April 10, 1995
Remarks by Senator Bob Dole
Official Announcement
Topeka, Kansas
Thank you, Governor Graves, Senator Kassebaum. Good morning friends --
Elizabeth, Robin, and I thank you for that tremendous welcome. It's great to
be in Kansas. Of course, I'm not the first Kansan to say, "there's no
place like home." But for me, the words have special meaning. Wherever I
have traveled in this life, I have never forgotten where I came from -- or
where I go home to.
Whatever lessons I have applied in public life were first learned here as a
member of the Kansas House of Representatives. These days I spend much of my
time in another capitol. You see many things from atop the hill in Washington
where I work -- but you can see America from here.
Common sense and uncommon sensitivity: that's the Kansas way. It's what made
Dwight Eisenhower a great general and a great President. And it's what
prompted Alf Landon with his unique wisdom to say, "there are some
intelligent people in Washington, but there are more of 'em in Kansas." I
hasten to add the same applies to forty nine other states.
But then, Kansans have never had to look to Washington, DC for a sense of
compassion or community. As a young man in a small town my parents taught me
to put my trust in God, not government, and never confuse the two. Something
else I learned, learned the hard way -- that while self reliance is an
essential part of the American character, so is the spirit of community that
reaches out to those wounded in body or soul.
When I went off to war it was to defend a community of values unique in all
the world. I came back sustained by the love and generosity of friends and
neighbors who renewed my sense of life's possibilities. Over the years they
have given me opportunities for service which I can never hope to repay.
Because they restored my spirit in a time of trial I have dedicated myself to
restoring the spirit of America. And so today, tempered by adversity, seasoned
by experience, mindful of the world as it is -- yet confident it can be made
better -- I have come home to Kansas with a grateful heart to declare that I
am a candidate for the Presidency of the United States.
The view many Americans see this morning is a sobering one. We are troubled
about the direction our country is taking. Our values are under constant
assault from our public and cultural institutions. We feel threatened by the
random incidents of violent crime. Too many of our schools, which were once
passports to opportunity, have become demoralizing places. Welfare has become
a misery subsidy fostering illegitimacy and generations of dependency. And yet
the deficit keeps growing, taxes keep increasing, and the government keeps
demanding more and more authority over our lives.
None of this should come as a surprise. For much of this century power and
wealth alike have flowed from grassroots Americans to a federal government
which exploded to meet the twin crises of economic depression and global war.
Yet, the lifejacket of one generation can become the straightjacket of the
next. In giving to Washington our responsibility to address problems close to
their source, Americans have unwittingly encouraged the Federal government to
become too large, too remote, too unresponsive, and too undemocratic to be
representative.
However, another America is waiting -- an America strong again in heart and
sure of mind. I would like to lead us there.
Our problems are not too difficult to handle. It's just that our leaders have
grown too isolated from places like Topeka -- embarrassed by the values here.
They seem to have lost the idea that we are -- and must remain -- one nation
under God. We are bound by our heritage to a set of common values: hard work,
integrity, responsibility -- these values have always been the source of our
strength and the glue that holds us together.
Our country must again have leaders who believe in our people and are proud of
our values. We need leaders who will summon from each of us the best of our
character, who will call us as a nation to our full potential. I want to be
president so I can do this for America.
My mandate as President would be to rein in the Federal government in order to
set free the spirit of the American people; to reconnect our government in
Washington with the common sense values of our citizens; and to reassert
American interests wherever and whenever they are challenged around the world.
My guide in this would be the final piece of the Bill of Rights -- the Tenth
Amendment. It reads, "The powers not delegated to the United States by
the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the
states ... or to the people."
When those words were written by our Founding Fathers more than 200 years ago,
they were an affirmation of a radical new theory of politics -- a theory based
on the need to limit the powers of the central government in order to unleash
the unlimited potential of the people. The Federal government should do only
those things specifically called for in the Constitution. All others should
remain with the states or the people. It is a philosophy of freedom conceived
in liberty, tested by history, yet too often ignored in Washington. I intend
to restore it.
In the last election, the American people sent an unmistakable message to
Washington. With rare clarity, they reaffirmed their faith in themselves and a
healthy amount of skepticism about government.
If we are truly to rein in government, we must have a President who is more
than a clever apologist for the status quo. In 1992, Bill Clinton ran for
president as the candidate of change. In 1996, he will seek reelection as a
candidate pledged to prevent change at all cost.
We need a President who will do more than say "no" to every spending
cut, "no" to every attempt to return power and money to the states.
We need a President who shares our values, embraces our agenda and who will
lead the fight for the fundamental change America chose last November. We need
a President who will say "yes" to the American people, and that is
the kind of President I intend to be.
And while on the subject of creating a government that will say
"yes" to the American people, let me make one fundamental belief
crystal clear: we can cut taxes and balance the budget. Middle class families
are forced to send too much of their hard-earned money to Washington. We
should provide a tax credit for children and remove the marriage penalty to
strengthen our families. And we should cut the capital gains tax to stimulate
economic growth, create new jobs, and expand opportunity for all our people.
That is just the first step, not the last. We need a president committed to
making our tax system lower, fairer, flatter, simpler -- so that ordinary
people like you and me could fill out our tax form without a lawyer or an
accountant or both.
Balancing the budget will also be a top priority; we cannot continue
mortgaging our children's future. We will give the President the line item
veto and we will give the American people a Balanced Budget Amendment.
But that is only the beginning. Reining in the government means streamlining
the entire Federal bureaucracy, getting its nose out of places the government
just shouldn't be. We should work our way through the alphabet soup of
government, asking this question: Is this program a basic function of limited
government, or is it an example of how government has lost faith in the
judgment of our people?
The best place to begin is with four of the most ineffective, burdensome and
meddlesome departments: Education, Housing and Urban Development, Energy, and
Commerce. Together they spend more than $74 billion per year and employ more
than 74,000 workers.
Let's close down the Education Department and spend the money on our children,
not bureaucracies and red tape; and let's implement school choice to return
power to parents. HUD has become a cash cow for big city mayors and the
well-connected. We should give housing vouchers to those who need them and get
the government out of the landlord business altogether. Energy would function
better as an agency within the Department of Defense. And more than half of
what the Department of Commerce does has nothing to do with commerce or trade
-- duplicated by 71 other governmental departments, agencies, and offices.
And there are other questions we should ask. We spend hundreds of millions of
dollars on the Endowments for the Arts and Humanities. Why is the Federal
government in the culture business? In this explosion of the information age,
why do we have a Corporation for Public Broadcasting?
There are a host of other areas that cry out for reform. I will be talking
about them at greater length in the year ahead. Welfare is one. The Federal
system has failed. Why are liberals in Washington so afraid to turn welfare
decision-making over to our governors and state legislatures? There is already
considerable evidence that they can do much better.
Affirmative action is another Federal policy out of control. Discrimination is
wrong, immoral. This is America. We should have a color blind society. But
fighting discrimination should never be used to divide Americans by race,
ethnic background, or gender.
There is one area where the Federal government must work in partnership with
our state and local governments -- and that area is crime. Today, a criminal
committing a serious crime has less than a ten percent chance of going to
jail. And once in jail that criminal will serve only a fraction of his
sentence.
We should put an end to parole for violent offenders. Put limits on the
endless and often frivolous appeals clogging our courts. Remove teenagers who
commit serious, violent crimes from juvenile courts and try them as adults. We
should be more concerned with the rights of victims than the privileges of
criminals. And we must rededicate ourselves to the war on drugs.
Finally, let me touch for a moment on America's place in the world. There is
one responsibility only the Federal government has, and that is to protect our
freedom. We must never be reluctant about our greatness or ashamed of our
national strength.
We must stop placing the agenda of the United Nations before the interests of
the United States. When we take our revolution to the White House in 1996, we
will vow that American policies will be determined by us, not by the United
Nations. Let us remember that America has been the greatest force for good the
world has ever known.
I was reminded of that on the 50th anniversary of D-Day last summer, when the
eyes of the world were focused on the beaches of France. I was there and
witnessed the emotion as memories came flooding back -- memories of the
heroism, the sacrifices and pain men and women suffered.
Before visiting France, I traveled to Northern Italy where I served in the
10th Mountain Division. While revisiting the battle sites, I thought about why
we had been sent there, about the America of our youth, the America we were
risking our lives to protect, and about our hopes for the generations who
would follow us. And then I thought about the America we live in now -- an
America still great and still the beacon of freedom around the world, but an
America that is headed in the wrong direction.
Standing there gazing across those peaceful fields I thought of why it is
critical to have a president who knows what made America great, who knows what
has been sacrificed to keep us free, and who would do all in his power to lead
America back to her place in the sun.
My friends, I have the experience. I've been tested, tested in many ways. I am
not afraid to lead, and I know the way. Let us rein in our government to set
the spirit of the American people free. Let us renew our moral convictions and
strengthen our families by returning to fundamental values. Together, let us
reassert our rightful place as a great nation.
We should do it for ourselves -- we owe it to our children. We must act to be
worthy of the gift our ancestors sacrificed so much for: to ensure the next
century will dawn on a new beginning of American greatness ... prosperity ...
and freedom. Let us do it together. Let us begin today.
Thank you
Paid for by Dole/Kemp '96
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