government
program, but a path to greater opportunity and more freedom and more
control over your own life. And here, as on so many other issues,
there's a big difference between my opponent and me. Senator Kerry
voted against tax deductible health savings accounts. He voted against
expanding personal retirement savings accounts. He opposes our
proposals to strengthen Social Security by allowing younger workers to
put some of their taxes into personal accounts that they control. He
opposes our plan to allow small businesses to join together to purchase
health insurance at the discounts available to big companies. There's
a pattern here. (Laughter.) On just about every proposal to empower
the individual instead of government, my opponent has voted "no."
A few weeks ago, Senator Kerry gave a speech in Detroit to lay our
his economic agenda. Not once in that speech did he mention expanding
ownership, not a word on how we would help more Americans own their own
homes or stocks or savings accounts. Instead, his agenda focuses on
expanding the scope and power of the government. He has decided to put
his faith in the wisdom of the government. I will always put my faith
in the wisdom of the American people. (Applause.)
Senator Kerry -- Senator Kerry has spent almost 20 years in the
federal government, and he's concluded that it just isn't big enough.
(Laughter.) On the campaign trail, he has proposed more than $2
trillion in new federal spending so far. (Laughter.) And that's a
lot, even for a senator from Massachusetts. (Laughter.) And he said
-- they asked him, well, how are you going to pay for it? He said, by
raising taxes on the rich; by raising taxes on the wealthiest 2 percent
of the population. We've heard that rhetoric before, "raising taxes on
the rich." There's one problem with that, that the tax increase would
bring only in about $600 billion of revenue. And he wants to spend
more than $2 trillion, so there's a tax gap. And guess who gets to
fill the tax gap? Yes, you do. That's what happens. People make wild
promises, and they can't pay for it, and then they're going to raise
your taxes to pay for it.
He also doesn't understand when he says, tax the so-called, "rich,"
he's raising the taxes on the small business owners of America. My
opponent's plan would raise taxes on over 900,000 small business
owners, the subchapter-S corporations, the sole proprietorships, people
just like you. Small businesses are the engine of job creation in our
country. Small businesses create seven out of every 10 new jobs. It
makes no sense to tax the job creators as our economy is getting
stronger. (Applause.) We should not punish free enterprise. We ought
to encourage free enterprise in America. (Applause.)
Now, I've got a plan to help this country move forward. I believe
tax -- the tax relief we passed ought to be made permanent.
(Applause.) I've got a practical way to make sure Americans get health
coverage without empowering the federal government. We got a clear
view of how to make sure Social Security fulfills its promise to our
younger folks. We're going to help more families find dignity and
independence in a home they call their own. We're going to build an
ownership society where everyone has a stake in the success of America
and everyone has a chance to realize the great promise of our country.
And you're helping people realizing that success. It must be a
fantastic feeling to be a part of the American Dream. It must be great
to see -- (applause) -- it must be magnificent to see somebody walk in
to their home and feel the pride of ownership, the fantastic feeling of
saying to a son or daughter: Here's your room; here's our piece of
property.
I want to thank you, very much, for what you're doing. I want to
thank you for helping pull our economy through some tough times and
helping this nation get on that hopeful path for a bright future. I
appreciate your hard work, I appreciate your optimism, I appreciate
your love for America.
May God bless you, and may God continue to bless our country.
Thank you all. (Applause.)
END 10:38 A.M. EDT
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