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THE WHITE HOUSE

                       Office of the Press Secretary
                            (Chicago, Illinois)
________________________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                                   December 3, 1997
                          REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
                   AT DEMOCRATIC CONGRESSIONAL COMMITTEE/
                       ILLINOIS STATE PARTY RECEPTION
                         Festival Hall at Navy Pier
                             Chicago, Illinois               

7:35 P.M. CST

THE PRESIDENT: Thank you. Thank you for being here, and thank you for being in such good spirits. I want to begin by saying a very special word of appreciation to Gary Lapaille for eight years of leadership of the Illinois Democratic Party. (Applause.) During which time, among other things, the state of Illinois voted by large margins, twice, for Bill Clinton and Al Gore. We are very grateful for Gary and for all of you. (Applause.)

I want to thank Senator Dick Durbin for many things, but especially I want to thank him for his leadership in the fight to protect our children from their illegal and often deadly exposure to tobacco. We are going to win that fight next year, thanks to Dick Durbin. And we thank him for that. (Applause.)

And I want to thank Senator Carol Moseley-Braun for many things, but I want you to remember when we approach this election how much difference a vote can make. There were no votes to spare in 1993 when the economic future of our country hung in the balance.

Don't forget what it was like when I was elected in 1992, and why I was elected -- 20 years of stagnant wages, a long recession, despair that we had any kind of plan for dealing with the global economy. And when I presented my economic plan I said, look, the first thing we've got to do is get the deficit down. But we can't cut education or health care or investment in the environment. And by the way, we ought to give a tax cut to the lowest income working people with families. And we did. (Applause.)

And when I presented my plan, the members of the other party said it would be an end to the world, we'd have a terrible recession, everything was horrible. We passed it by one vote. If Carol Moseley-Braun hadn't been representing Illinois in the Senate, I doubt very seriously --(applause)-- I doubt very seriously that we would be able to say, today, after five years, we've got the lowest unemployment rate in 24 years, 13.5 million new jobs and the strongest American economy in a generation. You have a lot of reasons to reelect Carol Moseley-Braun to the United States Senate. (Applause.)

And then, in 1994, I asked repeatedly for three years, the police officers of this country, and the prosecutors, and the community leaders who work with young people, what kind of crime bill do we need to bring the crime rate down in America again. And keep in mind, when I ran for office in '92, if you had told the American people that we'd have five years of declining crime, people would have said, yeah, and I'd like to sell you the Brooklyn Bridge. No one would have believed it.

But we knew there were places in America where the crime rate was already going down. And so, I presented to the Congress a crime bill to put 100,000 police on the street, the Brady Bill to keep guns out of the hands of people with crime or mental health problems that should disqualify them, an assault weapons ban to keep guns that intended to kill people out of the hands of young people and gangs on the streets, and preventive funds to keep our kids out of trouble. And the other side said, oh, this was the end of the world; why, the crime would go up and we were going to take guns away from law-abiding citizens. It was the awfulest squalling you ever heard. And we barely broke the filibuster in the Senate.

And if Carol Moseley-Braun hadn't been representing Illinois in the Senate, we might not have five years of declining crime in the United States of America. That's a good reason to reelect her. (Applause.)

And tomorrow -- what about tomorrow? All elections are about the future. Arguably, if she did a good job, that's what you paid her to do. What about tomorrow? We have other challenges. Yes, our Democratic Party has led this country in getting the best economy in a generation, the lowest crime rate in 24 years, the biggest drop in welfare in history, while protecting the children of people on welfare with health care and nutrition and child care and support for people to go into the workplace. Yes, I'm proud of that.

What about tomorrow? Tomorrow we have to give a commitment to educational excellence to every child in this country, and we have to have more cities doing what Chicago has done to overhaul their school system and stand for high standards. (Applause.)

I presented a plan last year in the State of the Union address to do what Carol Moseley-Braun first asked me to do -- to try to provide some national help to the crumbling school buildings of this country. I was in Philadelphia the other day; the average school is 65 years old. I was in Akron today at one of our race town hall meetings; three different people said, please give us some help to make our schools places that our kids can be proud of, where learning can occur.

We're going to get that done if Carol Moseley-Braun from Illinois is reelected, so the message is sent to the American Congress that the American people want education to be our top national domestic priority. (Applause.) So I want you to help her.

And finally let me say, I owe a special debt of gratitude to the people of Illinois. When I started running for President, people said to me when I picked Al Gore in the summer of '92 -- one of my better decisions, I might add -- when I picked Al Gore, I remember before -- the first time we talked, I was the fifth best-known candidate in New Hampshire. Nobody knew who I was. And he and I met at the Tennessee Governor's Mansion once. And this was before -- much before I had offered him -- nobody thought I was going to be the nominee so I couldn't ask him to run with me. And he said, you know, I ran for president four years ago and I had a problem. I did real well in the South, and I had no place to go. How are you going to be nominated? And I said, I have a one-word answer: Illinois. (Applause.)

And he said, why? And I said, because Hillary is from Chicago and half the other people who live there were born in Arkansas, and I am going to win Illinois. (Applause.)

And you heard Gary talking about it -- December of '91, or October of '91 I appeared before the Democratic chairs who were here. David Wilhelm from Chicago became my campaign manager, went to become chairman of our party. Many people from Illinois have come in and out of our administration. A lot of them are here today -- Minyon Moore from Chicago here with me today, who set up our race town hall meeting in Akron; and, of course, Secretary Daley, our Secretary of Commerce, who is doing a terrific job; and Rahm Emanuel -- (applause) -- and my old friend, Kevin O'Keefe; and Avis Lavelle and others who were in the administration who are here. Illinois has been very special to me.

What Chicago did for Hillary on her 50th birthday almost made her forget her age. (Laughter.) It was an act of uncommon kindness and generosity. And I want you to know that we're looking to you, we're looking to you. Illinois is better than it was five years ago. And all the fights we had and all the compromises we made that were principled reflected the values, the ideas and the future of the Democratic Party. When we passed this balanced budget last year, which party do you think it was that was arguing the hardest to target our tax cuts to education and kids, rather than to those of us who were doing well already?

When we passed that balanced budget last year we guaranteed a $1,500 a year -- a year -- tax credit for the first two years of college, tax deductions for the last two years of college for graduate school and for working people that have to go back and further training. We opened the doors of college to all Americans; the biggest increase since the G.I. Bill 50 years ago. Who do you think was doing that? It was the Democrats that were fighting for that. And I'm proud of that. (Applause.)

When we agreed over the next few years to add five million more children in working families to the ranks of those with health insurance, who was really fighting for that? Our Democratic Party was fighting for that.

So I say to you, you've got most of the Democratic candidates for governor here. I know there's a lot of them, but you've got to patient with them. I had that job for 12 years; that's a good job. (Laughter.) I don't blame them for running. It's a good job. And it's more important than ever before for -- the governors shape how we cover children and health insurance; the governors shape how we implement welfare reform; the governors shape how we pursue the economic and educational initiatives that I'm trying to lead the country toward. It's a big deal.

So I want you to be for whomever you choose, but when it's over, unite behind the one who wins and give Illinois a Democratic governor in this next election year. (Applause.)

Lastly, let me say, I know that I will not be on the ballot again, but I will be working for our party and our candidates, and more importantly, for our ideas and our values, till the last minute of the last day of my presidency, and beyond. We have done a lot in the last five years, but we have three years more to go and I believe we can get more done in the next three years than we have in the last five if we will stay together, walk hand in hand, remember who sent us there and keep working to make America what it ought to be -- a land of opportunity for every single citizen. (Applause.)

Thank you and God bless you.

END 7:45 P.M. CST