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THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
(New Orleans, Louisiana)
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For Immediate Release October 24, 1996
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
TO THE PEOPLE OF THE NEW ORLEANS AND MARRERO AREAS
Marrero Action Playground
Marrero, Louisiana
8:33 P.M. CDT
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you. Thanks. Thank you very
much. Well, let me -- I was listening to Yvonne McPherson talk,
wondering if she was Reverend McPherson. (Laughter.) And when she
really got stirred up I thought, if this lady passes the plate we're all
going to leave here broke. (Laughter.)
Thank you. Thank you for your wonderful, wonderful
words and your wonderful example. Thank you, Lieutenant Renee
Washington, for your 18 years and for the work you're doing to make our
children safer, and for your great remarks. I want to thank all of you
for making all of us who don't live here feel so welcome tonight.
(Applause.)
I understand the West Jefferson High School Band played.
I thank them for that. (Applause.) I want to thank Congressman Cleo
Fields for coming with me tonight and for all the work he's doing on our
behalf, thank you. (Applause.) My good friend, Congressman Bill
Jefferson, who plays both sides of the river here, and that's good
politics. (Applause.) Sometimes it's not good in public life to
straddle the fence, but I picked up pretty quick it's a good thing to
straddle this river. (Laughter.) If his in-laws hadn't been from here
I think he would have moved them over here just to make sure he was
covered.
Thank you, my good friend, Senator John Breaux, for all
you do for Louisiana and all you've done for me. Thank you and God
bless you sir. (Applause.) Thank you, Mary Landrieu, for running for
the Senate and for standing up for what is right and supporting our
crime program. Thank you. (Applause.) And, Sheriff, thank you.
(Applause.) I want to thank everybody in the Sheriff's department who's
worked on this program. I understand that Deputy Chief Gus Clavery
(phonetic) has done a lot of work on it, and others have. But this STAR
program is an example of an issue that I think is very important.
When I ran for President I found people all over America
frustrated and angry by the crime problem, but nearly resigned to it.
There were no new ideas in many places, so people said, just throw the
book at them and leave me alone and I'll duck and dodge the bullets --
everywhere. But there were, thank goodness, a number of local leaders
in law enforcement like Harry Lee -- there isn't really nobody like
Harry Lee, but you know what I mean. (Laughter and applause.)
People that -- I wasn't going to say this, but I'm going
to say this -- as you know, it's fairly well known throughout the
country that I enjoy a meal now and then. (Laughter.) And last time I
came to New Orleans -- I always love to come here and I'm always angry
if they make me leave without eating when I'm in here. So Harry took
John Breaux and me to lunch and I was finally with somebody I didn't
have to be a bit embarrassed by enjoying my lunch with. I loved it. I
loved it. (Applause.) And we had a good one, didn't we, Sheriff?
(Laughter.)
But the important thing -- let me get back to this. Law
enforcement leaders like Harry Lee who understood -- and I found them
all around America -- that it wasn't only important to do things right,
it was important to do the right things, which is very different.
(Applause.) It was one thing for a person with a badge and a uniform
on to look tough, be strong and not do anything wrong and quite another
thing for a person to always be searching out new ideas, ways to involve
people in not only solving crime but preventing crimes in the first
place.
You heard him say up here when he talked -- he just picked
up on something I mentioned at lunch about the way New York City had
dramatically lowered the crime rate by radically increasing its ability
to move law enforcement officers around every day among neighborhoods
based on where the crime was moving. So I come -- the next time I come
to Louisiana, he tells me he's instituted the same thing. That's what
we need, local leadership -- citizens like Yvonne McPherson, dedicated
officers like Renee Washington and law enforcement leaders like Harry
Lee who want to do the right things as well as do things right.
(Applause.)
And I was astonished when I ran for President the extent to
which people on the one hand were screaming for something to be done
about crime and on the other hand, absolutely believed nothing could be
done about it. Deep down inside they had sort of given up, but they
wanted us to make the right moves and make some right noises, but they
didn't really believe we could take our streets, our schools, our
neighborhoods and, ultimately, our children back.
And I began to see things that changed my mind. I've told
this story a lot of times, but I made a good friend one night early in
1992 when I was dropping in the polls in New Hampshire and people were
writing my obituary. I went to New York City to a fundraiser and,
frankly, I was a pretty sad case. I was feeling sorry for myself. And
I was walking through the kitchen to get around like we sometimes do, to
get around to where I was going to give the speech.
And a Greek immigrant with a waiter's uniform stopped me.
And he said, now, Mr. President, my son is 10, he's in the fifth grade,
he studies this election. He says I should vote for you, so I think I
will vote for you --if you will do one thing for me. I said, what do
you want? He said, I want to make my boy free. And I said, well, sir,
I said, Mr. Theophanos (phonetic), this is a democracy. He said, yes it
is, but my boy is not free. He said, where I lived before, I was poor,
much poorer than I am here in New York. But at least we were free.
Here, across the street from our apartment in New York, there is this
beautiful park. I can't let my child go to the park unless I go with
him. I'm lucky I live only two blocks from the school and it's actually
quite a good school, but my boy can't walk down the street to the school
unless I go with him. So I'll vote for you, but you have to make my boy
free.
And I heard stories like this all over America. But I also
saw neighborhoods in Los Angeles where the police had cut the response
time down to two minutes. I saw streets in Philadelphia that had been
infested by gangs and drugs, where neighborhood groups had worked with
the police to take their streets back. And just a little bit, here and
there I would see these glimmers of hope, and I promised myself that if
I got elected President, I was going to take the politics out of crime
and try to put the police and the people back into the business of
lowering the crime rate and bringing safety back to America and
restoring fundamental freedom.
Now, the Crime Bill that you've heard everybody brag on --
I appreciate that, all the credit they're trying to give me. All I did
was take the politics out of crime. All we did was to let law
enforcement people and community activists, like the folks that have
spoken tonight, tell us what the federal government ought to do to be a
good partner to help communities take their streets back and give their
kids a future back. That is all we did.
But, as it turned out, that was quite a lot, because for
six years the debate in Washington had been a bunch of rhetoric and who
could talk the toughest and who could do the least because they we
didn't want anything to make any of the organized groups mad. And the
problem was, nothing ever got done. So all we did was to let law
enforcement officials, in effect, tell us what ought to be done, let
community activists tell us what ought to be done -- that's what the '94
Crime Bill was about.
It's been a remarkable four years in the area of fighting
crime. In this Crime Bill, we agreed that over a five-year period, we'd
fund 100,000 police. After only two years, we've funded almost half of
them, so we're ahead of schedule and under budget. As the Sheriff said,
there were no strings in this bill except one. There was just one
string -- the money had to be spent to hire law enforcement officers who
would go on the street, not behind a desk. That was the only string.
We said, you figure out who to hire, you figure out how to
train them, you decide how to deploy them, you decide how you're going
to relate to the community. It's all your decision. We don't know in
Washington how to do that. But we do know that in 30 years the violent
crime rate has tripled and the police forces have only gone up by 10
percent in this country. There's no way you could do it. We had place
after place after place that were more violent without any more police
officers, and they were covering less because they had to go around two
at a time and then they had to get in the car, so nobody was on the
street. And we were losing the battle because we weren't doing the
right things. So that's all we tried to do.
We also passed a three-strikes-and-you're-out law for
people who are prosecuted in federal court for serious crimes. They do
it a third time, they're not eligible for parole, not ever. And life
imprisonment. We passed the capital punishment for drug kingpins and
people who kill our law enforcement officers in the line of duty. We
passed a strong safe and drug-free schools program to give our little
children something to say yes to, to put more of those DARE officers and
other people out there in the classrooms when the kids were in grade
school, saying drugs are wrong, drugs are illegal, drugs can kill you.
We also -- we're giving schools more funds to stay open
later. I've fought to maintain the Summer Jobs Program, I've fought to
try to give our young people something to say yes to. I'm now trying to
make sure we open the doors of college education to everybody, so no
young person has to worry about whether they'll be able to afford to go
to college if they stay in school and stay off drugs and stay out of
trouble and make their grades. I think that's important. That's
important. (Applause.)
We've also tried to support more people, like Yvonne, in
citizens groups. Over the next four years, we're going to try to
mobilize another million volunteers to work with the police to get the
crime rate down. San Diego, California has the lowest crime rate of any
of the 10 big cities in America, even though it's right on the border
where we're constantly fighting illegal immigration and people trying to
bring drugs across the border. They still have -- in any of the 10
biggest cities, they've got the lowest crime rate.
Why? One reason is, they have hundreds and hundreds of
retired people who work in these citizens groups with the police not
only to catch criminals, but to keep crime from happening in the first
place, watching out for the little kids on the street, watching out for
their neighbors. They know whenever somebody's gone on vacation, they
watch their homes and they work together.
So this is something we've got to do together. There's
more to be done. We have to continue to support these police officers.
You know, Harry Lee and I were laughing -- I once had a lifetime
membership in the NRA; I think it's been revoked now because I stood up
for the Brady Bill. But we didn't take any guns away from hunters or
sportsmen, not a single one. We haven't done that. But at least 60,000
felons, fugitives and stalkers couldn't get guns. (Applause.)
Now, if you beat up your wife or your kids, you can't get a
handgun, under the new law. It's a good thing. It's a good thing.
(Applause.) I would oppose any effort to undermine my ability to duck
hunt -- (laughter) -- or anybody's ability to be a championship skeet
shooter, or to do anything else that's appropriate and legal. But I
still think we ought to ban those bullets that are built only for one
purpose, to pierce the bullet-proof vests that our police officers wear.
I don't see why we need those things out there. (Applause.)
Let me tell you, we just started this program two years
ago, as I said, when I signed the Crime Bill in 1994. Today, I met with
the first -- the family of the first one of the police officers hired
under our Crime Bill, killed in the line of duty. I met here in
Louisiana, in Lake Charles I met with that officer's widow and two
beautiful, beautiful young sons. And I thought to myself, you know, if
people like these folks here are going to put their lives on the line
for us, the least we can do is tell them if they put on a bullet-proof
vest, it will protect them from being killed. That's the least we can
do for them. (Applause.)
And so what I want you to believe is, number one, this is
not an accident, what Harry Lee said about reducing the violent crime
rate and the crime rate by 85 percent. That is not an accident. That
happened because people did the right things. The second thing I want
you to believe is the federal government, your President and the
Congress -- we can make a difference, and we are. But we're not doing
it because of our political connections or philosophy. We're doing it
because we took the politics out of crime.
The third thing I want you to know is this could all be
reversed. In the budget I vetoed last year that the majority in
Congress passed, they eliminated the 100,000 police program. Again, I
had to stop them from trying to cut back on it. For reasons I do not
understand, they do not believe in it. They tried to cut the Safe and
Drug Free Schools program in half. Drug use is going down in America,
folks, big time. But drug use among children under 18 is still going
up. The last thing we need to do is to cut back on Safe and Drug Free
Schools effort. We need more adults in those schools talking to those
kids. (Applause.)
And my newest proposal, which is probably going to get me
in trouble with some of the young people in America, but I want to say,
look, 90 percent of our kids are drug free and we need to support them
and we need to lift up the good kids and we need to give them something
to say yes to. I want to say that again. We need to say it.
(Applause.) But I'm going to ask those 90 percent to do something that
may be unpopular with them. I'm going to ask them to go along with my
proposal to get every state in the country to make a drug test part of
getting a driver's license so we can find the other 10 percent and save
their lives and help them and give them a chance for the future.
(Applause.)
I say again, you deserve most of the credit here; the
Sheriff, Lieutenant Washington, Yvonne McPherson, all of you that work
in this, these police officers. You deserve the credit. But we have to
do our part. And we have tried to do our part. And I want you to
sustain this effort by what you say on November 5th. And I know what
Mary Landrieu will say, she'll stay with us. She'll support us. And
that's important. (Applause.)
So I want you to help by sending people to Washington who
will continue to take crime fighting out of politics and give it back to
the people of every neighborhood in America. That's important and Mary
will do that. That's important. (Applause.)
And I want you to continue to support these efforts here.
But just remember this -- if you don't remember anything else remember
this: This is an example of what we can do when we stop talking and
start acting. And when we reach across the lines that divide us and
join hands and agree on things that we all agree on. We do not have to
put up with unacceptable rates of crime and violence. We do not have to
put up with what I have seen in America.
We're almost to Halloween, now. Just a couple of years ago
in Baltimore -- where the mayor has labored mightily on this -- there
was this wonderful young man, 17 years old, his whole life before him;
took two little kids out trick-or-treating so they would be safe. And
somebody shot him from across the street and ended his life just for
kicks. Last year in Washington in a suburb a 13-year-old honor student
standing innocently at a school bus stop -- a city bus stop, shot down
just because he happened to be standing in the wrong place in a drive-by
shooting. You don't have to put up with that. You don't have to give
up your children to that. You don't have to do that. We can make a
difference. (Applause.)
We are making a difference and you're making a difference
here. And I will do my best for four more years to make sure we have
four more years of declining crime here in Jefferson Parish. Thank you
and God bless you.
END 8:50 P.M. CDT
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