|
ADDRESS
OF
THE
PRESIDENT
TO
THE
JOINT
SESSION
OF
CONGRESS
The
United
States
Congress
Washington,
D.C.
Feb.
27,
2001
-
9:10
P.M.
EST
Editor's
Note:
The
President
mentioned
Social
Security
14
times
and
Medicare
12
times.
These
mentions
are
noted
below
in
Bold
Red.
THE
PRESIDENT: Mr.
Speaker,
Mr.
Vice
President,
members
of
Congress: It's
a
great
privilege
to
be
here
to
outline
a
new
budget
and
a
new
approach
for
governing
our
great
country. I
thank
you
for
your
invitation
to
speak
here
tonight. I
know
Congress
had
to
formally
invite
me,
and
it
could
have
been
a
close
vote. (Laughter.) So,
Mr.
Vice
President,
I
appreciate
you
being
here
to
break
the
tie. (Laughter.)
I
want
to
thank
so
many
of
you
who
have
accepted
my
invitation
to
come
to
the
White
House
to
discuss
important
issues. We're
off
to
a
good
start. I
will
continue
to
meet
with
you
and
ask
for
your
input. You
have
been
kind
and
candid,
and
I
thank
you
for
making
a
new
President
feel
welcome. (Applause.)
The
last
time
I
visited
the
Capitol,
I
came
to
take
an
oath
on
the
steps
of
this
building. I
pledged
to
honor
our
Constitution
and
laws.
(Applause.) And
I
asked
you
to
join
me
in
setting
a
tone
of
civility
and
respect
in
Washington. (Applause.)
I
hope
America
is
noticing
the
difference,
because
we're
making
progress. Together,
we
are
changing
the
tone
in
the
Nation's
Capital. And
this
spirit
of
respect
and
cooperation
is
vital,
because,
in
the
end,
we
will
be
judged
not
only
by
what
we
say
or
how
we
say
it,
we
will
be
judged
by
what
we're
able
to
accomplish.
America
today
is
a
nation
with
great
challenges,
but
greater
resources. An
artist
using
statistics
as
a
brush
could
paint
two
very
different
pictures
of
our
country. One
would
have
warning
signs:
increasing
layoffs,
rising
energy
prices,
too
many
failing
schools,
persistent
poverty,
the
stubborn
vestiges
of
racism. Another
picture
would
be
full
of
blessings: a
balanced
budget,
big
surpluses,
a
military
that
is
second
to
none,
a
country
at
peace
with
its
neighbors,
technology
that
is
revolutionizing
the
world,
and
our
greatest
strength
--
concerned
citizens
who
care
for
our
country
and
care
for
each
other.
Neither
picture
is
complete
in
and
of
itself. And
tonight
I
challenge
and
invite
Congress
to
work
with
me
to
use
the
resources
of
one
picture
to
repaint
the
other;
to
direct
the
advantages
of
our
time
to
solve
the
problems
of
our
people. Some
of
these
resources
will
come
from
government. Some,
but
not
all.
Year
after
year
in
Washington,
budget
debates
seem
to
come
down
to
an
old,
tired
argument: on
one
side,
those
who
want
more
government,
regardless
of
the
cost;
on
the
other,
those
who
want
less
government,
regardless
of
the
need. We
should
leave
those
arguments
to
the
last
century,
and
chart
a
different
course. (Applause.)
Government
has
a
role,
and
an
important
role. Yet,
too
much
government
crowds
out
initiative
and
hard
work,
private
charity
and
the
private
economy. Our
new
governing
vision
says
government
should
be
active,
but
limited;
engaged,
but
not
overbearing. And
my
budget
is
based
on
that
philosophy.
It
is
reasonable,
and
it
is
responsible. It
meets
our
obligations,
and
funds
our
growing
needs. We
increase
spending
next
year
for
Social
Security
and
Medicare,
and
other
entitlement
programs,
by
$81
billion. We've
increased
spending
for
discretionary
programs
by
a
very
responsible
4
percent,
above
the
rate
of
inflation. My
plan
pays
down
an
unprecedented
amount
of
our
national
debt. And
then,
when
money
is
still
left
over,
my
plan
returns
it
to
the
people
who
earned
it
in
the
first
place. (Applause.)
A
budget's
impact
is
counted
in
dollars,
but
measured
in
lives.
Excellent
schools,
quality
health
care,
a
secure
retirement,
a
cleaner
environment,
a
stronger
defense
--
these
are
all
important
needs,
and
we
fund
them. The
highest
percentage
increase
in
our
budget
should
go
to
our
children's
education. (Applause.) Education
is
not
my
top
priority
--
education
is
my
top
priority
and,
by
supporting
this
budget,
you'll
make
it
yours,
as
well.
Reading
is
the
foundation
of
all
learning. So
during
the
next
five
years,
we
triple
spending,
adding
$5
billion
to
help
every
child
in
America
learn
to
read. Values
are
important,
so
we've
tripled
funding
for
character
education
to
teach
our
children
not
only
reading
and
writing,
but
right
from
wrong. (Applause.)
We've
increased
funding
to
train
and
recruit
teachers,
because
we
know
a
good
education
starts
with
a
good
teacher. And
I
have
a
wonderful
partner
in
this
effort. I
like
teachers
so
much,
I
married
one.
(Applause.) Laura
has
begun
a
new
effort
to
recruit
Americans
to
the
profession
that
will
shape
our
future
--
teaching. She
will
travel
across
America
to
promote
sound
teaching
practices
and
early
reading
skills
in
our
schools
and
in
programs
such
as
Head
Start.
When
it
comes
to
our
schools,
dollars
alone
do
not
always
make
the
difference. Funding
is
important,
and
so
is
reform. So
we
must
tie
funding
to
higher
standards
and
accountability
for
results. (Applause.)
I
believe
in
local
control
of
schools. We
should
not,
and
we
will
not,
run
public
schools
from
Washington,
D.C. (Applause.) Yet
when
the
federal
government
spends
tax
dollars,
we
must
insist
on
results.
Children
should
be
tested
on
basic
reading
and
math
skills
every
year
between
grades
three
and
eight. Measuring
is
the
only
way
to
know
whether
all
our
children
are
learning. And
I
want
to
know,
because
I
refuse
to
leave
any
child
behind
in
America. (Applause.)
Critics
of
testing
contend
it
distracts
from
learning. They
talk
about
teaching
to
the
test. But
let's
put
that
logic
to
the
test. If
you
test
a
child
on
basic
math
and
reading
skills,
and
you're
teaching
to
the
test,
you're
teaching
math
and
reading. And
that's
the
whole
idea.
(Applause.) As
standards
rise,
local
schools
will
need
more
flexibility
to
meet
them. So
we
must
streamline
the
dozens
of
federal
education
programs
into
five,
and
let
states
spend
money
in
those
categories
as
they
see
fit.
(Applause.)
Schools
will
be
given
a
reasonable
chance
to
improve
and
the
support
to
do
so. Yet,
if
they
don't,
if
they
continue
to
fail,
we
must
give
parents
and
students
different
options
--
a
better
public
school,
a
private
school,
tutoring
or
a
charter
school. (Applause.) In
the
end,
every
child
in
a
bad
situation
must
be
given
a
better
choice
because,
when
it
comes
to
our
children,
failure
is
simply
not
an
option. (Applause.)
Another
priority
in
my
budget
is
to
keep
the
vital
promises
of
Medicare
and
Social
Security,
and
together
we
will
do
so. To
meet
the
health
care
needs
of
all
America's
seniors,
we
double
the
Medicare
budget
over
the
next
10
years. My
budget
dedicates
$238
billion
to
Medicare
next
year
alone,
enough
to
fund
all
current
programs
and
to
begin
a
new
prescription
drug
benefit
for
low-income
seniors. (Applause.) No
senior
in
America
should
have
to
choose
between
buying
food
and
buying
prescriptions. (Applause.)
To
make
sure
the
retirement
savings
of
America's
seniors
are
not
diverted
in
any
other
program,
my
budget
protects
all
$2.6
trillion
of
the
Social
Security
surplus
for
Social
Security,
and
for
Social
Security
alone.
(Applause.)
My
budget
puts
a
priority
on
access
to
health
care,
without
telling
Americans
what
doctor
they
have
to
see
or
what
coverage
they
must
choose. Many
working
Americans
do
not
have
health
care
coverage,
so
we
will
help
them
buy
their
own
insurance
with
refundable
tax
credits.
(Applause.) And
to
provide
quality
care
in
low-income
neighborhoods,
over
the
next
five
years
we
will
double
the
number
of
people
served
at
community
health
care
centers. (Applause.)
And
we
will
address
the
concerns
of
those
who
have
health
coverage,
yet
worry
their
insurance
company
doesn't
care
and
won't
pay.
Together
this
Congress
and
this
President
will
find
common
ground
to
make
sure
doctors
make
medical
decisions,
and
patients
get
the
health
care
they
deserve
with
a
patients'
bill
of
rights. (Applause.)
When
it
comes
to
their
health,
people
want
to
get
the
medical
care
they
need,
not
be
forced
to
go
to
court
because
they
didn't
get
it.
We
will
ensure
access
to
the
courts
for
those
with
legitimate
claims. But
first,
let's
put
in
place
a
strong,
independent
review
so
we
promote
quality
health
care,
not
frivolous
lawsuits. (Applause.)
My
budget
also
increases
funding
for
medical
research,
which
gives
hope
to
many
who
struggle
with
serious
disease. Our
prayers
tonight
are
with
one
of
your
own
who
is
engaged
in
his
own
fight
against
cancer
--
a
fine
representative,
and
a
good
man,
Congressman
Joe
Moakley.
(Applause.) I
can
think
of
no
more
appropriate
tribute
to
Joe
than
to
have
the
Congress
finish
the
job
of
doubling
the
budget
for
the
National
Institutes
of
Health. (Applause.)
My
new
Freedom
Initiative
for
Americans
with
Disabilities
funds
new
technologies,
expands
opportunities
to
work,
and
makes
our
society
more
welcoming. For
the
more
than
50
million
Americans
with
disabilities,
we
need
to
break
down
barriers
to
equality.
(Applause.)
The
budget
I
propose
to
you
also
supports
the
people
who
keep
our
country
strong
and
free,
the
men
and
women
who
serve
in
the
United
States
military. (Applause.) I'm
requesting
$5.7
billion
in
increased
military
pay
and
benefits,
and
health
care
and
housing. Our
men
and
women
in
uniform
give
America
their
best
and
we
owe
them
our
support. (Applause.)
America's
veterans
honored
their
commitment
to
our
country
through
their
military
service. I
will
honor
our
commitment
to
them
with
a
million-dollar
increase
to
ensure
better
access
to
quality
care
and
faster
decisions
on
benefit
claims. (Applause.)
My
budget
will
improve
our
environment
by
accelerating
the
cleanup
of
toxic
brownfields. And
I
propose
we
make
a
major
investment
in
conservation
by
fully
funding
the
Land
and
Water
Conservation
Fund.
(Applause.) Our
national
parks
have
a
special
place
in
our
country's
life.
Our
parks
are
places
of
great
natural
beauty
and
history. As
good
stewards,
we
must
leave
them
better
than
we
found
them. So
I
propose
providing
$4.9
billion
over
five
years
for
the
upkeep
of
these
national
treasures. (Applause.)
And
my
budget
adopts
a
hopeful
new
approach
to
help
the
poor
and
the
disadvantaged. We
must
encourage
and
support
the
work
of
charities
and
faith-based
and
community
groups
that
offer
help
and
love
one
person
at
a
time. (Applause.) These
groups
are
working
in
every
neighborhood
in
America
to
fight
homelessness
and
addiction
and
domestic
violence;
to
provide
a
hot
meal
or
a
mentor
or
a
safe
haven
for
our
children.
Government
should
welcome
these
groups
to
apply
for
funds,
not
discriminate
against
them. (Applause.)
Government
cannot
be
replaced
by
charities
or
volunteers.
Government
should
not
fund
religious
activities. (Applause.) But
our
nation
should
support
the
good
works
of
these
good
people
who
are
helping
their
neighbors
in
need. (Applause.) So
I
propose
allowing
all
taxpayers,
whether
they
itemize
or
not,
to
deduct
their
charitable
contributions.
Estimates
show
this
could
encourage
as
much
as
$14
billion
a
year
in
new
charitable
giving,
money
that
will
save
and
change
lives. (Applause.)
Our
budget
provides
more
than
$700
million
over
the
next
10
years
for
a
federal
compassion
capital
fund,
with
a
focused
and
noble
mission,
to
provide
a
mentor
to
the
more
than
100
million
children
with
a
parent
in
prison,
and
to
support
other
local
efforts
to
fight
illiteracy,
teen
pregnancy,
drug
addiction
and
other
difficult
problems. (Applause.)
With
us
tonight
is
the
Mayor
of
Philadelphia. Please
help
me
welcome
Mayor
John
Street. (Applause.) Mayor
Street
has
encouraged
faith-based
and
community
organizations
to
make
a
significant
difference
in
Philadelphia. He's
invited
me
to
his
city
this
summer
to
see
compassionate
action. I'm
personally
aware
of
just
how
effective
the
Mayor
is. Mayor
Street's
a
Democrat. (Applause.) Let
the
record
show,
I
lost
his
city,
big
time. (Applause.) But
some
things
are
bigger
than
politics. So
I
look
forward
to
coming
to
your
city,
to
see
your
faith-based
programs
in
action. (Applause.)
As
government
promotes
compassion,
it
also
must
promote
justice.
Too
many
of
our
citizens
have
cause
to
doubt
our
nation's
justice,
when
the
law
points
a
finger
of
suspicion
at
groups,
instead
of
individuals. All
our
citizens
are
created
equal,
and
must
be
treated
equally. (Applause.)
Earlier
today,
I
asked
John
Ashcroft,
the
Attorney
General,
to
develop
specific
recommendations
to
end
racial
profiling. It's
wrong
and
we
will
end
it
in
America. (Applause.) In
so
doing,
we
will
not
hinder
the
work
of
our
nation's
brave
police
officers. They
protect
us
every
day
--
often
at
great
risk. (Applause.) But
by
stopping
the
abuses
of
a
few,
we
will
add
to
the
public
confidence
our
police
officers
earn
and
deserve.
(Applause.)
My
budget
has
funded
a
responsible
increase
in
our
ongoing
operations. It
has
funded
our
nation's
important
priorities. It
has
protected
Social
Security
and
Medicare. And
our
surpluses
are
big
enough
that
there
is
still
money
left
over.
Many
of
you
have
talked
about
the
need
to
pay
down
our
national
debt. I
listened,
and
I
agree. (Applause.) We
owe
it
to
our
children
and
grandchildren
to
act
now,
and
I
hope
you
will
join
me
to
pay
down
$2
trillion
in
debt
during
the
next
10
years. (Applause.) At
the
end
of
those
10
years,
we
will
have
paid
down
all
the
debt
that
is
available
to
retire. (Applause.) That
is
more
debt,
repaid
more
quickly
than
has
ever
been
repaid
by
any
nation
at
any
time
in
history. (Applause.)
We
should
also
prepare
for
the
unexpected,
for
the
uncertainties
of
the
future. We
should
approach
our
nation's
budget
as
any
prudent
family
would,
with
a
contingency
fund
for
emergencies
or
additional
spending
needs. For
example,
after
a
strategic
review,
we
may
need
to
increase
defense
spending. We
may
need
to
increase
spending
for
our
farmers
or
additional
money
to
reform
Medicare. And
so,
my
budget
sets
aside
almost
a
trillion
dollars
over
10
years
for
additional
needs. That
is
one
trillion
additional
reasons
you
can
feel
comfortable
supporting
this
budget. (Applause.)
We
have
increased
our
budget
at
a
responsible
4
percent. We
have
funded
our
priorities. We
paid
down
all
the
available
debt. We
have
prepared
for
contingencies. And
we
still
have
money
left
over.
Yogi
Berra
once
said,
"When
you
come
to
a
fork
in
the
road,
take
it." (Laughter.) Now,
we
come
to
a
fork
in
the
road;
we
have
two
choices.
Even
though
we
have
already
met
our
needs,
we
could
spend
the
money
on
more
and
bigger
government. That's
the
road
our
nation
has
traveled
in
recent
years.
Last
year,
government
spending
shot
up
8
percent. That's
far
more
than
our
economy
grew,
far
more
than
personal
income
grew,
and
far
more
than
the
rate
of
inflation. If
you
continue
on
that
road,
you
will
spend
the
surplus
and
have
to
dip
into
Social
Security
to
pay
other
bills.
(Applause.) Unrestrained
government
spending
is
a
dangerous
road
to
deficits,
so
we
must
take
a
different
path. (Applause.) The
other
choice
is
to
let
the
American
people
spend
their
own
money
to
meet
their
own
needs. (Applause.)
I
hope
you
will
join
me
in
standing
firmly
on
the
side
of
the
people. You
see,
the
growing
surplus
exists
because
taxes
are
too
high
and
government
is
charging
more
than
it
needs. The
people
of
America
have
been
overcharged
and,
on
their
behalf,
I
am
here
asking
for
a
refund.
(Applause.)
Some
say
my
tax
plan
is
too
big. (Applause.) Others
say
it's
too
small. (Applause.) I
respectfully
disagree. (Laughter.) This
plan
is
just
right. (Applause.) I
didn't
throw
darts
at
the
board
to
come
up
with
a
number
for
tax
relief. I
didn't
take
a
poll
or
develop
an
arbitrary
formula
that
might
sound
good. I
looked
at
problems
in
the
Tax
Code
and
calculated
the
cost
to
fix
them.
A
tax
rate
of
15
percent
is
too
high
for
those
who
earn
low
wages,
so
we
must
lower
the
rate
to
10
percent. (Applause.) No
one
should
pay
more
than
a
third
of
the
money
they
earn
in
federal
income
taxes,
so
we
lowered
the
top
rate
to
33
percent. (Applause.)
This
reform
will
be
welcome
relief
for
America's
small
businesses,
which
often
pay
taxes
at
the
highest
rate. And
help
for
small
business
means
jobs
for
Americans. (Applause.) We
simplified
the
Tax
Code
by
reducing
the
number
of
tax
rates
from
the
current
five
rates
to
four
lower
ones,
10
percent,
15,
25
and
33
percent. In
my
plan,
no
one
is
targeted
in
or
targeted
out. Everyone
who
pays
income
taxes
will
get
relief. (Applause.)
Our
government
should
not
tax,
and
thereby
discourage
marriage,
so
we
reduced
the
marriage
penalty. (Applause.) I
want
to
help
families
rear
and
support
their
children,
so
we
doubled
the
child
credit
to
$1,000
per
child. (Applause.) It's
not
fair
to
tax
the
same
earnings
twice
--
once
when
you
earn
them,
and
again
when
you
die
--
so
we
must
repeal
the
death
tax. (Applause.)
These
changes
add
up
to
significant
help. A
typical
family
with
two
children
will
save
$1,600
a
year
on
their
federal
income
taxes. Now,
$1,600
may
not
sound
like
a
lot
to
some,
but
it
means
a
lot
to
many
families: $1,600
buys
gas
for
two
cars
for
an
entire
year;
it
pays
tuition
for
a
year
at
a
community
college;
it
pays
the
average
family
grocery
bill
for
three
months. That's
real
money.
With
us
tonight
representing
many
American
families
are
Steven
and
Josefina
Ramos. (Applause.) They
are
from
Pennsylvania. (Applause.)
But
they
could
be
from
any
one
of
your
districts. Steven
is
the
network
administrator
for
a
school
district. Josefina
is
a
Spanish
teacher
at
a
charter
school. And
they
have
a
two-year-old
daughter.
Steven
and
Josefina
tell
me
they
pay
almost
$8,000
a
year
in
federal
income
taxes. My
plan
will
save
them
more
than
$2,000. Let
me
tell
you
what
Steven
says: "Two
thousand
dollars
a
year
means
a
lot
to
my
family. If
we
had
this
money,
it
would
help
us
reach
our
goal
of
paying
off
our
personal
debt
in
two
years'
time." After
that,
Steven
and
Josefina
want
to
start
saving
for
Lianna's
college
education.
My
attitude
is,
government
should
never
stand
in
the
way
of
families
achieving
their
dreams. (Applause.) And
as
we
debate
this
issue,
always
remember,
the
surplus
is
not
the
government's
money,
the
surplus
is
the
people's
money. (Applause.)
For
lower-income
families,
my
tax
plan
restores
basic
fairness.
Right
now,
complicated
tax
rules
punish
hard
work. A
waitress
supporting
two
children
on
$25,000
a
year
can
lose
nearly
half
of
every
additional
dollar
she
earns
above
the
$25,000. Her
overtime,
her
hardest
hours,
are
taxed
at
nearly
20
percent. This
sends
a
terrible
message: you'll
never
get
ahead.
But
America's
message
must
be
different. We
must
honor
hard
work,
never
punish
it. (Applause.) With
tax
relief,
overtime
will
no
longer
be
over-taxed
time
for
the
waitress. (Applause.)
People
with
the
smallest
incomes
will
get
the
highest
percentage
of
reductions. And
millions
of
additional
American
families
will
be
removed
from
the
income
tax
rolls
entirely. (Applause.)
Tax
relief
is
right
and
tax
relief
is
urgent. The
long
economic
expansion
that
began
almost
10
years
ago
is
faltering. Lower
interest
rates
will
eventually
help,
but
we
cannot
assume
they
will
do
the
job
all
by
themselves.
Forty
years
ago,
and
then
20
years
ago,
two
Presidents,
one
Democrat,
one
Republican,
John
F.
Kennedy
and
Ronald
Reagan,
advocated
tax
cuts
to,
in
President
Kennedy's
words,
get
this
country
moving
again. They
knew
then
what
we
must
do
now. To
create
economic
growth
and
opportunity,
we
must
put
money
back
into
the
hands
of
the
people
who
buy
goods
and
create
jobs. (Applause.)
We
must
act
quickly. The
Chairman
of
the
Federal
Reserve
has
testified
before
Congress
that
tax
cuts
often
come
too
late
to
stimulate
economic
recovery. So
I
want
to
work
with
you
to
give
our
economy
an
important
jump-start
by
making
tax
relief
retroactive. (Applause.)
We
must
act
now
because
it
is
the
right
thing
to
do. We
must
also
act
now
because
we
have
other
things
to
do. We
must
show
courage
to
confront
and
resolve
tough
challenges,
to
restructure
our
nation's
defenses,
to
meet
our
growing
need
for
energy,
and
to
reform
Medicare
and
Social
Security.
America
has
a
window
of
opportunity
to
extend
and
secure
our
present
peace
by
promoting
a
distinctly
American
internationalism. We
will
work
with
our
allies
and
friends
to
be
a
force
for
good
and
a
champion
of
freedom. We
will
work
for
free
markets,
free
trade
and
freedom
from
oppression. Nations
making
progress
toward
freedom
will
find
America
is
their
friend. We
will
promote
our
values. We
will
promote
the
peace. And
we
need
a
strong
military
to
keep
the
peace.
But
our
military
was
shaped
to
confront
the
challenges
of
the
past. So
I've
asked
the
Secretary
of
Defense
to
review
America's
Armed
Forces
and
prepare
to
transform
them
to
meet
emerging
threats. My
budget
makes
a
down
payment
on
the
research
and
development
that
will
be
required.
Yet,
in
our
broader
transformation
effort,
we
must
put
strategy
first,
then
spending. Our
defense
vision
will
drive
our
defense
budget,
not
the
other
way
around. (Applause.)
Our
nation
also
needs
a
clear
strategy
to
confront
the
threats
of
the
21st
century
--
threats
that
are
more
widespread
and
less
certain.
They
range
from
terrorists
who
threaten
with
bombs
to
tyrants
in
rogue
nations
intent
upon
developing
weapons
of
mass
destruction. To
protect
our
own
people,
our
allies
and
friends,
we
must
develop
and
we
must
deploy
effective
missile
defenses. (Applause.)
And
as
we
transform
our
military,
we
can
discard
Cold
War
relics,
and
reduce
our
own
nuclear
forces
to
reflect
today's
needs. (Applause.) A
strong
America
is
the
world's
best
hope
for
peace
and
freedom.
Yet
the
cause
of
freedom
rests
on
more
than
our
ability
to
defend
ourselves
and
our
allies. Freedom
is
exported
every
day,
as
we
ship
goods
and
products
that
improve
the
lives
of
millions
of
people. Free
trade
brings
greater
political
and
personal
freedom. Each
of
the
previous
five
Presidents
has
had
the
ability
to
negotiate
far
reaching
trade
agreements.
Tonight
I
ask
you
to
give
me
the
strong
hand
of
presidential
trade
promotion
authority,
and
to
do
so
quickly. (Applause.)
As
we
meet
tonight,
many
citizens
are
struggling
with
the
high
cost
of
energy. We
have
a
serious
energy
problem
that
demands
a
national
energy
policy. (Applause.) The
West
is
confronting
a
major
energy
shortage
that
has
resulted
in
high
prices
and
uncertainty. I've
asked
federal
agencies
to
work
with
California
officials
to
help
speed
construction
of
new
energy
sources,
and
I
have
direct
Vice
President
Cheney,
Commerce
Secretary
Evans,
Energy
Secretary
Abraham
and
other
senior
members
in
my
administration
to
develop
a
national
energy
policy.
(Applause.)
Our
energy
demand
outstrips
our
supply. We
can
produce
more
energy
at
home
while
protecting
our
environment,
and
we
must. (Applause.)
We
can
produce
more
electricity
to
meet
demand,
and
we
must. (Applause.)
We
can
promote
alternative
energy
sources
and
conservation,
and
we
must.
(Applause.) America
must
become
more
energy-independent,
and
we
will.
(Applause.)
Perhaps
the
biggest
test
of
our
foresight
and
courage
will
be
reforming
Medicare
and
Social
Security. Medicare's
finances
are
strained
and
its
coverage
is
outdated. Ninety-nine
percent
of
employer-provided
health
plans
offer
some
form
of
prescription
drug
coverage;
Medicare
does
not. The
framework
for
reform
has
been
developed
by
Senators
Frist
and
Breaux
and
Congressman
Thomas,
and
now
is
the
time
to
act. (Applause.)
Medicare
must
be
modernized,
and
we
must
make
sure
that
every
senior
on
Medicare
can
choose
a
health
care
plan
that
offers
prescription
drugs. (Applause.)
Seven
years
from
now,
the
baby
boom
generation
will
begin
to
claim
Social
Security
benefits. Every
one
in
this
chamber
knows
that
Social
Security
is
not
prepared
to
fully
fund
their
retirement. And
we
only
have
a
couple
of
years
to
get
prepared. Without
reform,
this
country
will
one
day
awaken
to
a
stark
choice: either
a
drastic
rise
in
payroll
taxes
or
a
radical
cut
in
retirement
benefits.
There
is
a
better
way. This
spring
I
will
form
a
presidential
commission
to
reform
Social
Security. The
commission
will
make
its
recommendations
by
next
fall. Reform
should
be
based
on
these
principles:
It
must
preserve
the
benefits
of
all
current
retirees
and
those
nearing
retirement. It
must
return
Social
Security
to
sound
financial
footing.
And
it
must
offer
personal
savings
accounts
to
younger
workers
who
want
them. (Applause.)
Social
Security
now
offers
workers
a
return
of
less
than
2
percent
on
the
money
they
pay
into
the
system. To
save
the
system,
we
must
increase
that
by
allowing
younger
workers
to
make
safe,
sound
investments
that
yield
a
higher
rate
of
return. Ownership,
access
to
wealth
and
independence
should
not
be
the
privilege
of
the
few. They
are
the
hope
of
every
American,
and
we
must
make
them
the
foundation
of
Social
Security.
(Applause.)
By
confronting
the
tough
challenge
of
reform,
by
being
responsible
with
our
budget,
we
can
earn
the
trust
of
the
American
people.
And
we
can
add
to
that
trust
by
enacting
fair
and
balanced
election
and
campaign
reforms. (Applause.)
The
agenda
I
have
set
before
you
tonight
is
worthy
of
a
great
nation. America
is
a
nation
at
peace,
but
not
a
nation
at
rest. Much
has
been
given
to
us,
and
much
is
expected. Let
us
agree
to
bridge
old
divides. But
let
us
also
agree
that
our
goodwill
must
be
dedicated
to
great
goals. Bipartisan
is
more
than
minding
our
matters. It
is
doing
our
duty. (Applause.)
No
one
can
speak
in
this
Capitol
and
not
be
awed
by
its
history.
As
so
many
turning
points,
debates
in
these
chambers
have
reflected
the
collected
or
divided
conscience
of
our
country. And
when
we
walk
through
Statuary
Hall
and
see
those
men
and
women
of
marble,
we're
reminded
of
their
courage
and
achievement.
Yet
America's
purpose
is
never
found
only
in
statues
or
history.
America's
purpose
always
stands
before
us. Our
generation
must
show
courage
in
a
time
of
blessing,
as
our
nation
has
always
shown
in
times
of
crisis. And
our
courage,
issue
by
issue,
can
gather
to
greatness
and
serve
our
country. This
is
the
privilege
and
responsibility
we
share. And
if
we
work
together,
we
can
prove
that
public
service
is
noble.
We
all
came
here
for
a
reason. We
all
have
things
we
want
to
accomplish
and
promises
to
keep. Juntos
podemos
--
together
we
can.
(Applause.)
We
can
make
Americans
proud
of
their
government. Together
we
can
share
in
the
credit
of
making
our
country
more
prosperous
and
generous
and
just,
and
earn
from
our
conscience
and
from
our
fellow
citizens
the
highest
possible
praise: Well
done,
good
and
faithful
servants.
Thank
you
all. Good
night
and
God
bless.
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