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Originally Processed With FOIA(s): FOIA Number: S S FOIA MARKER This is not a textual record. This is used as an administrative marker by the George Bush Presidential Library Staff. Record Group/Collection: George H.W. Bush Presidential Records Collection/Office of Origin: Speechwriting, White House Office of Series: Speech File Draft Files Subseries: Chron File, 1989-1993 OA/ID Number: 13618 Folder ID Number: 13618-005 Folder Title: Charlotte Bush/Quayle Fundraiser 4/27/92 [OA 6101] [2] Stack: Row: Section: Shelf: Position: G 26 18 1 5 APR-23-1992 16:11 FROM TO 94562223 P.02 UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION DEPARTMENT OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY STATES a April 23, 1992 MEMO TO PAUL FROM LESLYE ARSHT I've suggested word changes on the Charlotte speech as we usually do. But, I've also included a proposed "alternate insert with a local anecdote" about Charlotte 2000. This idea came out of a meeting Lamar had with the speechwriters yesterday. They asked for local stories to go in POTUS speeches and we are creating a process for sending them. However, this is the first one. Thanks. ann MARYLAND AVE.. S.W. WAGHINGTON. D.C. 20303 Document No. 323546ss WHITE HOUSE STAFFING MEMORANDUM DATE: 4/22/92 ACTION/CONCURRENCE/COMMENT DUE BY: THURS. 4/23/92 3:00 pm PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: BUSH-QUAYLE FUNDRAISER SUBJECT: CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA MONDAY, APRIL 27, 1992 ACTION FYI ACTION FYI VICE PRESIDENT HORNER SKINNER MCBRIDE SCOWCROFT MOORE DARMAN PETERSMEYER BRADY PORTER BROMLEY ROGICH CALIO ROLLINS DEMAREST SMITH YEUTTER FITZWATER FINDLAY GRAY HOLIDAY KAUFMAN BOSKIN MCGROARTY REMARKS: Please forward your comments directly to Dan McGroarty, RM. 122, x2930, no later than 3:00 p.m., THURSDAY, APRIL 23, with a copy to this office. Thank you. RESPONSE: to DrMcH. Trm PHILLIP D. BRADY Assistant to the President and Staff Secretary Ext. 2702 DDJCMN 32 APR 22 P2: 16 Wednesday, April 22, 1922 12:00 p.m. PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: BUSH-QUAYLE FUNDRAISER CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA MONDAY, APRIL 27, 1992 Thank you for that warm welcome. You know, coming into Charlotte is no longer a small-city experience -- I can't believe your airport is now the 8th busiest in the country. The old saw used to be, you had to go through Atlanta if you wanted to get to Heaven; now they say it is much more fun if you go through Charlotte. It is wonderful to see so many good friends here. Governor Jim Martin and I have a lot in common. We both have to deal with a House full of Democrats -- we don't need his Ph.D. to realize that's bad chemistry. You know, people say they think Jim will have a hard time making the transition from politics to medicine. I don't think so! I'll bet it won't take him anytime at all to learn to spend Wednesday afternoons on the golf course. Being here at Carowinds, I'm tempted to compare Congress to an amusement park, but that wouldn't really be fair. An amusement park has some activity in it. I have been looking forward to being with you tonight, there is so much I admire about this city -- especially the way you support two concerns that are close to my heart -- education and service to others. Your "Foundation for the Carolinas" shows the priority you place on community efforts. Many people here in 2 Charlotte have been named "points of light". Charlotte has good reason to be a proud city. I could talk about what you are doing in this great city all night, but I especially want to thank each of you who have contributed so generously to our re-election campaign. Your support is very important and I very much appreciate your commitment to the goals of my Presidency. I know many here are concerned about the economy. That's my number one concern as well. This month we had some heartening news about the United States economy. All around the world, consumers and companies buy American goods and services in ever- greater amounts, despite the sluggish performance of some of their own economies. U.S. exports -- I look around this room and I see many who are aware of this -- U.S. exports are experiencing what does a surge, rising seven percent in February to a one-month record this mean high of almost $38 billion. And once again, I think in a good sense, manufacturing exports are leading the American exports, way. This good news underscores a fundamental truth about our own competitiveness: If we're to succeed economically at home, we must succeed economically abroad. And the evidence is indisputable: Open markets and free trade mean new jobs for American workers and certainly growth for American companies. Over the past four decades, trade-related jobs in our country have grown three times faster than overall American job creation. 3 There's still much we can do to make America more competitive. And one of our serious economic problems right now is the cost of capital -- it's too high. A high cap-gains tax rate discourages investment and, thus, business expansion and, thus job creation. None of our industrial competitors -- major industrial competitors -- tax capital gains at rates comparable to ours. Germany, as some of you know, Germany doesn't tax them at all. And in Japan, an entrepreneur who sells the company that he's built from scratch pays a tax of one percent. It makes no sense that we ask our workers to compete with those vigorous economies with a much higher capital gains rate. And yet, the very people who complain about America's ability to compete block our effort -- every effort to lower the capital gains tax. A lower rate will benefit virtually everyone in America, not only those who run a business, but anyone who owns a house, or a farm, or share of stock, seeks a better job. So it's time to stop punishing the pursuit of excellence. And it's time, I think, to cut the tax on capital gains. For us to compete we also must lighten up the regulatory burden that Washington imposes on every American business. Last January we announced a 90-day moratorium on federal regulations. Wherever possible, we blocked those regulations that discourage growth and we're accelerating those that encourage growth. So far, the preliminary estimates show that we've saved American business $10 billion to $20 billion in regulatory costs. Wednesday, I'm going to make an announcement about the next step 4 in our battle against these excessive regulations, but for now I simply want to say the days of overregulation are just that -- they are over. There's been a lot of talk about change this election year. Most of it has been just that -- talk. But that's not good enough if we're going to build a better America. We need people of action. People with the experience to know what to do, and how to do it. People of principle -- willing to stand up against powerful special interests. That's why I need your support -- to fight for change -- make this country a better country -- I need your help to serve for four more years. I have talked often about the need for reform. And I've acted -- made specific and far-reaching proposals. I've called for reform of our education system, our health care system, our courts and our election campaigns. Right down the line, issue after issue, from crime to Congress, our Administration has proposed fundamental changes to help us solve pressing national problems. We have had some successes in our efforts to change things - - but more often than not roadblocks stand in the way. They are the special interests. They are not interested in change. They stand squarely behind the status quo. They may be powerful. They may be influential. They may be well-connected. But let me tell you this: they are wrong. It used to be that a doctor's first concern was about the care of the patient not the chance of a malpractice suit. You 5 know what I'm talking about -- obstetricians not delivering babies, parents not coaching Little League, volunteers not helping the elderly -- all because of the fear of lawsuits. That's wrong. That is not the America we want. People should spend more time helping each other, and a little less time suing each other. Sure, our legal system is complicated. People's rights must be protected, but it desperately needs reform -- and no lawyers' lobby should stand in the way. It used to be that we were confident that when we sent our children to school they would get a first class education. Know how to read and write -- and understand something about the world. We also believed that education includes teaching values and responsibility -- you know, "right from wrong". That builds character and that's the way it should be. But educational achievement has been sliding for years. And now we thank our lucky stars that our child's school isn't one where they find a gun in someone's locker, or drug dealing in the playground. That's wrong. That is not what we want for our children. And our teachers -- they are also counselors, mentors, social workers, and surrogate parents. God bless them for the work they do. They deserve our best effort to make the system better. Our America 2000 reforms are gaining steam. Break-the- mold schools -- national standards and testing, community by community. And whether it's among public schools, or private, or religious, parents deserve the right to choose their children's 6 schools. It's a giant undertaking to change the nation's education system -- but we are going to do it -- with or without the permission of the NEA. It used to be that going to the hospital didn't conjure up images of financial ruin. And while our health care is still the finest quality care in the world, too many people can't qualify for health insurance or can't afford it. And the cost of even minor surgery has gone through the roof. Many poor people would prefer going to a family doctor but end up going to hospital emergency rooms for routine medical treatment. Sometimes they wait for hours, because the doctors and nurses have to treat life-and-death emergencies first. And then frustrated, over- worked hospital staff refer to them derogatorily as GOMERS -- meaning "get out of my emergency room". This too is wrong. And it's got to change. Our health care proposal is comprehensive. It makes health insurance accessible and affordable for all Americans -- without throwing out the finest quality health care in the world. We must not go the way of nationalized health care with its long lines, impersonal service, and fewer options for consumers. If that's what we wanted, we'd put health care under the Department of Motor Vehicles. A brand new big bureaucracy -- kind of like Medicaid -- started as a $$ anti-poverty program. Now it's $$ and growing at a rate of % a year. Multiply that a few times and that's a cradle-to-grave boondoggle. And no matter what those whose first resort is a new big government program -- 7 with all the self-perpetuating features of the old big government programs -- nationalized health care would be a national disaster. In these and SO many areas that demand reform, our government can play a pivotal and positive role in addressing many of our nation's most critical problems. I've been in government for many years. I've been in the Congress, and I've served this country -- in uniform and as a diplomat -- overseas. I've also run a business, met a payroll, created jobs. I know how to meet the competition. I've seen this country change -- sometimes for the better, sometimes for the worse. So I think I bring something to the table when it comes to taking on the status quo. You need to know the system in order to change it. If you don't, you won't know what needs change. "Change for change sake" is meaningless and empty. It takes more than happy talk. what mean does More than lip service to reform and then full service to the special interests. The Democratic Party will always revert to form -- solve a problem by creating a program -- more power to the bureaucracy, less to the individual. They don't understand that people are yearning for a return to responsibility, that old idea that refuses to go out of style. Liberal Democrats don't understand that people have had it with the "no-fault" lifestyle efecty refer have Doction to the denial that actions have consequences. Parents want their kids brought up to know that. And the people have a right to a government that understands that as well. 8 The American people know -- as government tries to do more and more, it delivers less and less. Next year, the federal government will spend $1.5 trillion dollars of your money. There is just no question about it. The federal government is too big and spends too much. Major reforms are in order. First, it's time for the Congress to govern itself by the laws it imposes on others. No more special treatment. And it's time for sweeping reform of campaign financing -- time to eliminate the special interest PACs. It's time for real spending reform; time for the President to have what 43 governors have -- the line-item veto. And I'm going to take that case to the American people this fall. Finally, it's time to make Congress a citizen assembly, not a club for careerists -- time to limit the terms of Members of Congress. My term is limited to two terms and I want to serve why not limit Congress to both of them -- so I don't see that it would hurt to have Congress limited to six terms for a member of the House and two terms for a senator. It would keep government more active, more vital and closer to the people. to It will help us get government back to the basics. Focus on what people want, what they need, what they deserve. Things like pin refer what to does wholesome families, good jobs. Safe streets, good schools, a strong economy and a strong country. If you think about it that's nothing more than a working definition of freedom. That's what I believe, and why I am asking for your support for another four years. 9 These last years have seen our world turned upside down. Think how much we have accomplished. Think of our blessings. With God's help and with hard work to support our convictions, we've helped change the world. We've helped the peoples of Eastern Europe and the old Soviet empire peacefully throw off the yoke of communism. And today we're aiding their transition to free markets, helping them reduce their nuclear arsenals. And we stood up against dictators and exporters of totalitarian revolution in Latin America and we've helped democracy take root in nearly every country of our hemisphere. When a ruthless tyrant overran Kuwait and threatened to engulf the Middle East in its worst conflagration, we protected the people of Israel and Turkey and Saudi Arabia. And we organized an unprecedented world coalition and we liberated Kuwait from the aggressor. And in the process we accomplished a breakthrough sought by every President from Truman to Reagan -- we brought Arab neighbors face to face with Israel for the first time at the peace table. And we won the Cold War and we stopped Saddam's aggression because, 12 years ago, we renewed our faith in our values and we strengthened our defenses. The United States is now the undisputed leader of the entire world. And we will keep ourselves strong, and we will stay engaged in world politics. This is no time to pull back and to retreat and to be afraid of the changes in the world. In world security and in world markets, we will remain engaged. 10 And we have a mission together to carry on the American Dream for new generations. And with your help and with Does the mean twi grassroots action, we can win a mandate to lead this country for four more years. And we can keep our country open to the contributions of immigrants, of trade, of ideas. And we can work together and win with our plans to reform our schools, our health win what the fall election care system, our very system of government. And we can assure laws that when we reach the new century, America still will be the strongest, the bravest, the freest nation on the face of the Earth. Thank you all. And may God bless each and every one of you and our great country, the United States of America. Thank you very much. # # # action B. Male CC: PW&JDF Document No. 323546ss 92 APR 23 WHITE HOUSE STAFFING MEMORANDUM All: 23 DATE: 4/22/92 ACTION/CONCURRENCE/COMMENT DUE BY: THURS. 4/23/92 3:00 pm PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: BUSH-QUAYLE FUNDRAISER SUBJECT: CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA - MONDAY, APRIL 27, 1992 ACTION FYI ACTION FYI VICE PRESIDENT HORNER SKINNER MCBRIDE SCOWCROFT MOORE DARMAN PETERSMEYER BRADY PORTER BROMLEY ROGICH CALIO ROLLINS DEMAREST SMITH YEUTTER FITZWATER FINDLAY GRAY HOLIDAY KAUFMAN BOSKIN MCGROARTY REMARKS: Please forward your comments directly to Dan McGroarty, RM. 122, x2930 no later than 3:00 p.m., THURSDAY, APRIL 23, with a copy to this office. Thank you. RESPONSE: MANA P.2 AA PHILLIP D. Br Assistant to the P and Staff Secre Ext. 2702 DDJCMN 32 APR 22 P2: 16 Wednesday, April 22, 1922 12:00 p.m. PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: BUSH-QUAYLE FUNDRAISER CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA MONDAY, APRIL 27, 1992 Thank you for that warm welcome. You know, coming into Charlotte is no longer a small-city experience -- I can't believe your airport is now the 8th busiest in the country. The old saw used to be, you had to go through Atlanta if you wanted to get to Heaven; now they say it is much more fun if you go through Charlotte. It is wonderful to see so many good friends here. Governor Jim Martin and I have a lot in common. We both have to deal with a House full of Democrats -- we don't need his Ph. D.. to realize that's bad chemistry. You know, people say they think Jim will have a hard time making the transition from politics to medicine. I don't think so! I'll bet it won't take him anytime at all 'to learn to spend Wednesday afternoons on the golf course. Being here at Carowinds, I'm tempted to compare Congress to an amusement park, but that wouldn't really be fair. An amusement park has some activity in it. I have been looking forward to being with you tonight, there is so much I admire about this city -- especially the way you support two concerns that are close to my heart -- education and service to others. Your "Foundation for the Carolinas" shows the priority you place on community efforts. Many people here in 2 Charlotte have been named "points of light". Charlotte has good reason to be a proud city. I could talk about what you are doing in this great city all night, but I especially want to thank each of you who have contributed so generously to our re-election campaign. Your support is very important and I very much appreciate your commitment to the goals of my Presidency. I know many here are concerned about the economy. That's my number one concern as well. This month we had some heartening news about the United States economy. All around the world, consumers and companies buy American goods and services in ever- greater amounts, despite the sluggish performance of some of their own economies. U.S. exports -- I look around this room and I see many who are aware of this -- U.S. exports are experiencing a surge, rising seven percent in February to a one-month record high of almost $38 billion. And once again, I think in a good sense, American exports, manufacturing exports, are leading the way. This good news underscores a fundamental truth about our own competitiveness: If we're to succeed economically at home, we must succeed economically abroad. And the evidence is indisputable: Open markets and free trade mean new jobs for American workers and certainly growth for American companies. Over the past four decades, trade-related jobs in our country have grown three times faster than overall American job creation. 3 There's still much we can do to make America more competitive. And one of our serious economic problems right now is the cost of capital -- it's too high. A high cap-gains tax rate discourages investment and, thus, business expansion and, thus job creation. None of our industrial competitors -- major industrial competitors -- tax capital gains at rates comparable to ours. Germany, as some of you know, Germany doesn't tax them at all. And in Japan, an entrepreneur who sells the company that he's built from scratch pays a tax of one percent. It makes no sense that we ask our workers to compete with those vigorous economies with a much higher capital gains rate. And yet, the very people who complain about America's ability to compete block our effort -- every effort to lower the capital gains tax. A lower rate will benefit virtually everyone in America, not only those who run a business, but anyone who owns a house, or a farm, or share of stock, seeks a better job. So it's time to stop punishing the pursuit of excellence. And it's time, I think, to cut the tax on capital gains. For us to compete we also must lighten up the regulatory burden that Washington imposes on every American business. Last January we announced a 90-day moratorium on federal regulations. Wherever possible, we blocked those regulations that discourage growth and we're accelerating those that encourage growth. So we will have far, the preliminary estimates show that we ve saved American (msumery business $10 billion S to $20 billion in regulatory costs. That are and Wednesday, I'm going to make an announcement about the next step means frenamply lown writing bills fn consumers and more jobs and factories in america 4 in our battle against these excessive regulations, but for now I simply want to say the days of overregulation are just that -- they are over. There's been a lot of talk about change this election year. Most of it has been just that -- talk. But that's not good enough if we're going to build a better America. We need people of action. People with the experience to know what to do, and how to do it. People of principle -- willing to stand up against powerful special interests. That's why I need your support -- to fight for change -- make this country a better country -- I need your help to serve for four more years. I have talked often about the need for reform. And I've acted -- made specific and far-reaching proposals. I've called for reform of our education system, our health care system, our courts and our election campaigns. Right down the line, issue after issue, from crime to Congress, our Administration has proposed fundamental changes to help us solve pressing national problems. We have had some successes in our efforts to change things - - but more often than not roadblocks stand in the way. They are the special interests. They are not interested in change. They stand squarely behind the status quo. They may be powerful. They may be influential. They may be well-connected. But let me tell you this: they are wrong. It used to be that a doctor's first concern was about the care of the patient not the chance of a malpractice suit. You 5 know what I'm talking about -- obstetricians not delivering babies, parents not coaching Little League, volunteers not helping the elderly -- all because of the fear of lawsuits. That's wrong. That is not the America we want. People should spend more time helping each other, and a little less time suing each other. Sure, our legal system is complicated. People's rights must be protected, but it desperately needs reform -- and no lawyers' lobby should stand in the way. It used to be that we were confident that when we sent our children to school they would get a first class education. Know how to read and write -- and understand something about the world. We also believed that education includes teaching values and responsibility -- you know, "right from wrong". That builds character and that's the way it should be. But educational achievement has been sliding for years. And now we thank our lucky stars that our child's school isn't one where they find a gun in someone's locker, or drug dealing in the playground. That's wrong. That is not what we want for our children. And our teachers -- they are also counselors, mentors, social workers, and surrogate parents. God bless them for the work they do. They deserve our best effort to make the system better. Our America 2000 reforms are gaining steam. Break-the- mold schools -- national standards and testing, community by community. And whether it's among public schools, or private, or religious, parents deserve the right to choose their children's 6 schools. It's a giant undertaking to change the nation's education system -- but we are going to do it -- with or without the permission of the NEA. It used to be that going to the hospital didn't conjure up images of financial ruin. And while our health care is still the finest quality care in the world, too many people can't qualify for health insurance or can't afford it. And the cost of even minor surgery has gone through the roof. Many poor people would prefer going to a family doctor but end up going to hospital emergency rooms for routine medical treatment. Sometimes they wait for hours, because the doctors and nurses have to treat life-and-death emergencies first. And then frustrated, over- worked hospital staff refer to them derogatorily as GOMERS -- meaning "get out of my emergency room". This too is wrong. And it's got to change. Our health care proposal is comprehensive. It makes health insurance accessible and affordable for all Americans -- without throwing out the finest quality health care in the world. We must not go the way of nationalized health care with its long lines, impersonal service, and fewer options for consumers. If that's what we wanted, we'd put health care under the Department of Motor Vehicles. A brand new big bureaucracy -- kind of like Medicaid -- started as a $$ anti-poverty program. Now it's $$ and growing at a rate of % a year. Multiply that a few times and that's a cradle-to-grave boondoggle. And no matter what those whose first resort is a new big government program -- 7 with all the self-perpetuating features of the old big government programs -- nationalized health care would be a national disaster. In these and so many areas that demand reform, our government can play a pivotal and positive role in addressing many of our nation's most critical problems. I've been in government for many years. I've been in the Congress, and I've. served this country -- in uniform and as a diplomat -- overseas. I've also run a business, met a payroll, created jobs. I know how to meet the competition. I've seen this country change -- sometimes for the better, sometimes for the worse. So I think I bring something to the table when it comes to taking on the status quo. You need to know the system in order to change it. If you don't, you won't know what needs change. "Change for change sake" is meaningless and empty. It takes more than happy talk. More than lip service to reform -- and then full service to special interests. The Democratic Party will always revert to form -- solve a problem by creating a program -- more power to the bureaucracy, less to the individual. They don't understand that people are yearning for a return to responsibility, that old idea that refuses to go out of style. Liberal Democrats don't understand that people have had it with the "no-fault" lifestyle -- the denial that actions have consequences. Parents want their kids brought up to know that. And the people have a right to a government that understands that as well. 8 The American people know -- as government tries to do more and more, it delivers less and less. Next year, the federal government will spend $1.5 trillion dollars of your money. There is just no question about it. The federal government is too big and spends too much. Major reforms are in order. First, it's time for the Congress to govern itself by the laws it imposes on others. No more special treatment. And it's time for sweeping reform of campaign financing -- time to eliminate the special interest PACs. It's time for real spending reform; time for the President to have what 43 governors have -- the line-item veto. And I'm going to take that case to the American people this fall. Finally, it's time to make Congress a citizen assembly, not a club for careerists -- time to limit the terms of Members of Congress. My term is limited to two terms and I want to serve both of them -- so I don't see that it would hurt to have Congress limited to six terms for a member of the House and two terms for a senator. It would keep government more active, more vital and closer to the people. It will help us get government back to the basics. Focus on what people want, what they need, what they deserve. Things like wholesome families, good jobs. Safe streets, good schools, a strong economy and a strong country. If you think about it that's nothing more than a working definition of freedom. That's what I believe, and why I am asking for your support for another four years. 9 These last years have seen our world turned upside down. Think how much we have accomplished. Think of our blessings. With God's help and with hard work to support our convictions, we've helped change the world. We've helped the peoples of Eastern Europe and the old Soviet empire peacefully throw off the yoke of communism. And today we're aiding their transition to free markets, helping them reduce their nuclear arsenals. And we stood up against dictators and exporters of totalitarian revolution in Latin America and we've helped democracy take root in nearly every country of our hemisphere. When a ruthless tyrant overran Kuwait and threatened to engulf the Middle East in its worst conflagration, we protected the people of Israel and Turkey and Saudi Arabia. And we organized an unprecedented world coalition and we liberated Kuwait from the aggressor. And in the process we accomplished a breakthrough sought by every President from Truman to Reagan -- we brought Arab neighbors face to face with Israel for the first time at the peace table. And we won the Cold War and we stopped Saddam's aggression because, 12 years ago, we renewed our faith in our values and we strengthened our defenses. The United States is now the undisputed leader of the entire world. And we will keep ourselves strong, and we will stay engaged in world politics. This is no time to pull back and to retreat and to be afraid of the changes in the world. In world security and in world markets, we will remain engaged. 10 And we have a mission together to carry on the American Dream for new generations. And with your help and with grassroots action, we can win a mandate to lead this country for four more years. And we can keep our country open to the contributions of immigrants, of trade, of ideas. And we can work together and win with our plans to reform our schools, our health care system, our very system of government. And we can assure that when we reach the new century, America still will be the strongest, the bravest, the freest nation on the face of the Earth. Thank you all. And may God bless each and every one of you and our great country, the United States of America. Thank you very much. # # # April 23, 1992 David -- I just flipped through comments for BQ-Charlotte and saw that Tom Scully had put in different numbers from that of Fish Brown re the Medicaid sentence. I called over to OMB about it and they said to go with Scully's numbers. Michele EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT OFFICE OF MANAGEMENT AND BUDGET WASHINGTON, D.C. 20503 NOTICE: Enclosed are comments from staff members of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). Such comments do not necessarily represent the official position of the Director of OMB or of the Office of Management and Budget. If you wish to have the Director's personal comments, please let me know -- and contact me if you have any questions. If our proposed substantive changes are not made, please let us know before the material is prepared James UM Associate Director for Legislative Reference and Administration Document No. 323546ss WHITE HOUSE STAFFING MEMORANDUM DATE: 4/22/92 ACTION/CONCURRENCE/COMMENT DUE BY: THURS. 4/23/92 3:00 pm PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: BUSH-QUAYLE FUNDRAISER SUBJECT: CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA - MONDAY, APRIL 27, 1992 ACTION FYI ACTION FYI VICE PRESIDENT HORNER SKINNER MCBRIDE SCOWCROFT MOORE DARMAN PETERSMEYER BRADY PORTER BROMLEY ROGICH CALIO ROLLINS DEMAREST SMITH YEUTTER FITZWATER FINDLAY GRAY HOLIDAY KAUFMAN BOSKIN MCGROARTY REMARKS: Please forward your comments directly to Dan McGroarty, RM. 122, x2930, no later than 3:00 p.m., THURSDAY, APRIL 23, with a copy to this office. Thank you. RESPONSE: See Comments PHILLIP D. BRADY Assistant to the President and Staff Secretary Ext. 2702 DDJCMN 32 APR 22 P2: 16 Wednesday, April 22, 1922 12:00 p.m. PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: BUSH-QUAYLE FUNDRAISER CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA MONDAY, APRIL 27, 1992 Thank you for that warm welcome. You know, coming into Charlotte is no longer a small-city experience -- I can't believe your airport is now the 8th busiest in the country. The old saw used to be, you had to go through Atlanta if you wanted to get to Heaven; now they say it is much more fun if you go through Charlotte. It is wonderful to see so many good friends here. Governor Jim Martin and I have a lot in common. We both have to deal with a House full of Democrats -- we don't need his Ph.D. to realize that's bad chemistry. You know, people say they think Jim will mention have a hard time making the transition from politics to medicine. Alex momellan? I don't think so! I'll bet it won't take him anytime at all to -Rep. learn to spend Wednesday afternoons on the golf course. Being Compession here at Carowinds, I'm tempted to compare Congress to an from amusement park, but that wouldn't really be fair. An amusement charlotte park has some activity in it. Very I have been looking forward to being with you tonight, there helpful is so much I admire about this city -- especially the way you to support two concerns that are close to my heart -- education and Admin. service to others. Your "Foundation for the Carolinas" shows the Sciently priority you place on community efforts. Many people here in 5178 2 Charlotte have been named "points of light" Charlotte has good reason to be a proud city. I could talk about what you are doing in this great city all night, but I especially want to thank each of you who have contributed so generously to our re-election campaign. Your support is very important and I very much appreciate your commitment to the goals of my Presidency. I know many here are concerned about the economy. That's my number one concern as well. This month we had some heartening news about the United States economy. All around the world, consumers and companies buy American goods and services in ever- greater amounts, despite the sluggish performance of some of their own economies. U.S. exports -- I look around this room and I see many who are aware of this -- U.S. exports are experiencing a surge, rising seven percent in February to a one-month record high of almost $38 billion. And once again, I think in a good sense, American exports, manufacturing exports, are leading the way. This good news underscores a fundamental truth about our own competitiveness: If we're to succeed economically at home, we must succeed economically abroad. And the evidence is indisputable: Open markets and free trade mean new jobs for American workers and certainly growth for American companies. Over the past four decades, trade-related jobs in our country have grown three times faster than overall American job creation. 3 There's still much we can do to make America more competitive. And one of our serious economic problems right now is the cost of capital -- it's too high. A high cap-gains tax rate discourages investment and, thus, business expansion and, thus job creation. None of our industrial competitors -- major industrial competitors -- tax capital gains at rates comparable to ours. Germany, as some of you know, Germany doesn't tax them at all. And in Japan, an entrepreneur who sells the company that he's built from scratch pays a tax of one percent. It makes no sense that we ask our workers to compete with those vigorous economies with a much higher capital gains rate. And yet, the very people who complain about America's ability to compete block our effort -- every effort to lower the capital gains tax. A lower rate will benefit virtually everyone in America, not only those who run a business, but anyone who owns a house, or a farm, or share of stock, seeks a better job. So it's time to stop punishing the pursuit of excellence. And it's time, I think, to cut the tax on capital gains. For us to compete we also must lighten up the regulatory burden that Washington imposes on every American business. Last January we announced a 90-day moratorium on federal regulations. Wherever possible, we blocked those regulations that discourage growth and we're accelerating those that encourage growth. So far, the preliminary estimates show that we've saved American business $10 billion to $20 billion in regulatory costs. Wednesday, I'm going to make an announcement about the next step 4 in our battle against these excessive regulations, but for now I simply want to say the days of overregulation are just that -- they are over. There's been a lot of talk about change this election year. Most of it has been just that -- talk. But that's not good enough if we're going to build a better America. We need people of action. People with the experience to know what to do, and how to do it. People of principle -- willing to stand up against powerful special interests. That's why I need your support -- to fight for change -- make this country a better country -- I need your help to serve for four more years. I have talked often about the need for reform. And I've acted -- made specific and far-reaching proposals. I've called for reform of our education system, our health care system, our courts and our election campaigns. Right down the line, issue after issue, from crime to Congress, our Administration has proposed fundamental changes to help us solve pressing national problems. We have had some successes in our efforts to change things - - but more often than not roadblocks stand in the way. They are the special interests. They are not interested in change. They stand squarely behind the status quo. They may be powerful. They may be influential. They may be well-connected. But let me tell you this: they are wrong. It used to be that a doctor's first concern was about the care of the patient not the chance of a malpractice suit. You 5 know what I'm talking about -- obstetricians not delivering babies, parents not coaching Little League, volunteers not helping the elderly -- all because of the fear of lawsuits. That's wrong. That is not the America we want. People should spend more time helping each other, and a little less time suing each other. Sure, our legal system is complicated. People's rights must be protected, but it desperately needs reform -- and no lawyers' lobby should stand in the way. It used to be that we were confident that when we sent our children to school they would get a first class education. Know how to read and write -- and understand something about the world. We also believed that education includes teaching values and responsibility -- you know, "right from wrong That builds character and that's the way it should be. But educational achievement has been sliding for years. And now we thank our lucky stars that our child's school isn't one where they find a gun in someone's locker, or drug dealing in the playground. That's wrong. That is not what we want for our children. And our teachers -- they are also counselors, mentors, social workers, and surrogate parents. God bless them for the work they do. They deserve our best effort to make the system better. Our America 2000 reforms are gaining steam. Break-the- mold schools -- national standards and testing, community by community. And whether it's among public schools, or private, or religious, parents deserve the right to choose their children's Charbotte is represented by one of Congers true health reform experts - - Alex mcmellan, and were waking together to reform the health 6 care system. schools. It's a giant undertaking to change the nation's Scully 15175 education system -- but we are going to do it -- with or without the permission of the NEA. It used to be that going to the hospital didn't conjure up images of financial ruin. And while our health care is still the finest quality care in the world, too many people can't qualify for health insurance or can't afford it. And the cost of even minor surgery has gone through the roof. Many poor people would prefer going to a family doctor but end up going to hospital emergency rooms for routine medical treatment. Sometimes they wait for hours, because the doctors and nurses have to treat life-and-death emergencies first. And then frustrated, over- worked hospital staff refer to them derogatorily as GOMERS -- meaning "get out of my emergency room". This too is wrong. And it's got to change. Our health care proposal is comprehensive. It makes health insurance accessible and affordable for all Americans -- without throwing out the finest quality health care in the world. We must not go the way of nationalized health care with its long lines, impersonal service, and fewer options for consumers. If that's what we wanted, we'd put health care under the Department of Motor Vehicles. A brand new big bureaucracy -- kind of like Medicaid -- started as a $$ 1 billion anti-poverty program. Now it's $$ 150 Billion and growing at a/rate of % %17 a year. Multiply that a a year average and by 38% last year alone few times and that's a cradle to grave boondoggle. And no matter (Too glmst what those whose first resort is a new big government program -- Saulity 5170 7 with all the self-perpetuating features of the old big government programs -- nationalized health care would be a national disaster. In these and so many areas that demand reform, our government can play a pivotal and positive role in addressing many of our nation's most critical problems. I've been in government for many years. I've been in the Congress, and I've served this country -- in uniform and as a diplomat -- overseas. I've also run a business, met a payroll, created jobs. I know how to meet the competition. I've seen this country change -- sometimes for the better, sometimes for the worse. So I think I bring something to the table when it comes to taking on the status quo. You need to know the system in order to change it. If you don't, you won't know what needs change. "Change for change sake" is meaningless and empty. It takes more than happy talk. More than lip service to reform -- and then full service to special interests. The Democratic Party will always revert to form -- solve a problem by creating a program -- more power to the bureaucracy, less to the individual. They don't understand that people are yearning for a return to responsibility, that old idea that refuses to go out of style. Liberal Democrats don't understand that people have had it with the "no-fault" lifestyle -- the denial that actions have consequences. Parents want their kids brought up to know that. And the people have a right to a government that understands that as well. 8 The American people know -- as government tries to do more and more, it delivers less and less. Next year, the federal government will spend $1.5 trillion dollars of your money. There is just no question about it. The federal government is too big and spends too much. Major reforms are in order. First, it's time for the Congress to govern itself by the laws it imposes on others. No more special treatment. And it's time for sweeping reform of campaign financing -- time to eliminate the special interest PACs. It's time for real spending reform; time for the President to have what 43 governors have -- the line-item veto. And I'm going to take that case to the American people this fall. Finally, it's time to make Congress a citizen assembly, not a club for careerists -- time to limit the terms of Members of Congress. My term is limited to two terms and I want to serve both of them -- so I don't see that it would hurt to have Congress limited to six terms for a member of the House and two terms for a senator. It would keep government more active, more vital and closer to the people. It will help us get government back to the basics. Focus on what people want, what they need, what they deserve. Things like wholesome families, good jobs. Safe streets, good schools, a strong economy and a strong country. If you think about it that's nothing more than a working definition of freedom. That's what I believe, and why I am asking for your support for another four years. 9 These last years have seen our world turned upside down. Think how much we have accomplished. Think of our blessings. With God's help and with hard work to support our convictions, we've helped change the world. We've helped the peoples of Eastern Europe and the old Soviet empire peacefully throw off the yoke of communism. And today we're aiding their transition to free markets, helping them reduce their nuclear arsenals. And we stood up against dictators and exporters of totalitarian revolution in Latin America and we've helped democracy take root in nearly every country of our hemisphere. When a ruthless tyrant overran Kuwait and threatened to engulf the Middle East in its worst conflagration, we protected the people of Israel and Turkey and Saudi Arabia. And we organized an unprecedented world coalition and we liberated Kuwait from the aggressor. And in the process we accomplished a breakthrough sought by every President from Truman to Reagan -- we brought Arab neighbors face to face with Israel for the first time at the peace table. And we won the Cold War and we stopped Saddam's aggression because, 12 years ago, we renewed our faith in our values and we strengthened our defenses. The United States is now the undisputed leader of the entire world. And we will keep ourselves strong, and we will stay engaged in world politics. This is no time to pull back and to retreat and to be afraid of the changes in the world. In world security and in world markets, we will remain engaged. 10 And we have a mission together to carry on the American Dream for new generations. And with your help and with grassroots action, we can win a mandate to lead this country for four more years. And we can keep our country open to the contributions of immigrants, of trade, of ideas. And we can work together and win with our plans to reform our schools, our health care system, our very system of government. And we can assure that when we reach the new century, America still will be the strongest, the bravest, the freest nation on the face of the Earth. Thank you all. And may God bless each and every one of you and our great country, the United States of America. Thank you very much. # # # Document No. 323546ss WHITE HOUSE STAFFING MEMORANDUM 92 APR 23 P2: 59 DATE: 4/22/92 ACTION/CONCURRENCE/COMMENT DUE BY: THURS. 4/23/92 3:00 pm PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: BUSH-QUAYLE FUNDRAISER SUBJECT: CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA - MONDAY, APRIL 27, 1992 ACTION FYI ACTION FYI VICE PRESIDENT HORNER SKINNER MCBRIDE SCOWCROFT MOORE DARMAN PETERSMEYER BRADY PORTER BROMLEY ROGICH CALIO ROLLINS DEMAREST SMITH YEUTTER FITZWATER FINDLAY GRAY HOLIDAY KAUFMAN BOSKIN MCGROARTY REMARKS: Please forward your comments directly to Dan McGroarty, RM. 122, x2930, no later than 3:00 p.m., THURSDAY, APRIL 23, with a copy to this office. Thank you. RESPONSE: No Comment MauaShech & US PHILLIP D. BRADY Assistant to the President and Staff Secretary Ext. 2702 DDJCMN 32 APR 22 P2: 16 Wednesday, April 22, 1922 12:00 p.m. PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: BUSH-QUAYLE FUNDRAISER CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA MONDAY, APRIL 27, 1992 Thank you for that warm welcome. You know, coming into Charlotte is no longer a small-city experience -- I can't believe your airport is now the 8th busiest in the country. The old saw used to be, you had to go through Atlanta if you wanted to get to Heaven; now they say it is much more fun if you go through Charlotte. It is wonderful to see so many good friends here. Governor Jim Martin and I have a lot in common. We both have to deal with a House full of Democrats -- we don't need his Ph.D. to realize that's bad chemistry. You know, people say they think Jim will have a hard time making the transition from politics to medicine. I don't think so! I'll bet it won't take him anytime at all to learn to spend Wednesday afternoons on the golf course. Being here at Carowinds, I'm tempted to compare Congress to an amusement park, but that wouldn't really be fair. An amusement park has some activity in it. I have been looking forward to being with you tonight, there is so much I admire about this city -- especially the way you support two concerns that are close to my heart -- education and service to others. Your "Foundation for the Carolinas" shows the priority you place on community efforts. Many people here in 2 Charlotte have been named "points of light". Charlotte has good reason to be a proud city. I could talk about what you are doing in this great city all night, but I especially want to thank each of you who have contributed so generously to our re-election campaign. Your support is very important and I very much appreciate your commitment to the goals of my Presidency. I know many here are concerned about the economy. That's my number one concern as well. This month we had some heartening news about the United States economy. All around the world, consumers and companies buy American goods and services in ever- greater amounts, despite the sluggish performance of some of their own economies. U.S. exports -- I look around this room and I see many who are aware of this -- U.S. exports are experiencing a surge, rising seven percent in February to a one-month record high of almost $38 billion. And once again, I think in a good sense, American exports, manufacturing exports, are leading the way. This good news underscores a fundamental truth about our own competitiveness: If we're to succeed economically at home, we must succeed economically abroad. And the evidence is indisputable: Open markets and free trade mean new jobs for American workers and certainly growth for American companies. Over the past four decades, trade-related jobs in our country have grown three times faster than overall American job creation. 3 There's still much we can do to make America more competitive. And one of our serious economic problems right now is the cost of capital -- it's too high. A high cap-gains tax rate discourages investment and, thus, business expansion and, thus job creation. None of our industrial competitors -- major industrial competitors -- tax capital gains at rates comparable to ours. Germany, as some of you know, Germany doesn't tax them at all. And in Japan, an entrepreneur who sells the company that he's built from scratch pays a tax of one percent. It makes no sense that we ask our workers to compete with those vigorous economies with a much higher capital gains rate. And yet, the very people who complain about America's ability to compete block our effort -- every effort to lower the capital gains tax. A lower rate will benefit virtually everyone in America, not only those who run a business, but anyone who owns a house, or a farm, or share of stock, seeks a better job. So it's time to stop punishing the pursuit of excellence. And it's time, I think, to cut the tax on capital gains. For us to compete we also must lighten up the regulatory burden that Washington imposes on every American business. Last January we announced a 90-day moratorium on federal regulations. Wherever possible, we blocked those regulations that discourage growth and we're accelerating those that encourage growth. So far, the preliminary estimates show that we've saved American business $10 billion to $20 billion in regulatory costs. Wednesday, I'm going to make an announcement about the next step 4 in our battle against these excessive regulations, but for now I simply want to say the days of overregulation are just that -- they are over. There's been a lot of talk about change this election year. Most of it has been just that -- talk. But that's not good enough if we're going to build a better America. We need people of action. People with the experience to know what to do, and how to do it. People of principle -- willing to stand up against powerful special interests. That's why I need your support -- to fight for change -- make this country a better country -- I need your help to serve for four more years. I have talked often about the need for reform. And I've acted -- made specific and far-reaching proposals. I've called for reform of our education system, our health care system, our courts and our election campaigns. Right down the line, issue after issue, from crime to Congress, our Administration has proposed fundamental changes to help us solve pressing national problems. We have had some successes in our efforts to change things - - but more often than not roadblocks stand in the way. They are the special interests. They are not interested in change. They stand squarely behind the status quo. They may be powerful. They may be influential. They may be well-connected. But let me tell you this: they are wrong. It used to be that a doctor's first concern was about the care of the patient not the chance of a malpractice suit. You 5 know what I'm talking about -- obstetricians not delivering babies, parents not coaching Little League, volunteers not helping the elderly -- all because of the fear of lawsuits. That's wrong. That is not the America we want. People should spend more time helping each other, and a little less time suing each other. Sure, our legal system is complicated. People's rights must be protected, but it desperately needs reform -- and no lawyers' lobby should stand in the way. It used to be that we were confident that when we sent our children to school they would get a first class education. Know how to read and write -- and understand something about the world. We also believed that education includes teaching values and responsibility -- you know, "right from wrong". That builds character and that's the way it should be. But educational achievement has been sliding for years. And now we thank our lucky stars that our child's school isn't one where they find a gun in someone's locker, or drug dealing in the playground. That's wrong. That is not what we want for our children. And our teachers -- they are also counselors, mentors, social workers, and surrogate parents. God bless them for the work they do. They deserve our best effort to make the system better. Our America 2000 reforms are gaining steam. Break-the- mold schools -- national standards and testing, community by community. And whether it's among public schools, or private, or religious, parents deserve the right to choose their children's 6 schools. It's a giant undertaking to change the nation's education system -- but we are going to do it -- with or without the permission of the NEA. It used to be that going to the hospital didn't conjure up images of financial ruin. And while our health care is still the finest quality care in the world, too many people can't qualify for health insurance or can't afford it. And the cost of even minor surgery has gone through the roof. Many poor people would prefer going to a family doctor but end up going to hospital emergency rooms for routine medical treatment. Sometimes they wait for hours, because the doctors and nurses have to treat life-and-death emergencies first. And then frustrated, over- worked hospital staff refer to them derogatorily as GOMERS -- meaning "get out of my emergency room". This too is wrong. And it's got to change. Our health care proposal is comprehensive. It makes health insurance accessible and affordable for all Americans -- without throwing out the finest quality health care in the world. We must not go the way of nationalized health care with its long lines, impersonal service, and fewer options for consumers. If that's what we wanted, we'd put health care under the Department of Motor Vehicles. A brand new big bureaucracy -- kind of like Medicaid -- started as a $$ anti-poverty program. Now it's $$ and growing at a rate of % a year. Multiply that a few times and that's a cradle-to-grave boondoggle. And no matter what those whose first resort is a new big government program -- 7 with all the self-perpetuating features of the old big government programs -- nationalized health care would be a national disaster. In these and so many areas that demand reform, our government can play a pivotal and positive role in addressing many of our nation's most critical problems. I've been in government for many years. I've been in the Congress, and I've served this country -- in uniform and as a diplomat -- overseas. I've also run a business, met a payroll, created jobs. I know how to meet the competition. I've seen this country change -- sometimes for the better, sometimes for the worse. So I think I bring something to the table when it comes to taking on the status quo. You need to know the system in order to change it. If you don't, you won't know what needs change. "Change for change sake" is meaningless and empty. It takes more than happy talk. More than lip service to reform -- and then full service to special interests. The Democratic Party will always revert to form -- solve a problem by creating a program -- more power to the bureaucracy, less to the individual. They don't understand that people are yearning for a return to responsibility, that old idea that refuses to go out of style. Liberal Democrats don't understand that people have had it with the "no-fault" lifestyle -- the denial that actions have consequences. Parents want their kids brought up to know that. And the people have a right to a government that understands that as well. 8 The American people know -- as government tries to do more and more, it delivers less and less. Next year, the federal government will spend $1.5 trillion dollars of your money. There is just no question about it. The federal government is too big and spends too much. Major reforms are in order. First, it's time for the Congress to govern itself by the laws it imposes on others. No more special treatment. And it's time for sweeping reform of campaign financing -- time to eliminate the special interest PACs. It's time for real spending reform; time for the President to have what 43 governors have -- the line-item veto. And I'm going to take that case to the American people this fall. Finally, it's time to make Congress a citizen assembly, not a club for careerists -- time to limit the terms of Members of Congress. My term is limited to two terms and I want to serve both of them -- so I don't see that it would hurt to have Congress limited to six terms for a member of the House and two terms for a senator. It would keep government more active, more vital and closer to the people. It will help us get government back to the basics. Focus on what people want, what they need, what they deserve. Things like wholesome families, good jobs. Safe streets, good schools, a strong economy and a strong country. If you think about it that's nothing more than a working definition of freedom. That's what I believe, and why I am asking for your support for another four years. 9 These last years have seen our world turned upside down. Think how much we have accomplished. Think of our blessings. With God's help and with hard work to support our convictions, we've helped change the world. We've helped the peoples of Eastern Europe and the old Soviet empire peacefully throw off the yoke of communism. And today we're aiding their transition to free markets, helping them reduce their nuclear arsenals. And we stood up against dictators and exporters of totalitarian revolution in Latin America and we've helped democracy take root in nearly every country of our hemisphere. When a ruthless tyrant overran Kuwait and threatened to engulf the Middle East in its worst conflagration, we protected the people of Israel and Turkey and Saudi Arabia. And we organized an unprecedented world coalition and we liberated Kuwait from the aggressor. And in the process we accomplished a breakthrough sought by every President from Truman to Reagan -- we brought Arab neighbors face to face with Israel for the first time at the peace table. And we won the Cold War and we stopped Saddam's aggression because, 12 years ago, we renewed our faith in our values and we strengthened our defenses. The United States is now the undisputed leader of the entire world. And we will keep ourselves strong, and we will stay engaged in world politics. This is no time to pull back and to retreat and to be afraid of the changes in the world. In world security and in world markets, we will remain engaged. 10 And we have a mission together to carry on the American Dream for new generations. And with your help and with grassroots action, we can win a mandate to lead this country for four more years. And we can keep our country open to the contributions of immigrants, of trade, of ideas. And we can work together and win with our plans to reform our schools, our health care system, our very system of government. And we can assure that when we reach the new century, America still will be the strongest, the bravest, the freest nation on the face of the Earth. Thank you all. And may God bless each and every one of you and our great country, the United States of America. Thank you very much. ### Sinon Memorandum for Speechwriting Staff From: Dan McGroarty Regarding: B/QCharlotto Please return your comments to Room 122 by: 2pm tomorrow APR 22 1992 Today's Date: DDJCMN Wednesday, April 22, 1922 12:00 p.m. PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: BUSH-QUAYLE FUNDRAISER CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA MONDAY, APRIL 27, 1992 Thank you for that warm welcome. You know, coming into Charlotte is no longer a small-city experience -- I can't believe your airport is now the 8th busiest in the country. The old saw used to be, you had to go through Atlanta if you wanted to get to Heaven; now they say it is much more fun if you go through Charlotte. It is wonderful to see so many good friends here. Governor Jim Martin and I have a lot in common. We both have to deal with a House full of Democrats -- we don't need his Ph.D. to realize that's bad chemistry. You know, people say they think Jim will have a hard time making the transition from politics to medicine. I don't think so! I'll bet it won't take him anytime at all to learn to spend Wednesday afternoons on the golf course. Being here at Carowinds, I'm tempted to compare Congress to an amusement park, but that wouldn't really be fair. An amusement park has some activity in it. I have been looking forward to being with you tonight, there is so much I admire about this city -- especially the way you support two concerns that are close to my heart -- education and service to others. Your "Foundation for the Carolinas" shows the priority you place on community efforts. Many people here in good language + use of real examples. should connect with this + future andiences. 2 Charlotte have been named "points of light". Charlotte has good reason to be a proud city. I could talk about what you are doing in this great city all night, but I especially want to thank each of you who have contributed so generously to our re-election campaign. Your support is very important and I very much appreciate your commitment to the goals of my Presidency. I know many here are concerned about the economy. That's my number one concern as well. This month we had some heartening news about the United States economy. All around the world, consumers and companies buy American goods and services in ever- greater amounts, despite the sluggish performance of some of their own economies. U.S. exports -- I look around this room and I see many who are aware of this -- U.S. exports are experiencing a surge, rising seven percent in February to a one-month record high of almost $38 billion. And once again, I think in a good sense, American exports, manufacturing exports, are leading the way. This good news underscores a fundamental truth about our own competitiveness: If we're to succeed economically at home, we must succeed economically abroad. And the evidence is indisputable: Open markets and free trade mean new jobs for American workers and certainly growth for American companies. Over the past four decades, trade-related jobs in our country have grown three times faster than overall American job creation. 3 There's still much we can do to make America more competitive. And one of our serious economic problems right now is the cost of capital -- it's too high. A high cap-gains tax rate discourages investment and, thus, business expansion and, thus job creation. None of our industrial competitors -- major industrial competitors -- tax capital gains at rates comparable to ours. Germany, as some of you know, Germany doesn't tax them at all. And in Japan, an entrepreneur who sells the company that he's built from scratch pays a tax of one percent. It makes no sense that we ask our workers to compete with those vigorous economies with a much higher capital gains rate. And yet, the very people who complain about America's ability to compete block our effort -- every effort to lower the capital gains tax. A lower rate will benefit virtually everyone in America, not only those who run a business, but anyone who owns a house, or a farm, or share of stock, seeks a better job. So it's time to stop punishing the pursuit of excellence. And it's time, inthilok to cut the tax on capital gains. For us to compete we also must lighten up the regulatory burden that Washington imposes on every American business. Last January we announced a 90-day moratorium on federal regulations. Wherever possible, we blocked those regulations that discourage growth and we're accelerating those that encourage growth. So far, the preliminary estimates show that we've saved American business $10 billion to $20 billion in regulatory costs. Wednesday, I'm going to make an announcement about the next step 4 in our battle against these excessive regulations, but for now I simply want to say the days of overregulation are just that -- they are over. There's been a lot of talk about change this election year. Most of it has been just that -- talk. But that's not good enough if we're going to build a better America. We need people of action. People with the experience to know what to do, and how to do it. People of principle -- willing to stand up against powerful special interests. That's why I need your support -- to fight for change -- make this country a better country -- I need your help to serve for four more years. I have talked often about the need for reform. And I've acted -- made specific and far-reaching proposals. I've called for reform of our education system, our health care system, our courts and our election campaigns. Right down the line, issue after issue, from crime to Congress, our Administration has proposed fundamental changes to help us solve pressing national problems. We have had some successes in our efforts to change things - - but more often than not roadblocks stand in the way. They are the special interests. They are not interested in change. They stand squarely behind the status quo. They may be powerful. They may be influential. They may be well-connected. But let me tell you this: they are wrong. It used to be that a doctor's first concern was about the care of the patient not the chance of a malpractice suit. You 5 know what I'm talking about -- obstetricians not delivering babies, parents not coaching Little League, volunteers not helping the elderly -- all because of the fear of lawsuits. That's wrong. That is not the America we want. People should spend more time helping each other, and a little less time suing each other. Sure, our legal system is complicated. People's rights must be protected, but it desperately needs reform -- and no lawyers' lobby should stand in the way. It used to be that we were confident that when we sent our children to school they would get a first class education. Know how to read and write -- and understand something about the world. We also believed that education includes teaching values and responsibility -- you know, "right from wrong". That builds character and that's the way it should be. But educational achievement has been sliding for years. And now we thank our lucky stars that our child's school isn't one where they find a gun in someone's locker, or drug dealing in the playground. That's wrong. That is not what we want for our children. And our teachers -- they are also counselors, mentors, social workers, and surrogate parents. God bless them for the work they do. They deserve our best effort to make the system better. Our America 2000 reforms are gaining steam. Break-the- mold schools -- national standards and testing, community by community. all And whether it's among public schools, or private, or religious, parents deserve the right to choose their children's Л rich or poor 6 schools. It's a giant undertaking to change the nation's education system -- but we are going to do it, with or without the permission of the NEA If the business as usual help won't thailt It used to be that going to the hospital didn't conjure up we"ll images of financial ruin. And while our health care is still the do it finest quality care in the world, too many people can't qualify without for health insurance or can't afford it. And the cost of even them. minor surgery has gone through the roof. Many poor people would prefer going to a family doctor but end up going to hospital emergency rooms for routine medical treatment. Sometimes they wait for hours, because the doctors and nurses have to treat life-and-death emergencies first. And then frustrated, over- worked hospital staff refer to them derogatorily as GOMERS -- meaning "get out of my emergency room". This too is wrong. And it's got to change. Our health care proposal is comprehensive. It makes health insurance accessible and affordable for all Americans -- without throwing out the finest quality health care in the world. We must not go the way of nationalized health care with its long lines, impersonal service, and fewer options for consumers. If that's what we wanted, we'd put health care under the Department of Motor Vehicles. A brand new big bureaucracy kind of like Medicaid 8 started as a $$ anti poverty program. Now it $$ and growing at a rate of % a year Multiply that a few times and that's a cradle to-grave boondoggle. And no matter medical burevacracy what those whose first resort is new big government program won't This doesn't funite make the point. make anyone hea 1thy. Plus, we not against Medicaid. 7 with the self perpetuating features of the old big government It's clear: programs- nationalized health care would be a national disaster. In these and so many areas that demand reform, our government can play a pivotal and positive role in addressing many of our nation's most critical problems. I've been in government for many years. I've been in the Congress, and I've served this country -- in uniform and as a diplomat -- overseas. I've also run a business, met a payroll, created jobs. I know how to meet the competition. I've seen this country change -- sometimes for the better, sometimes for the worse. So I think I bring something to the table when it comes to taking on the status quo. You need to know the system in order to change it. If you don't, you won't know what needs change. "Change for change sake" is meaningless and empty. It takes more than happy talk Some pay More than lip service to reform -- and then full service to special interests. The Democratic Party will always revert to Yougot They got form solve a problem by creating a program, more power to the bureaucracy, less to the individual. They don't understand that people are yearning for a return to responsibility, that old point idea that refuses to go out of style. Liberal Democrats don't needs understand that people have had it with the "no-fault" lifestyle work the denial that actions have consequences. Parents want their kids brought up to know that. And the people have a right to a government that understands that as well. lots of people like avoiding blame 4 rish I all the lawsn'ts withess 8 The American people know -- as government tries to do more and more, it delivers less and less. Next year, the federal government will spend $1.5 trillion dollars of your money. are There you getting ^ your is just no question about it. The federal government is too biamony's big and spends too much. worth? Major reforms are in order. First, it's time for the Congress to govern itself by the laws it imposes on others. No more special treatment. And it's time for sweeping reform of campaign financing -- time to eliminate the special interest PACs. It's time for real spending reform; time for the President to have what 43 governors have -- the line-item veto. And I'm going to take that case to the American people this fall. Finally, it's time to make Congress a citizen assembly, not a club for careerists -- time to limit the terms of Members of Congress. My term is limited to two terms and I want to serve both of them -- so I don't see that it would hurt to have Congress limited to six terms for a member of the House and two terms for a senator. It would keep government more active, more vital and closer to the people. It will help us get government back to the basics. Focus on what people want, what they need, what they deserve. Things like wholesome families, good jobs. Safe streets, good schools, a strong economy and a strong country. If you think about it the that's nothing more than a working definition of freedom. That's what I believe, and why I am asking for your support for another four years. 9 These last years have seen our world turned upside down. Think how much we have accomplished. Think of our blessings. With God's help and with hard work to support our convictions, we've helped change the world. We've helped the peoples of Eastern Europe and the old Soviet empire peacefully throw off the yoke of communism. And today we're aiding their transition to free markets, helping them reduce their nuclear arsenals. And we stood up against dictators and exporters of totalitarian revolution in Latin America and we've helped democracy take root in nearly every country of our hemisphere. When a ruthless tyrant overran Kuwait and threatened to engulf the Middle East in its worst conflagration, we protected the people of Israel and Turkey and Saudi Arabia. And we organized an unprecedented world coalition and we liberated Kuwait from the aggressor. And in the process we accomplished a breakthrough sought by every President from Truman to Reagan -- we brought Arab neighbors face to face with Israel for the first time at the peace table. we won the Cold War and we stopped Saddam's aggression because, 12 years ago, we renewed our faith in our values and we strengthened our defenses. The United States is now the not of the free world, but undisputed leader of the entire world. And we will keep ourselves strong, and we will stay engaged in world politics. This is no time to pull back and to retreat and to be afraid of the changes in the world. In world security and in world markets, we will remain engaged. 10 And we have a mission together to carry on the American Dream for new generations. And with your help and with grassroots action, we can win a mandate to lead this country for four more years. And we can keep our country open to the contributions of immigrants, of trade, of ideas. And we can work together and win with our plans to reform our schools, our health care system, our very system of government. And we can assure that when we reach the new century, America still will be the strongest, the bravest, the freest nation on the face of the Earth. Thank you all. And may God bless each and every one of you and our great country, the United States of America. Thank you very much. ### Bunton Memorandum for Speechwriting Staff From: Dan McGroarty Regarding: B/Qchaolotto Please return your comments to Room 122 by: 2pm tomorrow Today's Date: APR 22 1992 DDJCMN Wednesday, April 22, 1922 12:00 p.m. PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: BUSH-QUAYLE FUNDRAISER CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA MONDAY, APRIL 27, 1992 Thank you for that warm welcome. You know, coming into Charlotte is no longer a small-city experience -- I can't believe your airport is now the 8th busiest in the country. The old saw used to be, you had to go through Atlanta if you wanted to get to Heaven; now they say it is much more fun if you go through Charlotte. It is wonderful to see so many good friends here. Governor Jim Martin and I have a lot in common. We both have to deal with a House full of Democrats -- we don't need his Ph.D. to realize that's bad chemistry. You know, people say they think Jim will have a hard time making the transition from politics to medicine. I don't think so! I'll bet it won't take him anytime at all to learn to spend Wednesday afternoons on the golf course. Being here at Carowinds, I'm tempted to compare Congress to an amusement park, but that wouldn't really be fair. An amusement park has some activity in it. I have been looking forward to being with you tonight, there is so much I admire about this city -- especially the way you support two concerns that are close to my heart -- education and service to others. Your "Foundation for the Carolinas" shows the priority you place on community efforts. Many people here in 2 Charlotte have been named "points of light". Charlotte has good reason to be a proud city. I could talk about what you are doing in this great city all night, but I especially want to thank each of you who have contributed so generously to our re-election campaign. Your support is very important and I very much appreciate your commitment to the goals of my Presidency. I know many here are concerned about the economy. That's my number one concern as well. This month we had some heartening news about the United States economy. All around the world, consumers and companies buy American goods and services in ever- greater amounts, despite the sluggish performance of some of their own economies. U.S. exports -- I look around this room and I see many who are aware of this -- U.S. exports are experiencing a surge, rising seven percent in February to a one-month record high of almost $38 billion. And once again, I think in a good sense, American exports, manufacturing exports, are leading the way. This good news underscores a fundamental truth about our own competitiveness: If we're to succeed economically at home, we must succeed economically abroad. And the evidence is indisputable: Open markets and free trade mean new jobs for American workers and certainly growth for American companies. Over the past four decades, trade-related jobs in our country have grown three times faster than overall American job creation. 3 There's still much we can do to make America more competitive. And one of our serious economic problems right now is the cost of capital -- it's too high. A high cap-gains tax rate discourages investment and, thus, business expansion and, thus job creation. None of our industrial competitors -- major industrial competitors -- tax capital gains at rates comparable to ours. Germany, as some of you know, Germany doesn't tax them at all. And in Japan, an entrepreneur who sells the company that he's built from scratch pays a tax of one percent. It makes no sense that we ask our workers to compete with those vigorous economies with a much higher capital gains rate. And yet, the very people who complain about America's ability to compete block our effort -- every effort to lower the capital gains tax. A lower rate will benefit virtually everyone in America, not only those who run a business, but anyone who owns a house, or a farm, or share of stock, seeks a better job. So it's time to stop punishing the pursuit of excellence. And it's time, I think, to cut the tax on capital gains. For us to compete we also must lighten up the regulatory burden that Washington imposes on every American business. Last January we announced a 90-day moratorium on federal regulations. Wherever possible, we blocked those regulations that discourage growth and we're accelerating those that encourage growth. So far, the preliminary estimates show that we've saved American business $10 billion to $20 billion in regulatory costs. Wednesday, I'm going to make an announcement about the next step 4 in our battle against these excessive regulations, but for now I simply want to say the days of overregulation are just that -- they are over. There's been a lot of talk about change this election year. Most of it has been just that -- talk. But that's not good enough if we're going to build a better America. We need people of action. People with the experience to know what to do, and how to do it. People of principle -- willing to stand up against powerful special interests. That's why I need your support -- to fight for change -- make this country a better country -- I need your help to serve for four more years. I have talked often about the need for reform. And I've acted -- made specific and far-reaching proposals. I've called for reform of our education system, our health care system, our courts and our election campaigns. Right down the line, issue after issue, from crime to Congress, our Administration has proposed fundamental changes to help us solve pressing national problems. We have had some successes in our efforts to change things - There's no White House Gridloch only Congressional Badblick- - but more often than not roadblocks stand in the way. They are the special interests. They are not interested in change. They stand squarely behind the status quo. They may be powerful. They may be influential. They may be well-connected. But let me tell you this: they are wrong. (They are Democrats) when used tabe I It used to be that a doctor's first concern was about the care of the patient not the chance of a malpractice suit. You 5 know what I'm talking about -- obstetricians not delivering Do into others. babies, parents not coaching Little League, volunteers not "sue unto others as they helping the elderly -- all because of the fear of lawsuits. sue unto you. That's wrong. That is not the America we want. People should spend more time helping each other, and a little less time suing each other. Sure, our legal system is complicated. People's rights must refers baca to people's rights not legal system be protected, but it desperately needs reform -- and no lawyers' lobby should stand in the way. used be It used to be that we were confident that when we sent our children to school they would get a first class education. Know how to read and write -- and understand something about the world. We also believed that education includes teaching values and responsibility -- you know, "right from wrong". That builds character and that's the way it should be. But educational achievement has been sliding for years. And now we thank our lucky stars that our child's school isn't one where they find a gun in someone's locker, or drug dealing in the playground. That's wrong. That is not what we want for our children. And our teachers -- they are also counselors, mentors, social workers, and surrogate parents. God bless them for the work they do. They deserve our best effort to make the system better. Our America 2000 reforms are gaining steam. Break-the- mold schools -- national standards and testing, community by community. And whether it's among public schools, or private, or when N.C. America kich -olf religious, parents deserve the right to choose their children's 6 schools. It's a giant undertaking to change the nation's education system -- but we are going to do it -- with or without the permission of the NEA. It used to be that going to the hospital didn't conjure up stick out your wallet and say AHH. images of financial ruin. And while our health care is still the finest quality care in the world, too many people can't qualify for health insurance or can't afford it. And the cost of even minor surgery has gone through the roof. Many poor people would prefer going to a family doctor but end up going to hospital emergency rooms for routine medical treatment. Sometimes they wait for hours, because the doctors and nurses have to treat life-and-death emergencies first. And then frustrated, over- worked hospital staff refer to them derogatorily as GOMERS -- meaning "get out of my emergency room". This too is wrong. And it's got to change. Our health care proposal is comprehensive. It makes health insurance accessible and affordable for all Americans -- without throwing out the finest quality health care in the world. We must not go the way of nationalized health care with its long lines, impersonal service, and fewer options for consumers. If that's what we wanted, we'd put health care under the Department of Motor Vehicles. A brand new big bureaucracy kind of like Medicaid -- started as a $$ anti-poverty program. Now it's $$ and growing at a rate of % a year. Multiply that a few times and that's a cradle-to-grave boondoggle. And no matter what those whose first resort is a new big government program -- 7 with all the self-perpetuating features of the old big government programs -- nationalized health care would be a national disaster. In these and so many areas that demand reform, our government can play a pivotal and positive role in addressing many of our nation's most critical problems. I've been in government for many years. I've been in the Congress, and I've served this country -- in uniform and as a diplomat -- overseas. I've also run a business, met a payroll, created jobs. I know how to meet the competition. I've seen this country change -- sometimes for the better, sometimes for the worse. So I think I bring something to the table when it comes to taking on the status quo. You need to know the system in order to change it. If you don't, you won't know what needs change. "Change for change sake" is meaningless and empty. It takes more than happy talk. 0000L More than lip service to reform -- and then full service to special interests. The Democratic Party will always revert to form -- solve a problem by creating a program -- more power to the bureaucracy, less to the individual. They don't understand that people are yearning for a return to responsibility, that old idea that refuses to go out of style. Liberal Democrats don't understand that people have had it with the "no-fault" lifestyle -- the denial that actions have consequences. Parents want their kids brought up to know that. And the people have a right to a government that understands that as well. 8 The American people know -- as government tries to do more and more, it delivers less and less. Next year, the federal government will spend $1.5 trillion dollars of your money. There gotting your dollar's worth is just no question about it. The federal government is too big and spends too much. Major reforms are in order. First, it's time for the Congress to govern itself by the laws it imposes on others. No more special treatment. And it's time for sweeping reform of campaign financing -- time to eliminate the special interest PACs. It's time for real spending reform; time for the President to have what 43 governors have -- the line-item veto. And I'm going to take that case to the American people this fall. Finally, it's time to make Congress a citizen assembly, not a club for careerists -- time to limit the terms of Members of Congress. My term is limited to two terms and I want to serve both of them -- so I don't see that it would hurt to have Congress limited to six terms for a member of the House and two terms for a senator. It would keep government more active, more vital and closer to the people. It will help us get government back to the basics. Focus on what people want, what they need, what they deserve. Things like wholesome families, good jobs. Safe streets, good schools, a strong economy and a strong country. If you think about it that's nothing more than a working definition of freedom. That's what I believe, and why I am asking for your support for another four years. 9 These last years have seen our world turned upside down. Think how much we have accomplished. Think of our blessings. With God's help and with hard work to support our convictions, we've helped change the world. We've helped the peoples of Eastern Europe and the old Soviet empire peacefully throw off the yoke of communism. And today we're aiding their transition to free markets, helping them reduce their nuclear arsenals. And we stood up against dictators and exporters of totalitarian revolution in Latin America and we've helped democracy take root in nearly every country of our hemisphere. When a ruthless tyrant overran Kuwait and threatened to engulf the Middle East in its worst conflagration, we protected the people of Israel and Turkey and Saudi Arabia. And we organized an unprecedented world coalition and we liberated Kuwait from the aggressor. And in the process we accomplished a breakthrough sought by every President from Truman to Reagan -- we brought Arab neighbors face to face with Israel for the first time at the peace table. And we won the Cold War and we stopped Saddam's aggression because, 12 years ago, we renewed our faith in our values and we strengthened our defenses. The United States is now the undisputed leader of the entire world. And we will keep ourselves strong, and we will stay engaged in world politics. This is no time to pull back and to retreat and to be afraid of the changes in the world. In world security and in world markets, we will remain engaged. 10 And we have a mission together to carry on the American Dream for new generations. And with your help and with grassroots action, we can win a mandate to lead this country for four more years. And we can keep our country open to the contributions of immigrants, of trade, of ideas. And we can work together and win with our plans to reform our schools, our health care system, our very system of government. And we can assure that when we reach the new century, America still will be the strongest, the bravest, the freest nation on the face of the Earth. Thank you all. And may God bless each and every one of you and our great country, the United States of America. Thank you very much. # # # Aarhus Memorandum for Speechwriting Staff From: Dan McGroarty Regarding: B/Q Chartote Please return your comments to Room 122 by: 2pm tomorrow APR 22 1992 Today's Date: Dr I like this - it's terrific! -Mmor wordage changes, that'sall. DDJCMN Wednesday, April 22, 1922 12:00 p.m. PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: BUSH-QUAYLE FUNDRAISER CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA MONDAY, APRIL 27, 1992 Thank you for that warm welcome. You know, coming into Charlotte is no longer a small-city experience -- I can't believe your airport is now the 8th busiest in the country. The old saw used to be, you had to go through Atlanta if you wanted to get to Heaven; now they say it is much more fun if you go through Charlotte. It is wonderful to see so many good friends here. Governor Jim Martin and I have a lot in common. We both have to deal with a House full of Democrats -- we don't need his Ph.D. to realize that's bad chemistry. You know, people say they think Jim will have a hard time making the transition from politics to medicine. I don't think so! I'll bet it won't take him anytime at all to learn to spend Wednesday afternoons on the golf course Being here at Carowinds, I'm tempted to compare Congress to an amusement park, but that wouldn't really be fair. An amusement park has some activity in it. !!! Goodone- I have been looking forward to being with you tonight, there is so much I admire about this city -- especially the way you support two concerns that are close to my heart -- education and service to others. Your "Foundation for the Carolinas" shows the priority you place on community efforts. Many people here in 2 Charlotte have been named "points of light". Charlotte has good reason to be a proud city. I could talk about what you are doing in this great city all night, but I especially want to thank each of you who have contributed so generously to our re-election campaign. Your support is very important and I very much appreciate your commitment to the goals of my Presidency. I know many here are concerned about the economy. That's my number one concern as well. This month we had some heartening news about the United States economy. All around the world, consumers and companies buy American goods and services in ever- greater amounts, despite the sluggish performance of some of their own economies. U.S. exports -- I look around this room and I see many who are aware of this -- U.S. exports are experiencing a surge, rising seven percent in February to a one-month record high of almost $38 billion. And once ed again, I think in a good sense, American exports manufacturing exports are leading the way. This good news underscores a fundamental truth about our own competitiveness: If we're to succeed economically at home, we must succeed economically abroad. And the evidence is indisputable: Open markets and free trade mean new jobs for American workers and certainly growth for American companies. Over the past four decades, trade-related jobs in our country have grown three times faster than overall American job creation. 3 There's still much more we can do to make America more competitive. And one of our serious economic problems right now is the cost of capital -- it's too high. A high cap tab gains tax rate discourages investment and, thus business expansion and thus job creation. None of our major industrial competitors major industrial competitors tax capital gains at rates comparable to ours. Germany as some of you know, Germany doesn't tax them at all. And in Japan, an entrepreneur who sells the company that capital gains he's built from scratch pays a tax of one percent. It makes no sense that we ask our workers to compete with those vigorous economies with a much higher capital gains rate sounds the vig. like economies the youresaying high rate And yet, the very people who complain about America's ability to compete block our ffort every effort to lower the capital gains tax. A lower rate will benefit virtually everyone in America, not only those who run a business, but anyone who who owns a house, or a farm, or share of stock, seeks a better job. So it's time to stop punishing the pursuit of excellence. And it's time I think, to cut the tax on capital gains. For us to compete we also must lighten the regulatory burden that Washington imposes on every American business. Last In January we I announced a 90-day moratorium on federal regulations. Wherever possible, we ive blocked those regulations that discourage growth and we're accelerating those that encourage growth. So far, the preliminary estimates show that we've saved American business $10 billion to $20 billion in regulatory costs. On Wednesday, I'm going to make an announcement about the next step 4 in our battle against these excessive regulations, but for now I simply want to say that the days of overregulation are just that -- they are over. There's been a lot of talk about change this election year. Most of it has been just that -- talk. But that's not good enough if we're going to build a better America. We need people committed to action. People with the experience to know what to do, and how to do it. People of principle -- willing to stand up against powerful special interests. That's why I need your support -- to fight for change make this country a better country -- I need beliPresident your help to serve for four more years. --the need for broys I have talked often about the need for reform And I've acted -- made specific and far-reaching proposals. I've called for reform of our education system, our health care system, our courts and our election campaigns. Right down the line, issue after issue, from crime to Congress, our my Administration has proposed fundamental changes to help us solve pressing national problems. We have had some successes in our efforts to change things - - but more often than not roadblocks stand in the way. They are the special interests. They are not interested in change. They stand want to squarely keep the behind business the -as- status usual approach. quo. They may be powerful. They may be influential. They may be well-connected. But let me tell you this: they are wrong. It used to be that a doctor's first concern was about the care of the patient not the chance of a malpractice suit. You He aplubbed. or 5 know what I'm talking about -- obstetricians doctors not delivering this babies, parents not coaching Little League, volunteers not helping the elderly -- all because of the fear of lawsuits. Thatisnotthe America I want That's wrong. ^ That is not the America we want. People should instead of spend more time helping each other, and a little less time suing each other. Sure, our legal system is complicated. People's rights must we won't let be protected, but it desperately needs reform -- and no lawyers lobby anyone should stand in the way. our send It used to be that we were confident that when we sent our children to school they would get a first-class education. Know we expect Should how to read and write -- and understand something about the world. We also believed that education includes teaching values and responsibility -- you know, "right from wrong". That builds character and that's the way it should be. Unfortunately But educational achievement has been sliding for years. And Today, we thank our lucky stars that our child's school isn't one where they find a gun in someone's locker, or drug dealing in the playground. That S wrong. That is not what we want for our children. And our teachers -- they are also counselors, mentors, social workers, and surrogate parents. God bless them for the work they do. They deserve our best effort to make the system better. Our America 2000 reforms are gaining steam. Break-the- mold schools -- national standards and testing, community by community. And whether it's among public schools, or private, or religious, pall parents deserve the right to choose their children's richorpoor, or inthemidate, how about a Section on $ Solvroiden. won't the can meithmall govt. the work call tor do to a X of fn this 6 schools. It's a giant undertaking to change the nation's education system -- but we are going to do it -- with or without the permission of the NEA. meant goingtoget you weref it It used to be that going to the hospital didn't conjure up images of financial ruin. And while our health care is still the finest quality care in the world, too many people can don't qualify for health insurance or can't afford it. And the cost of even minor surgery has gone through the roof. Many poor people would prefer going to a family doctor but end up going to hospital emergency rooms for routine medical treatment. Sometimes they wait for hours, because the doctors and nurses have to treat life-and or death emergencies first. And then frustrated, over- worked hospital staff refer to them derogatorily as GOMERS -- meaning "get out of my emergency room". This too is wrong. And it's got to change. Our health care proposal is comprehensive. It makes health insurance accessible and affordable for all Americans -- without throwing out the finest quality health care in the world. We must not go the way of nationalized health care with its long lines, impersonal service, and fewer options for consumers. If that's what we wanted, we'd put health care under the Department of Motor Vehicles. A brand new big bureaucracy -- kind of like Medicaid -- started as a $$ anti-poverty program. Now it's eh? $$ and growing at a rate of % a year. Multiply that a Confusing. few times and that's a cradle-to-grave boondoggle. And no matter what those whose first resort is a new big government program -- 7 with all the self-perpetuating features of the old big government programs nationalized health care would be a national disaster!Tex disaster In these and so many areas that demand reform, our government can play a pivotal and positive role in addressing many of our nation's most critical problems. I've been in government for many years. I've been in the Congress, and I've served this country -- in uniform and as a diplomat -- overseas. I've also run a business, met a payroll, created jobs. I know how to meet stare the competition, I've seen this country change -- intheface-andwin- sometimes for the better, sometimes for the worse. So I think I bring something to the table when it comes to taking on the status quo. You need to know the system in order to change it. If you don't, you won't know what needs change. "Change for change sake" is meaningless and empty. It takes more than happy talk. More than lip service to reform and then full service to And you can besure special interests. The Democratic Party will always revert to form -- solve your problem by creating a program -- more power to human being. the bureaucracy, less to the indi idual. They don't understand that people are yearning for a return to responsibility, that old idea that refuses to go out of style. Liberal Democrats don't understand that people have had it with the "no-fault" lifestyle -- the denial that actions have consequences. Parents want their people.,beliare expand all ofus has kids brought up to know that. And the people have a right to a more. government that understands that as well. 8 The American people know -- as government tries to do more and more, it delivers less and less. Next year, the federal government will spend $1.5 trillion dollars of your money. There is just no question about it. The federal government is too big and spends too much. Major reforms are in order. First, it's time for the Congress to govern itself by the laws it imposes on others. No more special treatment. And it's time for sweeping reform of campaign financing -- time to eliminate the special interest PACs. It's time for real spending reform; time for the President to have what 43 governors have -- the line-item veto. And I'm going to take that case to the American people this fall. Finally, it's time to make Congress a citizen assembly, not a club for careerists time to limit the terms of Members of politicians >it's Congress. My term is limited to two terms and I want to serve both of them -- so I don't see that it would hurt to have Congress limited to six terms for a member of the House and two terms for a senator. It would keep government more active, more vital and certaining closer to the people. Termlimity will help us get government back to the basics. Focus on forthetaxdollars.,Heypay. pay. what people want, what they need, what they deserve Things like wholesome families good jobs, Safe streets, good schools, a strong economy and a strong country. If you think about it that's nothing more than a working definition of freedom. That's what I believe, and why I am asking for your support for another that's four more years. Youknow, 9 ^ These last few years have seen our world turned upside down. Think how much we have accomplished. Think of our blessings. With God's help and with hard work to support our convictions, we've helped change the world. We've helped the peoples of Eastern Europe and the old Soviet empire peacefully throw off the yoke of communism. And today we're aiding their transition to free markets and helping them reduce their nuclear arsenals. And we stood up against dictators and exporters of totalitarian revolution in Latin America, and we've helped democracy take root in nearly every country of our hemisphere. When a ruthless tyrant overran Kuwait and threatened to fire storm engulf the Middle East in its worst lagration, we protected the people of Israel and Turkey and Saudi Arabia. And we organized an unprecedented world coalition and we liberated Kuwait from the aggressor. And in the process we accomplished a brutal breakthrough sought by every President from Truman to Reagan -- we brought Arab neighbors face to face with Israel for the first time at the peace table. And we won the Cold War and we stopped Saddam's aggression because 12 years ago, we renewed our faith in our values and we strengthened our defenses. The United States is now the undisputed leader of the entire world. And we will keep ourselves strong, and we will stay engaged in world politics. This is no time to pull back and to retreat and be afraid of the changes in the world. In world security and in world markets, we will remain engaged. at States United will be when and my of the Taybeah what section forthe Polus u.s. 2000. And we have a mission together to carry on the American (n Dream for new generations. And with your help and with grassroots action, we can win a mandate to lead this country for & schools, four more years. And we can keep our country open to the contributions of immigrants, of trade, of ideas. And we can work family world.. together and win with our plans to reform our schools, our health care system, our very system of government. And we can assure that when we reach the new century, America still will be the year 2000 strongest, the bravest, the freest nation on the face of the Earth. Thank you all. And may God bless each and every one of you and our great country, the United States of America. Thank you very much. # # # DDJCMN Wednesday, April 22, 1922 12:00 p.m. PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: BUSH-QUAYLE FUNDRAISER CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA MONDAY, APRIL 27, 1992 Thank you for that warm welcome. You know, coming into Charlotte is no longer a small-city experience -- I can't believe your airport is now the 8th busiest in the country. The old saw used to be, you had to go through Atlanta if you wanted to get to Heaven; now they say it is much more fun if you go through Charlotte. It is wonderful to see so many good friends here. Governor Jim Martin and I have a lot in common. We both have to deal with a House full of Democrats -- we don't need his Ph. to realize that's bad chemistry. You know, people say they think Jim will have a hard time making the transition from politics to medicine. I don't think so! I'll bet it won't take him anytime at all to learn to spend Wednesday afternoons on the golf course. Being here at Carowinds, I'm tempted to compare Congress to an amusement park, but that wouldn't really be fair. An amusement park has some activity in it. I have been looking forward to being with you tonight, there is so much I admire about this city -- especially the way you support two concerns that are close to my heart -- education and service to others. Your "Foundation for the Carolinas" shows the priority you place on community efforts. Many people here in 2 Charlotte have been named "points of light". Charlotte has good reason to be a proud city. I could talk about what you are doing in this great city all night, but I especially want to thank each of you who have contributed so generously to our re-election campaign. Your support is very important and I very much appreciate your commitment to the goals of my Presidency. I know many here are concerned about the economy. That's my number one concern as well. This month we had some heartening news about the United States economy. All around the world, consumers and companies buy American goods and services in ever- greater amounts, despite the sluggish performance of some of their own economies. U.S. exports -- I look around this room and I see many who are aware of this -- U.S. exports are experiencing a surge, rising seven percent in February to a one-month record high of almost $38 billion. And once again, I think in a good sense, American exports, manufacturing exports, are leading the way. This good news underscores a fundamental truth about our own competitiveness: If we're to succeed economically at home, we must succeed economically abroad. And the evidence is indisputable: Open markets and free trade mean new jobs for American workers and certainly growth for American companies. Over the past four decades, trade-related jobs in our country have grown three times faster than overall American job creation. 3 There's still much we can do to make America more competitive. And one of our serious economic problems right now is the cost of capital -- it's too high. A high cap-gains tax rate discourages investment and, thus, business expansion and, thus job creation. None of our industrial competitors -- major industrial competitors -- tax capital gains at rates comparable to ours. Germany, as some of you know, Germany doesn't tax them at all. And in Japan, an entrepreneur who sells the company that he's built from scratch pays a tax of one percent. It makes no sense that we ask our workers to compete with those vigorous economies with a much higher capital gains rate. And yet, the very people who complain about America's ability to compete block our effort every effort to lower the capital gains tax. A lower rate will benefit virtually everyone in America, not only those who run a business, but anyone who owns a house, or a farm, or share of stock, seeks a better job. So it's time to stop punishing the pursuit of excellence. And it's time, I think, to cut the tax on capital gains. For us to compete we also must lighten up the regulatory burden that Washington imposes on every American business. Last January we announced a 90-day moratorium on federal regulations. Wherever possible, we blocked those regulations that discourage growth and we're accelerating those that encourage growth. So far, the preliminary estimates show that we've saved American business $10 billion to $20 billion in regulatory costs. Wednesday, I'm going to make an announcement about the next step 4 in our battle against these excessive regulations, but for now I simply want to say the days of overregulation are just that -- they are over. There's been a lot of talk about change this election year. Most of it has been just that -- talk. But that's not good enough if we're going to build a better America. We need people of action. People with the experience to know what to do, and how to do it. People of principle -- willing to stand up against powerful special interests. That's why I need your support -- to fight for change -- make this country a better country -- I need your help to serve for four more years. I have talked often about the need for reform. And I've acted -- made specific and far-reaching proposals. I've called for reform of our education system, our health care system, our courts and our election campaigns. Right down the line, issue after issue, from crime to Congress, our Administration has proposed fundamental changes to help us solve pressing national problems. We have had some successes in our efforts to change things - - but more often than not roadblocks stand in the way. They are the special interests. They are not interested in change. They stand squarely behind the status quo. They may be powerful. They may be influential. They may be well-connected. But let me tell you this: they are wrong. It used to be that a doctor's first concern was about the care of the patient not the chance of a malpractice suit. You 5 know what I'm talking about -- obstetricians not delivering babies, parents not coaching Little League, volunteers not helping the elderly -- all because of the fear of lawsuits. That's wrong. That is not the America we want. People should spend more time helping each other, and a little less time suing each other. Sure, our legal system is complicated. People's rights must be protected, but it desperately needs reform -- and no lawyers' lobby should stand in the way. It used to be that we were confident that when we sent our children to school they would get a first class education. Know how to read and write -- and understand something about the world. We also believed that education includes teaching values and responsibility -- you know, "right from wrong". That builds character and that's the way it should be. But educational achievement has been sliding for years. And now we thank our lucky stars that our child's school isn't one where they find a gun in someone's locker, or drug dealing in the playground. That's wrong. That is not what we want for our children. And our teachers -- they are also counselors, mentors, social workers, and surrogate parents. God bless them for the work they do. They deserve our best effort to make the system better. Our America 2000 reforms are gaining steam. Break-the- mold schools -- national standards and testing, community by community. And whether it's among public schools, or private, or religious, parents deserve the right to choose their children's 6 schools. It's a giant undertaking to change the nation's education system -- but we are going to do it -- with or without the permission of the NEA. It used to be that going to the hospital didn't conjure up images of financial ruin. And while our health care is still the finest quality care in the world, too many people can't qualify for health insurance or can't afford it. And the cost of even minor surgery has gone through the roof. Many poor people would prefer going to a family doctor but end up going to hospital emergency rooms for routine medical treatment. Sometimes they wait for hours, because the doctors and nurses have to treat life-and-death emergencies first. And then frustrated, over- worked hospital staff refer to them derogatorily as GOMERS -- meaning "get out of my emergency room". This too is wrong. And it's got to change. Our health care proposal is comprehensive. It makes health insurance accessible and affordable for all Americans -- without throwing out the finest quality health care in the world. We must not go the way of nationalized health care with its long lines, impersonal service, and fewer options for consumers. If that's what we wanted, we'd put health care under the Department of Motor Vehicles. A brand new big bureaucracy -- kind of like Medicaid -- started as a $$ anti-poverty program. Now it's $$ and growing at a rate of % a year. Multiply that a few times and that's a cradle-to-grave boondoggle. And no matter what those whose first resort is a new big government program -- 7 with all the self-perpetuating features of the old big government programs -- nationalized health care would be a national disaster. In these and so many areas that demand reform, our government can play a pivotal and positive role in addressing many of our nation's most critical problems. I've been in government for many years. I've been in the Congress, and I've served this country -- in uniform and as a diplomat -- overseas. I've also run a business, met a payroll, created jobs. I know how to meet the competition. I've seen this country change -- sometimes for the better, sometimes for the worse. So I think I bring something to the table when it comes to taking on the status quo. You need to know the system in order to change it. If you don't, you won't know what needs change. "Change for change sake" is meaningless and empty. It takes more than happy talk. More than lip service to reform -- and then full service to special interests. The Democratic Party will always revert to form -- solve a problem by creating a program -- more power to the bureaucracy, less to the individual. They don't understand that people are yearning for a return to responsibility, that old idea that refuses to go out of style. Liberal Democrats don't understand that people have had it with the "no-fault" lifestyle -- the denial that actions have consequences. Parents want their kids brought up to know that. And the people have a right to a government that understands that as well. 8 The American people know -- as government tries to do more and more, it delivers less and less. Next year, the federal government will spend $1.5 trillion dollars of your money. There is just no question about it. The federal government is too big and spends too much. Major reforms are in order. First, it's time for the Congress to govern itself by the laws it imposes on others. No more special treatment. And it's time for sweeping reform of campaign financing -- time to eliminate the special interest PACs. It's time for real spending reform; time for the President to have what 43 governors have -- the line-item veto. And I'm going to take that case to the American people this fall. Finally, it's time to make Congress a citizen assembly, not a club for careerists -- time to limit the terms of Members of Congress. My term is limited to two terms and I want to serve both of them -- so I don't see that it would hurt to have Congress limited to six terms for a member of the House and two terms for a senator. It would keep government more active, more vital and closer to the people. It will help us get government back to the basics. Focus on what people want, what they need, what they deserve. Things like wholesome families, good jobs. Safe streets, good schools, a strong economy and a strong country. If you think about it that's nothing more than a working definition of freedom. That's what I believe, and why I am asking for your support for another four years. 9 These last years have seen our world turned upside down. Think how much we have accomplished. Think of our blessings. With God's help and with hard work to support our convictions, we've helped change the world. We've helped the peoples of Eastern Europe and the old Soviet empire peacefully throw off the yoke of communism. And today we're aiding their transition to free markets, helping them reduce their nuclear arsenals. And we stood up against dictators and exporters of totalitarian revolution in Latin America and we've helped democracy take root in nearly every country of our hemisphere. When a ruthless tyrant overran Kuwait and threatened to engulf the Middle East in its worst conflagration, we protected the people of Israel and Turkey and Saudi Arabia. And we organized an unprecedented world coalition and we liberated Kuwait from the aggressor. And in the process we accomplished a breakthrough sought by every President from Truman to Reagan -- we brought Arab neighbors face to face with Israel for the first time at the peace table. And we won the Cold War and we stopped Saddam's aggression because, 12 years ago, we renewed our faith in our values and we strengthened our defenses. The United States is now the undisputed leader of the entire world. And we will keep ourselves strong, and we will stay engaged in world politics. This is no time to pull back and to retreat and to be afraid of the changes in the world. In world security and in world markets, we will remain engaged. 10 And we have a mission together to carry on the American Dream for new generations. And with your help and with grassroots action, we can win a mandate to lead this country for four more years. And we can keep our country open to the contributions of immigrants, of trade, of ideas. And we can work together and win with our plans to reform our schools, our health care system, our very system of government. And we can assure that when we reach the new century, America still will be the strongest, the bravest, the freest nation on the face of the Earth. Thank you all. And may God bless each and every one of you and our great country, the United States of America. Thank you very much. # # # (Duggan/Simon) April 23, 1992 Draft One Dereg PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: REGULATION REFORM CEREMONY ROSE GARDEN WEDNESDAY, APRIL 29, 1992 2:00 P.M. [Acknowledgments] A warm welcome to the White House for all of you -- especially the many grass-roots fighters for economic freedom who have travelled long distances to be here. You honor us with your presence. Remember, the first residents of the White House were men like Jefferson and Madison. They were freedom fighters, they were revolutionaries. Two hundred years ago they unleashed forces of social and economic freedom that gave the world an entirely new paradigm for man's relationship to government. They made the United States a land of opportunity -- a haven for the poor and the oppressed. 11 Our laws and our system of government did not promise material well-being, but they guaranteed personal freedom. In just one century's time, millions of poor people came here from every corner of the Old World. And because America empowered them to use their God-given talents to the fullest, people who came to our shores with nothing but faith and imagination made us the richest nation on earth -- poetry's New Colossus. 11 When a great economic shock hit the world six decades ago, our governing elites suffered a lapse of faith in our traditions of freedom and responsibility. Vainly, they embraced the project of social engineering -- the notion that human actions, human 2 choices, could be manipulated as easily as civil engineers manipulate stone and steel. They began a cycle of rule by bureaucracy. Like the Lilliputians swarming over Gulliver, bureaucracy cramped and pinned the colossus of American freedom. The age of social engineering suppressed our precious heritage of limited government, of the rule of law, of the accountability of citizen legislators. Our Congress shirked its own responsibilities while embracing many premises of the command economy. Congress passed laws mandating Americans to dance to the tune of abstract social and economic goals -- while Congress handed off to a new class of bureaucrats the details of the choreography. Under the rule of bureaucracy, we learned some hard lessons. We learned that lonely keepers of the flame of economic freedom - - men like the late Friedrich Hayek -- were right after all. The era of bureaucracy and regulation produced one example after another validating Hayek's observation: that rule by bureaucracy undermines the true rule of law, that government regulation causes unintended consequences. We've seen abstract safety rules undermine safety: When government mandates make ladders more and more costly to consumers, for instance, more people climb on chairs and stepstools -- which are far less safe. We've seen that abstract environmental rules can harm the environment. Consider the case of used lubricating oil: Now it has a very low market value -- just enough to provide collectors an incentive to haul it away 3 for free and sell it for recycling. But if new bureaucratic handling methods are imposed, collectors will refuse to haul it away unless they are paid to pick it up. To avoid paying to have it hauled away, holders of used oil will be tempted to dump it into the trash or into storm drains or streams or lakes. I could go on all day with examples of government by abstraction and its tragic collisions with human reality: How highway fatalities increased when Congress mandated the fuel efficiency of our cars. How a regulation system, plump with noble intentions, keeps life-saving drugs and medical devices from patients who need them. But we're here today for another purpose. We're here to mark that the era of unaccountable government and unreasoning bureaucracy is coming to an end. A new American revolution is under way -- and you and I and millions of like-minded people are leading it. 11 In my State of the Union Address, I lit a fire under our regulatory reformers and gave them 90 days to produce dramatic results. Today marks the 91st day -- and let me report our reformers have come through with flying colors. [details] Today I am ordering a 90-day extension on the moratorium on regulations, and during this time I expect more deregulation -- more accomplishments for freedom and common sense. Through the executive order I will sign in a moment, I also am making permanent an essential reform to bring all federal regulation under the central oversight of the Office of Management and 4 Budget. This will eliminate a major cause of governmental confusion, cross-purposes, and unintended consequences. And we'll ask Congress to do its part. I'm asking today for historic new rescission authority to block harmful regulations. And I'm putting Congress on notice: I will veto any bill that attempts to put burdensome new regulations on the backs of our families, our workers, and our businesses. 11 Let me be clear about our aims: This is not a three-month or six-month effort. This is not an exercise in adjusting or fine-tuning the system. The system is broken beyond repair. 11 There will be no -- I repeat, no -- return to business as usual. 11 We are engaged in a revolution to overthrow the cycle of rule by bureaucracy. We are fighting to regain -- and never again give up -- fundamental freedoms. 11 Our campaign against bureaucracy meshes with our efforts to limit the terms of congressmen and make them more accountable. It fits also with our crusade against the tyranny of nuisance lawsuits that mock our time-honored traditions of justice. In short, there's a common purpose linking the all of our efforts to renew the spirit and practice of limited government. 11 Let me leave you with one final thought. It begins with one of the classic pronouncements of a man I admire, Yogi Berra. After Yogi became a sportsman of national renown, friends from his old neighborhood on the south side of St. Louis organized a dinner in his honor. Yogi was overcome with emotion when he rose to accept the many testimonials. His voice quavered as he began 5 to speak. "First," he said, "let me thank from the bottom of my heart all the people who have made this evening necessary." 111 The relevance of Yogi's story is this: The freedom-loving people of this country -- the people of ingenuity -- are not simply making renewal of limited government possible. 11 They're making it necessary. 11 They're making it inevitable. 11 One of our gifted young intellectuals, Chris DeMuth, put it this way: "The pace of technological change has become so rapid that new markets are established quickly, before regulators have time to suppress them." Let's take heart from that wise insight as we work to renew our basic freedoms. There is no doubt in my mind: The day is coming when we will put the final wrecking ball to the discredited system of the social engineers. We will restore this country. We will build it back, sturdy in the radical faith in freedom that is the legacy of our Founding Fathers. [Signing ceremony] # # # APR-23-1992 16:12 FROM TO 94562223 P.05 INSERT FOR P.O.T.U.S. SPEECH--CHARLOTTE The nation's six education goals are: 1) Children start school ready to learn. 2) 90% high school graduation rate. 3) All Children learning to a world class standard in at least math, science, English, history, and geography. 4) First in the world in math and science. 5) A skilled, literate workforce and responsible citizens. 6) Drug-free/violence-free schools. A year ago we launched a four-part strategy to achieve these goals called AMERICA 2000. 1) Break-the mold New American Schools 2) World class academic standards and voluntary national exams. 3) Flexibility for teachers and principals. 4) School choices for families. I have a complaint to lodge with the Charlotte-Mecklenburg School District. They stole Superintendent John Murphy right out of my backyard. For years, John did a great job in Prince Georges County, Maryland. Now he's working wonders down here. Recently, the school board passed his proposal for nine magnet schools-- science, math, technology, communications, and others. My congratulations to him for taking bold steps to achieve the nation's education goals, and my thanks to him and Governor Jim Martin for their support for Charlotte 2000. ### NOTE--John Murphy was very skillful in getting magnet schools, which are choice schools. But our guidance is don't call them that.