For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
August 26, 2004
Remarks by the President at Farmington, New Mexico Rally
Ricketts Park
Farmington, New Mexico
12:35 P.M. MDT
THE PRESIDENT: Thanks for coming. I appreciate -- (Applause.)
It's good to be here in Farmington, New Mexico, in the Four Corners
area of our country. I appreciate you all coming out. (Applause.) I
told Rudy, I said, I can't wait to get to Farmington. You're going to
meet some really fine people here. (Applause.) It's a part of the
country where the boots outnumber the suits. (Applause.)
The other day my opponent said he thinks he find the heart and soul
of America in Hollywood.
AUDIENCE: Booo!
THE PRESIDENT: I think you find it right here in Farmington, New
Mexico. (Applause.) I appreciate your hospitality. Rudy and I love
being here. I want thank you all for coming out. It's such a
beautiful day. (Applause.) I'm here to ask for the vote. I'm
traveling with this great leader around New Mexico to tell the people
I've got more to do to make this country safer, stronger, and better.
(Applause.)
I also want to thank those of you who are involved with grass roots
politics. Those are the people who put up the signs. Those are the
people who make the phone calls. Those are the people who help
register the voters -- people like Bill Redmond, people who run the
county here. These are the people who do their duty. See, I think we
have a duty in America to vote.
AUDIENCE: Yes!
THE PRESIDENT: I think we have an obligation. (Applause.) I
think we have an obligation in this society to go to the polls, and so
therefore I'm asking for your help. I hope you will register people to
vote. Register Republicans, register independents. I see a man here,
he says, Navaho Democrats for Bush. Register Democrats to vote.
(Applause.) And when you get them headed to the polls, tell them we're
ready to lead for four more years. Tell them we're ready to make this
country a safer place and a better place. (Applause.)
I regret that Laura's not with me. Now, I know, she's fabulous. I
met the Vice President of the Navajo Nation out at the airport and met
his beautiful wife, and the first thing she asked me, she said,
"Where's Laura?" (Laughter.) She's working. (Laughter.)
I kissed her good-bye today in Crawford and headed west.
(Applause.) I'm really proud of her. She's a great mom and a wonderful
wife. She's a fabulous First Lady. Today, I'm going to give you some
reasons to put me back in, but perhaps the most important one of all is
so that Laura is the First Lady for four more years. (Applause.)
I'm running with a good man for Vice President, Dick Cheney.
(Applause.) He is a -- I know there's a state rep named Dick Cheney
from this part of the world. I hope he's as good a man as the Dick
Cheney I call running mate. I bet he is. (Applause.)
Dick Cheney is solid as a rock. I picked him because he knows what
he's doing. I picked him because he can get the job done. That's why
I'm running with Dick Cheney. (Applause.)
Listen, I enjoy working with your senator, Pete Domenici. He's a
good man. (Applause.) He and Nancy are taking a vacation. I don't
blame them. He's been working hard for the people of New Mexico. But
in his stead, we've got another great United States senator with us
today, and that's my friend Ben Nighthorse Campbell and his wife,
Linda, from the state of Colorado. (Applause.) Where are you? Oh,
yeah. (Laughter.) I'm going to miss you, friend. I'm going to win,
and I'm going to miss your presence in the United States Senate. He's
a great man. I appreciate you coming. (Applause.)
I want to remind you that we have been through a lot together. We
have accomplished a lot, too. But you know something, the only reason
to look backward at the record is to -- who best to lead us forward
into the future. (Applause.) I'm here traveling to your state because
there's so much at stake.
We have done much but there is more to do to move this country
forward. We have more to do to create jobs and improve our schools.
We have more to do to fight terror and to protect the American people.
We have more to do to spread freedom and peace we all want.
(Applause.) We've made progress. And over the next four years, we will
do more on behalf of the American people. (Applause.)
We've got more to do to make our public schools the centers of
excellence we know they can be so no child is left behind in America.
You might remember how the system worked three-and-a-half years ago.
Too many of our children were being shuffled from grade to grade, year
after year, without learning the basics. I went to Washington to
challenge the soft bigotry of low expectations. (Applause.) I said
we'll provide more money from Washington to help the schools, but in
return we expect results. We want our children to learn to read and
write and add and subtract, and our plan is working. We're closing the
achievement gap in America, but there's more to be done. We got to
make sure our high school students get more math and sciences, because
in order to be able to compete in the 21st century, we're going to need
new skills. We got to have early intervention programs to make sure no
child is left behind. We want to make sure our high school diploma
means something when a kid graduates from high school, so they can find
work. What I'm telling you is, after four more years, a rising
generation will have the skills and the confidence necessary to realize
the American Dream. (Applause.)
We've got more to do to make sure that we've got quality health
care that's affordable to our citizens. Listen, when we came to
office, the Medicare promise had been broken year after year. You
might remember those old campaigns, they'd say, vote for me, I'm going
to strengthen Medicare. Sure enough, nothing took place in
Washington. There's a lot of special interests there -- a lot of
people dug in. But we got the job done. We strengthened Medicare for
our seniors. Starting in the year 2006, seniors will have choices in
Medicare, including prescription drug coverage. (Applause.)
We've expanded community health centers for low-income Americans.
We will continue to do so over the next four years. We've created
health savings accounts so families can save tax-free for their health
care needs. We're making progress. There is more work to be done.
Listen, most Americans get health coverage through their work. Most of
today's new jobs are created by small businesses. (Applause.) But
small businesses all across America are having trouble with health
care. In order to help American families get the health care they
need, we must allow small employers to join together so they can
purchase insurance at the same discount that big businesses are able to
do so. (Applause.)
We will harness technology to save money in health care and to cut
down on errors. We will continue to expand research and seek new
cures. In order to make sure you've got good docs here in Farmington,
New Mexico, in order to make sure we got good health care in this part
of the world that's affordable, we need to cut down on the frivolous
lawsuits that are running up your cost of medicine. (Applause.)
See, I don't think you can be pro-patient, pro-hospital and
pro-doctor and pro-plaintiff attorney at the same time. (Applause.) I
think you have to choose. My opponent made his choice and he put him
on the ticket. (Laughter.) I made my choice: I'm standing with the
patients and the doctors. I am for medical liability reform -- now.
(Applause.) In all we do to improve health care in America, we will
make sure the health care decisions are made by doctors and patients,
not by bureaucrats in Washington, D.C. (Applause.)
We've got more to do to make this economy stronger. Our economy
has been through a lot. We've been through a recession. We've been
through corporate scandals. We've been through a severe attack on our
country, and yet, the economy is strong and it's getting stronger,
because our workers are great. (Applause.) Our farmers are great.
Our ranchers know what they're doing. The small business sector of
America is strong and vibrant. The entrepreneurial spirit is alive and
well in this country.
I also think one of the reasons we've overcome these obstacles is
because of well-timed tax cuts. (Applause.) We gave tax relief to
every American who pays taxes. That seems fair.
AUDIENCE: Yes.
THE PRESIDENT: You might remember we helped American families by
raising the child credit. (Applause.) We reduced the marriage
penalty. (Applause.) The tax code penalizes marriage; we ought to be
encouraging marriage, not penalizing marriage. (Applause.)
We're helping our small businesses. And this time, the check
actually was in the mail. (Laughter.) Because we acted, our economy
since last summer has grown at a rate as fast as any in nearly 20
years. Since last August, we've added about 1.5 million new jobs. The
unemployment rate nationally is 5.5 percent, and the unemployment rate
in your important state is 5.3 percent. (Applause.)
The economy is strong, it's getting stronger, and there's more to
do to keep jobs here at home. We've got to make sure our regulations
are reasonable and fair. We need tort reform, not only in the health
care field, but all across the board to make sure our employers don't
spend their money on frivolous lawsuits but are able to do so on their
employees.
Listen, in order to make sure jobs stay here, we need a sound
energy policy. (Applause.) Of course, we need to encourage
conservation and renewable sources of energy, but we need to be
exploring for natural gas right here in America, too. We need to be
less dependent -- (applause.) In order to make sure jobs stay in
America, we need to become less dependent on foreign sources of
energy. (Applause.)
In order to make sure jobs are here, we've got to open up markets
like we've opened up ours. Listen, I believe American workers and
farmers and ranchers can compete with anybody, anytime, anywhere, so
long as the rules are fair. (Applause.) In order to make sure jobs
stay here America, we've got to make sure our workers have a lifetime
of learning available to them. See, this is a changing world, and jobs
are changing, the skill sets are different. That's why I'm such a
strong believer in the community college system. I believe we need to
use our community colleges and help workers gain the skills necessary
to fill the jobs of the 21st century.
In order to make sure we keep jobs here, we've got to be wise about
how we spend your money. Listen carefully to the rhetoric coming out
of Washington. They say, well, we're going to spend the government's
money. That's not what I think and that's what I know -- not -- that's
what I know. We're not talking about the government's money. We're
talking about the people's money. It's your money we spend in
Washington, D.C. (Applause.)
In order to make sure we keep jobs here in America, we must keep
your taxes low. (Applause.) Running up the taxes on the working
people and the small businesses of America will slow down its economic
recovery. Now, I'm running against a fellow who's already made over $2
trillion of promises in the course of the campaign, and we haven't even
gotten to the stretch run yet. (Laughter.) We're not even coming down
the pike. No telling what he'll promise in October. (Laughter.) The
problem is, he hasn't said how he's going to pay for it. Well, he said
one thing, he said he's going to tax the rich. You've heard that
before, haven't you?
AUDIENCE: Yes.
THE PRESIDENT: Yes. Guess what? The rich dodge and you pay.
AUDIENCE: Yes.
THE PRESIDENT: But we're not going to let him. We're going to
beat him come November. (Applause.) And it's going to start with
carrying the great state of New Mexico. (Applause.)
We have more to do to wage and win the war on terror. America's
future depends on our willingness to lead in the world. If America
shows uncertainty or weakness in this decade, the world will drift
toward tragedy. This isn't going to happen on my watch. (Applause.)
The world changed on a terrible September morning, and since that
day, we have changed the world. Before September the 11th, of 2001,
Afghanistan served as the home base of al Qaeda, which trained and
deployed thousands of killers to set up terror cells around the world,
including our own country. Because we acted, Afghanistan is a rising
democracy. Because we acted -- (applause) -- because we acted, over
ten million people have registered to vote in a country that a short
time ago was brutalized by a barbaric regime called the Taliban.
Because we acted, Afghanistan is an ally in the war on terror. Because
we acted, many young girls go to school for the first time. Because we
acted, America and the world are safer. (Applause.)
Before September the 11th, Pakistan and Saudi didn't take al Qaeda
seriously. Today, they are allies in the war against the terrorists;
America and the world are safer. Before September the 11th, Libya was
spending millions to acquire weapons of mass destruction. Today,
because America and our allies have sent a strong and
easy-to-understand message, the leader of Libya has abandoned his
pursuit of weapons of mass destruction, and America and the world are
safer. (Applause.)
Before September the 11th, the ruler of Iraq was a sworn enemy of
America. He was defying the world. He was firing weapons at American
pilots enforcing the world's sanctions. He had pursued and he had used
weapons of mass destruction. He harbored terrorists. He invaded his
neighbors. He subsidized the families of suicide bombers. Saddam
Hussein and his henchmen murdered tens of thousands of his own
citizens. He was a source of great instability in the world's most
volatile region. He was a threat.
AUDIENCE MEMBER: No longer!
AUDIENCE MEMBER: Not any more!
THE PRESIDENT: After September the 11th, we had to look at the
world differently. It's very important for our country to remember the
lessons of September the 11th. One of the clearest lessons is that we
must take threats seriously, before they fully materialize.
(Applause.)
So I went to the United States Congress. The Congress looked at
the intelligence I looked at, they remembered Saddam's history, and
came to the same conclusion I did, he was a threat -- including the
person I'm running against, came to that same conclusion. Because a
military action ought to be the last option of an American President, I
went to the United Nation. I said to the United Nations, you have seen
a threat in the past. We see a threat. The world has changed since
September the 11th. What do you think? They came together after a
debate, looked at the same intelligence we did, and concluded that
Saddam Hussein was a threat, that he must disclose, disarm or face
serious consequences. The world spoke. But as he had for over a
decade, he defied the demands of the free world. See, he didn't seem
to care what the free world said.
Not only that, when we sent inspectors into the country, he
systematically deceived the inspectors. So I had a choice to make. Do
I trust a madman and forget the lessons of September the 11th, or take
action necessary to defend America? Given that choice, I will defend
our country every time. (Applause.)
Even though we did not find the stockpiles that we expected to
find, Saddam Hussein had the capability of making weapons of mass
destruction and could have passed that capability on to our enemy, and
that was a risk we could not afford to take. Knowing what I know
today, I would have made the same decision. (Applause.)
Saddam Hussein sits in a prison cell, and America and the world are
safer. (Applause.) And now, almost two years after he voted for the
war in Iraq, and nearly seven months after switching positions to
declare himself the anti-war candidate, my opponent has found a new
nuance. He now agrees it was the right decision to go into Iraq. See,
after months of questioning my motives and even my credibility, the
Senator now agrees with me that even though we have not found the
stockpiles we thought we would find, knowing everything we know today,
he would have voted to go into Iraq and remove Saddam Hussein from
power. I want to thank him for clearing that up. (Applause.)
However, there's still a little over 60 days for him to change his
mind again. (Laughter.) I'm running because I understand we must
continue to work with our allies and friends to aggressively pursue the
terrorist enemy in Iraq and Afghanistan and elsewhere. See, you can't
talk sense to these people. You cannot negotiate with them. You
cannot hope for the best. We must aggressively pursue them around the
world so we do not have to face them here at home. (Applause.)
America will continue to lead the world with confidence and moral
clarity. We put together a strong coalition to help us. There's over
40 nations involved, or nearly 40 nations involved in Afghanistan and
some 30 nations involved in Iraq, 60 nations involved in the
Proliferation Security Initiative. We'll continue to build alliances
and work with our friends for the sake of security and peace. But I'll
never turn over America's national security decisions to leaders of
other countries. (Applause.)
When America says something, we got to mean it.
AUDIENCE: Yes.
THE PRESIDENT: In order to make this world a more peaceful place
when we speak, we better mean what we say. And so we'll keep our
commitments to the people in Afghanistan and Iraq as they become
peaceful and democratic societies. It's in our interest they become
peaceful and democratic societies, and now they've got two strong
leaders who are guiding those nations, people committed to the hopes
and aspirations of their fellow citizens. We're training up Iraqi
citizens and Afghan citizens to defeat the terrorists who are trying to
stop the advance of freedom. We're helping them so they can help
themselves. Our military will complete this mission as quickly as
possible so our troops don't a stay a day longer than necessary.
(Applause.)
It's important work we're doing. We're talking about keeping the
peace. We're talking about spreading freedom. And our troops are
helping us to keep our commitments. I'm proud of the United States
military. I'm proud of our troops. (Applause.)
I want to thank the veterans who are here for having set such a
great example to those who wear the uniform. (Applause.) We're going
to support our troops. That's a commitment we owe, not only to those
who wear the uniform, but to loved ones of those who wear the uniform.
That's why last September, while our troops were in combat in
Afghanistan and Iraq, I proposed supplemental funding to support them
in their mission. This legislation provided funding for body armor and
vital equipment, hazard pay, health benefits, ammunition, fuel and
spare parts. It was an important piece of legislation. (Applause.)
We received great bipartisan support. Matter of fact, the support
was so strong in the United States Senate that only 12 senators voted
against that funding, two of whom are my opponent and his running
mate. So they asked him, they said, why? He said, "Well, I actually
did vote for the $87 billion before I voted against it." That's not
exactly the way people talk in this part of the world.
AUDIENCE: No!
THE PRESIDENT: So they pressed him further. He said, well, he's
proud of his vote, and the whole thing was just a complicated matter.
There is nothing complicated about supporting our troops in combat.
(Applause.)
In the long run, our security is not guaranteed by force alone. We
will work to change the conditions that give rise to terror: poverty
and hopelessness and resentment. See, a free and peaceful Iraq and a
free and peaceful Afghanistan will set powerful examples to a part of
the world that is desperate for liberty. Free nations do not export
terror. Free nations are able to defeat hopelessness, because they
listen to the hopes of their people.
By serving the cause of liberty, we're bringing hope to others, and
that makes our country more secure. By serving the cause of liberty,
we're spreading the peace that we all want. (Applause.) And by
serving the cause of liberty, we're serving the deepest ideals of the
American spirit. Freedom is not America's gift to the world, freedom
is the Almighty God's gift to each man and woman in this world.
(Applause.)
I'm running because I know there's more work to do to protect the
homeland. There's enemies who hate us out there that are still
plotting. We have a difference of opinion on the enemy it seems. My
opponent said that going to war with the terrorists is actually
improving their recruiting efforts. The logic is upside-down. I think
it shows a misunderstanding of the enemy. See, during the 1990's, the
terrorists were recruiting and training for war with us long before we
went to war with them. They don't need an excuse for their hatred. It
is wrong to blame this country for staying on the offense. See, we
don't create enemies and terrorists by fighting back; we defeat the
terrorists by fighting back. (Applause.)
We're working hard to protect you. There's a lot of good people at
the federal level, and the state level, and the local level who are
working long hours to protect the American people. We're working on
reform. There'll be good solid, intelligence reform to make sure that
I've got what's needed to make good decisions on behalf of the American
people, that we can respond to the threats as they exist.
We've created the Department of Homeland Security to better protect
you. We got to do a better job on our ports and borders. We got to do
a better job of strengthening our intelligence-sharing. We need to
renew the Patriot Act -- the Patriot Act is a vital tool for law
enforcement to bust these terrorist organizations. (Applause.)
I'll continue to push for reform. But it's hard. There's a lot of
entrenched interests. The special interests are strong. That's why
it's not enough to advocate reform, you've got to be able to get the
job done.
So when you're out campaigning, and when you're out convincing
people to go to the polls, you might remind them when it comes to
reforming schools to lift the standard so every child can learn, we're
getting the job done. (Applause.) When it comes to health care
reforms that have helped our seniors and helped our families, we're
getting the job done. (Applause.) When it comes to improving our
economy and creating jobs, we're getting the job done. (Applause.)
When it comes to better securing the homeland, and spreading freedom
and peace, we're getting the job done. (Applause.) When it comes to
choosing a President, put somebody in there who can get the job done.
(Applause.)
AUDIENCE: Four more years! Four more years! Four more years!
THE PRESIDENT: We're living in a time -- we're living in changing
times. A lot of moms are working. A lot of people are changing jobs.
A lot of people need new skills in order to fill the jobs of the 21st
century. These are changing times, and I recognize they can be
unsettling. But government can help by standing side-by-side with
people. Instead of ordering people around, government can help people
have the tools so they can decide for themselves. And one way to do so
is to promote an ownership society. We want people owning their own
health care accounts, so they can take them from job to job.
I see we got a lot of younger workers here. I appreciate you
coming. (Applause.) Baby boomers and older folks can look at Social
Security and know it's going to be around for us. Younger workers need
to be concerned about the fiscal solvency of Social Security. That's
why I believe we ought to give younger workers the option of
establishing personal savings accounts with their own money, that they
call their own and pass on from generation to generation. (Applause.)
In order to meet the changing times, we've got to change the work
rules to give our families flex-time and comp-time so you can better
juggle your family needs. In order to make sure that we've got a
hopeful America, we've got to continue to spread ownership -- ownership
of businesses. Listen, I love the fact that the home ownership rate in
America is at an all-time high. (Applause.) We'll continue to expand
home ownership over the next four years. We'll continue to expand
ownership -- home ownership. There's nothing better than somebody
opening up a front door of the house, saying, welcome to my home.
(Applause.) Welcome to my piece of property. We believe in ownership
because we know that when somebody owns something, they have a vital
stake in the future of the United States of America. (Applause.)
In this world of rapid change, there are some things that will not
change. Our belief in liberty, our belief in opportunity, and our
belief in the non-negotiable demands of human dignity. (Applause.)
The individual values we try to live by -- courage and compassion,
reverence and integrity. In a changing world, we must honor those
institutions that give us direction and purpose: our families, our
schools, and our religious congregations. (Applause.)
We stand for institutions like marriage and family, which are the
foundations of society. (Applause.) We stand for a culture of life in
which every person matters and every person counts. (Applause.) We
stand for judges who faithfully interpret the law, instead of
legislating from the bench. (Applause.) We stand for a culture of
responsibility in this country. Listen, the culture of our country is
changing from one that has said, if it feels good, do it, and if you've
got a problem, blame somebody else, to a culture in which each of us
understands we're responsible for the decisions we make in life.
(Applause.)
If you're fortunate enough to be a mother or a father, you are
responsible for loving your child with all your heart and all your
soul. (Applause.) If you're worried about the quality of the
education in Farmington, New Mexico, you're responsible for supporting
your teachers and doing something about it. (Applause.) If you're a
CEO in corporate America, you're responsible for telling the truth to
your shareholders and your employees. (Applause.) And in this
responsibility society of ours, each of us is responsible for loving
our neighbor, just like we'd like to be loved ourselves. (Applause.)
I'm running for four more years to continue to rally the armies of
compassion. See, I believe we can change this country one heart and
one soul at a time by relying upon the true strength of America, which
is the hearts and souls of the American people.
Today, I met Rod Conover. He's involved with Project Read. He's a
volunteer. He's taking time out of his life to help somebody else
learn to read. See, we'll change this country. We'll change this
country by calling upon the great love of the American people to serve
something greater than themselves, to help somebody in need, to help
the homeless, to feed the hungry, to help the addicted by surrounding
with something the government can't live, which is love. (Applause.)
Now, government can give money, but government cannot give love.
And so over the next four years, I'll continue to call upon the great
spirit of the American people. We're living in a -- (Applause.) We've
come through a lot together. The last four years have brought great
challenges. I'll never forget the day Rudy and I went to the ruins of
the Twin Towers. It was a very emotional day. I remember the workers
in hard-hats yelling at me, "Whatever it takes!" I remember a worker
looking me in the eye and saying, "Do not let me down." See, it's
clear to me, and I know it's clear to Rudy that that day, people took
it personally on that site. I took it personally; I know you did as
well. I have a duty that goes on. I wake up every day trying to
figure out how best to secure this homeland. I will never relent in
defending America, whatever it takes. (Applause.)
We've done hard work over the past years and there's more work to
be done. During the next four years, we will spread ownership and
opportunity so everybody can realize the great promise of America.
During the next four years, we will continue to pass on the enduring
values of our country to a younger generation. During the next four
years, we will continue to lead in the cause of freedom and peace.
With your support, I'll be a leader America can count on in a world of
change.
For four years, I traveled this great country, including your great
state, asking for the vote -- four years ago I did, asking for the
vote. I said, if you gave me a chance to serve in this high office, I
would uphold the dignity and the honor of the office to which I had
been elected. (Applause.) And with your help, I will do so for the
next four years. Thanks for coming. May God bless.
Thank you all. Thank you all very much. (Applause.)
END 1:15 P.M. MDT
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