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October 3, 2000
The First Gore-Bush Presidential Debate
MODERATOR:
Good evening from the Clark Athletic Center at the University of
Massachusetts in Boston. I'm Jim Lehrer of the NewsHour on PBS, and
I welcome you to the first of three 90-minute debates between the
Democratic candidate for president, Vice President Al Gore and the
Republican candidate, Governor George W. Bush of Texas. The debates
are sponsored by the Commission on Presidential Debates and they will
be conducted within formats agreed to between the two campaigns.
We'll have the candidates at podiums. No answer to a question can
exceed two minutes. Rebuttal is limited to one minute. But as
moderator I have the option to follow up and extend any give and take
any three-and-a-half minutes. Even then, no single answer can exceed
two minutes. The candidates under their rules may not question each
other directly. There will be no opening statements, but each
candidate may have up to two minutes for a closing statement. The
questions and the subjects were chosen by me alone. I have told no
one from the two campaigns, or the Commission, or anyone else
involved what they are. There is a small audience in the hall
tonight. They are not here to participate, only to listen. I have
asked, and they have agreed, to remain silent for the next 90
minutes. Except for right now, when they will applaud as we welcome
the two candidates, Governor Bush and Vice President Gore.
(Applause)
MODERATOR:
And now the first question as determined by a flip of a coin, it
goes to Vice President Gore. Vice President Gore, you have
questioned whether Governor Bush has the experience to be President
of the United States. What exactly do you mean?
GORE:
Well, Jim, first of all, I would like to thank the sponsors of this
debate and the people of Boston for hosting the debate. I would like
to thank Governor Bush for participating, and I would like to say I'm
happy to be here with Tipper and our family. I have actually not
questioned Governor Bush's experience. I have questioned his
proposals. And here is why. I think this is a very important moment
for our country. We have achieved extraordinary prosperity. And in
this election, America has to make an important choice. Will we use
our prosperity to enrich not just the few, but all of our families?
I believe we have to make the right and responsible choices. If I'm
entrusted with the presidency, here are the choices that I will
make. I will balance the budget every year. I will pay down the
national debt. I will put Medicare and Social Security in a lockbox
and protect them. And I will cut taxes for middle-class families. I
believe it's important to resist the temptation to squander our
surplus. If we make the right choices, we can have a prosperity that
endures and enriches all of our people. If I'm entrusted with the
presidency, I will help parents and strengthen families because, you
know, if we have prosperity that grows and grows, we still won't be
successful unless we strengthen families by, for example, ensuring
that children can always go to schools that are safe. By giving
parents the tools to protect their children against cultural
pollution. I will make sure that we invest in our country and our
families. And I mean investing in education, health care, the
environment, and middle-class tax cuts and retirement security. That
is my agenda and that is why I think that it's not just a question of
experience.
MODERATOR:
Governor Bush, one minute rebuttal.
BUSH:
Well, we do come from different places. I come from being a West
Texas. The governor is the chief executive officer. We know how to
set agendas as a governor. I think you'll find the difference
reflected in our budgets. I want to take one-half of the surplus and
dedicate it to Social Security. One-quarter of the surplus for
important projects, and I want to send one-quarter of the surplus
back to the people who pay the bills. I want everybody who pays
taxes to have their tax rates cut. And that stands in contrast to my
worthy opponent's plan, which will increase the size of government
dramatically. His plan is three times larger than President
Clinton's proposed plan eight years ago. It is a plan that will have
200 new programs -- expanded programs and creates 20,000 new
bureaucrats. It it empowers Washington. My vision is to empower
Americans to be able to make decisions for themselves in their own
lives.
MODERATOR:
So I take it by your answer, then, Mr. Vice President, in an
interview recently with the "New York Times" when you said that you
questioned whether or not Governor Bush has experience enough to be
president, you were talking about strictly policy differences.
GORE:
Yes, Jim. I said that his tax cut plan, for example, raises the
question of whether it's the right choice for the country. And let
me give you an example of what I mean. Under Governor Bush's tax cut
proposal, he would spend more money on tax cuts for the wealthiest 1%
than all of the new spending that he proposes for education, health
care, prescription drug and national defense all combined. Now, I
think those are the wrong priorities. Now, under my proposal, for
every dollar that I propose in spending for things like education and
health care, I will put another dollar into middle class tax cuts.
And for every dollar that I spend in those two categories, I'll put
$2 toward paying down the national debt. I think it's very important
to keep the debt going down and completely eliminate it. And I also
think it's very important to go to the next stage of welfare reform.
Our country has cut the welfare rolls in half. I fought hard from my
days in the Senate and as vice president to cut the welfare rolls and
we've moved millions of people in America into good jobs. But it's
now time for the next stage of welfare reform, and include fathers
and not only mothers.
MODERATOR:
We're going to get a lot of those.
BUSH:
Let me just say that obviously tonight we're going to hear some
phony numbers about what I think and what we ought to do. People
need to know that over the next ten years it is going to be $25
trillion of revenue that comes into our treasurey and we anticipate
spending $21 trillion. And my plan say why don't we pass 1.3
trillion of that back to the people who pay the bills? Surely we can
afford 5% of the $25 trillion that are coming into the treasury to
the hard working people that pay the bills. There is a difference of
opinion. My opponent thinks the government -- the surplus is the
government's money. That's not what I think. I think it's the
hard-working people of America's money and I want to share some of
that money with you so you have more money to build and save and
dream for your families. It's a difference of opinion. It's a
difference between government making decisions for you and you
getting more of your money to make decisions for yourself.
MODERATOR:
Let me just follow up one quick question. When you hear Vice
President Gore question your experience, do you read it the same way,
that he's talking about policy differences only?
BUSH:
Yes. I take him for his word. Look, I fully recognize I'm not of
Washington. I'm from Texas. And he's got a lot of experience, but
so do I. And I've been the chief executive officer of the second
biggest state in the union. I have a proud record of working with
both Republicans and Democrats, which is what our nation needs.
Somebody that can come to Washington and say let's forget all the
finger pointing and get positive things done on Medicare,
prescription drugs, Social Security, and so I take him for his word.
GORE:
Jim, if I could just respond. I know that. The governor used the
phrase phony numbers, but if you look at the plan and add the numbers
up, these numbers are correct. He spends more money for tax cuts for
the wealthiest 1% than all of his new spending proposals for health
care, prescription drug, education and national defense all
combined. I agree that the surplus is the American people's money,
it's your money. That's why I don't think we should give nearly half
of it to the wealthiest 1%, because the other 99% have had an awful
lot to do with building the surplus in our prosperity.
MODERATOR:
Three-and-a-half minutes is up. New question. Governor Bush, you
have a question. This is a companion question to the question I
asked Vice President Gore. You have questioned whether Vice
President Gore has demonstrated the leadership qualities necessary to
be President of the United States. What do you mean by that?
BUSH:
Actually what I've said, Jim. I've said that eight years ago they
campaigned on prescription drugs for seniors. And four years ago
they campaigned on getting prescription drugs for seniors. And now
they're campaigning on getting prescription drugs for seniors. It
seems like they can't get it done. Now, they may blame other folks,
but it's time to get somebody in Washington who is going to work with
both Republicans and Democrats to get some positive things done when
it comes to our seniors. And so what I've said is that there's been
some missed opportunities. They've had a chance. They've had a
chance to form consensus. I've go a plan on Medicare, for example,
that's a two-stage plan that says we'll have immediate help for
seniors and what I call immediately Helping Hand, a $48 billion
program. But I also want to say to seniors, if you're happy with
Medicare the way it is, fine, you can stay in the program. But we're
going to give you additional choices like they give federal employees
in the federal employee health plan. They have a variety of choices
to choose, so should seniors. And my point has been, as opposed to
politicizing an issue like Medicare, in other words, holding it up
hoping somebody bites it and try to clobber them over the head for
political purposes, this year it's time to get it done once and for
all. That's what I've been critical about the administration for.
Same with Social Security. I think there was a good opportunity to
bring Republicans and Democrats together to reform the Social
Security system so seniors will never go without. Those on Social
Security today will have their promise made, but also to give younger
workers the option at their choice of being able to manage some of
their own money in the private sector to make sure there's a Social
Security system around tomorrow. There are a lot of young workers at
our rallies we go to that when they hear I'll trust them at their
option to be able to manage, under certain guidelines, some of their
own money to get a better rate of return so that they'll have a
retirement plan in the future, they begin to nod their heads and they
want a different attitude in Washington.
MODERATOR:
One minute rebuttal.
GORE:
Well, Jim, under my plan all seniors will get prescription drugs
under Medicare. The governor has described Medicare as a government
HMO. It's not, and let me explain the difference. Under the
Medicare prescription drug proposal I'm making, here is how it works,
you go to your own doctor. Your doctor chooses your prescription.
No HMO or insurance company can take those choices away from you.
Then you go to your own pharmacy. You fill the prescription and
Medicare pays half the cost. If you're in a very poor family or if
you have very high costs, Medicare will pay all the costs, a $25
premium, and much better benefits than you can possibly find in the
private sector. Now here is the contrast. 95% of all seniors would
get no help whatsoever under my opponent's plan for the first four or
five years. Now, one thing I don't understand, Jim, is why is it
that the wealthiest 1% get their tax cuts the first year, but 95% of
seniors have to wait four to five years before they get a single
penny?
BUSH:
I guess my answer to that is the man is running on Medi-scare.
Trying to frighten people into the voting booth. It's not what I
think and it's not my intentions and not my plan. I want all seniors
to have prescription drugs in Medicare. We need to reform Medicare.
This administration has failed to do it. Seniors will have not only
a Medicare plan where the poor seniors will have prescription drugs
paid for, but there will be a variety of options. The current system
today has meant a lot for a lot of seniors, and I really appreciate
the intent of the current system. If you're happy with the system
you can stay in it. There are a lot of procedures that haven't kept
up in Medicare with the current times. No prescription drug
benefits, no drug therapy, no preventative medicines, no vision
care. We need to have a modern system to help seniors, and the idea
of supporting a federally controlled 132,000-page document
bureaucracy as being a compassionate way for seniors, and the only
compassionate source of care for seniors is not my vision. We ought
to give seniors more options. I believe we ought to make the system
work better. I know this. I know it will require a different kind
of leader to go to Washington to say to both Republicans and
Democrats, let's come together. You've had your chance, Vice
President, you've been there for eight years and nothing has been
done. My point is, is that my plan not only trusts seniors with
options, my plan sets aside $3.4 trillion for Medicare over the next
ten years. My plan also says it requires a new approach in
Washington, D.C. It's going to require somebody who can work across
the partisan divide.
GORE:
If I could respond to that. Under my plan I will put Medicare in an
iron clad lockbox and prevent the money from being used for anything
other than Medicare. The governor has declined to endorse that idea
even though the Republican as well as Democratic leaders in Congress
have endorsed it. I would be interested to see if he would say this
evening he'll put Medicare in a lockbox. $100 billion comes out of
Medicare just for the wealthiest 1% in the tax cut. Now here is the
difference. Some people who say the word reform actually mean cuts.
Under the governor's plan, if you kept the same fee for service that
you have now under Medicare, your premiums would go up by between 18%
and 47%, and that is the study of the Congressional plan that he's
modeled his proposal on by the Medicare actuaries. Let me give you
one quick example. There is a man here tonight named George McKinney
from Milwaukee. He's 70 years old, has high blood pressure, his wife
has heart trouble. They have an income of $25,000 a year. They
can't pay for their prescription drugs. They're some of the ones
that go to Canada regularly in order to get their prescription
drugs. Under my plan, half of their costs would be paid right away.
Under Governor Bush's plan, they would get not one penny for four to
five years and then they would be forced to go into an HMO or to an
insurance company and ask them for coverage, but there would be no
limit on the premiums or the deductibles or any of the terms and
conditions.
BUSH:
I cannot let this go by, the old-style Washington politics, if we're
going to scare you in the voting booth. Under my plan the man gets
immediate help with prescription drugs. It's called Immediate
Helping Hand. Instead of squabbling and finger pointing, he gets
immediate help. Let me say something.
MODERATOR:
Your --
GORE:
They get $25,000 a year income, that makes them ineligible.
BUSH:
Look, this is a man who has great numbers. He talks about numbers.
I'm beginning to think not only did he invent the Internet, but he
invented the calculator. It's fuzzy math. It's a scaring -- he's
trying to scare people in the voting booth. Under my tax plan that
he continues to criticize, I set one-third. The federal government
should take no more than a third of anybody's check. But I also
dropped the bottom rate from 15% to 10%. Because by far the vast
majority of the help goes to people at the bottom end of the economic
ladder. If you're a family of four in Massachusetts, making $50,000,
you get a 50% cut in the federal income taxes you pay. It's from
$4000 to about $2000. Now, the difference in our plans is I want
that $2,000 to go to you, and the vice president would like to be
spending the $2,000 on your behalf.
MODERATOR:
One quick thing, gentlemen. These are your rules. I'm doing my
best. We're way over the three minutes. I have no problems with it.
We're over the three-and-a-half. Do you want to have a quick
response? We're almost to five minutes on this.
GORE:
It's just clear you can go to the website and look. If you make
more than $25,000 a year you don't get a penny of help under the Bush
prescription drug proposal for at least four to five years, and then
you're pushed into a Medicare -- into an HMO or insurance company
plan, and there's no limit on the premiums or the deductibles or any
of the conditions. And the insurance companies say it won't work and
they won't offer these plans.
MODERATOR:
Let me ask you both this and we'll move on on the subject. As a
practical matter, both of you want to bring prescription drugs to
seniors, correct?
GORE:
Correct.
BUSH:
Correct.
GORE:
The difference is I want to bring it to 100% and he wants to bring
it to 5%.
BUSH:
That's totally false for him to stand up here and say that. Let me
make sure the seniors hear me loud and clear. They have had their
chance to get something done. I'm going to work with Democrats and
Republicans to reform the system. All seniors will be covered, all
seniors will have their prescription drugs paid for, and in the
meantime, we'll have a plan to help poor seniors and in the meantime
it could be one year or two years.
GORE:
Let me call your attention to the key word there. He said all poor
seniors.
BUSH:
Wait a minute. All seniors are covered under prescription drugs in
my plan.
GORE:
In the first year?
BUSH:
If we can get it done in the first year, you bet.
GORE:
It's a two-phase plan. For the first four years -- it takes a year
to pass it and for the first four years only the poor are covered.
Middle class seniors like George McKinney and his wife are not
covered for four to five years.
MODERATOR:
I have an idea. If you have any more to say about this, you can say
it in your closing statements and we'll move on, okay? New
question. Vice President Gore. How would you contrast your approach
to preventing future oil price and supply problems like we have now
to the approach of Governor Bush?
GORE:
Excellent question. And here is the simple difference. My plan has
not only a short-term component, but also a long-term component. And
it focuses not only on increasing the supply, which I think we have
to do, but also on working on the consumption side. Now, in the
short-term we have to free ourselves from the domination of the big
oil companies that have the ability to manipulate the price from OPEC
when they want to raise the price. And in the long-term we have to
give new incentives for the development of domestic resources like
deep gas in the western Gulf, like stripper wells for oil, but also
renewable sources of energy. And domestic sources that are cleaner
and better. And I'm proposing a plan that will give tax credits and
tax incentives for the rapid development of new kinds of cars and
trucks and buses and factories and boilers and furnaces that don't
have as much pollution, that don't burn as much energy, and that help
us get out on the cutting edge of the new technologies that will
create millions of new jobs. Because, when we sell these new
products here, we'll then be able to sell them overseas. There is a
ravenous demand for them overseas. Now, another big difference is
Governor Bush is proposing to open up some of our most precious
environmental treasures, like the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge for
the big oil companies to go in and start producing oil there. I
think that is the wrong choice. It would only give us a few months'
worth of oil and the oil wouldn't start flowing for many years into
the future. I don't think it's a fair price to pay to destroy
precious parts of America's environment. We have to bet on the
future and move beyond the current technologies to have a whole new
generation of more efficient, cleaner, energy technology.
BUSH:
It's an issue I know a lot about. I was a small oil person for a
while in west Texas. This is an administration that's had no plan.
And all of a sudden the results of having no plan have caught up with
America. First and foremost we have to fully fund -- heat which is a
way to help low income people in the east to pay for high fuel
bills. We need an active exploration incentive in America. We need
to explore at home. You bet I want to open up a small part of
Alaska. When that field is online it will produce one million
barrels a day. Today we import one million barrels from Saddam
Hussein. I would rather that a million come from our own hemisphere,
have it come from our own country as opposed to Saddam Hussein. I
want to develop the coal resources in America. Have clean coal
technologies. We better start exploring it or otherwise we'll be in
deep trouble in the future because of our dependency upon foreign
sources of crude.
MODERATOR:
So if somebody is watching tonight and listening to what the two of
you just said, is it fair to say, okay, the differences between
Governor Bush and Vice President Gore are as follows. You're for
doing something on the consumption end and you're for doing something
on the production end?
GORE:
Let me clarify. I'm for doing something both on the supply side and
production side and on the consumption side. Let me say, that I
found one thing in Governor Bush's answer that we certainly agree on,
and that's the low income heating assistance program. I commend you
for supporting that. I worked to get $400 million just a couple of
weeks ago. And to establish a permanent home heating oil reserve
here in the northeast. Now, as for the proposals that I've worked
for for renewables and conservation and efficiencies and new
technologies for the last few years in the Congress, we've faced a
lot of opposition to them. They've only approved about 10% of the
agenda I've helped to send up there. We need to get serious about
this energy crisis, both in the Congress and in the White House, and
if you entrust me with the presidency, I will tackle this problem and
focus on new technologies that will make us less dependent on big oil
or foreign oil.
MODERATOR:
How would you draw the difference?
BUSH:
Well I would first say he should have been tackling it for the last
seven years. The difference is we need to explore at home. And the
vice president doesn't believe in exploration, for example, in
Alaska. There's a lot of shut-in gas that we need to be moving out
of Alaska by pipeline. There's an interesting issue up in the
northwest as well. Do we remove dams that produce hydroelectric
energy? I'm against removing dams in the northwest. We need to keep
that in line. I was in coal country in West Virginia. There is an
abundant supply of coal in this country. I know we can do a better
job of clean coal technologies. I'm going to ask the Congress for $2
billion to make sure we have the cleanest coal technologies in the
world. In the short-term we need to get after it here in America.
We need to explore our resources and we need to develop our
reservoirs of domestic production. We also need to have a
hemispheric energy policy where Canada, Mexico and the United States
come together. I brought this up recently with the newly elected
president in Mexico, he's a man I know from Mexico. I talked to him
about how best to expedite the exploration of natural gas in Mexico
and transport it up to the United States so we become less dependent
on foreign sources of crude oil. It's a major problem facing
America. The administration did not deal with it. It's time for a
new administration to deal with the energy problem.
GORE:
I found a couple of other things we agree upon. We may not find
that many this evening, so I wanted to emphasize. I strongly support
new investments in clean coal technology. I made a proposal three
months ago on this. And also domestic exploration yes, but not in
the environmental treasures of our country. We don't have to do
that. That's the wrong choice. I know the oil companies have been
itching to do that, but it is not the right thing to do.
BUSH:
It's the right thing for the consumers. Less dependency upon
foreign sources of crude is good for consumers. And we can do so in
an environmentally friendly way.
MODERATOR:
New question, new subject. Governor Bush. If elected president,
would you try to overturn the FDA's approval last week of the
abortion pill RU-486?
BUSH:
I don't think a president can do that. I was disappointed in the
ruling because I think abortions ought to be more rare in America,
and I'm worried that that pill will create more abortions and cause
more people to have abortions. This is a very important topic and
it's a very sensitive topic, because a lot of good people disagree on
the issue. I think what the next president ought to do is to promote
a culture of life in America. Life of the elderly and life of those
women all across the country. Life of the unborn. As a matter of
fact, I think a noble goal for this country is that every child, born
or unborn, need to be protected by law and welcomed to life. I know
we need to change a lot of minds before we get there in America.
What I do believe is that we can find good, common ground on issues
of parental consent or parental notification. I know we need to ban
partial birth abortions. This is a place where my opponent and I
have strong disagreement. I believe banning partial birth abortions
would be a positive step to reducing the number of abortions in
America. It is an issue that will require a new attitude. We've
been battling over abortion for a long period of time. Surely this
nation can come together to promote the value of life. Surely we can
fight off these laws that will encourage doctors to -- to allow
doctors to take the lives of our seniors. Surely we can work
together to create a cultural life so some of these youngsters who
feel like they can take a neighbor's life with a gun will understand
that that's not the way America is meant to be. Surely we can find
common ground to reduce the number of abortions in America. As to
the drug itself, I mentioned I was disappointed. I hope the FDA took
its time to make sure that American women will be safe who use this
drug.
MODERATOR:
Vice President Gore?
GORE:
Well, Jim, the FDA took 12 years, and I do support that decision.
They determined it was medically safe for the women who use that
drug. This is indeed a very important issue. First of all on the
issue of partial birth or so-called late-term abortion, I would sign
a law banning that procedure, provided that doctors have the ability
to save a woman's life or to act if her health is severely at risk.
That's not the main issue. The main issue is whether or not the Roe
v. Wade decision is going to be overturned. I support a woman's
right to choose. My opponent does not. It is important because the
next president is going to appoint three and maybe even four justices
of the Supreme Court. And Governor Bush has declared to the
anti-choice group that he will appoint justices in the mold of Scalia
and Clarence Thomas, who are known for being the most vigorous
opponents of a woman's right to choose. Here is the difference. He
trusts the government to order a woman to do what it thinks she ought
to do. I trust women to make the decisions that affect their lives,
their destinies and their bodies. And I think a woman's right to
choose ought to be protected and defended.
MODERATOR:
Governor, we'll go to the Supreme Court question in a moment, but
make sure I understand your position on RU-486. If you're elected
president, you won't support legislation to overturn this?
BUSH:
I don't think a president can unilaterally overturn it. The FDA has
made its decision.
MODERATOR:
That means you wouldn't, through appointments, to the FDA and ask
them to --
BUSH:
I think once a decision has been made, it's been made unless it's
proven to be unsafe to women.
GORE:
Jim, the question you asked, if I heard you correctly, was would he
support legislation to overturn it. And if I heard the statement day
before yesterday, you said you would order -- he said he would order
his FDA appointee to review the decision. Now that sounds to me a
little bit different. I just think that we ought to support the
decision.
BUSH:
I said I would make sure that women would be safe who used the
drug.
MODERATOR:
On the Supreme Court question. Should a voter assume -- you're
pro-life.
BUSH:
I am pro-life.
MODERATOR:
Should a voter assume that all judicial appointments you make to the
supreme court or any other court, federal court, will also be
pro-life?
BUSH:
The voters should assume I have no litmus test on that issue or any
other issue. Voters will know I'll put competent judges on the
bench. People who will strictly interpret the Constitution and not
use the bench for writing social policy. That is going to be a big
difference between my opponent and me. I believe that the judges
ought not to take the place of the legislative branch of government.
That they're appointed for life and that they ought to look at the
Constitution as sacred. They shouldn't misuse their bench. I don't
believe in liberal activist judges. I believe in strict
constructionists. Those are the kind of judges I will appoint. I've
named four in the State of Texas and ask the people to check out
their qualifications, their deliberations. They're good, solid men
and women who have made good, sound judgments on behalf of the people
of Texas.
MODERATOR:
What kind of appointments should they expect from you?
GORE:
We both use similar language to reach an exactly opposite outcome.
I don't favor a litmus test, but I know that there are ways to assess
how a potential justice interprets the Constitution. And in my view,
the Constitution ought to be interpreted as a document that grows
with our country and our history. And I believe, for example, that
there is a right of privacy in the Fourth Amendment. And when the
phrase a strict constructionist is used and when the names of Scalia
and Thomas are used as the benchmarks for who would be appointed,
those are code words, and nobody should mistake this, for saying the
governor would appoint people who would overturn Roe v. Wade. It's
very clear to me. I would appoint people that have a philosophy that
I think will be quite likely would uphold Roe v. Wade.
MODERATOR:
Is the vice president right?
BUSH:
It sounds like he's not very right tonight. I just told you the
criteria on which I'll appoint judges. I have a record of appointing
judges in the State of Texas. That's what a governor gets to do. A
governor gets to name supreme court judges. He also reads all kinds
of things into my tax plan and into my Medicare plan. I want the
viewers out there to listen to what I have to say about it.
MODERATOR:
Reverse the question. What code phrases should we read by what you
said about what kind of people you would appoint?
GORE:
It would be likely that they would uphold Roe v. Wade. I do believe
it's wrong to use a litmus test. If you look at the history of a
lower court judge's rulings, you can get a pretty good idea of how
they'll interpret questions. A lot of questions are first
impression, and these questions that have been seen many times come
up in a new context and so -- but, you know, this is a very important
issue. Because a lot of young women in this country take this right
for granted and it could be lost. It is on the ballot in this
election, make no mistake about it.
BUSH:
I'll tell you what kind of judges he'll put on. He'll put liberal
activists justices who will use their bench to subvert the
legislature, that's what he'll do.
MODERATOR:
Vice President Gore, if President Milosevic of Yugoslavia refuses to
leave office, what action, if any, should the United States take to
get him out of there?
GORE:
Well, Milosevic has lost the election. His opponent, Kostunica, has
won the election. It's overwhelming. Milosevic's government refuses
to release the vote count. There's now a general strike going on.
They're demonstrating. I think we should support the people of
Serbia and Yugoslavia, as they call the Serbia plus Montenegro, and
put pressure in every way possible to recognize the lawful outcome of
the election. The people of Serbia have acted very bravely in
kicking this guy out of office. Now he is trying to not release the
votes and then go straight to a so-called runoff election without
even announcing the results of the first vote. Now, we've made it
clear, along with our allies, that when Milosevic leaves, then Serbia
will be able to have a more normal relationship with the rest of the
world. That is a very strong incentive that we've given them to do
the right thing. Bear in mind also, Milosevic has been indicted as a
war criminal and he should be held accountable for his actions. Now,
we have to take measured steps because the sentiment within Serbia
is, for understandable reasons, against the United States because
their nationalism -- even if they don't like Milosevic, they still
have some feelings lingering from the NATO action there. So we have
to be intelligent in the way we go about it. But make no mistake
about it, we should do everything we can to see that the will of the
Serbian people expressed in this extraordinary election is done. And
I hope that he'll be out of office very shortly.
MODERATOR:
Governor Bush, one minute.
BUSH:
Well, I'm pleased with the results of the election. As the vice
president said, it's time for the man to go. It means that the
United States must have a strong diplomatic hand with our friends in
NATO. That's why it's important to make sure our alliances are as
strong as they possibly can be to keep the pressure on Mr.
Milosevic. But this will be an interesting moment for the Russians
to step up and lead as well. Be a wonderful time for the Russians to
step into the Balkans and convince Mr. Milosevic that it's in his
best interest and his country's best interest. The Russians have
sway in that part of the world. We would like to see the Russians
use that sway to encourage democracy to take hold. It's an
encouraging election. It's time for the man to leave.
MODERATOR:
What if he doesn't leave? What if all the diplomatic efforts, all
the pressure and he still doesn't go? Is this the kind of thing, and
be specific, that you as president would consider the use of U.S.
military force to get him gone?
GORE:
In this particular situation, no. Bear in mind that we have a lot
of sanctions in force against Serbia right now. And the people of
Serbia know that they can escape all those sanctions if this guy is
turned out of power. Now, I understand what the governor has said
about asking the Russians to be involved, and under some
circumstances that might be a good idea. But being as they have not
yet been willing to recognize Kostunica as the lawful winner of the
election, I'm not sure it's right for us to invite the president of
Russia to mediate this -- this dispute there because we might not
like the results that comes out of that. They currently favor going
forward with a runoff election. I think that's the wrong thing. I
think the governor's instinct is not necessarily bad because we have
worked with the Russians in a constructive way in Kosovo, for
example, to end the conflict there. But I think we need to be very
careful in the present situation before we invite the Russians to
play the lead role in mediating.
BUSH:
Well obviously we wouldn't use the Russians if they didn't agree
with our answer, Mr. Vice President. Let me say this to you, I
wouldn't use force. I wouldn't use force.
MODERATOR:
You wouldn't use force?
BUSH:
No.
MODERATOR:
Why not?
BUSH:
It's not in our national interest to use force. I would use
pressure and diplomacy. There is a difference what the president did
in Kosovo and this. It's up to the people in this region to take
control of their country.
MODERATOR:
New question. How would you go about as president deciding when it
was in the national interest to use U.S. force, generally?
BUSH:
Well, if it's in our vital national interest, and that means whether
our territory is threatened or people could be harmed, whether or not
the alliances are -- our defense alliances are threatened, whether or
not our friends in the Middle East are threatened. That would be a
time to seriously consider the use of force. Secondly, whether or
not the mission was clear. Whether or not it was a clear
understanding as to what the mission would be. Thirdly, whether or
not we were prepared and trained to win. Whether or not our forces
were of high morale and high standing and well-equipped. And
finally, whether or not there was an exit strategy. I would take the
use of force very seriously. I would be guarded in my approach. I
don't think we can be all things to all people in the world. I think
we've got to be very careful when we commit our troops. The vice
president and I have a disagreement about the use of troops. He
believes in nation building. I would be very careful about using our
troops as nation builders. I believe the role of the military is to
fight and win war and therefore prevent war from happening in the
first place. So I would take my responsibility seriously. And it
starts with making sure we rebuild our military power. Morale in
today's military is too low. We're having trouble meeting recruiting
goals. We met the goals this year, but in the previous years we have
not met recruiting goals. Some of our troops are not well-equipped.
I believe we're overextended in too many places. And therefore I
want to rebuild the military power. It starts with a billion dollar
pay raise for the men and women who wear the uniform. A billion
dollars more than the president recently signed into law. It's to
make sure our troops are well-housed and well-equipped. Bonus plans
to keep some of our high-skilled folks in the services and a
commander in chief that sets the mission to fight and win war and
prevent war from happening in the first place.
MODERATOR:
Vice President Gore, one minute.
GORE:
I want to make it clear, our military is the strongest,
best-trained, best-equipped, best-led fighting force in the world and
in the history of the world. Nobody should have any doubt about
that, least of all our adversaries or potential adversaries. If you
entrust me with the presidency, I will do whatever is necessary in
order to make sure our forces stay the strongest in the world. In
fact, in my ten-year budget proposal I've set aside more than twice
as much for this purpose as Governor Bush has in his proposal. Now,
I think we should be reluctant to get involved in someplace in a
foreign country. But if our national security is at stake, if we
have allies, if we've tried every other course, if we're sure
military action will succeed, and if the costs are proportionate to
the benefits, we should get involved. Now, just because we don't
want to get involved everywhere doesn't mean we should back off
anywhere it comes up. I disagree with the proposal that maybe only
when oil supplies are at stake that our national security is at
risk. I think that there are situations like in Bosnia or Kosovo
where there's a genocide, where our national security is at stake
there.
BUSH:
I agree our military is the strongest in the world today, that's not
the question. The question is will it be the strongest in the years
to come? Everywhere I go on the campaign trail I see moms and dads
whose son or daughter may wear the uniform and they tell me about how
discouraged their son or daughter may be. A recent poll was taken
among 1,000 enlisted personnel, as well as officers, over half of
whom will leave the service when their time of enlistment is up. The
captains are leaving the service. There is a problem. And it's
going to require a new commander in chief to rebuild the military
power. I was honored to be flanked by Colin Powell and General
Norman Schwartzkopf recently stood by me side and agreed with me. If
we don't have a clear vision of the military, if we don't stop
extending our troops all around the world and nation building
missions, then we're going to have a serious problem coming down the
road, and I'm going to prevent that. I'm going to rebuild our
military power. It's one of the major priorities of my
administration.
MODERATOR:
Vice President Gore, how should the voters go about deciding which
one of you is better suited to make the kinds of decisions, whether
it's Milosevic or whatever, in the military and foreign policy area?
GORE:
Well, they should look at our proposals and look at us as people and
make up their own minds. When I was a young man, I volunteered for
the Army. I served my country in Vietnam. My father was a senator
who strongly opposed the Vietnam War. I went to college in this
great city, and most of my peers felt against the war as I did. But
I went anyway because I knew if I didn't, somebody else in the small
town of Carthage, Tennessee, would have to go in my place. I served
for eight years in the House of Representatives and I served on the
Intelligence Committee, specialized in looking at arms control. I
served for eight years in the United States Senate and served on the
Armed Services Committee. For the last eight years I've served on
the National Security Council, and when the conflict came up in
Bosnia, I saw a genocide in the heart of Europe with the most violent
war on the continent of Europe since World War II. Look, that's
where World War I started. My uncle was a victim of poisonous gas
there. Millions of Americans saw the results of that conflict. We
have to be willing to make good, sound judgments. Incidentally, I
know the value of making sure our troops have the latest technology.
The governor has proposed skipping the next generation of weapons. I
think that's a big mistake, because I think we have to stay at the
cutting edge.
MODERATOR:
Governor, how would you advise the voters to make the decision on
this issue?
BUSH:
I think you've got to look at how one has handled responsibility in
office. Whether or not it's -- the same in domestic policy as well.
Whether or not you have the capacity to convince people to follow?
Whether or not one makes decisions based on sound principles or
whether or not you rely upon polls or focus groups on how to decide
what the course of action is. We have too much polling and focus
groups going on in Washington today. We need decisions made on sound
principles. I've been the governor of a big state. I think one of
the hallmarks of my relationship in Austin, Texas, is that I've had
the capacity to work with both Republicans and Democrats. I think
that's an important part of leadership. I think what it means to
build consensus. I've shown I know how to do so. Tonight in the
audience there's one elected state senator who is a Democrat, a
former state-wide officer who is a Democrat, a lot of Democrats who
are here in the debate to -- because they want to show their support
that shows I know how to lead. And so the fundamental answer to your
question, who can lead and who's shown the ability to get things
done?
GORE:
If I could say one thing.
MODERATOR:
We are way over three-and-a-half minutes. Go ahead.
GORE:
One of the key points in foreign policy and national security policy
is the need to establish the old-fashioned principle that politics
ought to stop at the water's edge. When I was in the United States
Congress, I worked with former President Reagan. When I was in the
United States Senate I worked with former President Bush, your
father. I was one of only a few Democrats in the Senate to support
the Persian Gulf War. I think bipartisanship is a national asset.
We have to find ways to reestablish it in foreign policy and national
security policy.
MODERATOR:
Do you have a problem with that?
BUSH:
Yeah. Why haven't they done it in seven years?
MODERATOR:
New subject. New question. Should the voters of this election,
Vice President Gore, see this in the domestic area as a major choice
between competing political philosophies?
GORE:
Oh, absolutely. This is a very important moment in the history of
our country. Look, we've got the biggest surpluses in all of
American history. The key question that has to be answered in this
election is will we use that prosperity wisely in a way that benefits
all of our people and doesn't go just to the few. Almost half of all
the tax cut benefits, as I said under Governor Bush's plan, go to the
wealthiest 1%. I think we have to make the right and responsible
choices. I think we have to invest in education, protecting the
environment, health care, a prescription drug benefit that goes to
all seniors, not just to the poor, under Medicare, not relying on
HMOs and insurance companies. I think that we have to help parents
and strengthen families by dealing with the kind of inappropriate
entertainment material that families are just heart sick that their
children are exposed to. I think we've got to have welfare reform
taken to the next stage. I think that we have got to balance the
budget every single year, pay down the national debt and, in fact,
under my proposal the national debt will be completely eliminated by
the year 2012. I think we need to put Medicare and Social Security
in a lockbox. The governor will not put Medicare in a lockbox. I
don't think it should be used as a piggy bank for other programs. I
think it needs to be moved out of the budget and protected. I'll
veto anything that takes money out of Social Security or Medicare for
anything other than Social Security or Medicare. Now, the priorities
are just very different. I'll give you a couple of examples. For
every new dollar that I propose for spending on health care, Governor
Bush spends $3 for a tax cut for the wealthiest 1%. Now, for every
dollar that I propose to spend on education, he spends $5 on a tax
cut for the wealthiest 1%. Those are very clear differences.
MODERATOR:
Governor, one minute.
BUSH:
The man is practicing fuzzy math again. There's differences. Under
Vice President Gore's plan, he is going to grow the federal
government in the largest increase since Lyndon Baines Johnson in
1965. We're talking about a massive government, folks. We're
talking about adding to or increasing 200 programs, 20,000 new
bureaucrats. Imagine how many IRS agents it is going to take to be
able to figure out his targeted tax cut for the middle class that
excludes 50 million Americans. There is a huge difference in this
campaign. He says he's going to give you tax cuts. 50 million of
you won't receive it. He said in his speech he wants to make sure
the right people get tax relief. That's not the role of a president
to decide right and wrong. Everybody who pays taxes ought to get tax
relief. After my plan is in place, the wealthiest Americans will pay
more tax, the poorest of Americans, six million families, won't pay
any tax at all. It's a huge difference. A difference between big
exploding federal government that wants to think on your behalf and a
plan that meets priorities and liberates working people to be able to
make decisions on your own.
GORE:
You haven't heard the governor deny these numbers. He's called them
phony and fuzzy. The fact remains almost 30% of his proposed tax cut
goes to -- only to Americans that make more than $1 million per
year. More money goes to the -- can I have a rebuttal here?
MODERATOR:
I want to see if he buys that.
BUSH:
Let me tell you what the facts are. The facts are after my plan,
the wealthiest of Americans pay more taxes of the percentage of the
whole than they do today. Secondly, if you're a family of four
making $50,000 in Massachusetts, you get a 50% tax cut. Let me give
you one example. A family in Allentown, Pennsylvania, I campaigned
with them the other day. They make $51,000 combined income, they pay
about $3500 in taxes. Under my plan, they get $1800 of tax relief.
Under Vice President Gore's plan, they get $145 of tax relief. Now
you tell me who stands on the side of the fence. You ask whose plan
makes more sense. There is a difference of opinion. He would rather
spend the family's $1800 and I would rather the family spend that
money.
GORE:
No, I don't, and I'm not going to go to calling names on his facts.
I'm just gonna tell you what the real facts are. The analysis that
he's talking about leaves out more than half of the tax cuts that I
have proposed. And if you just add the numbers up, he still hasn't
denied it, he spends more money on a tax cut for the wealthiest 1%
than all his new proposals for all his other things combined. Now
those are the wrong priorities. $665 billion over ten years for the
wealthiest 1%. As I said, almost 30% of it goes to Americans that
make more than $1 million per year. Every middle class family is
eligible for a tax cut under my proposal. Let me give you some
specific examples. I believe college tuition up to $10,000 per year
ought to be tax deductible so middle-class families can choose to
send their children to college. I believe all senior citizens should
be able to choose their own doctors and get prescription drugs from
their own pharmacists with Medicare paying half the bill. I believe
parents need more public and charter school choice to send their kids
to a safe school. We need to make education the number one priority
in our country and treat teachers like the professionals that they
are. And that's why I have made it a number one priority in my
budget.
BUSH:
Let me talk about tax cuts one more time. It excludes 50 million
Americans.
GORE:
Not so.
BUSH:
The marriage penalty. If you itemize your tax return, you get no
marriage penalty relief. He picks and chooses. He decides who the
right people are. It's a fundamental difference of opinion. I want
my fellow Americans to hear one more time. We'll spend $25 trillion
-- we'll collect $25 trillion in revenue in the next 10 years and
spend $21 trillion. We need to send 5% back to you that pay the
bills. I want to say something. This man has been disparaging my
plan with all this Washington fuzzy math. If you're a single mother
making $22,000 a year and you have two children, under this tax code,
for every additional dollar you make, you pay a higher marginal rate
on that dollar than someone making more than $200,000 a year, and
that is not right. My plan drops the rate from 15% to 10% and
increases the child credit from $500 to $1,000 to make the code more
fair for everybody, not just a few, not just a handful. Everybody
who pays taxes ought to get some relief.
MODERATOR:
Having cleared that up, we're going to a new question. Education.
Governor Bush. Both of you have promised dramatically to change --
to change dramatically public education in this country. Of the
public money spent on education, only 6% of that is federal money.
You want to change 100% of the public education on 6% of the money,
is it possible to change it?
BUSH:
We can make a huge difference by saying if you receive federal money
we expect you to show results. Let me give you a story about public
education, if I might. It's about Kipp Academy in Houston, Texas. A
charter school run by some people from Teach For America. Young
folks saying I'm going to do something good for my country. I want
to teach. A guy named Michael runs the school. It is a school full
of so-called at-risk children. It's how wer unfortunately label
certain children. Basically it means they can't learn. It's a
school of strong discipline and high standards. It's one of the best
schools in Houston. Here are the key ingredients. High
expectations, strong accountabily. What Michael says, don't put all
these rules on us, just let us teach and hold us accountable for
every grade. That's what we do. And as a result, these mainly
Hispanic youngsters are some of the best learners in Houston, Texas.
That's my vision for public education all around America. Many of
you viewers don't know, but Laura and I sent our girls to public
school. They went to Austin High School. And many of the public
schools are meeting the call. But, unfortunately, a lot of schools
are trapping children in schools that just won't teach and won't
change. Here is the role of the federal government. One is to
change Head Start to a reading program. Two is to say if you want to
access reading money, you can do so. The goal is for every single
child to learn to Read. there must by K-2 diagnostic teaching tools
available. We have to consolidate the system to free the schools and
encourage innovators. Let them reach out beyond the confines of the
current structure to recruit teach-for-the-children type teachers.
Four, we're going to say if you receive federal money, measure third,
fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth grade. Show us if they are
learning to read, write, add and subtract there will be bonus plans.
If not, instead of continuing to subsidize failure, the money will go
to -- the federal money will go to the parents for public school or
charter school or tutorial or Catholic school. What I care about is
children. And so does Michael Feinberg. And you know what? It can
happen in America with the right kind of leadership.
GORE:
We agree on a couple of things on education. I strongly support new
accountability, so does Governor Bush. I strongly support local
control, so does Governor Bush. I'm in favor of testing as a way of
measuring performance. Every school and every school district, have
every state test the children. I've also proposed a voluntary
national test in the fourth grade and eighth grade, and a form of
testing the governor has not endorsed. I think that all new teachers
ought to be tested, including in the subjects that they teach. We've
got to recruit 100,000 new teachers. And I have budgeted for that.
We've got to reduce the class size so that the student who walks in
has more one-on-one time with the teacher. We ought to have
universal pre-school and we ought to make college tuition tax
deductible, up to $10,000 a year. I would like to tell you a quick
story. I got a letter today as I left Sarasota, Florida. I'm here
with a group of 13 people from around the country who helped me
prepare. We had a great time. Two days ago we ate lunch at a
restaurant. The guy that served us lunch gave me a letter today.
His name is Randy Ellis. He has a 15-year-old daughter named Caley,
who is in Sarasota High School. Her science class was supposed to be
for 24 students. She's the 36th student in that classroom. They
sent me a picture of her in the classroom. They can't squeeze
another desk in for her, so she has to stand during class. I want
the federal government, consistent with local control and new
accountability, to make improvement of our schools the number one
priority so Caley will have a desk and can sit down in a classroom
where she can learn.
MODERATOR:
All right. So having heard the two of you, the voters have just
heard the two of you, what is the difference? What is the choice
between the two of you on education?
BUSH:
The first is, the difference is there is no new accountability
measures in Vice President Gore's plan. He says he's for voluntary
testing. You can't have voluntary testing. You must have mandatory
testing. You must say that if you receive money you must show us
whether or not children are learning to read and write and add and
subtract. That's the difference. You may claim you've got mandatory
testing but you don't, Mr. Vice President. That's a huge
difference. Testing is the cornerstone of reform. You know how I
know? Because it's the cornerstone of reform in the State of Texas.
Republicans and Democrats came together and said what can we do to
make our public education the best in the country? We've done a long
way working together to do so. The cornerstone is to have strong
accountability in return for money and in return for flexibility.
We're going to ask you to show us whether or not -- we ask you to
post the results on the Internet. We encourage parents to take a
look at the comparative results of schools. We have a strong charter
school movement that I signed the legislation to get started in the
State of Texas. I believe if we find poor children trapped in
schools that won't teach, we need to free the parents. We need to
expand education savings accounts. Something that my vice
presidential running mate supports. There's big differences. He
won't support freeing local districts from the strings of federal
money.
GORE:
First of all, I do have mandatory testing. I think the governor may
not have heard what I said clearly. The voluntary national testing
is in addition to the mandatory testing that we require of states.
All schools, all school districts, students themselves, and required
teacher testing, which goes a step farther than Governor Bush has
been willing to go. Here are a couple of differences, though, Jim.
Governor Bush is in favor of vouchers which take taxpayer money away
from public schools and give them to private schools that are not
accountable for how the money is used and don't have to take all
applicants. Now, private schools play a great role in our society.
All of our children have gone to both public schools and private
schools. But I don't think private schools should have a right to
take taxpayer money away from public schools at a time when Caley
Ellis is standing in that classroom. Let me give you another
example. I went to a school in Dade County, Florida where the
facilities are so overcrowded the children have to eat lunch in
shifts with the first shift for lunch starting at 9:30 in the
morning. Look, this is a funding crisis all around the country.
There are fewer parents of school-age children as a percentage of the
voting population and there is the largest generation of students
ever. We're in an information age when learning is more important
than ever. 90% of our kids go to public schools. We have to make it
the number one priority. Modernize our schools, reduce class size,
recruit new teachers, give every child a chance to learn with
one-on-one time in a quality -- high-quality, safe school. If it's a
failing school, shut it down and reopen it under a new principal with
a turnaround team of specialists the way Governor Jim Hunt does in
North Carolina. Here is another difference. The governor, if it's a
failing school, would leave the children in that failing school for
three years and then give a little bit of money to the parents, a
down payment on a down payment for private school tuition, and
pretend that that would be enough for them to go out and go to a
private school. It's an illusion.
MODERATOR:
Wait a minute, Governor.
BUSH:
Okay. First of all, most of this is at the state level. See, here
is the mentality. I'm going to make the state do this and make the
state do that. All I'm saying is if you spend money, show us results
and test every year, which you do not do, Mr. Vice President. You
don't test every year. You can say you do to the cameras but you
don't, unless you've changed your plan.
GORE:
I didn't say that.
BUSH:
You need to test every year. That's why you determine if children
are progressing to excellence. Secondly, one of the things that we
have to be careful about in politics is throwing money at a system
that has not yet been reformed. More money is needed and I spend
more money, but step one is to make sure we reform the system to have
the system in place that leaves no child behind. Stop this business
about asking gosh, how old are you? If you're 10 we'll put you here,
12 you put here. Start asking the question, what do you know? If
you don't know what you're supposed to know, we'll make sure you do
early before it's too late.
MODERATOR:
New question. We've been talking about a lot of specific issues.
It's often said that in the final analysis about 90% of being the
President of the United States is dealing with the unexpected, not
with issues that came up in the campaign. Vice President Gore, can
you point to a decision, an action you have taken, that illustrates
your ability to handle the unexpected, the crisis under fire?
GORE:
When the action in Kosovo was dragging on and we were searching for
a solution to the problem, our country had defeated the adversary on
the battlefield without a single American life being lost in combat.
But the dictator Milosevic was hanging on. I invited the former
prime minister of Russia to my house and took a risk in asking him to
get personally involved, along with the head of Finland, to go to
Belgrade and to take a set of proposals from the United States that
would constitute basically a surrender by Serbia. But it was a
calculated risk that paid off. Now, I could probably give you some
other examples of decisions over the last 24 years. I have been in
public service for 24 years, Jim. And throughout all that time the
people I have fought for have been the middle-class families, and I
have been willing to stand up to powerful interests like the big
insurance companies, the drug companies, the HMOs, the oil
companies. They have good people and they play constructive roles
sometimes, but sometimes they get too much power. I cast my lot with
the people even when it means that you have to stand up to some
powerful interests who are trying to turn the -- the policies and the
laws to their advantage. You can see it in this campaign. The big
drug companies support Governor Bush's prescription drug proposal.
They oppose mine because they don't want to get Medicare involved
because they're afraid that Medicare will negotiate lower prices for
seniors who currently pay the highest prices of all.
MODERATOR:
Governor Bush?
BUSH:
I've been standing up to big business, Hollywood, big trial
lawyers. Was -- the question about emergencies, wasn't it?
MODERATOR:
It was about -- okay.
BUSH:
You know, as governor, one of the things you have to deal with is
catastrophe. I can remember the fires that swept Parker County,
Texas. I remember the floods that swept our state. I remember going
down to Del Rio, Texas. I have to pay the administration a
compliment. James Lee Witt of FEMA has done a really good job of
working with governors during times of crisis. But that's the time
when you're tested not only -- it's the time to test your metal, a
time to test your heart when you see people whose lives have been
turned upside down. It broke my heart to go to the flood scene in
Del Rio where a fellow and his family got completely uprooted. The
only thing I knew was to got aid as quickly as possible with state
and federal help, and to put my arms around the man and his family
and cry with them. That's what governors do. They are often on the
front line of catastrophic situations.
MODERATOR:
New question. There can be all kinds of crises, Governor. A
questions for you. There could be a crisis, for instance, in the
financial area, the stock market could take a tumble, there could be
a failure of a major financial institution. What is your general
attitude toward government intervention in such events?
BUSH:
Well, it depends, obviously. But what I would do first and
foremost, is I would get in touch with the Federal Reserve Chairman,
Allen Greenspan, to find out all the facts and all the
circumstances. I would have my Secretary of the Treasury be in touch
with the financial centers not only here, but at home. I would make
sure that key members of Congress were called in to discuss the
gravity of the situation. And I would come up with a game plan to
deal with it. That's what governors end up doing. We end up being
problem solvers. We come up with practical, common sense solutions
for problems that we're confronted with. In this case, in the case
of a financial crisis, I would gather all the facts before I made the
decision as to what the government ought or ought not to do.
MODERATOR:
Vice President Gore?
GORE:
First I want to compliment the governor on his response to those
fires and floods in Texas. I accompanied James Lee Witt down to
Texas when those fires broke out. And FEMA has been a major flagship
project of our reinventing government efforts. And I agree, it works
extremely well now. On the international financial crises that come
up, my friend, Bob Rubin, the former Secretary of Treasury is here,
he's a close advisor to me and great friend in all respects. I have
had a chance to work with him and Allen Greenspan and others on the
crisis following the collapse of the Mexican peso. When the Asian
financial crisis raised the risk of world-wide recession that could
affect our economy, And now, of course, the euro's value has been
dropping, but seems to be under control. But it started for me in
the last eight years when I had the honor of casting the tie-breaking
vote to end the old economic plan here at home and put into place a
new economic plan that has helped us to make some progress, 22
million new jobs, the greatest prosperity ever. But it's not good
enough. My attitude is you ain't seen nothing yet. We need to do
more and better.
MODERATOR:
So, Governor, would you agree there is no basic difference here on
intervening -- on federal government intervening in what might be
seen by others to be a private financial crisis?
BUSH:
No, there's no difference on that. There is a difference,
though, as to what the economy has meant. I think the economy has
meant more for the Gore and Clinton folks than the Gore and Clinton
folks have meant for the economy. I think most of the economic
growth that has taken place is a result of ingenuity and hard work
and entrepreneurship and that's the role of goverment to encourage
that. In terms of in response to the question, no.
GORE:
Can I comment on that?
MODERATOR:
You may.
GORE:
You know, I think the American people deserve credit for the great
economy that we have. It's their ingenuity, I agree with that. But
you know, they were working pretty hard eight years ago. And now
they had ingenuity eight years ago. The difference is we've got a
new policy. And instead of concentrating on tax cuts mostly for the
wealthy, we want -- I want tax cuts for the middle-class families
and I want to continue the prosperity and make sure that it enriches
not just a few but all of our families. We have gone from the
biggest deficits to the biggest surpluses. We have gone from a
triple debt recession during the previous 12 years to a tripling in
the stock market. Instead of a high unemployment, we have the lowest
African-American and Latin American unemployment rates in history and
22 million new jobs. It's not good enough. Too many people have
been left behind. We have got to do much more. The key is job
training, education, investments in health care and education,
environment, retirement security. And incidentally, we have got to
preserve Social Security. I'm opposed to diverting one out of every
six dollars out of the Social Security trust fund, as the Governor
has proposed, into the stock market. I want new incentives for
savings and investment for the young couples who are working hard so
they can save and invest on their own on top of Social Security, not
at the expense of Social Security, as the governor proposes.
BUSH:
Two points. One, a lot of folks are still waiting for that 1992
middle-class tax cut. I remember the vice president saying, "Just
give us a chance to get up there, we're going to make sure you get
tax cuts." It didn't happen. Now he's having to say that again.
They've had their chance to deliver a tax cut to you. Secondly, the
surest way to bust this economy is to increase the role and size of
the federal budget. The Senate Budget Committee did a study of the
vice president's expenditures. It's been projected that they could
conceivably bust the budget by $900 billion. That means he'll either
have to raise your taxes by $900 billion or go into the Social
Security surplus for $900 billion. This is a plan that is going to
increase the bureaucracy by 20,000 people. His targeted tax cut is
so detailed, so much fine print that it is going to require numerous
IRS agents. We need somebody to simplify the code, to be fair, to
continue prosperity by sharing some of the surplus with the people
who pay the bills, particularly those at the bottom end of the
economic ladder.
GORE:
If I could respond, Jim. What he's quoting is not the Senate Budget
Commiitte, it is a partisan press release by the Republicans on the
Senate Budget Committee that's not worth the government -- the
taxpayer-paid paper that it's printed on. Now, as for 20,000 new
bureaucrats, as you call them, you know, the size of the federal
government will go down in a Gore administration. In the reinventing
government program you just look at the numbers. It is 300,000
people smaller today than it was eight years ago. Now, the fact is
you're going to have a hard time convincing folks that we were a
whole lot better off eight years ago than we are today. But that's
not the question. The question is, will we be better off four years
from now than we are today? And as for the surest way to threaten
our prosperity, having a $1.9 trillion tax cut, almost half of which
goes to the wealthy, and a $1 trillion Social Security privatization
proposal is the surest way to put our budget into deficit --
BUSH:
I can't let the man continue with fuzzy math. It is 1.3 trillion.
It will go to everybody who pays taxes. I'm not going to be the kind
of president that says you get tax relief and you don't. I'm not
going to be a picker and chooser. What is fair is everybody who pays
taxes ought to get relief.
MODERATOR:
I thought we cleared this up a while ago. New question on Social
Security. Both of you have Social Security reform plans, so we could
spend the rest of the evening and two or three other evenings talking
about them in detail. We won't do that. But --
GORE:
Suits me.
MODERATOR:
Many experts, including Federal Reserve Chairman Greenspan, Vice
President Gore, say that it will be impossible for either of you,
essentially, to keep the system viable on its own during the coming
baby boomer retirement onslaught without either reducing benefits or
increasing taxes. You disagree?
GORE:
I do disagree. Because if we can keep our prosperity going, if we
can continue balancing the budget and paying down the debt, then the
strong economy keeps generating surpluses. Here is my plan. I will
keep Social Security in a lockbox and that pays down the national
debt. And the interest savings I would put right back into Social
Security. That extends the life of Social Security for 55 years.
Now, I think that it's very important to understand that cutting
benefits under Social Security means that people like Winifred
Skinner from Des Moines, Iowa, who is here, would really have a much
harder time. Because there are millions of seniors who are living
almost hand to mouth. And you talk about cutting benefits. I don't
go along with it. I am opposed to it. I'm also opposed to a plan
that diverts 1 out of every $6 away from the Social Security Trust
Fund. Social Security is a trust fund that pays the checks this year
with the money that is paid into Social Security this year. The
governor wants to divert 1 out of every $6 off into the stock market,
which means that he would drain a trillion dollars out of the Social
Security Trust Fund in this generation over the next ten years, and
Social Security under that approach would go bankrupt within this
generation. His leading advisor on this plan actually said that
would be okay, because then the Social Security Trust Fund could
start borrowing. It would borrow up to $3 trillion. Now, Social
Security has never done that. And I don't think it should do that.
I think it should stay in a lockbox, and I'll tell you this. I will
veto anything that takes money out of Social Security for
privatization or anything else other than Social Security.
BUSH:
I thought it was interesting that on the two minutes he spent about
a million-and-a-half on my plan, which means he doesn't want you to
know what he's doing is loading up IOUs for future generations. He
puts no real assets into the Social Security system. The revenues
exceed the expenses in Social Security until the year 2015 which
means all retirees are going to get the promises made. For those of
you who he wants to scare into the voting booth to vote for him, hear
me loud and clear. A promise made will be a promise kept. You bet
we want to allow younger workers to take some of their own money.
That's the difference of opinion. The vice president thinks it's the
government's money. The payroll taxes are your money. You ought to
put it in prudent, safe investments so that $1 trillion over the next
ten years grows to be $3 trillion. The money stays within the Social
Security system. It's a part of the Social Security system. He
claims it will be out of Social Security. It's your money, it's a
part of your retirement benefit. It's a fundamental difference
between what we believe. I want you to have your own asset that you
can call your own. That you can pass on from one generation to the
next. I want to get a better rate of return for your own money than
the paltry 2% that the current Social Security Trust gets today. Mr.
Greenspan I thought missed an opportunity to say there's a third way,
and that is to get a better rate of return on the Social Security
monies coming into the trust. There is $2.3 trillion of surplus that
we can use to make sure that younger workers have a Social Security
plan in the future. If we're smart and if we trust workers and if we
understand the power of the compounding rate of interest.
GORE:
Here is the difference. I give a new incentive for younger workers
to save their own money and invest their own money, but not at the
expense of Social Security, on top of Social Security. My plan is
Social Security plus. The governor's plan is Social Security minus.
Your future benefits would be cut by the amount that's diverted into
the stock market. If you make bad investments, that's too bad. But
even before then the problem hits because the money contributed to
Social Security this year is an entitlement. That's how it works.
And the money is used to pay the benefits for seniors this year. If
you cut the amount going in 1 out of every $6, then you have to cut
the value of each check by 1 out of every $6 unless you come up with
the money from somewhere else. I would like to know from the
governor -- I know we're not supposed to ask each other questions --
but I'd be interested in knowing, does that trillion dollars come
from the trust fund, or does it come from the rest of the budget?
BUSH:
No. There's enough money to pay seniors today in the current
affairs of Social Security. The trillion comes from the surplus.
Surplus is money -- more money than needed. Let me tell you what
your plan is. It's not Social Security plus, it's Social Security
plus huge debt. That is what it is. You leave future generations
with tremendous IOUs. It's time to have a leader that doesn't put
off tomorrow what we should do today. It's time to have somebody to
step up and say look, let's let younger workers take some of their
own money and under certain guidelines invest it in the private
markets. The safest of federal investments yields 4%. That's twice
the amount of rate of return than the current Social Security Trust.
It's a fundamental difference of opinion here, folks. Younger worker
after younger worker hears my call that says I trust you. And you
know what, the issue is changeing. Seniors now understand that the
promise made will be a promise kept, but younger workers now
understand we better have a government that trusts them and that's
exactly what I'm going to do.
GORE:
Could I respond to that, Jim? This is a big issue. Could we do
another round on it?
MODERATOR:
We're almost out of time.
GORE:
Just briefly. When FDR established Social Security, they didn't
call them IOUs, they called it the full faith and credit of the
United States. If you don't have trust in that, I do. If you take
it out of the surplus in the trust fund, that means the trust fund
goes bankrupt in this generation within 20 years.
BUSH:
This is a government that thinks a 2% rate of return on your money
is satisfactory. It's not. This is a government that says younger
workers can't possibly have their own assets. We need to think
differently about the issue. We need to make sure our seniors get
the promise made. If we don't trust younger workers to manage some
of their own money with the Social Security surplus, to grow from $1
trillion to $3 trillion, it will be impossible to bridge the gap
without it. What Mr. Gore's plan will do causing huge payroll taxes
or major benefit reductions.
MODERATOR:
New question. Are there issues of character that distinguish you
from Vice President Gore?
BUSH:
The man loves his wife and I appreciate that a lot. And I love
mine. The man loves his family a lot, and I appreciate that, because
I love my family. I think the thing that discouraged me about the
vice president was uttering those famous words, "No controlling legal
authority." I felt like there needed to be a better sense of
responsibility of what was going on in the White House. I believe
that -- I believe they've moved that sign, "The buck stops here" from
the Oval Office desk to "The buck stops here" on the Lincoln
bedroom. It's not good for the country and it's not right. We need
to have a new look about how we conduct ourselves in office. There's
a huge trust. I see it all the time when people come up to me and
say, I don't want you to let me down again. And we can do better
than the past administration has done. It's time for a fresh start.
It's time for a new look. It's time for a fresh start after a season
of cynicism. And so I don't know the man well, but I've been
disappointed about how he and his administration have conducted the
fundraising affairs. You know, going to a Buddhist temple and then
claiming it wasn't a fundraiser isn't my view of responsibility.
MODERATOR:
Vice President Gore?
GORE:
I think we ought to attack our country's problems, not attack each
other. I want to spend my time making this country even better than
it is, not trying to make you out to be a bad person. You may want
to focus on scandal. I want to focus on results. As I said a couple
of months ago, I stand here as my own man and I want you to see me
for who I really am. Tipper and I have been married for 30 years.
We became grandparents a year-and-a-half ago. We've got four
children. I have devoted 24 years of my life to public service and
I've said this before and I'll say it again, if you entrust me with
the presidency, I may not be the most exciting politician, but I will
work hard for you every day. I will fight for middle-class families
and working men and women and I will never let you down.
MODERATOR:
So, Governor, what are you saying when you mention the fundraising
scandals or the fundraising charges that involve Vice President
Gore? What are you saying that the voters should take from that
that's relevant to this election?
BUSH:
They ought to factor in it when they go to the voting booth.
MODERATOR:
In what way?
BUSH:
I think people need to be held responsible for the actions they take
in life. I think that -- well, I think that's part of the need for a
cultural change. We need to say we each need to be responsible for
what we do. People in the highest office of the land must be
responsible for decisions they make in life. And that's the way I've
conducted myself as Governor of Texas and that's the way I'll conduct
myself as President of the United States, should I be fortunate
enough to earn your vote.
MODERATOR:
Are you saying all this is irrelevant, Vice President Gore?
GORE:
No. I think the American people should take into account who we are
as individuals, what our experience is, what our positions are on the
issues and proposals are. I'm asking you to see me for who I really
am. I'm offering you my own vision, my own experience, my own
proposals. And incidentally, one of them is this. This current
campaign financing system has not reflected credit on anybody in
either party. And that's one of the reasons I've said before, and
I'll pledge here tonight, if I'm president, the very first bill that
Joe Lieberman and I will send to the United States Congress is the
McCain-Feingold campaign finance reform bill. And the reason it's
that important is that all of the other issues, whether prescription
drugs for all seniors that are opposed by the drug companies or the
patient's bill of rights to take the decisions away from the HMOs and
give them to the doctors and nurses, opposed by the HMOs and
insurance companies, all these other proposals are going to be a lot
easier to get passed for the American people if we limit the
influence of special interest money and give democracy back to the
American people. And I wish Governor Bush would join me this evening
in endorsing the McCain-Feingold Campaign Finance Reform Bill.
BUSH:
You know, this man has no credibility on the issue. As a matter of
fact, I read in the "New York Times" where he said he co-sponsored
the McCain-Feingold Campaign Fundraising Bill. But he wasn't in the
Senate with Senator Feingold. And so, look, I'm going to -- what you
need to know about me is I will uphold the law, I'm going to have an
attorney general that enforces the law. The time for campaign
funding reform is after the election. This man has outspent me and
the special interests are outspending me. And I am not going to lay
down my arms in the middle of the campaign for somebody who has got
no credibility on the issue.
MODERATOR:
Senator McCain -- hold on one second. Senator McCain said in
August, "It doesn't matter which one of you is President of the
United States in January, there is going to be blood on the floor of
the United States Senate," and he'll tie up the Senate until campaign
finance reform is passed that includes a ban on soft money. First of
all, would you support that effort by him, or would you sign a bill
that is finally passed that included --
BUSH:
I would support an effort to ban corporate soft money and labor
union soft money so long as there was dues check-off. I've
campaigned on this since the primaries. I believe there needs to be
instant disclosure on the Internet as to who has given to who. I
think we need to fully enforce the law. I think we need to have an
attorney general that says if a law is broken, we'll enforce it. Be
strict and firm about it.
GORE:
Look, Governor Bush, you have attacked my character and credibility
and I am not going to respond in kind. I think we ought to focus on
the problems and not attack each other. One of the serious problems,
hear me well, is that our system of government is being undermined by
too much influence coming from special interest money. We have to
get a handle on it. And like John McCain, I have learned from
experience, and it's not a new position for me. 24 years ago I
supported full public financing of all federal elections. And
anybody who thinks I'm just saying it, it will be the first bill I
send to the Congress. I want you to know I care passionately about
this and I will fight until it becomes law.
BUSH:
I want people to hear what he just said. He is for full public
financing of Congressional elections. I'm absolutely, adamently
opposed to that. I don't want the government financing congressional
elections.
MODERATOR:
On that wonderful note of disagreement, we have to stop here and we
want to go now to your closing statements. Governor Bush is first.
You have two minutes.
BUSH:
Thank you, Jim. Thank the University of Massachusetts and Mr. Vice
President, thank you. It has been a good, lively exchange. There is
a huge difference of opinion. Mine is I want to empower people in
their own lives. I also want to go to Washington to get some
positive things done. It is going to require a new spirit. A spirit
of cooperation. It will require the ability of a Republican
president to reach out across the partisan divide and to say to
Democrats, let's come together to do what is right for America. It's
been my record as Governor of Texas, it will be how I conduct myself
if I'm fortunate enough to earn your vote as President of the United
States. I want to finally get something done on Medicare. I want to
make sure prescription drugs are available for all seniors. And I
want seniors to have additional choices when it comes to choosing
their health care plans. I want to finally get something done on
Social Security. I want to make sure the seniors have the promise
made will be a promise kept, but I want younger workers to be able to
manage some of their own money, some of their own payroll taxes in
the private sector under certain guidelines to get a better rate of
return on your own money. I want to rebuild our military to keep the
peace. I want to have a strong hand when it comes to the United
States in world affairs. I don't want to try to put our troops in
all places at all times. I don't want to be the world's policeman, I
want to be the world's peacemaker by having a military of high morale
and a military that is well-equipped. I want anti-ballistic missile
systems to protect ourselves and our allies from a rogue nation that
may try to hold us hostage or blackmail our allies and friends. I
want to make sure the education system fulfills its hope and
promise. I've had a strong record of working with Democrats and
Republicans in Texas to make sure no child is left behind. I
understand the limited role of the federal government, but it could
be a constructive role when it comes to reform, by insisting that
there be a strong accountability systems. My intentions are to earn
your vote and earn your confidence. I'm asking for your vote. I
want you to be on my team. And for those of you working, thanks from
the bottom of my heart. For those of you making up your mind, I
would be honored to have your support.
MODERATOR:
Vice President Gore, two minutes.
GORE:
I want to thank everybody who watched and listened tonight because
this is indeed a crucial time in American history. We're at a fork
in the road. We have this incredible prosperity, but a lot of people
have been left behind. And we have a very important decision to
make. Will we use the prosperity to enrich all of our families and
not just a few? One important way of looking at this is to ask who
are you going to fight for? Throughout my career in public service,
I have fought for the working men and women of this country,
middle-class families. Why? Because you are the ones who have the
hardest time paying taxes, the hardest time making ends meet. You
are the ones who are making car payments and mortgage payments and
doing right by your kids. And a lot of times there are powerful
forces that are against you. Make no mistake about it, they do have
undue influence in Washington, D.C. and it makes a difference if you
have a president who will fight for you. I know one thing about the
position of president, it's the only position in our Constitution
that is filled by an individual who is given the responsibility to
fight not just for one state or one district or the well-connected or
wealthy, but to fight for all of the people, including especially
those who most need somebody who will stand up and take on whatever
powerful forces might stand in the way. There is a woman named
Winifred Skinner here tonight from Iowa. I mentioned her earlier.
She's 79 years old. She has Social Security. I'm not going to cut
her benefits or support any proposal that would. She gets a small
pension, but in order to pay for her prescription drug benefits, she
has to go out seven days a week several hours a day picking up cans.
She came all the way from Iowa in a Winnebago with her poodle in
order attend here tonight. I want to tell her, I'll fight for a
prescription drug benefit for all seniors and fight for the people of
this country for a prosperity that benefits all.
MODERATOR:
We will continue this dialogue next week on October 11th at Wake
Forest University in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. The format then
will be more informal, more conversational with the two candidates
seated at a table with me. The third will be October 17th at
Washington University in St. Louis, and that will follow a town-hall
type format. October 5 there is a 90-minute debate between Senator
Joe Lieberman and Secretary Dick Cheney. It will be held at Center
College in Danville, Kentucky. The moderator will be Bernard Shaw of
CNN. Thank you, Governor Bush, Vice President Gore. See you next
week. For now from Boston, I'm Jim Lehrer. Thank you, and good
night.
(APPLAUSE)
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