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THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary


For Immediate Release September 26, 1996
                        REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
                        DURING A TELECONFERENCE 
       TO THE INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF MACHINISTS IN CHICAGO 
                                    
                        The Hyatt Regency Hotel
                            Washington, D.C.

6:41 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT: Thank you. I want you to save some of that energy for the next five weeks and four days; we need your help all the way. (Applause.) I thank you for your endorsement. Your support means a great deal to me. As you know, it is crucial to our victory. I wish I could be there with you to thank you in person, but I'm glad to have this opportunity to speak to you by satellite. You're out there in Chicago, a city that has always stood for the strength and drive of our working people, and a city that was awfully good to our Democrats just a couple of weeks ago.

I want to thank my good friend, your president, George Kourpias, for all of his hard work and support. George rode with me on the train to Chicago, and I enjoyed that very much, and I missed him on Labor Day. We usually spend that together, too. I'll see you soon, George.

I also want to thank Don Wharton, your Secretary Treasurer, and the entire executive council of the IAM. You're all doing a great job. The International Association of Machinists has been going strong for 108 years now, and I congratulate you on your plans to unify IAM with two other great unions, the United Steel Workers and the United Auto Workers.

By the year 2000 when we start that new century, you will be the largest union in North America. And with leaders like George Kourpias -- (applause) -- Steve Yokich and George Becker, I don't have any doubt at all that soon you'll be the largest in the entire world. (Applause.)

I want to talk to you today for a few minutes about the choice our country is facing in just 40 days -- a choice that will determine whether we build a bridge to the future or a bridge to the past. Whether we can build a bridge to the 21st century that is strong enough and wide enough for every American to walk across.

Just four years ago, our economy was stalled with high unemployment, the slowest job growth since the Great Depression, a record budget deficit, stagnant wages, increasing inequality, rampant cynicism. Our workers were becoming more divided economically, and it seemed that Americans were working harder and harder just to keep up.

I took office with a simple strategy: Opportunity for all, responsibility from all, and bring us all together in a great American community again. That's America's basic bargain. We didn't ask who is to blame; instead, we asked what can we do. And our strategy has worked. Today, we have further evidence of just how well it is working.

According to the Census Bureau just today, we have had the largest decline in the last year in income inequality in 27 years -- the largest decline -- (applause) -- the largest decline in the number of Americans living in poverty in 27 years.

Since our economic plan passed, family incomes are up over $1,600. In the last year, after inflation, average family incomes are up about $900. That's the biggest jump in a decade. Now, these are remarkable turnarounds from a condition that many people thought was inevitable -- from America growing apart, to America growing together as we go forward together. And that's just today's news.

In the past four years, we've cut unemployment by a third to its lowest level in seven and a half years. The combined rates of unemployment and inflation and home mortgages are the lowest in nearly 30 years. Our economy has produced 10.5 million new jobs, 4.4 million new homeowners. We've cut the deficit by 60 percent, given 15 million of our hardest-working American families a tax cut. And now we're going to help 25 million Americans get the quality health care access they need by saying, in the Kennedy-Kassebaum bill, you can no longer have your insurance taken away from you when you move from job to job, and you can't be denied coverage simply because someone in your family has been sick. (Applause.)

The U.S. aerospace industry, which is so critical to our country and its future, is on the rebound in a big way. Last year, American aerospace companies captured a record 83 percent of the world market for large commercial aircraft. I am committed to supporting the aerospace industry and the hundreds of thousands of good jobs it produces. That's why our administration will continue to promote our aerospace industry and our exports all around the world, just the way the late Ron Brown and Secretary Mickey Kantor and I have done for the last four years. (Applause.)

I know that many of you have been affected by defense downsizing. That's why we've done what we could to ease the transition by developing new applications for defense technology and working to create employment opportunities for former defense workers. Over the past four years, we've also fought to protect our own values, the ones you and I share.

Yes, we do have to balance the budget; it keeps interest rates down and the economy growing. But when the Republican Congress tried to pass devastating cuts in Medicare, Medicaid, education and the environment, I stopped them. Then, they shut down the government twice to try and -- (applause) -- then, they shut down the government twice to try to force their cuts on the American people and, together, we said no again. (Applause.)

Because we want to strengthen families, we fought for the Family and Medical Leave Act. Because we honor our parents, we worked to secure the pensions of 40 million working and already retired people. And we stopped the Republicans from letting their corporations raid their workers' pension plans again in their budget. We learned our lesson in the '80s, we don't want to do that again. (Applause.)

And because we honor work and family, we were right to raise the minimum wage for 10 million American workers. (Applause.) Next Tuesday, because of that victory, those 10 million American workers will get their raise. It was a long and difficult fight, but when many of our hardest-pressed citizens get a raise on Tuesday, I know you will agree it was worth it.

And I want to pay a special word of tribute to the IAM and to the labor movement in general for its fight for this increase. I know your members don't earn the minimum wage, but you fought for it, anyway, because you know how important it is for people who are working hard to support their children and to be productive citizens and to stay off welfare, to be able to be rewarded and to have dignity in their work. So I thank you; you did a great thing for our country. (Applause.)

We all know that America is on the right track to the 21st century, but we've got more to do. I want to build a bridge to the next century where every American family has a chance to benefit from the growing economy, a chance to succeed at home with their children, and to succeed at work.

We should expand the Family and Medical Leave Act to give parents a little time off to take their children to the doctor and to parent-teacher conferences. We ought to make the first two years -- (applause) -- we ought to make the first two years of college as universal as high school is today by giving families tax cuts to pay for college tuition. (Applause.) I know that will help a lot of you.

I've proposed a $1,500 tax credit for tuition, a dollar-for-dollar reduction from your tax bill, for the first two years of college. That's the typical cost of tuition at a community college. And I've proposed a $10,000 tax deduction for any tuition after high school for people of any age.

We also want to expand IRAs so that families can save for college and then withdraw from the IRA, tax-free, to pay for those college costs, or for a medical emergency, or to buy a first home. (Applause.)

I also want to streamline the training programs that have been passed to benefit America's workers who are unemployed or underemployed. I've proposed a G.I. bill for America's workers that will tell every worker in America: If you lose your job or you're underemployed and you qualify for a federal training program, we'll give you a skill grant worth up to $2,600 a year, and you figure out where you want to take it, to get the training you most need to go on to a better job. I don't want anybody left behind or stuck in this global economy; I want us to go forward together. (Applause.)

We also had a good day for health care here in the Nation's Capital. We said that there are not going to be any more drive-by deliveries, that insurance companies can't force mothers and their newborn babies out of the hospital in just a day, in some cases up to eight hours. (Applause.)

We began to take some steps to provide some parity for families that have members with mental health problems, which I think is terribly important. And we said to the Vietnam veterans who were exposed to Agent Orange and whose children, therefore, were born with the terrible disease of spina bifida, we're going to give you the support and the help you deserve. (Applause.) These things, plus Kennedy-Kassebaum, mean we're moving in the right direction.

Now, we've got to take the next step on health care. My balanced budget plan would provide for support for people who are between jobs so they can keep their health insurance for six months. That will help 5 million Americans a year, up to 700,000 children a year. And I know you're for that, and I ask you to keep working with me until we make sure that health care is accessible and affordable to all American working families. (Applause.)

Now, that's how we'll build our bridge to the 21st century, doing everything we can to strengthen and support working American families. Soon after I took office, I got rid of my predecessor's anti-worker, anti-union executive orders. (Applause.) Our administration is pro-family, pro-worker and pro-union. I strongly support collective bargaining. It is not a privilege, it's the right of all of our workers. (Applause.)

The recent resolution of the McDonnell-Douglas contract dispute at the bargaining table is a great example of why we have to preserve that right always. And we're glad to have you back at work. (Applause.) I want you to know I'll keep standing up for working Americans. Congress tried to make our workplaces less safe and company unions the law of the land, but I wouldn't let them. Congress tried to gut the National Labor Relations Board and undermine the prevailing wage laws, and I said no.

We can have a stronger economy without sacrificing workers' rights, workers' job security and safe workplaces. And I will keep fighting to protect striking workers from being permanently replaced. (Applause.) I will also continue to use my veto pen to stop Republicans in Congress from attacking our working families and the unions that represent them. Our unequaled progress throughout the entire 20th century would simply not have been possible without the unions that helped to make it happen. I know I can count on you to help me build that bridge to the 21st century.

Our best days are still ahead of us, but we have to do everything we possibly can to make that promise real for all Americans. And as we do, we'll all be better off.

So, for the next 40 days, go out and tell your friends what President Kourpias told you. Your vote matters more than ever, for the presidential race, for the fight to elect good people to Congress, for your future, your children's future and the future of America.

Thank you, God bless you all, and on to victory. (Applause.)

END 6:55 P.M. EDT