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VICE PRESIDENT AL GORE AND GOVERNOR GEORGE W. BUSH PARTICIPATE IN THIRD DEBATE SPONSORED BY THE COMMISSION ON PRESIDENTIAL DEBATES
CAMPAIGN 2000: VICE PRESIDENT GORE AND GOVERNOR BUSH
PARTICIPATE IN THIRD DEBATE SPONSORED BY THE COMMISSION ON
PRESIDENTIAL DEBATES
OCTOBER 17, 2000
SPEAKER: ALBERT GORE, JR., VICE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED
STATES
DEMOCRATIC PARTY PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE
GOVERNOR GEORGE W. BUSH (R-TX)
REPUBLICAN PARTY PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE
JIM LEHRER, MODERATOR
MICHELLE PURDY, PRESIDENT, STUDENT UNION
WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY
LEHRER: Good evening from the Field House at Washington
University in St. Louis. I'm Jim Lehrer of The NewsHour on PBS. And
I welcome you to this third and final campaign 2000 debate between the
Democratic candidate for president, Vice President Al Gore, and the
Republican candidate, Governor George W. Bush of Texas. Let's welcome
the candidates now.
(APPLAUSE)
Before proceeding tonight, we would like to observe a moment of
silence in memory of Governor Mel Carnahan of Missouri, who, along
with his son and his former chief of staff, died in a private plane
crash last night near St. Louis.
(MOMENT OF SILENCE)
LEHRER: A reminder, as we continue now, that these debates are
sponsored by the Commission on Presidential Debates. The formats and
the rules were worked out by the commission and the two campaigns.
Tonight's questions will be asked by St. Louis area voters who
were identified as being uncommitted by the Gallup organization.
LEHRER: Earlier today, each of them wrote a question on a small
card like this. Those cards were collected and then given to me this
afternoon. My job under the rules of the evening was to decide the
order the questions will be asked and to call on the questioners
accordingly. I also have the option of asking follow-ups, which in
order to get to more of the panel's questions, for the record, I plan
to do sparingly and mostly for clarifications.
The audience participants are bound by the following rule: They
shall not ask follow-up questions or otherwise participate in the
extended discussion. And the questioner's microphone will be turned
off after he or she completes asking the question. Those are the
rules.
As in Winston-Salem last week, no single answer or response from
a candidate can exceed two minutes.
There is an audience here in the hall, and they have promised to
remain absolutely quiet as did their predecessors this year in Boston,
Danville and Winston-Salem.
Before we begin, a correction from last week's debate. I was
wrong when I said Vice President Gore's campaign commercial had called
Governor Bush a "bumbler." That specific charge was made in a press
statement by Gore campaign spokesman Mark Fabiani not in a TV guide --
in a TV ad.
BUSH: I'm glad you clarified that.
LEHRER: Now let's go to the first question. Of over the 130
questions we received from this panel, we will begin with one of the
19 on health issues.
And it goes to you, Mr. Vice President, and it will be asked by
James Hankins (ph).
Mr. Hankins (ph)?
QUESTION: How do you feel about HMOs and insurance companies
making the critical decisions that affect people's lives instead of
the medical professionals? And why are the HMOs and insurance
companies not held accountable for their decisions?
GORE: Mr. Hankins (ph), I don't feel good about it, and I think
we ought to have a Patients' Bill of Rights to take the medical
decisions away from the HMOs and give them back to the doctors and the
nurses. I want to come back and tell you why.
But if you will forgive me, I would like to say something right
now at the beginning of this debate, following on the moment of
silence for Mel Carnahan and Randy Carnahan and Chris Sifford.
Tipper and I were good friends with Mel and Randy. And I know
that all of us here want to extend our sympathy and condolences to
Jean and the family and to the Sifford family. And I'd just like to
say that this debate in a way is a living tribute to Mel Carnahan
because he loved the vigorous discussion of ideas in our democracy.
He was a fantastic governor of Missouri. This state became one of the
top five in the nation for health care coverage for children under his
leadership, one of the best in advancing all kinds of benefits for
children to grow up healthy and strong.
And, of course, this debate also takes place at a time when the
tragedy of the USS Cole is on our minds and hearts.
GORE: And insofar as the memorial service is tomorrow, I would
like to also extend sympathy to the families of those who have died
and those who are still missing and the injured.
Now, Mr. Hankins (ph), I think that the situation that you
described has gotten completely out of hand. Doctors are giving
prescriptions, they're recommending treatments and then their
recommendations are being overruled by HMOs and insurance companies.
That is unacceptable.
I support a strong national patients' bill of rights. It is
actually a disagreement between us. A national law that is pending on
this, the Dingell-Norwood bill, a bipartisan bill, is one that I
support...
LEHRER: Times up.
GORE: ... and that the governor does not.
LEHRER: Two minutes' response, Governor Bush.
BUSH: I too want to extend my prayers to the -- and blessings,
God's blessings on the families whose lives were overturned last
night. It was a tragic moment.
Actually, Mr. Vice President, it's not true. I do support a
national patients' bill of rights. As a matter of fact, I brought
Republicans and Democrats together to do just that in the state of
Texas, to get a patients' bill of rights through.
It requires a different kind of leadership style to do it though.
You see, in order to get something done on behalf of the people, you
have to put partisanship aside. And that's what we did in my state.
We've got one of the most advanced patients' bill of rights.
It says, for example, that a woman can -- doesn't have to go
through a gatekeeper to go to her gynecologist.
BUSH: It says that you can't gag a doctor. A doctor can advise
you. The HMO, insurance company, can't gag that doctor from giving
you full advice. In this particular bill, it allows patients to chose
a doctor, their own doctor if they want to.
But we did something else that was interesting. We're one of the
first states that said you can sue an HMO for denying you proper
coverage. Now, there's what's called an Independent Review
Organization that you have to go through first. It says, if you've
got a complaint with your insurance company, you can take your
complaint to an objective body. If the objective body rules on your
behalf, the insurance company must follow those rules. However, if
the insurance company doesn't follow the findings of the IRO, then
that becomes a cause of action in a court of law.
It's time for our nation to come together and do what's right for
the people. And I think this is right for the people.
You know, I support a national patients' bill of rights, Mr. Vice
President. And I want all people covered. I don't want the law to
supersede good law like we've got in Texas. I think...
LEHRER: Governor, time is up, sir.
GORE: Jim?
LEHRER: Yes, sir.
GORE: We have a direct disagreement on this.
LEHRER: Just a minute, Mr. Vice President. I wanted to -- you
know, the way the rules go here, now, two minutes, two minutes, and
then I'll decide whether we go on.
GORE: Right.
LEHRER: So what I want to make sure is we understand here is,
before we go on to another question in the health area, would you
agree that you two agree on a national patients' bill of rights?
GORE: Absolutely -- absolutely not. I referred to the Dingell-
Norwood bill. It is the bipartisan bill that is now pending in the
Congress. The HMOs and the insurance companies support the other bill
that's pending, the one that Republican majority has put forward.
They like it because it doesn't accomplish what I think really
needs to be accomplished, to give the decisions back to the doctors
and nurses and to give a right of appeal to somebody other than the
HMO or insurance company, let you go the nearest emergency room
without having to call an HMO before you call 911, to let you see a
specialist if you need to. And it has strong bipartisan support. It
is being blocked by the Republican leadership in the Congress.
And I specifically would like to know whether Governor Bush will
support the Dingell-Norwood bill, which is the main one pending.
LEHRER: Governor Bush, you may answer that if you'd like. But
also, I'd like to know how you see the differences between the two of
you, and we need to move on.
BUSH: Well, the difference is is that I can get it done.
(LAUGHTER)
That I can get something positive done on behalf of the people.
That's what the question in this campaign is about. It's not only
what your philosophy and what your position on issues, but can you get
things done.
(LAUGHTER)
And I believe I can.
LEHRER: All right...
GORE: What about the Dingell-Norwood bill?
LEHRER: All right, we're going to go now to another...
BUSH: I'm not quite through. Let me finish the...
LEHRER: All right.
BUSH: I talked about the principles and the issues that I think
are important in a patients' bill of rights. Now, there's this kind
of Washington, D.C., focus, well, it's in this committee or it's got
this sponsor. If I'm the president, we're going to have emergency
room care, we're going to have to gag orders. Women will have direct
access to ob-gyn.
BUSH: People'll be able to take their HMO insurance company to
court. That's what I've done in Texas. And that's the kind of
leadership style I'll bring to Washington.
LEHRER: All right another -- the next question, also on a health
issue, is from -- it will be asked by Marie Payne Clappey (ph), and it
goes to Governor Bush.
QUESTION: Are either of you concerned with...
BUSH: There you go. I've got...
(LAUGHTER)
QUESTION: OK. Are either of you concerned with finding some
feasible way to lower the price of pharmaceutical drugs, such as
education on minimizing intake, a revamp of the FDA process or
streamline the drug companies' procedures instead of just finding more
money to pay for them.
BUSH: Well, that's a great question. I think one of the
problems we have, particularly for seniors, is there's no prescription
drug coverage in Medicare. And, therefore, when they have to try to
purchase drugs, they do so on their own. There's no kind of
collective bargaining; there's no power of purchasing amongst seniors.
So I think step one to make sure prescription drugs is more
affordable for seniors -- and those are the folks who really rely upon
prescription drugs a lot these days -- is to reform the Medicare
system, is to have prescription drugs as an integral part of Medicare
once and for all.
The problem we have today is that like the Patients' Bill of
Rights, particularly with health care, there's a lot of bickering in
Washington, D.C. It's kind of like a political issue as opposed to a
people issue.
So what I want to do is I want to call upon Republicans and
Democrats to forget all the arguing and finger-pointing and come
together and take care of our senior prescription drug program that
says we'll pay for the poor seniors, we'll help all seniors with
prescription drugs.
BUSH: In the meantime, I think it's important to have what's
called Immediate Helping Hand, which is direct money to states so that
seniors, poor seniors, don't have to chose between food and medicine
as part of an overall overhaul.
The purchasing powers -- and I'm again price controls. I think
price controls would hurt our ability to continue important research
and development. Drug therapies are replacing a lot of medicine as we
used to know it.
One of the most important things is to continue the research and
development component, and so I'm against price controls.
Expediting drugs through the FDA makes sense, of course.
Allowing the new bill that was passed in the Congress made sense to
allow for, you know, drugs that were sold overseas to come back, in
other countries, to come back into the United States. That makes
sense.
But the best thing to do is to reform Medicare.
LEHRER: Vice President Gore, two minutes.
GORE: All right, here we go again. Now look, if you want
someone who will spin a lot of words describing a whole convoluted
process and then end up supporting legislation that is supported by
the big drug companies, this is your man.
If you want someone who will fight for you and who will fight for
the middle class families and working men and women, who are sick and
tired of having their parents and grandparents pay higher prices for
prescription drugs than anybody else, then I want to fight for you.
GORE: And you asked the -- a great question, because it's not
only seniors.
Listen, for 24 years, I have never been afraid to take on the big
drug companies. They do some great things. They discovered great new
cures, and that's great. We want -- we want them to continue that.
But they are now spending more money on advertising and promotion
-- you see all these ads -- than they are on research and development.
And they're trying to artificially extend the monopoly patent
protection so they can keep charging these very high prices.
I want to streamline the approval of the competing generic drugs
and the new kinds of treatments that can compete with them so that we
bring the price down for everybody.
Now, briefly, let me tell you how my prescription drug plan
works. The governor talked about Medicare. I proposed a real
prescription drug benefit under Medicare for all seniors, all seniors.
And here's how it works: You pick your own doctor and nobody can take
that away from you. The doctor chooses the prescription that you need
and nobody can overrule your doctor. You go to your own pharmacy and
then Medicare pays half the price. If you're poor, they pay all of
it. If you have extraordinarily high costs, then they pay all over
$4,000 out of pocket.
And I'll bring new competition to bring the price down. And if
you pass the big drug companies' bill, nothing will happen.
LEHRER: All right. Another health question. It comes from
Vickie French (ph) and it's for you Vice President Gore.
Vickie French (ph), where are you?
Oh, there she is.
QUESTION: As American people, we spend billions of dollars every
year on taxes -- or pay billions of dollars in taxes. Would you be
open to the ideal of a national health care plan for everybody?
QUESTION: And if not, why? If so, is it something you would try
to implement if you're elected into office? And what would you do
implement this plan?
GORE: I think that we should move step by step toward universal
health coverage. But I am not in favor of government doing it all.
We've spent 65 years now on the development of a hybrid system --
partly private, partly public -- and 85 percent of our people have
health insurance, 15 percent don't. That adds up to 44 million
people; that is a national outrage. We have got to get health
coverage for those who do not have it.
And we've got to improve the quality for those who do with a
Patients' Bill of Rights that's real and that works -- the Dingell-
Norwood Bill.
And we have got to fill in the gaps in coverage by finally
bringing parity for the treatment of mental illness because that's
been left out. We've got to deal with long-term care.
Now, here are the steps that I would take first of all. I will
make a commitment to bring health care coverage of high quality that
is affordable to every single child in America within four years. And
then, we'll fill other gaps by covering the parents of those children
when the family is poor or up to two and a half times the poverty
rate.
I want to give a tax credit for the purchase of individual health
insurance plans. I want to give small business employers a tax
credit, 25 percent, to encourage the providing of health insurance for
the employees in small businesses. I want to give seniors who are --
well, the near-elderly; I don't like that term because I am just about
in that category. But those 55 to 65 ought to be able to buy into
Medicare for premiums that are reasonable and fair and significantly
below what they have to get now.
GORE: Now, we have a big difference on this. And you need to
know the record here. Under Governor Bush, Texas has sunk to be 50th
out of 50 in health care -- in health insurance for their citizens.
Last week he said that they were spending $3.7 billion -- or $4.7
billion on this.
LEHRER: Mr. Vice President?
GORE: OK, I'll...
LEHRER: Time is up. Governor Bush, two minutes.
BUSH: I'm absolutely opposed to a national health care plan. I
don't want the federal government making decisions for consumers or
for providers.
I remember what the administration tried to do in 1993. They
tried to have a national health care plan, and fortunately it failed.
I trust people; I don't trust the federal government. It's going to
be one of the themes you'll hear tonight. I don't want the federal
government making decisions on behalf of everybody.
There is an issue with the uninsured. There sure is. And we've
got uninsured people in my state. Ours is a big state, a fast-growing
state. We share a common border with another nation. But we're
providing health care for our people.
One thing about insurance, that's a Washington term. The
question is, are people getting health care? And we've got a strong
safety net.
And there needs to be a safety net in America. There needs to be
more community health clinics where the poor can go get health care.
We need a program for the uninsured. They've been talking about it in
Washington, D.C. The number of uninsured have now gone up for the
past seven years.
BUSH: We need a $2,000 credit -- rebate, for people, working
people who don't have insurance. They can get in the marketplace and
start purchasing insurance.
We need to have -- allow small businesses to write across --
insurance across jurisdictional lines so small business can afford
health care, small restaurants can afford health care.
And so health care needs to be affordable and available.
But we got to trust people to make decisions with their lives.
In the Medicare reform I talk about, it says if you're a senior, you
can stay in Medicare if you like it, and that's fine, but we're going
to give you other choices to choose if you want to do so. Just like
they do the federal employees, the people who work in Washington,
D.C., for the U.S. Congress or the United States Senate, get a variety
of choices to make in their lives. And that's what we ought to do for
all people in America.
LEHRER: Governor?
BUSH: Yes, sir. I'm sorry.
LEHRER: Governor?
GORE: Could I follow up, Jim?
BUSH: Not paying attention to the lights...
LEHRER: No, not right now. Not right now.
Education. We...
BUSH: Trying to find my light.
LEHRER: These folks submitted 18 questions on education, and the
first is -- that will be asked on education will go to you, Governor,
and will be asked by Angie Pettick (ph).
Angie Pettick (ph), where are you?
There she is.
Governor, right there.
BUSH: Oh, thanks. Hi, Angie.
QUESTION: I've heard a lot about education and the need to hold
teachers and schools accountable, and I certainly agree with that.
But as an individual with an educational background and also a parent,
I have seen a lot of instances where the parents are unresponsive to
the teachers or flat out uninvolved in their child's education. How
do you intend to not only hold the teachers and schools accountable,
but also hold parents accountable?
BUSH: Well, you know, it's hard to make people love one another.
I wish I knew the law, because I'd darn sure sign it. I wish I knew
the law that said all of us should be good parents.
One of the things the next president must do is to remind people
that if we're going to have a responsible period in America, that each
of us must love our children with all our heart and all our soul.
I happen to believe strong accountability encourages parental
involvement, though. I think when you measure and post results on the
Internet or in the town newspapers, most parents say, "Wait a minute,
my child's school isn't doing what I want it to do," and therefore
become involved in education.
I recognize there are some who just don't seem to care. But
there are a lot of parents who feel like everything is going well in
their child's school and all of a sudden they wake up and realize
that, "Wait a minute, standards aren't being met." That's why I'm so
strong for accountability.
I believe we ought to measure a lot, three, four, five, six,
seven, eighth grade. We do so in my state of Texas. One of the good
things we've done in Texas is we've got strong accountability, because
you can't cure unless you know. You can't -- you can't solve a
problem unless you diagnosis it.
I strongly believe that one of the best things to encourage
parental involvement also is to know that the classrooms will be safe
and secure. That's why I support a teacher liability act at the
federal level, that says if a teacher or principal upholds reasonable
standards of classroom discipline, they can't be sued. They can't be
sued.
BUSH: I think parents will be more involved with education when
they know their children's classrooms are safe and secure as well.
I also believe that we need to say to people that if you cannot
meet standards, there has to be a consequence, instead of just the
kind of soft bigotry of low expectations, that there has to be a
consequence. We can't continue to shuffle children through school.
And one of the consequences is we allow parents to have different
choices.
LEHRER: Vice President Gore?
GORE: Yes, we have a huge difference between us on this
question. I'd like to start by telling you what my vision is. I see
a day in the United States of America where all of our public schools
are considered excellent, world class; where there are no failing
schools; where the classrooms are small enough in size, number of
students, so that the teacher can spend enough one-on-one time with
each -- with each student.
Now, that means recruiting new teachers for the public schools.
It means, in my plan, hiring bonuses to get 100,000 new teachers in
the public schools within the next four years. It means also helping
local school districts, that sometimes find the parents of school-age
children out voted on bond issues, to give them some help with
interest-free bonding authority, so that we can build new schools and
modernize the classrooms.
We need to give teachers the training and professional
development that they need to -- including paid time off to go visit
the classroom of a master teacher and pick up some new skills.
I want to give every middle class family a $10,000 a year tax
deduction for college tuition so that -- so that middle class families
will always be able to send their kids on to college.
GORE: I want to work for universal free school, because we know
from all the studies that the youngsters learn -- kids learn more in
the first few years of life than anywhere else.
Now, I said there was a contrast. Governor Bush is for vouchers.
And in his plan, he proposes to drain more money, more taxpayer money,
out of the public schools for private school vouchers than all of the
money that he proposes in his entire budget for public schools
themselves. And only one in 20 students would be eligible for these
vouchers, and they wouldn't even pay the full tuition to private
school.
I think that's a mistake. I don't think we should give up on the
private schools and leave kids trapped in failing schools. I think we
should make it the number one priority, to make our schools the best
in the world, all of them.
LEHRER: Governor, what is your position on that?
BUSH: Yes, I appreciate that. I think any time we end with one
of these attacks, it's appropriate to respond. Here's what I think.
First of all, vouchers are up to states. If you want to do a voucher
program in Missouri, fine. See, I strongly believe in local control
of schools. I'm a governor of a state and I don't like it when the
federal government tell us what to do. I believe in local control of
schools.
But here's what I've said. I've said to the extent we spend
federal money on disadvantaged children, we want the schools to show
us whether or not the children are learning. What's unreasonable
about that? We expect there to be standards met, and we expect there
to be measurement. And if we find success, we'll praise it.
But when we find children trapped in schools that will not change
and will not teach, instead of saying, "Oh, this is OK in America,
just to shuffle poor kids through schools," there has to be a
consequence. And the consequence is that federal portion of federal
money will go to the parent so the parent can go to a tutoring program
or another public school or another private school -- or a private
school.
BUSH: You see, there has to be a consequence. We've got a
society that says, "Hey, the status quo is fine. Just move them
through." And guess who suffers?
LEHRER: What's the harm on -- what's the other side on vouchers?
GORE: Well, the program that he's proposing is not the one that
he just described. Under your plan, Governor Bush, states would be
required to pay vouchers to students, to match the vouchers that the
federal government would put up. Now, here's -- and, the way it would
happen is that, under his plan, if a school was designated as failing,
the kids would be trapped there for another three years, and then some
of them would get federal vouchers, and the state would be forced to
match that money.
Under my plan, if a school is failing, we work with the states to
give them the authority and the resources to close down that school
and reopen it right away with a new principal, a new faculty, a
turnaround team of specialists who know what they're doing to -- it's
based on the plan of Governor Jim Hunt in North Carolina, and it works
great.
LEHRER: So, no vouchers under -- in a Gore administration?
GORE: If I thought that there was no alternative, then I might
feel differently. But I have an obligation to fight to make sure that
there are no failing schools. We've got to turn around all -- most
schools are excellent. But we've got to make sure that all of them
are.
LEHRER: Andrew Costburg (ph) has a related question on education
that's right on this subject.
Mr. Costburg (ph) where are you? There you are.
And it's for Vice President Gore.
QUESTION: Mr. Vice President...
(LAUGHTER)
... in the school district in which I work and in countless
others across the nation, we face crumbling school buildings,
increased school violence, student apathy, overcrowding, lack of
funding, lawsuits, the list goes on. I could mention low teacher pay,
but I won't.
(LAUGHTER)
GORE: You should.
QUESTION: What can you tell me and my fellow American teachers
today about your plans for our immediate future?
GORE: What grade do you teach?
LEHRER: That's a violation of your rule, Vice President Gore.
QUESTION: High school.
(LAUGHTER)
GORE: I mentioned before that the local communities are having a
harder time passing bond issues. Traditionally, if you've been
involved in a campaign like that, you know that the parents with kids
in school are the ones that turn out and vote.
It's ironic that there are now -- there's now a smaller
percentage of the voters made up of parents with children than ever in
American history because of the aging of our population. But at the
same time, we've got the largest generation of students of public
schools ever. More than 90 percent of America's children go to public
schools. And it's the largest number ever this year, and they'll
break the record next year and every year for 10 years running. We've
got to do something about this.
GORE: And local -- it's not enough to leave it up to the local
school districts. They're not able to do it. And our future depends
upon it.
Look, we're in an information age. Our economic future depends
upon whether or not our children are going to get the kind of
education that lets them go on to college. And, again, I want to make
it possible for all middle class families to send their kids to
college, and more Pell Grants for those who are in the lower income
groups also. And then I want to make sure that we have job training
on top of that and lifelong learning.
But it all starts with the public school teachers. My proposal
gives $10,000 hiring bonuses for those teachers who are -- who get
certified to teach in the areas where they're most needed.
Now, accountability. We basically agree on accountability. My
plan requires testing of all students. It also requires something
that Governor Bush's plan doesn't: It requires testing of all new
teachers, including in the subjects that they teach.
We have to start treating teachers like the professionals that
they are and give them the respect and the kind of quality of life
that will draw more people into teaching, because we need a lot more
teachers.
LEHRER: Governor Bush, two minutes.
BUSH: When you total up all the federal spending he wants to do,
it's the largest increase in federal spending in years. And there's
just not going to be enough money.
I have been the governor of a big state; I've made education my
number one priority. That's the -- that's what governors ought to do.
They ought to say this is the most important thing we do as a state.
BUSH: The federal government puts about 6 percent of the money
up. They put about, you know, 60 percent of the strings, where you
got to fill out paperwork. I don't know if you have to be a
paperwork-filler-outer, but most of it's because of the federal
government.
What I want to do is to send flexibility and authority to the
local folks so you can choose what to do with the money. One size
does not fit all. I'd worry about federalizing education, if I were
you.
I believe strongly that the federal government can help. They
need to fund Head Start. We need to have accountability. The vice
president's plan does not have annual accountability, third grade,
fourth grade, fifth grade. We need to demand on results.
I believe strongly in a teacher protection act, like I mentioned.
I hear from teachers all the time about the lawsuits and the threats,
respect in the classroom. Part of it's because you can't -- you can't
control the classroom. You can't have a consequence for somebody,
without fear of getting sued under federal law. So I'm going to ask
the Congress to pass a teacher protection act.
So I believe in flexibility. I believe in a national reading
initiative for local districts to access with K-2 diagnostic testing,
curriculum that works. Phonics works, by the way; it needs to be a
part of our curriculum. There needs to be flexibility for teacher
training and teacher hiring with federal money.
You know, the federal government can be a part, but don't fall
prey to all this talk about money here and money there because
education is really funded at the local level; 94 percent comes from
the local level.
LEHRER: Vice President Gore, is the governor right when he says
that you're proposing the largest federal spending in years?
GORE: Absolutely not, absolutely not. I'm so glad that I have a
chance to knock that down.
Look, the problem is that under Governor Bush's plan, $1.6
trillion tax cut mostly to the wealthy. Under his own budget numbers,
he proposes spending more money for a tax cut just for the wealthiest
1 percent than all of the new money that he budgets for education,
health care and national defense combined.
Now, under my plan, we will balance the budget every year. I'm
not just saying this. I'm not just talking. I have helped to balance
the budget for the first time in 30 years, pay down the debt.
And under my plan, in four years, as a percentage of our gross
domestic product, federal spending will be the smallest that it has
been in 50 years. One reason is -- you know, the third biggest
spending item in our budget is interest on the national debt. We get
nothing for it. We keep the good faith and credit of the United
States.
I will pay down the debt every single year, until it is
eliminated early in the next decade. That gets rid of the third
biggest intrusion of the federal government in our economy.
Now, because the governor has all this money for a tax cut,
mostly to the wealthy, there is no money left over, so schools get
testing and a lawsuit reform, and not much else.
LEHRER: Governor, the vice president says you're wrong.
BUSH: Well, he's wrong.
(LAUGHTER)
Just add up all the numbers; it's three times bigger than what
President Clinton proposed. The Senate Budget Committee...
LEHRER: Three times -- excuse me, three times...
BUSH: Bigger than what President Clinton proposed...
GORE: That's in an ad Jim that was knocked down by the
journalists who analyzed the ad an said it was misleading.
(CORRECTED COPY: CORRECTS "TRUSTING MONEY")
LEHRER: Go ahead.
BUSH: My turn?
(LAUGHTER)
LEHRER: Yes, sir.
BUSH: Forget the journalists. You propose more than Walter
Mondale and Michael Dukakis combined. In other -- this is a big
spender, he is. And he ought to be proud of it. It's part of his
record. We just have a different philosophy.
Let me talk about tax relief. If you pay taxes, you ought to get
tax relief. The vice president believes that only the right people
ought to get tax relief. I don't think that's the role of the
president to pick: "You're right, and you're not right."
I think if you're going to have tax relief, everybody ought to
get it. And, therefore, wealthy people are going to get it. But the
top 1 percent will end up paying one-third of the taxes in America and
they get one-fifth of the benefits. And that's because we've
structured the plan so that 6 million additional American families pay
no taxes. If you're a family of four making $50,000 in Missouri, you
get a 50 percent cut in your federal income taxes.
What I've done is set priorities and funded them, and there's
extra money. And I believe the people who pay the bills ought to --
ought to get some money back.
It's a difference of opinion. He wants to grow the government,
and I trust you with your own money.
LEHRER: Well, let's...
BUSH: I wish we could spend an hour talking about trusting
people. It is the right position to take.
GORE: Can we extend the time?
LEHRER: Hold on one sec here, though. The governor just
reversed the thing.
What do you say specifically to what the vice president said
tonight? He's said it many, many times, that your tax cut benefits
the top 1 percent of the wealthiest Americans. And you've heard what
he said...
BUSH: Of course, it does. If you pay taxes, you're going to get
a benefit. People who pay taxes...
LEHRER: All right...
BUSH: ... will get tax relief.
LEHRER: Why shouldn't they?
GORE: All right...
BUSH: Wait. Let me finish, please.
Under my plan, if you make -- the top -- the wealthy people pay
62 percent of the taxes today; afterwards, they pay 64 percent. This
is a fair plan. You know why? Because the tax code is unfair for
people at the bottom end of the economic ladder. If you're a single
mother making $22,000 a year today and you're trying to raise two
children, for every additional dollar you earn you pay a higher
marginal rate on that dollar than someone making $200,000, and that's
not right.
LEHRER: Vice President Gore?
GORE: Yes...
BUSH: So I want to do something about that.
LEHRER: All right. Vice President Gore?
GORE: Look, this isn't about Governor Bush, it's not about me.
It is about you. And I want to come back to something I said before.
If you want somebody who believes that we were better off eight
years ago than we are now and that we ought to go back to the kind of
policies that we had back then, emphasizing tax cuts mainly for the
wealthy, here is your man.
If you want somebody who will fight for you and who will fight to
have middle class tax cuts, then I am your man. I want to be.
Now, I doubt anybody here makes more than $330,000 a year. I
won't ask you. But if you're do, you're in the top 1 percent. If you
don't...
LEHRER: It would be a violation of the rules. They couldn't...
(CROSSTALK)
GORE: I'm not going to...
(LAUGHTER)
I'm not going to ask -- I'm not going to ask. But if everyone
here in this audience was dead on in the middle of the middle class,
then the tax cuts for every single one of you, all added up, would be
less than the tax cut his plan would give to just one member of that
top, wealthiest 1 percent. Now, you judge for yourselves whether or
not that's fair.
LEHRER: A quick, and then we're moving on.
BUSH: Good. Fifty million Americans get no tax relief under his
plan.
(CORRECTED COPY: FIXES MATCH)
GORE: That's not right.
BUSH: And you may not be one of them; you're just not one of the
right people.
And secondly, we've had enough fighting. It's time to unite.
You talk about eight years? In eight years, they haven't gotten
anything done on Medicare, on Social Security, a patients' bill of
rights. It's time to get something done.
LEHRER: Hey, we're going move on now...
GORE: I've got to answer that, Jim.
Medicare, we -- I cast the tie-breaking vote to add 26 years to
the life of Medicare. It was due to go bankrupt in 1999.
And that $50 million figure, again, the newspapers -- I said --
you said forget the journalists, but they are the keepers of the
scorecard and whether or not you're using facts that aren't right.
And that fact is just not right.
LEHRER: Speaking of keepers of the scorecard, that's what I'm
trying to do here, Mr. Vice President, Governor Bush. We're going to
move on. We're going to have to move on.
All right, there were 12 questions on foreign and military
matters. And the first one that we're going to ask will be directed
to you, Governor Bush. And David Norwood (ph) is going to ask it.
Mr. Norwood (?), where are you? There you are.
QUESTION: What would you make -- what would make you the best
candidate in office during the Middle East crisis?
BUSH: I've been a leader. I've been a person that has to set a
clear vision and convince people to follow. I've got a strategy for
the Middle East.
And first, let me say that our nation now needs to speak with one
voice during this time. And I applaud the president for working hard
to defuse tensions.
BUSH: Our nation needs to be credible and strong. When we say
we're somebody's friend, everybody's got to believe it. Israel is our
friend, and we'll stand by Israel. We need to reach out to modern
Arab nations as well, to build coalitions to keep the peace.
I also -- the next leader needs to be patient. We can't put the
Middle East peace process on our timetable. It's got to be on the
timetable of the people that are trying -- that we're trying to bring
to the peace table. We can't dictate the terms of peace, which means
that we have to be steady. Can't worry about polls or focus groups.
Got to have a clear vision. That's what a leader does.
A leader also understands that the United States must be strong
to keep the peace. Saddam Hussein still is a threat in the Middle
East. Our coalition against Saddam is unraveling, the sanctions are
loosened. I -- the man who may be developing weapons of mass
destruction, we don't know because inspectors aren't in.
So to answer your question, it requires a clear vision,
willingness to stand by our friends, and the credibility for people,
both friend and foe, to understand when America says something, we
mean it.
LEHRER: Vice President Gore?
GORE: I see a future when the world is at peace, with the United
States of America promoting the values of democracy and human rights
and freedom all around the world.
(CORRECTED COPY: CORRECTS MATCH)
GORE: Even in Iran, they have had an election that began to
bring about some change. We stand for those values. And we have to
be willing to assert them. Right now, our military is the strongest
in the entire history of the world. I will -- I pledge to you, I will
do whatever is necessary to make sure that it stays that way.
Now, what can I bring to that challenge? When I was a young man,
my father was a senator opposed to the Vietnam War. When I graduated
from college, there were plenty of fancy ways to get out of going and
being a part of that. I went and I volunteered and I went to Vietnam.
I didn't do the most or run the gravest risk, by a long shot. But I
learned what it was like to be an enlisted man in the United States
Army.
In the Congress, in the House of Representatives, I served on the
House Intelligence Committee. And I worked hard to learn the subject
of nuclear arms control and how we can diffuse these tensions, and
deal with nonproliferation, and deal with the problems of terrorism,
and these new weapons of mass destruction.
Look, we're going to face some serious new challenges in the next
four years. I've worked on that long and hard. When I went to the
United States Senate, I asked for an assignment to the Armed Services
Committee. And while I was there, I worked on a bipartisan basis, as
I did in the House, I worked with former President Reagan to -- on the
modernization of our strategic weaponry.
In the Senate, I was one of only 10 Democrats, along with Senator
Joe Lieberman, to support Governor Bush's dad in the Persian Gulf War
resolution.
And for the last eight years, I've served on the National
Security Council...
LEHRER: Mr. Vice President...
GORE: Could I say just one other thing here?
LEHRER: No, sir. We'll get back with you.
The next question is to you...
GORE: Fine, I'll wait.
LEHRER: ... and it's a related -- it's a related question.
(CORRECTED COPY: CORRECTS MATCH)
LEHRER: It's going to be asked by Kenneth Allen (ph).
Mr. Allen (ph)?
GORE: All right. I think that he gets a -- he gets a -- oh, I'm
sorry, you're right. Go ahead.
LEHRER: Mr. Allen (ph), right there.
QUESTION: Mr. Vice President, today our military forces are
stretched thinner and doing more than they've ever done before during
a peacetime. I'd like to know what you -- I think we'd all like to
know what you as president would do to ensure proper resourcing for
the current mission and/or more selectively choosing the time and
place that our forces will be used around the world.
GORE: Thank you, sir.
Just to finish briefly, I started to say that for the last eight
years, I've been on the National Security Council. And last week I
broke off -- I suspended campaigning for two days or parts of two days
to go back and participate in the meetings that charted the
president's summit meeting that he just returned from earlier today.
And our team over -- our country's team over there did a great job.
It's a difficult situation.
The United States has to be strong in order to make sure that we
can help promote peace and security and stability, and that means
keeping our military strong.
Now, I said earlier that we are the strongest military, but we
need to continue improving readiness and making sure that our military
personnel are adequately paid, and that the combination of their pay
and their benefits and their retirement as veterans is comparable to
the stiff competition that's coming in this strong economy from the
private sector.
And we -- I have supported the largest pay raise in many a year.
And I support another one now.
I also support modernization of our strategic and tactical
weaponry. The governor has proposed skipping a generation of
technology. I think that's a -- I think that would be a mistake
because I think one of the ways we've been able to be so successful in
Kosovo and Bosnia and Haiti and in other places is by having the
technological edge. You know, we won that conflict in Kosovo without
losing a single human life in combat -- a single American life in
combat.
Now, readiness. The trends before we -- before I got my current
job were on the decline. The number of divisions were reduced. I
argued that we should reverse that trend and take it back up. And I'm
happy to tell you that we have.
Now, in my budget for the next -- for the next 10 years, I
propose $100 billion for this purpose. The governor proposes $45
billion. I propose more than twice as much because I think it's
needed.
LEHRER: Governor Bush, two minutes.
BUSH: If this were a spending contest, I'd come in second.
BUSH: I readily admit, I'm not going to grow the size of the
federal government like he is.
Your question was deployment. It must be in the national
interests. It must be in our vital interest whether we ever send
troops. The mission must be clear. Soldiers must understand why
we're going. The force must be strong enough so that the mission can
be accomplished. And the exit strategy needs to be well-defined.
I'm concerned that we're overdeployed around the world. You see,
I think the mission has somewhat become fuzzy.
Should I be fortunate enough to earn your confidence, the mission
of the United States military will be to be prepared and ready to
fight and win war, and therefore prevent war from happening in the
first place. There may be some moments when we use our troops as
peacekeepers, but not often.
The vice president mentioned my view of the long term for the
military. I want to make sure the equipment for our military is the
best it can possibly be, of course. But we have an opportunity. We
have an opportunity to use our research and development capacities,
the great technology of the United States, to make our military
lighter, harder to find, more lethal. We have an opportunity, really,
if you think about it, if we're smart and have got a strategic vision,
and a leader who understands strategic planning, to make sure that we
change the terms of the battlefield of the future, so that we can make
-- keep the peace.
This is a peaceful nation, and I intend to keep the peace.
Spending money is one thing, but spending money without a
strategic plan can oftentimes be wasted.
BUSH: First thing I'm going to do is ask the secretary of
defense to develop a plan so we're making sure we're not spending our
money on political projects, but on projects to make sure our soldiers
are well-paid, well-housed and have the best equipment in the world.
LEHRER: Governor Bush, another kind of gun question. It'll be
asked by Robert Lutz (ph).
Mr. Lutz (ph)?
QUESTION: Governor Bush.
BUSH: Yes, sir.
QUESTION: We'd just like to know, what is your opposition to the
Brady gun -- handgun bill?
BUSH: Could you -- I'm sorry I didn't hear that.
QUESTION: We'd like to know why you object to the Brady handgun
-- if you do object to it. Because in a recent TV ad, it showed that
the National Rifle Association says if you are elected that they will
be working out of your office. I can just see...
BUSH: I don't think the National Rifle Association ran that ad,
but let me just tell you my position on guns in general, sir, if you
don't mind.
LEHRER: I'm not -- excuse me, I'm not sure he's finished with
his question, Governor. I'm sorry.
BUSH: Oh, I'm sorry.
QUESTION: Well, actually that kind of bothers me, you know, when
I see that ad like that. I wonder if you could explain that ad to me.
BUSH: Well, I don't think I ran the ad; I think somebody who
doesn't want me to president might have run that ad. It's a -- that
wasn't my ad and I think it might have been one of my opponents' ads.
Here's what I believe, sir. I believe law-abiding citizens ought
to be allowed to protect themselves and their families. I believe
that we ought to keep guns out of the hands of people who shouldn't
have them. That's why I'm for instant background checks at gun shows.
I'm for trigger locks. I think that makes sense. Matter of fact, we
distributed free trigger locks in the state of Texas so that people
can get them and put them on their guns to make their guns more safe.
BUSH: I think we ought to raise the age at which juveniles can
have a gun.
But I also believe strongly that we need to enforce laws on the
books, that the best way to make sure that we keep our society safe
and secure is to hold people accountable for breaking the law. If we
catch somebody illegally selling a gun, there needs to be a
consequence. We keep -- somebody, you know, illegally using a gun,
there needs to be a consequence. Enforcement of law. And the federal
government can help.
There's a great program called Project Exile in Richmond,
Virginia. We focused federal taxpayers' money and federal prosecutors
and went after people who were illegally using guns. To me, that's
how you make society the safest it can be.
And so, yes, sometimes I agree with some of these groups in
Washington and sometimes I don't. I'm a pretty independent thinker.
But one thing I'm for is a safe society, and I'm for enforcing laws on
the books. And that's what's going to happen should I earn your
confidence.
LEHRER: Vice President Gore?
GORE: Well, it wasn't one of -- it was not one of my ads either,
Governor. But I am familiar with the statement, and it was made by
one of the top ranking officials of that organization.
Let me tell you my position. I think that some common-sense gun
safety measures are certainly needed with the flood of cheap handguns
that have sometimes been working their way into the hands of the wrong
people.
But all of my proposals are focused on that problem: gun safety.
None of my proposals would have any effect on hunters or sportsmen or
people who use rifles.
GORE: They're aimed at the real problem. Let's make our schools
safe. Let's make our neighborhoods safe. Let's have a three-day
waiting period, A cooling off, so we can have a background check to
make sure that criminals and people who really shouldn't have guns
don't get them.
But I'd like to use my remaining time on this exchange, Jim, to
respond to an exchange that took place just a moment ago, because a
couple of times the governor has said that I am for a bigger
government.
Governor, I'm not. And let me tell you what the record shows.
For the last eight years, I have had the challenge of running the
streamlining program called Reinventing Government. And if there are
any federal employees in this group, you know what that means.
The federal government has been reduced in size by more than
300,000 people, and it's now the smallest number that we have had
since -- the smallest in size since John Kennedy's administration.
During the last five years, Texas' government has gone up in size.
The federal government has gone down; Texas' government has gone up.
Now, my plan for the future, I see a time when we have smaller,
smarter government, where you don't have to wait in line because you
can get services online cheaper, better, faster. We can do that.
LEHRER: Steve Lukar (ph) has a question, and it is for Vice
President Gore.
Mr. Lukar (ph)? There you are.
QUESTION: Vice President Gore, the family farms are disappearing
and having a hard time, even in the current positive economic
environment.
(CORRECTED COPY: CORRECTS MATCH)
QUESTION: What steps would you or your administration take on
agricultural policy developments to protect the family farms for this
multifunctional service they perform?
GORE: We've got a bumper crop this year. But that's the good
news. You know what the bad news is that follows on that: The prices
are low.
In the last several years, the so-called Freedom to Farm Law has,
in my view, been mostly a failure. I want to change many of its
provisions.
Now, many here who are not involved in farming won't follow this,
so just forgive me, because the 2 percent of the country that is
involved in farming is important because the rest of us wouldn't eat
except for them.
And you guys have been having a hard time, and I want to fight
for you. I want to change those provisions. I want to restore a
meaningful safety net.
And I think that you pointed the way in your comments, because
when you say there are multiple things accomplished by farmers, you're
specifically including conservation and protection of the environment
-- and yes, farmers are the first environmentalists. And when they
decide not to plow a field that is vulnerable to soil erosion, that
may cost them a little money, but it helps the environment.
I think that we ought to have an expanded conservation reserve
program. And I think that the environmental benefits that come from
sound management of the land ought to represent a new way for farmers
to get some income that will enable them -- enable you to make
sensible choices in crop rotation and when you leave the land fallow
and the rest.
GORE: Now, I'll go beyond that and say I think we need much more
focused rural economic development programs.
I see a time when the Internet-based activities are more
available in the rural areas and where the extra source of income that
farm families used to have from shoe factories is replaced by an extra
source of income from working in the information economy.
So we need to do a lot of things, but we ought to start with a
better safety net.
LEHRER: Governor Bush, two minutes.
BUSH: I'd like our farmers feeding the world. We're the best in
the -- we're the best producers in the world. And I want -- I want
the farmers feeding the world. We need to open up markets.
Exports are down. And every time an export number goes down, it
hurts the farmer.
I want the next president to have fast track negotiating
authority to open up markets around the world. We're the best. We're
the most efficient, efficient farmers.
I don't want to use food as a diplomatic weapon from this point
forward. We shouldn't be using food. It hurts the farmers. It's not
the right thing to do.
I want -- I'm for value-added processing. We need more work on
value-added processing. You take the raw product you produce -- I
presume you're a farmer -- off your farm and convert it. I think
value-added process is important.
I'm for research and development, spending research and
development money so that we can use our technological base to figure
out new uses for farm products.
BUSH: I'm for getting rid of the death tax, completely getting
rid of the death tax. One reason family farmers are forced to sell
early is because of the death tax. This is a bad tax. The president
shouldn't have vetoed that bill. It's a tax that taxes people twice,
it penalizes the family farmer.
So should I be fortunate enough to earn your vote, I also -- I'm
going to open up markets, but I also understand that farming is a part
of our national security. I'm from a big farm state, the second-
biggest state -- farming state in the country, and I hear from my
farmer friends all the time.
The vice president's right, by the way, every day's Earth Day if
you own the land, and I like the -- I like the policies that'll
encourage farmers to put -- set aside land as well for conservation
purposes.
Thank you.
LEHRER: A quick thing on the inheritance taxes. There is a
difference between the two of you on this.
Vice President Gore...
GORE: Yes. I'm for a massive reform of the estate tax or the
death tax.
LEHRER: OK.
GORE: And under the plan that I've proposed, 80 percent of all
family farms will be completely exempt from the estate tax, and the
vast majority of all family businesses would be completely exempt, and
all of the others would have sharply reduced. So 80 percent.
Now, the problem with completely eliminating it goes back to the
wealthiest 1 percent. The amount of money that has to be raised in
taxes from middle class families to make up for completely eliminating
that on the very wealthiest, the billionaires, that would -- that
would be an extra heavy burden on middle class families.
GORE: And so, let's do it for most all, but not completely
eliminate it for the very top.
LEHRER: What's the case for doing that, Governor?
BUSH: Eliminating the death tax completely?
LEHRER: For everybody.
BUSH: Because people shouldn't be taxed twice on their assets.
It's either unfair for some or unfair for all.
Again, this is just a difference of opinion. If you're from
Washington, you want to pick and choose winners. I don't think that's
the role of the president. I think if you've got tax relief,
everybody benefits.
Secondly, I think your plan -- there's a lot of fine print in
your plan, Mr. Vice President, in all due respect. It is -- I'm not
so sure 80 percent of the people get -- get the death tax. I know
this, 100 percent'll get it if I -- if I'm the president.
I just don't think it's fair to tax people's assets twice,
regardless of your status. It's a fairness issue. It's an issue of
principle, not politics.
LEHRER: New issue. New issue, and the question will be asked by
Joyce Klinger (ph) of Governor Bush.
Joyce Klinger (ph)? There you are.
BUSH: Hi, Joyce.
QUESTION: Yes, hi, Governor. I'm very concerned about the
morality of our country now. TV, movies, the music that our children
are -- are, you know, barraged with every day. And I want to know if
there's anything that can be worked out with the -- Hollywood or
whoever to help get rid of some of this bad language and the --
whatever, you know. It's just bringing the country down. And our
children are very important to us. And we're concerned about their
education at school. We should be concerned about their education at
home, also.
BUSH: Yes.
QUESTION: Thank you.
BUSH: I appreciate that question. Laura and I are proud parents
of teenage girls, twin daughters, and I know what you're saying.
BUSH: Government ought to stand on the side of parents. Parents
are teaching their children right from wrong, and the message
oftentimes gets undermined by the popular culture.
You bet there's things the government can do. We can work with
the entertainment industry to provide family hour. We can have
filters on Internets where public money is spent. There ought to be
filters in public libraries, and filters in public schools, so that if
kids get on the Internet, there's not going to be pornography or
violence coming in.
I think we ought to have character education in our schools. I
know that doesn't directly talk about Hollywood, but it does reinforce
the values you're teaching. I'd greatly expand character education
funding, so that public schools will teach children values, values
which have stood the test of time.
There's after-school money available. I think that after-school
money ought to be available for faith-based programs, and charitable
programs that exist because somebody has heard the call to love a
neighbor like you'd like to be loved yourself. That will help
reinforce the values that parents teach at home as well.
I just -- ours is a great land. And one of the reasons why, is
because we're free. And so, I don't support censorship. But I do
believe that we ought to talk plainly to the Hollywood moguls and
people who produce this stuff, and explain the consequences. I think
we need to have rating systems that are clear. And I happen to like
the idea of having technology for the TV, easy for parents to use, so
you can tune out these programs that you don't want in your house.
BUSH: But I'm going to remind mothers and dads: The best weapon
is the off-on button, and paying attention to your children and eating
dinner with them. And being -- I'm sorry...
LEHRER: That's all right.
BUSH: ... showing my peer relation.
GORE: My turn.
LEHRER: Vice President Gore?
GORE: I care a lot about this. It's not just movies,
television, video games, music, the Internet. Parents now feel like
you have to compete with the mass culture in order to raise your kids
with the values that you want them to have.
Tipper and I have four children. And God bless them, everyone of
them decided on their own to come here this evening. I don't want to
embarrass our oldest daughter, she and her husband made us
grandparents almost a year and a half ago. And yet, if she'll forgive
me, when she was little, she brought a record home that had some awful
lyrics in it. And Tipper hit the ceiling. And that launched a
campaign to try to get the record companies to put ratings that --
warning labels for parents. And I'm so proud of what she accomplished
in getting them on there.
I've been involved myself in negotiating and helping to move
along the negotiations with the Internet service providers to get a
parents' protection page every time 95 percent of the pages come up.
And a feature that allows parents to automatically check, with one
click, what sites your kids have visited lately.
GORE: You know, some parents are worried about those filters,
that you'll have to ask your kids how to put them on there.
(LAUGHTER)
But if you can check up on them, then you -- that's real power.
And recently the Federal Trade Commission pointed out that some
of these entertainment companies have warned parents that the material
is inappropriate for children, and then they turned around behind the
backs of the parents and advertised that same adult material directly
to children. That is an outrage.
Joe Lieberman and I gave them six months to clean up their act.
And if they don't do it, we're going to ask for tougher authority in
the hands of the FTC on the false and deceptive advertising.
I'll tell you this: I want to do something about this -- respect
the First Amendment -- but I will do something to help you raise your
kids without that garbage.
LEHRER: Vice President, all right.
Vice President Gore, the next question is for you, and it will be
asked by Steven Koosman (ph).
Mr. Koosman (ph), where are you, sir? Right behind me as well.
There we go.
GORE: Right next to the last...
LEHRER: Yes, got it. Good planning.
QUESTION: It seems that when we hear about issues of this
campaign, it's usually Medicare, Social Security or prescription
drugs. As a college professor, I hear a lot of apathy amongst young
people...
GORE: Yes.
QUESTION: ... who feel that there are no issues directed to
them.
GORE: Yes.
QUESTION: And they don't plan to vote. How do you address that?
GORE: We've got to change it. I spend a good deal of time
talking to young people. And in my standard speech out there on the
stump, I usually end my speech by saying I want to ask you for
something and I want to direct it especially to the young people in
the audience.
GORE: And I want to tell you what I tell them: Sometimes people
who are very idealistic and have great dreams, as young people do, are
apt to stay at arm's length from the political process because they
think their good hearts might be brittle, and if they invest their
hopes and allow themselves to believe, then they're going to be let
down and disappointed.
But thank goodness we've always had enough people who have been
willing in every generation to push past the fear of a broken heart
and become deeply involved in forming a more perfect union. We're
America. And we believe in our future, and we know we have the
ability to shape our future.
Now, we've got to address one of the -- one of the biggest
threats to our democracy and that is the current campaign financing
system. And I know they say it doesn't rank anywhere on the polls. I
don't believe -- I don't believe that's a fair measure.
I'm telling you, I will make it -- I will make the McCain-
Feingold campaign finance reform bill the very first measure that I
send to the Congress as president.
Governor Bush opposes it. I wish that he would consider changing
his mind on that because I think that the special interests have too
much power, and we need to give our democracy back to the American
people.
Let me tell you why. Those issues you mentioned, Social
Security, prescription drugs, the big drug companies are against the
prescription drug proposal that I have made. The HMOs are against the
patients' rights bill -- the Dingell-Norwood bill that I support and
that Governor Bush does not support. The big oil companies are
against the measures to get more energy independence and renewable
fuels.
GORE: They ought to have their voices heard, but they shouldn't
have a big megaphone that drowns out the American people.
We need campaign finance reform, and we need to shoot straight
with young and old alike, and tell them what the real choices are.
And we can renew and rekindle the American spirit and make our future
what our founders dreamed it could be. We can.
LEHRER: Time.
Governor Bush, two minutes.
BUSH: I'll tell you what I hear. A lot of people are sick and
tired of the bitterness in Washington, D.C., and therefore they don't
want any part of politics. They look at Washington and see people
pointing fingers and casting blame and saying one thing and doing
another. There are a lot of young folks saying, you know, "Why do I
want to be involved with this mess?"
And what I think needs to happen, in order to encourage the young
to become involved, is to shoot straight, is to set aside the partisan
differences and set an agenda that will make sense.
Medicare -- I know you talked about it, but Medicare is relevant
for all of us, young and old alike. We better get it right now. Tax
reform is relevant for old and young alike. I don't think it's the
issues that turn kids off. I think it's the tone. I think it's the
attitude. I think it's a cynicism in Washington, and it doesn't have
to be that way.
Before I decided to run, I had to resolve two issues in my mind:
One, could our family endure all this business. And I came to the
conclusion that our love was strong enough to be able to do it. And
the other was, could an administration change the tone in Washington,
D.C.
BUSH: And I believe the answer is yes. Otherwise, I wouldn't be
asking for your vote.
That's what happened in Texas. We work together. There's a man
here in this audience named Hugo Belaga (ph). He's the chairman of
the health committee. He came here for a reason, to tell our record
on health in Texas. He's a Democrat. I didn't care whether he a
Republican or Democrat, what I cared about is could we work together?
That's what Washington, D.C., needs.
And finally, sir, to answer your question, it needs somebody in
office who'll tell the truth. That's the best way to get people back
in the system.
LEHRER: Governor Bush, Norma Kirby (ph) has the next question.
And it's for you.
Norma Kirby (ph), where are you?
BUSH: Hi, Norma.
QUESTION: Hi. How will your administration address diversity,
inclusiveness? And what role will affirmative action play in your
overall plan?
BUSH: I've had a record of bringing people from all walks of
life into my administration, and my administration is better off for
it in Texas. I going to find people that want to serve their country,
but I want a diverse administration. I think it's important.
I've worked hard in the state of Texas to make sure institutions
are -- reflect the state, with good, smart policy, policy that rejects
quotas. I don't like quotas. Quotas tend to pit one group of people
against another. Quotas are bad for America. It's not the way
America is all about. But policies that give people a helping hand so
they can help themselves.
BUSH: For example, in our state of Texas, I worked with the
legislature, both Republican and Democrats, to pass a law that said if
you come in the top 10 percent of your high school class, you're
automatically admitted to one of our higher institutions, higher
institutions of learning -- college. And as a result, our
universities are now more diverse. It's a smart thing to do. It's
what I called it -- I labeled it affirmative access.
I think the contracting business in government can help, not with
quotas, but help meet a goal of ownership of small businesses, for
example. The contracts need to be smaller. The agencies need to
recruit and to work hard to find people to bid on the state contracts.
I think we can do that in a way that represents what America is all
about, which is equal opportunity and the opportunity for people to
realize their potential.
So to answer your question, I support -- I guess the way to put
it is affirmative access. And I'll have an administration that will
make you proud. Thank you.
LEHRER: Vice President Gore?
GORE: I believe in this goal and this effort with all my heart.
I believe that our future as a nation depends upon whether or not we
can break down these barriers that have been used to pit group against
group and bring our people together. How do you do it? Well, you
establish respect for differences. You don't ignore differences.
It's all too easy for somebody in the majority in the population to
say, "Oh, we're just all the same," without an understanding of the
different life experience that you've had, that others have had.
(CORRECTED COPY: CORRECTS BUSH FOR GORE)
GORE: Once you have that understanding and mutual respect, then
we can transcend the differences and embrace the highest common
denominator of the American spirit.
I don't know what affirmative access means; I do know what
affirmative action means. I know the governor's against it and I know
that I'm for it.
I know what a hate crime statute pending at the national level is
all about, in the aftermath of James Byrd's death. I'm for that
proposed law; the governor is against it.
I know what it means to have a commitment to diversity. I am
part of an administration that has the finest record on diversity and,
incidentally, an excellent -- I mean, I think our success over the
last eight years has not been in spite of diversity, but because of
it, because we're able to draw on the wisdom and experience from
different parts of the society that hadn't been tapped in the same way
before.
And, incidentally, Mel Carnahan in Missouri had the finest record
on diversity of any governor in the entire history of the state of
Missouri, and I want to honor that, among his other achievements here.
Now, I just believe that what we have to do is enforce the civil
rights laws. I'm against quotas.
This is -- with all due respect, Governor, that's a red herring.
Affirmative action isn't quotas. I'm against quotas. They're
illegal. They're against the American way.
Affirmative action means that you take extra steps to acknowledge
the history of discrimination and injustice and prejudice, and bring
all people into the American dream because it helps everybody, not
just those who are directly benefited.
LEHRER: Governor, what is your -- are you opposed to affirmative
action?
BUSH: No. If affirmative action means quotas, I'm against it.
If affirmative action means what I just described, what I'm for, then
I'm for it. You heard what I was for.
The vice president keeps saying I'm against things. You heard
what I was for, and that's what I support.
LEHRER: What about -- Mr. Vice President, you heard what he
said.
GORE: He said if affirmative action means quotas, he's against
it. Affirmative action doesn't mean quotas.
BUSH: Good.
GORE: Are you for it without quotas?
BUSH: I may not be for your version, Mr. Vice President. But
I'm for what I just described to the lady. She heard my answer.
GORE: Are you for what the Supreme Court says is a
constitutional way of having affirmative action?
BUSH: Jim, is this...
LEHRER: Let's go on to another...
(LAUGHTER)
GORE: I think that speaks for itself.
BUSH: No. Doesn't speak for itself, Mr. Vice President. It
speaks for the fact that there are certain rules in this that we all
agreed to, but evidently rules don't mean anything.
LEHRER: The question is for you, Vice President Gore. And Lisa
Key (ph) will ask it.
Lisa Key (ph) where are you? There we go, sorry.
QUESTION: How will your tax proposals affect me as a middle
class 34-year-old single person with no dependents?
GORE: If you make less than $60,000 a year and you decide to
invest $1,000 in a savings account, you'll get a tax credit which
means in essence that the federal government will match your $1,000
with another $1,000. If you make less than $30,000 a year and you put
$500 in a savings account, the federal government will match it with
$1,500.
GORE: If you make more than $60,000, up to a $100,000, you'll
still get a match, but not as generous.
You will get access to lifelong learning and education, help with
tuition, if you want to get a new skill or training. If you want to
purchase health insurance, you will get help with that. If you want
to participate in some of the dynamic changes that are going on in our
country, you will get specific help in doing that.
If you are part of the bottom 20 percent or so of wage earners,
then you will get an expanded Earned Income Tax Credit.
Now, the tax relief that I propose is directed specifically at
middle income individuals and families. And if you have an elderly
parent or grandparent, who needs long-term care, then you will get
help with that -- a $3,000 tax credit to help your expenses in taking
care of a loved one who needs long-term care.
LEHRER: Governor Bush?
BUSH: Right, let me just say, the first -- this business about
the entitlement he tried to describe about savings -- you know,
matching savings here, and matching savings there -- if fully funded
is going to cost a whole lot of money, a lot more than we have.
You're going to get tax relief under my plan. You're not going
to be targeted in or targeted out. Everybody who pays taxes is going
to get tax relief. If you take care of an elderly in your home,
you're going to get the personal exemption increased.
I think also what you need to think about is not the immediate,
but what about Medicare?
BUSH: You get a plan that will include prescription drugs, a
plan that will give you options.
Now, I hope people understand that Medicare today is -- is -- is
-- is important, but it doesn't keep up with the new medicines. If
you're a Medicare person, on Medicare, you don't get the new -- new
procedures. You're stuck in a time warp in many ways.
So it will be a modern Medicare system that trusts you to make a
variety of options for you.
You're going to live in a peaceful world. It will be a world of
peace, because we're going to have a clearer -- clear-sighted foreign
policy, based upon a strong military, and a mission that stands by our
friends, a mission that doesn't try to be all things to all people --
a judicious use of the military which will help keep the peace.
You'll be in a world hopefully that's more educated so it's less
likely you'll be harmed in your neighborhood. See, an educated child
is one much more likely to be hopeful and optimistic.
You'll be in a world which fits into my philosophy, you know, the
harder work -- the harder you work, the more you can keep. It's the
American way. Government shouldn't be a heavy hand. It's what the
federal government does to you. It should be a helping hand. And tax
relief and proposals I just described should be a good helping hand.
LEHRER: Governor, the next question is for you. And Leo
Anderson (ph) will ask it.
Mr. Anderson (ph)?
BUSH: Hi, Leo (ph). What, you want a mike?
QUESTION: In one of the last debates held, the subject of
capital punishment came up.
QUESTION: And in your response to the question you seemed to
overly enjoy, as a matter of fact proud that Texas leads the -- led
the nation in execution of prisoners.
Sir, did I misread your respond, and are you really, really proud
of the fact that Texas is number one in executions?
BUSH: No, I'm not proud of that. The death penalty is very
serious business, Leo. It's an issue that good people obviously
disagree on. I take my job seriously, and I -- if you think I was
proud of it, I think you misread me, I do.
I was sworn to uphold the laws of my state. During the course of
the campaign in 1994 I was asked: Do you support the death penalty?
I said I did, if administered fairly and justly, because I believe it
saves lives. Well, I do. I think if it's administered swiftly,
justly and fairly, it saves lives.
One of the things that happens when you're a governor, oftentimes
you have to make tough decisions, and you can't let public persuasion
sway you, because the job's to enforce the law. And that's what I
did, sir.
Have been some tough cases come across my desk. Some of the
hardest moments since I've been the governor of the state of Texas is
to deal with those cases.
But my job is to ask two questions, sir. Is the person guilty of
the crime? And did the person have full access to the courts of law?
And I can tell you, looking at you right now, in all cases those
answers were affirmative.
BUSH: I'm not proud of any record. I'm proud of the fact that
violent crime is down in the state of Texas. I'm proud of the fact
that we hold people accountable. But I'm not proud of any record,
sir, no.
LEHRER: Vice President Gore?
GORE: I support the death penalty. I think that it has to be
administered not only fairly, with attention to things like DNA
evidence, which I think should be used in all capital cases, but also
with very careful attention. If, for example, somebody confesses to
the crime and somebody's waiting on death row, there has to be
alertness to say, wait a minute, have we got the wrong guy?
If the wrong guy is put to death, then that's a double tragedy.
Not only has an innocent person been executed but the real perpetrator
of the crime has not been held accountable for it, and in some cases
may be still at large. But I support the death penalty in the most
heinous cases.
LEHRER: Do both of you believe that the death penalty actually
deters crime?
Governor?
BUSH: I do, that's the only reason to be for it. Let me finish
that -- I don't think you should support the death penalty to seek
revenge. I don't think that's right. I think the reason to support
the death penalty is because it saves other people's lives.
LEHRER: Vice President Gore?
GORE: I think it is a deterrence. I know that's a controversial
view, but I do believe it's a deterrence.
LEHRER: All right.
Next question is for you, Vice President Gore, and Thomas Fisher
(ph) will ask it.
Mr. Fisher (ph)?
QUESTION: Yes, my sixth grade class at St. Clair (ph) School
wanted to ask of all these promises you guys are making and all the
pledges, will you keep them when you're in office?
GORE: Yes.
(LAUGHTER)
I am a person who keeps promises. And you know, we've heard a
lot from the governor about not much being done in the last eight
years, as if the promises that I made eight years ago have not been
kept. I think the record shows otherwise.
We have gone from the biggest deficits, eight years ago, to the
biggest surpluses in history today. Instead of high unemployment, we
now have the lowest African-American unemployment, the lowest Latino
unemployment ever measured, 22 million new jobs, very low unemployment
nationally. Instead of ballooning the debt and multiplying it four
times over, we have seen the debt actually begun to be paid down.
Here are some promises that I'll make to you now. I will balance
the budget every year. I will pay down the debt every year. I will
give middle class Americans tax cuts -- meaningful ones. And I will
invest in education, health care, protecting the environment and
retirement security.
We both made promises in this campaign. I promise you I will
keep mine. Let me tell you about one of the governor's.
GORE: He has promised a trillion dollars out of the Social
Security trust fund for young working adults to invest and save on
their own. But he's promised seniors that their Social Security
benefits will not be cut, and he's promised the same trillion dollars
to them. So this is the "Show Me" state, reminds me the line from the
movie, "Show me the money." Which one of those promises will you keep
and which will you break, Governor?
LEHRER: Governor Bush?
BUSH: Thank you for your question.
(LAUGHTER)
I -- there's an old high school debating trick, which is to
answer something and then attack your opponent at the end. Now, you
asked about promises. You were promised that Medicare would be
reformed, and that Social Security would be reformed. You were
promised a middle class tax cut in 1992. It didn't happen.
There's too much bitterness in Washington. There's too much
wrangling. It's time to have a fresh start. One of the reasons I was
successful as the governor of Texas is because I didn't try to be all
things to all people. When I campaigned in a race a lot of folks
didn't think I could win, including, by the way, my mother...
(LAUGHTER)
... I said I'd do four things: tort reform, education reform,
welfare reform and juvenile justice reform. And I won and I had the
will of the people in my state behind me, and then I brought folks
together to get it done. And that's what we need, I think, in this
election.
BUSH: To me, that's what it's all about. I know, listen, I'm
sure your sixth grade kids are listening -- "These guys will say
anything to get elected." But there's a record. That's what other
people look at. And one of my promises is going to be Social Security
reform, and you bet we need to take a trillion dollar -- trillion
dollars out of that $2.4 trillion surplus.
Now, remember, Social Security revenue exceeds expenses up until
2015. People are going to get paid. But if you're a younger worker,
if you're younger, you better hope this country thinks differently,
otherwise you're going to be faced with huge payroll taxes or reduced
benefits. And you bet we're going to take a trillion dollars of your
own money and let you invest it under safe guidelines to get a better
rate of return on the money than the paltry 2 percent that the federal
government gets for you today. That's one of my promises.
But it's going to require people to bring both Republicans and
Democrats together to get it done. That's what it requires. There's
a chance to get this done. There's bipartisan -- bipartisan approach,
but it's been rejected. I'm going to bring them together.
LEHRER: Both of you -- to both of you, on this subject, there
are other questions that also go to this skepticism, not necessarily
about you but all people in politics. Why is that?
GORE: Well, first of all, Jim, I'd like to -- I'd like to
respond to what the governor just said because the trillion dollars
that has been promised the young people has also been promised to
older people. And you cannot keep both promises. If you're in your
mid-40s, under the governor's plan, Social Security will be bankrupt
by the time you retire, if he takes it out of the Social Security
trust fund.
Under my plan, it will be -- its solvency will be extended until
you're 100.
GORE: Now, that is the difference. And the governor may not
want to answer that question, he may want to call it a high school
debating trick, but let me tell you this: This election is not about
debating tricks; it is about your future.
The reason Social Security -- he says it gets 2 percent. You
know, it's not a bank account, it -- that just pays back money that's
invested. It is also used to give your mothers and fathers the Social
Security checks that they live on. If you take a trillion dollars out
of that Social Security trust fund, how are the checks going to -- how
are you going to keep faith with the seniors?
Now, let me come -- let me come directly to your point...
LEHRER: No, I think we're -- we have to go to the closing
statements and...
BUSH: Could I answer that? One reason people are skeptical is
because people don't answer the questions they've been asked.
(LAUGHTER)
The trillion dollars comes out of the surplus so that you can
invest some of your own money. There's just a difference of opinion.
I want workers to have their own assets. Who do you trust, the
government or the people?
LEHRER: Now we're going to go to a closing statement.
GORE: Great.
LEHRER: Vice President Gore, you're first.
GORE: Thank you.
LEHRER: You have two minutes.
GORE: Thank you very much, Jim. And I'll begin by answering
your questions -- your last question.
I believe that a lot of people are skeptical about people in
politics today because we have seen a time of great challenge for our
country, since the assassination of our best leaders in the '60s,
since the Vietnam War, since Watergate, and because we need campaign
finance reform.
I'd like to tell you something about me. I keep my word. I have
kept the faith.
GORE: I've kept the faith with my country. I volunteered for
the Army. I served in Vietnam.
I kept the faith with my family. Tipper and I have been married
for 30 years. We have devoted ourselves to our children, and now our
nearly one-and-a-half-year-old grandson.
I have kept the faith with our country. Nine times I have raised
my hand to take an oath to the Constitution, and I have never violated
that oath.
I have not spent the last quarter century in pursuit of personal
wealth. I have spent the last quarter century fighting for middle-
class, working men and women in the United States of America.
I believe very deeply that you have to be willing to stand up and
fight, no matter what powerful forces might be on the other side. If
you want somebody who is willing to fight for you, I am asking for
your support and your vote, and, yes, your confidence, and your
willingness to believe that we can do the right thing in America and
be the better for it.
We've made some progress during the last eight years. We have
seen the strongest economy in the history of the United States, lower
crime rates for eight years in a row, highest private home ownership
ever.
But I'll make you one promise here: You ain't seen nothing yet.
And I will keep that promise.
LEHRER: Governor Bush, two minutes.
BUSH: Well, Jim, I want to thank you and thank the folks here at
Washington University and the vice president. Appreciate the chance
to have a good, honest dialogue about our differences of opinion. And
I think after the three debates, the good people of this country
understand there is a difference of opinion.
BUSH: It's the difference between big federal government and
somebody who's coming from outside of Washington who will trust
individuals.
I've got an agenda that I want to get done for the country. It's
an agenda that says we're going to reform Medicare to make sure
seniors have got prescription drugs and to give seniors different
options from which they can choose.
It's an agenda that says we're going to listen to the young
voices in Social Security and say we're going to think differently
about making sure we have a system, but also fulfill the promise to
the seniors in America. A promise made will be a promise kept should
I be fortunate enough to become your president.
I want to rebuild the military to keep the peace.
I want to make sure the public school system in America fulfills
its promise so that no child, not one child, is left behind.
And after setting priorities, I want to give some of the -- some
of your money back. See, I don't think the surplus is the
government's money, I think it's the people's money. I don't think
the surplus exists because of the ingenuity and hard work of the
federal government. I think it exists because of the ingenuity and
hard work of the American people. And you ought to have some of the
surplus so you can save and dream and build.
I look forward to the final weeks of this campaign. I'm asking
for your vote. For those of you for me, thanks for your help. For
those of you for my opponent, please only vote once.
(LAUGHTER)
But for those who have not made up their mind, I'd like to
conclude by this promise. Should I be fortunate enough to become your
president, when I put my hand on the Bible, I will swear to not only
uphold the laws of the land, but I will also swear to uphold the honor
and the dignity the office to which I have been elected, so help me
God.
Thank you very much.
LEHRER: A closing piece of business before we go.
LEHRER: The debate commission wants reaction to the three kinds
of formats used in the debates this year, and you may register an
opinion at their web site, www.debates.org.
Thank you, Vice President Gore, Governor Bush.
From St. Louis, I'm Jim Lehrer. Thank you and good night.
(APPLAUSE)
END
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