The following
is a transcript of remarks made by President
Bush during a campaign stop Friday in
Springfield, Mo.:
BUSH: Thanks for coming.
It's great to be in the
heartland of our country. And I want to
thank you all for being here this morning
to help kick off our "Heart and Soul
of America" tour.
There'll be big differences
in this campaign. They're going to raise
your taxes; we're not.
We have a clear vision
on how to win the war on terror and bring
peace to the world.
They somehow believe the
heart and soul of America can be found
in Hollywood. The heart and soul of America
is found right here in Springfield, Missouri.
I'm looking forward to
the campaign. I'm looking forward to getting
out amongst the people. We're going to
Michigan and Ohio this weekend. Everywhere
I've been going, the crowds are big, the
enthusiasm is high, the signs are good.
With your help, Dick Cheney and I will
lead this nation for four more years.
I'm
sorry Laura's not here. I know you are
too. You probably wish she was speaking
and not me.
She is a great first lady.
Today, you'll have some
— hear some reasons why I think
you need to put me back into office. But
perhaps the most important reason of all
is so that Laura will be first lady for
four more years.
I appreciate my running
mate.
BUSH: I tell you, he's
not the prettiest man in the race. But
he's got sound judgment. He's got great
national...
He's got great experience
in national security. He's a steady man.
I'm proud to have him by my side for four
more years.
I thank my friend Roy
Blunt for his leadership and his great
introduction. Proud to be working with
him.
I appreciate my friend
Kit Bond. You need to send him back to
Washington, D.C.
Two years ago you sent
a good one from Missouri in Jim Talent.
I appreciate you, Senator.
Thanks for being here.
I'm honored that Kenny
Hulshof and Jo Ann Emerson are with us:
two fine members of the House of Representatives.
Thank you all for coming.
Proud you're here.
Speaker Catherine Hanaway,
it's good to see you again. It wasn't
just but yesterday, it seemed like, we
were in St. Charles, Missouri, together.
Thank you for coming. I appreciate your
warm introduction there.
I can't help but notice
my friend Johnny Morris is here. Gosh,
I wish we were fishing. I was in the bass
tracker (ph), I want you to know, over
the weekend in Crawford. It didn't sink.
It's great to see you
friend. Thanks for coming.
I'm so proud so many citizens
showed up here.
I appreciate the grassroots
activists who are here. I'm here to ask
for your help. I'm not only traveling
the country to ask for the vote, I'm here
to ask for your help. I'd like you to
call up people on the phone and encourage
them to register to vote, encourage them
to do their duty on Election Day —
to vote. And when you get them headed
toward the polls, make sure you nudge
them toward that George Bush-Dick Cheney
lever.
I'm glad Joe White's here.
He runs Canacut Camps (ph).
Thanks for coming, Joe.
I appreciate your coming.
I met a fellow named Charlie
Grass. He's a volunteer with Stone County
food pantry. Let me tell you why I mention
him. The strength of America is in the
hearts and souls of our citizens: people
who are willing to feed the hungry, provide
shelter for the homeless, love a neighbor
in need.
Charlie, thank you for
being a soldier in the army of compassion.
BUSH: Every incumbent
who asks for the vote has to answer one
question: Why? Why should the American
people give me the great privilege of
serving as your president for four more
years?
In the past few years,
we've been through a lot together. We've
accomplished a great deal. But there's
only one reason to look backward at the
record and that is to determine who best
will lead the nation forward.
I'm asking for your vote
because so much is at stake: prosperity
and peace. We have so much more to do
to move this country forward. Give me
four more years, and America will continue
to march toward peace and better prosperity.
I'm asking for four more
years to make our country safer, to make
the economy stronger, to make our future
better and brighter for every single citizen.
From creating jobs to improving schools,
from fighting terror to protecting our
homeland, we have made much progress.
And there is more to do.
BUSH: We have more to
do to make America's public schools the
centers of excellence we all know they
can be so that no child is left behind
in America.
When we came to office
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.
We're challenging the
soft bigotry of low expectations. We've
raised the bar. We're setting high standards.
We're focusing on results. We're insisting
on accountability. We're empowering parents.
We're making sure local folks are in charge
of schoolreal, substantialprogress in
reading and math.
When it comes to improving
America's public schools, we are turning
the corner and we're not turning back.
This world of ours is
changing. The jobs of the future will
require greater knowledge and higher-level
skills. We'll reform our high schools
to make sure a high school diploma means
something. We'll expand math and science
education, so our young people can compete
in a high-tech world. We will expand the
use of the Internet to bring high-level
training into our classrooms.
With four more years,
we'll help a rising generation gain the
skills and the confidence to achieve the
American dream.
We have more to do to
make quality health care available and
affordable. When we came to office, too
many older Americans could not afford
prescription drugs. Medicare didn't pay
for them. Leaders in both political parties
had promised prescription drug coverage
for years. We got it done.
More than 4 million seniors
have signed up for drug discount cards
that provide real savings.
BUSH: And beginning in
2006, all seniors on Medicare will be
able to choose a plan that suits their
needs and gives them coverage for prescription
drugs.
We've expanded community
health centers for low-income Americans.
We've created health savings accounts,
so families can save tax-free for their
own health care needs. When it comes to
giving Americans more choices about their
own health care and making health care
more affordable, we are turning the corner
and we're not turning back.
This world of ours is
changing. Most Americans get their health
care coverage through their work. Most
of today's new jobs are created by small
businesses which too often cannot afford
to provide health coverage.
To help more American
families get health insurance, we must
allow small employers to join together
to purchase insurance at discounts available
to big companies.
To improve health care,
we must limit the frivolous lawsuits that
raise the cost of health care and drive
good doctors out of medicine.
We must harness technology
to reduce costs and prevent deadly health
care mistakes. We must do more to expand
research and development for new cures
for terrible diseases.
In all we do to improve
health care in America, and we will make
sure the health decisions are made by
doctors and patients, not by bureaucrats
in Washington, D.C.
We have more to do to
make America's economy stronger. We've
come through a recession, terrorist attacks,
corporate scandals.
BUSH: We overcame these
obstacles because of the hard work and
will of the American entrepreneur, the
small-business owner, the farmers and
the workers. And we came through these
obstacles because of well-timed tax cuts.
We gave tax relief to
every American who pays taxes. We didn't
play favorites with the tax code. We didn't
try to pick winners or losers. We made
sure families with children and married
couples and small businesses got tax relief.
And this time the check
really was in the mail.
Because we acted, our
economy, since last summer, has grown
at a rate as fast as any in nearly 20
years.
Because we acted, America's
added more than 1.5 million new jobs since
last August.
Because we acted, Missouri
has added more than 82,000 jobs over the
past 11 months. Your unemployment rate
is now 5.2 percent.
When it comes to creating
jobs for America's workers, we are turning
the corner and we are not turning back.
Today I met a fellow named
Kit Carson. He's a small-business owner
here in Springfield. You see, most new
jobs in America are created by small-business
owners. That's why the cornerstone of
our tax relief plan said we were going
to help the small-business owners.
Here's what he said about
tax relief. This is a fellow who's hiring
people right here in this area. It's a
fellow who's making investments. He said,
"The effect is showing already. It's
going to get better. I'm an optimistic
guy," he says. "I think we might
see a boom bigger than the '90s."
The tax relief we passed
is working.
We will do more to make
America more job friendly and America's
workplaces more family friendly.
To keep American jobs
in America, regulations should be reasonable
and fair. To keep the jobs here at home,
we must lessen our dependence on foreign
sources of energy.
To keep American jobs
here, we must end the junk law suits that
hurt our small businesses.
BUSH: And to keep this
economy growing so people can find work,
we will not overspend your money, and
we will keep your taxes low.
We'll offer America's
workers a lifetime of learning, and help
them get training for jobs of the future
at places like our community colleges.
The education and training
they offer can be the bridge between people's
lives as they are and people's lives as
they want them to be.
Today, I met Kristin Hite
(ph). She's from Springfield, as well.
She used to be a bank teller.
With the tax relief she
and her family had as a result of the
tax cuts, she went back to school. She's
now a nurse. She completed her program.
She now makes three times the amount of
money she made before because of education.
Good education means workers
can realize their dreams.
To make sure we continue
to grow our economy, we will insist on
a level playing field when it comes to
trade. We want Missouri farmers selling
Missouri crops all over the world.
And we'll make sure American
families keep more of something they never
have enough of, and that's time: time
to play with the kids, time to go to the
Little League games, time to care for
elderly parents or time to go to class
themselves.
I believe Congress ought
to enact comp time and flex time to help
America's families better juggle the demands
of work and their home.
The goals of the economic
agenda are clear. After four more years,
our nation will have more small businesses,
greater opportunities, better jobs and
higher wages for the American people.
We have more to do to
wage and win the war against terror. America's
future depends on our willingness to lead
in the world. If America shows uncertainty
and weakness in this decade, the world
will drift toward tragedy.
BUSH: This will not happen
on my watch.
The world changed on a
terrible September morning. And since
that day, we've changed the world.
Before September the 11th,
Afghanistan served as the home base for
Al Qaida, which trained and deployed thousands
of killers to set up terror cells in dozens
of countries, including our own. Today,
Afghanistan is a rising democracy, an
ally in the war on terror, a place where
many young girls go to school for the
first time. And as a result of our actions,
America and the world are safer.
Before September the 11th,
Pakistan was a safe transit point for
terrorists. Today, Pakistani forces are
aggressively helping to round up the terrorists
and America and the world are safer.
Before September the 11th,
in Saudi Arabia, terrorists were raising
money and recruiting and operating with
little opposition. Today, the Saudi government
has taken the fight to Al Qaida and 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 clear message, the leader of Libya
has abandoned his pursuit of weapons of
mass destruction and America and the world
are safer.
Before September the 11th,
the ruler of Iraq was a sworn enemy of
America.
BUSH: He was defying the
world. He was firing weapons at American
pilots and forcing the world's sanctions.
He had pursued and used weapons of mass
destruction against his own people. He
had harbored terrorists. He invaded his
neighbors. He subsidized the families
of suicide bombers. He had murdered tens
of thousands of his own citizens. He was
a source of great instability in the world's
most vulnerable region.
I took those threats seriously.
After September the 11th, we had to look
at the threats in a new light. One of
the lessons of September the 11th is we
must deal with threats before they fully
materialize.
The September the 11th
commission concluded that our institutions
of government had failed to imagine the
horror of that day. After September the
11th, we cannot fail to imagine that a
brutal tyrant, who hated America, who
had ties to terror, had weapons of mass
destruction and might use those weapons
or share his deadly capability with terrorists
was not a threat.
We looked at the intelligence.
We saw a threat. Members of the United
States Congress from both political parties,
including my opponent, looked at the intelligence
and they saw a threat.
We went to the United
Nations, which unanimously demanded a
full accounting of Saddam Hussein's weapons
programs or face serious consequences.
After 12 years of defiance, he refused
to comply with the demands of the free
world.
When he continued to deceive
the weapons inspectors, I had a decision
to make: to hope for the best and to trust
the word of a madman and a tyrant, or
remember the lessons of September the
11th and defend our country.
BUSH: Given that choice,
I will defend America every time.
When it comes to fighting
the threats of our world and making America
safer and promoting the peace, we're turning
the corner, and we're not turning back.
We have more to do. We
will continue to work with our friends
and allies around the world to aggressively
pursue the terrorists and foreign fighters
in places like Iraq and Afghanistan and
elsewhere.
See, you can't talk sense
to the terrorists. You can't hope for
the best. You can't negotiate with them.
We will engage those enemies
around the world so we do not have to
face them here at home.
We will continue to lead
the world with confidence and moral clarity.
We've put together a strong
coalition to help us defeat the terrorist
threats. Over 40 nations are involved
in Afghanistan. Some 30 nations are involved
in Iraq. Over the next four years, I will
continue to work with our friends and
build alliances.
But I will never turn
over America's national security decisions
to leaders of other countries.
BUSH: We will keep our
commitments to help Afghanistan and Iraq
become peaceful, democratic societies.
These two nations are now governed by
strong leaders. They're on the path to
free elections.
More and more people in
Afghanistan and Iraq are stepping up to
secure their own country from these killers.
They understand the benefits of a free
society. Moms and dads in Afghanistan
and Iraq want their children to grow up
in a peaceful world and so do we.
The people of these countries
can count on our continued help. When
we acted to protect our own security,
we promised to help deliver them from
tyranny, to restore their sovereignty,
to set them on the path of liberty. And
when America gives its word, America will
keep its word.
In these crucial times,
our commitments have been kept by the
men and women of our military.
I thank those who are
here today who wear our uniform. And I
thank their families as well.
BUSH: I've seen the great
decency and the unselfish courage of those
who wear our uniform. The cause of freedom
is in good hands.
And when these good folks
are in harm's way, they deserve the best
pay, the best equipment, the best possible
training.
That's why last September,
when our troops were in combat in both
Afghanistan and Iraq, I proposed supplemental
funding to support them in their missions.
The legislation provided for body armor
and vital equipment, hazard pay, health
benefits, ammunition, fuel, spare parts.
In the Senate, only a handful of what
I would call out-of-the- mainstream folks
— that would be 12 senators —
voted against that legislation. Two of
the 12 are my opponent and his running
mate.
(BOOING)
He tried to explain his
vote by saying, "I actually did vote
for the $87 billion before I voted against
it," end quote.
(LAUGHTER)
He's got a different explanation
now. One time he said he was proud he
voted against the funding. Then he said
the whole thing was a complicated matter.
There is nothing complicated
about supporting our troops in combat.
In the long run, our security
is not guaranteed by force alone. We must
work to change the conditions that give
rise to terror: poverty and hopelessness
and resentment.
You see, a free and peaceful
Iraq and a free and peaceful Afghanistan
will be powerful examples to a neighborhood
that needs the example of liberty. Free
countries do not export terror. Free countries
do not stifle the dreams of their citizens.
By serving the ideal of
liberty, we're bringing hope to others.
And that makes America more secure.
By being resolute and
strong, by working for the ideal of liberty,
after four more years, America will be
more secure and the world will be more
peaceful.
BUSH: These are still
dangerous times. There's an enemy out
there that would like to hurt us and change
our way of life and shake our will and
shake our confidence.
I agree with the conclusion
of the September the 11th commission when
they said our homeland is safer but we
are not yet safe. We've started the hard
process of reform. We've transformed our
defenses and created a new Department
of Homeland Security. We passed the Patriot
Act to give law enforcement new tools
to track terrorists.
The mission of the FBI
is now focused on preventing terrorism.
We're integrating intelligence and law
enforcement better than we have ever before.
When it comes to better protecting America,
we're turning the corner and we're not
turning back.
We will do more to better
secure our ports and borders, to train
first responders, to dramatically improve
our intelligence-gathering capabilities.
Reform is not easy, and
it never is. Achieving reform requires
taking on the special interests, requires
challenging the status quo.
You see, it's not enough
to advocate reform. You have to be able
to get it done.
When it comes to reforming
schools to provide an excellent education
for all our children, results matter.
When it comes to health care reforms to
give families more access and more choices,
results matter. When it comes to improving
our economy and creating new jobs, results
matter.
When it comes to better
securing our homeland and fighting the
forces of terror, results matter.
And when it comes to choosing
a president, results matter.
AUDIENCE: Four more years!
Four more years! Four more years!
BUSH: This week, members
of the other party gathered in Boston.
We heard a lot of clever speeches and
some big promises. My opponent has good
intentions, but intentions do not always
translate to results.
After 19 years in the
United States Senate, my opponent has
had thousands of votes but very few signature
achievements.
During eight years on
the Senate Intelligence Committee, he
voted to cut the intelligence budget and
he had no record of reforming America's
intelligence-gathering capability. He
had no significant record for reforming
education and health care.
As a matter of fact, he
and his running mate consistent opposed
reforms that limit the power of Washington
and leave more power in the hands of the
people.
He's spent nearly 20 years
in the federal government, and it appears
he's concluded that it's just not big
enough.
(LAUGHTER)
He's proposed more than
$2 trillion of additional federal spending.
BUSH: And he's just getting
started.
The problem is he hasn't
told us how he's going to pay for it.
We can figure it out, can't we? He's had
a history of voting for higher taxes.
We're going to make it clear his prescription
for America is the wrong medicine.
We're not turning back
to the old days, the old Washington mindset
that says they will give the orders, you'll
pay the bills. We've turned a corner from
that way of thinking and we're not turning
back.
These are exciting times
for change. The economy is changing, the
world is changing.
In our parents' generation,
moms usually stayed home while fathers
worked for one company until retirement.
The company provided health care and training
and a pension. Many of the government
programs and most basic systems, from
health care to Social Security to the
tax code, were based, and still are based,
on the old assumptions.
This is a different world.
Workers change jobs and careers frequently.
Most of the jobs are created by small
businesses. They can't afford to provide
health care or pensions or training. Parents
are working. They're not at home.
We need to make sure government
changes with the times and to work for
America's working families.
You see, American workers
need to own their own health care accounts.
They need to own and manage their own
pensions and retirement systems.
They need more ownership
so they can take the benefits from job
to the job. They need flex time so they
can work out of the home.
BUSH: All of these reforms
are based on this conviction: The role
of government is not to control or dominate
the lives of our citizens.
The role of government
is to help our citizens gain the time
and the tools to make their own choices
and improve their own lives.
That's why I will continue
to work to usher in a new era of ownership
and opportunity in America. We want more
people owning their own home. We want
more people owning their own business.
We want more people owning and managing
their own health care system. We want
more people owning and managing a part
of their retirement systems. When a person
owns something, he or she has a vital
stake in the future of the United States
of America.
In this world of rapid
change, some things will never change.
Our conviction that every life matters
and every life counts will not change.
Our belief in liberty
and opportunity and the nonnegotiable
demands of human dignity will not change.
The individual values
we try to live by, courage and compassion,
reverence and integrity, hard work and
duty, won't change.
We'll always honor the
institutions that give us direction and
purpose: our families, our schools, our
religious congregations.
These values and institutions
are fundamental to our future. They deserve
the respect of our government.
We stand for institutions
like marriage and family, which are the
foundations of society.
We stand for a culture
of life in which every person matters
and every person counts.
BUSH: We stand for judges
who strictly and faithfully interpret
the law instead of legislating from the
bench.
And we will work together
to build a culture of responsibility.
The culture of this country is changing,
from one that has said, "If it feels
good, let's go ahead and do it, and if
you got a problem, blame somebody else,"
to a culture in which each of us understands
that we're responsible for the decisions
we make in life.
If you are fortunate enough
to be a mother or a father, you're responsible
for loving your child with all your heart
and all your soul.
If you're worried about
the quality of the education in the community
in which you live, you're responsible
for doing something about it.
If you're a CEO in corporate
America, you're responsible for telling
the truth to your shareholders and your
employees.
And in a responsibility
society, each of us is responsible for
loving our neighbor just like we'd like
to be loved ourself.
For all Americans, these
years in our history will always stand
apart. There are quiet times in the life
of a nation when little is expected of
its leaders. This isn't one of those times.
None of us will ever forget
that week when one era ended and another
one began. September the 14th, 2001, I
stood in the ruins of the twin towers.
It's a day that I will never forget.
I remember the workers
in hard hats yelling at me, "Whatever
it takes." I remember a fireman or
a policeman — I can't remember which
one — looking me in the eyes and
saying, "Do not let me down."
And as those folks did
that day, and like many other Americans,
we took it personally. I took it personally.
I have a responsibility
that goes on. I wake up every morning
thinking about how to better protect our
country. I will never relent in defending
America, whatever it takes.
We've come through much
together. We've done some hard work. We've
turned the corner. We're moving America
forward by extending freedom and peace
around the world. We're expanding opportunity
here at home. During the next four years,
we will spread ownership and opportunity
to every corner — every corner of
this country.
We'll pass the enduring
values of our country to another generation.
We will lead the cause of freedom and
peace, and we will prevail.
With your support, and
with your prayers, I will be a leader
America can count on in a world of change.
BUSH: Four years ago,
as I traveled this great country asking
for the vote, I made a pledge to my fellow
Americans that if you honored me with
this great responsibility, I would uphold
the dignity and the honor of the office
to which I had been elected. With your
help, I will do so for four more years.
Thanks for coming. May
God bless.
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