June 6, 1985
Mr. Chairman, Mr. Mayor, Senator Denton, Mrs. Denton, all of you, thank you all very much.
You know, listening to Jerry, I was reminded of what a great general of ours said when he was
asked about any secret weapons we might possess in World War II. And he said that our secret
weapon was just the best darned kids in the world. Well, whenever I'm with Jerry, I see that one
of the best darned kids grew up into one of the best darned officers and now is one of the best
darned Senators in the United States Congress.
Jerry and I came into office in the same year, 1981, and for the last 4\1/2\ years, he's been a pillar
of support for our efforts to keep America strong and free and true. He's been rated the most
conservative Senator by the National Journal. That's my kind of Senator. His voting record has
been rated 100 percent by the American Conservative Union, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce,
the Conservatives Against Liberal Legislation -- I like the name of that one -- the National
Alliance of Senior Citizens, the Christian Voters Victory Fund, and some others. The magazine,
Conservative Digest, took a poll of its readers, and Jerry Denton was their second most admired
Senator. Now, knowing Jerry, he's probably wondering where he slipped up. But that's all right
because we're going to make sure that you have at least another 6 years to make number one.
He's more than one voice and one vote in the Senate. He's one of the most persuasive leaders on
the Hill. And he's also one of the most effective spokesmen I know for the interests of his State,
this proud and growing State of Alabama, which, as he says so well, is marching confidently into
the future.
One example of Jerry's abilities in looking out for Alabama is the Tenn-Tom Waterway, which,
due in great part to his support and leadership, was completed ahead of schedule.
We're also joined tonight with three very able State leaders -- State Republican Chairman Emory
Folmar, who also did a tremendous job for us as his finance chairman in the campaign, and from
the Republican National Committee, Perry Hooper and Jean Sullivan. I also want to recognize the
job that's being done by Congressman Bill Dickinson and Sonny Callahan. I don't know if Sonny
claims any relation to Harry Callahan, but after all he's done, he really makes my day.
[Laughter]
Jerry's been telling me about the progress of Operation Open Door, the program that's been set up
to bring Democrats into the Republican fold. So, let me pause right here and congratulate all of
you. Welcome on board. And those of you made the decision in the Grand Old Party. Nowadays,
we also call it the Great Opportunity Party. Switching to the Republican Party is rapidly becoming
a venerable tradition -- Sonny and Emory are both Republican converts and, well, so is the
President of the United States. [Laughter]
I know from personal experience how hard it can be to make the change from Democrat to
Republican. I also know that there comes a time when you look in your heart and realize that it
may be hard to change, but it's just something that you've got to do. Party loyalty can be mighty
fierce, though.
We all know that story about way back when -- probably one of the first Republicans was running
here in the South for office, out soliciting votes, and he was rejected by one gentleman who said
to him, ``I'm a Democrat, always been a Democrat, my pappy was a Democrat, and my
grandpappy was a Democrat.'' And the candidates made the mistake of saying, ``Well, if your
pappy was a jackass and your grandpappy was a jackass, what would that make you?'' And he
says, ``A Republican.'' [Laughter]
But I think all that's changing. While a lot of Democrats have stood fast by their principles, the
party has been pulled out from under their feet by a kind of left-wing leadership. I know it's what
made me change, and I found the answer and will suggest it to others who maybe are considering
it. As I say, I know the pain. It was like changing your religion. And I was converted in principle
before I could still bring myself to make that change in party. And then I heard the words of
another man who had changed party, Winston Churchill. And Winston said, ``Some men change
principle for party and some change party for principle.''
A lot of Democrats supported Senator Denton and me in 1980, and we're very grateful. And we
just want to say to any registered Democrats out there who might not be so happy about the
direction their party is heading: If you're looking for a new home the Republican Party has a
welcome mat out, and the doors are wide open. Come on over. And I can tell you, if you really
look back -- and I look back to that first vote that I cast in 1932 as a Democrat and others that I
cast subsequently -- and I remember what I voted for, not who. And then the time came when I
realized that what I had voted for there -- reduction of the Federal Government in cost,
elimination of useless boards and commissions, States rights -- not protectionism, but free trade.
The leadership of the Democratic Party today does not represent those things, but millions of
rank-and-file patriotic Democrats throughout the Nation represent those things, and I believe that
we're trying to represent them in the leadership of the Republican Party. So, you're welcome.
Well, today, June 6th is a double anniversary. It marks the day, 41 years ago, that the allies won
Normandy beach and the day, 39 years ago, that Jerry won his lovely bride, Jane, and convinced
her to marry him. Happy anniversary. Congratulations to you both.
That coincidence kind of makes you think how closely intertwined our families, our faith, and our
communities are with the freedom that we cherish. The family is the guardian of our most
treasured possessions -- our values of loyalty, chastity, and love and our belief in human dignity
and the incalculable worth of each individual life -- and through the family, each generation passes
these values on to the next as a sacred inheritance. It's the family that civilizes us, that keeps us
human, and ensures that our future will be humane.
Totalitarian ideologies, in their drive to subvert human nature, will always be hostile to the family
and its transcendent loyalties. We have seen that today in Russian totalitarianism; the taking over
of the children by the state, the virtual elimination of family control. But free and democratic
nations must be sure to honor, protect, and nourish their families as if their very survival depended
on it, because in truth it does.
In his 4\1/2\ years in the Senate, Jerry's been an untiring advocate of the family, and I might say
his seven children and eight grandchildren attest to the fact that he practices what he preaches.
[Laughter]
Jerry established and chairs the Senate Caucus on the Family. He's been a leader in the fight
against child abuse, and his adolescent family life act has been on the books since 1981, helping to
combat the tragedy of adolescent pregnancy. And Jerry knows that families don't hand over to the
State all rights to their children when they walk through the front door on their way to school. I
know there's been a strong push here in Birmingham to help restore voluntary prayer in public
schools. As this week's Supreme Court decision shows, we still have an uphill battle before us.
So, I hope we can also count on the support of Alabama's entire congressional delegation for our
prayer amendment, because it is time it was adopted.
Last year with the passage of the Equal Access Act, Jerry made sure that student religious groups
have the same rights as other student groups. Thomas Jefferson said, ``The God who gave us life
gave us liberty.'' Well, thanks to Jerry's determined efforts, Alabama schoolchildren now have a
little more liberty to thank their God for both these great gifts.
Last week I announced our plan to completely overhaul our nation's tax structure and replace it
with one that's fairer, simpler, more compassionate, and most importantly, one that gives the
American family a long-overdue break. As I said then, our proposal is the strongest profamily
initiative in postwar history. First, it will take the tax lid off our economy and make America an
engine of economic growth and job creation. We've called it America's tax plan, and I'm
convinced that it is quite simply the most effective jobs creation bill that ever came before the
United States Congress. We're not going to rest until every American who wants a job has a job,
until the doors of opportunity are open so wide that everyone from the inner cities to the
countryside can walk right on through.
We're also going to give immediate tax relief to America's families by nearly doubling the personal
exemption, raising the standard deduction, lowering income tax rates, and making tax-deductible
IRA accounts fully available to homemakers, so that spouses that choose to stay home and take
care of the children are no longer penalized. Through our plan, a family of four wouldn't pay a
cent in Federal income tax on the first $12,000 of income and only 15 cents on the dollar up to
$29,000 of taxable income.
Our tax proposal will right the injustices in the old system, help families, and increase economic
opportunity. There are two things that our tax plan will not do, however. It will not expand the
deficit, and it will not raise taxes. Now, I'm glad that some forward-looking Democrats in
Congress have decided to join hands with us and work alongside their Republican colleagues to
remold our tax system along the lines of fairness, simplicity, and economic growth. Since Rosty [Representative Dan Rostenkowski of Illinois] and I went on TV urging tax change, Washington has been deluged under a
mountain of letters and telegrams, most with one very simple message: America, go for it! Well,
all I have to say is, keep those cards and letters coming, folks.
I can only hope that this emerging spirit of bipartisanship will also transfer to the transcendent
moral issue of our time -- the support and protection of freedom from the assault of communism.
Sooner or later, we're all forced to shed any illusions we may have had about Communist regimes.
Jeremiah Denton knows from experience what communism means. He wrote about it graphically
in a book called, ``When Hell was in Session.'' And we're all seeing that communism has become
synonymous with starvation, terror, brutality, and prison camps.
Some would like to ignore Nicaragua's connection to the international terrorist network, the PLO,
Libya, and the followers of the Ayatollah Khomeini, who now -- thanks to the Sandinista
Communists -- have a foothold in Central America, just 2 hours by air from our southern border.
Some would like to ignore the incontrovertible evidence of the Communist religious persecution
of Catholics, Jews, and fundamentalists; of their campaign of virtual genocide against the Miskito
Indians; of their attempted subversion of their free, democratic neighbors.
When it comes to the Communists in Nicaragua, some have adopted a see no, hear no evil, speak
no evil attitude. But as the refugees come flooding out of Nicaragua, it becomes harder and
harder not to hear their cries of anguish, not to see the suffering of their shattered lives. And it
becomes all but impossible not to speak out against the tragedy the Communists are inflicting on
their country.
I remember in Washington a few weeks back meeting a young man who was a fundamentalist
preacher in Nicaragua. His face was simply a gargoyle. He had prayed, and they came in the night,
the military, with the Sandinistas, and took him out, tied him to a pillar of the house where he was
sleeping and then threw gasoline in the house and set it on fire. Well, fortunately, the fires burned
the ropes before they could kill him. But he, with his clothing in flames and his body in flames,
fled. Campesinos found him, took him to a hospital. He had to hide who he was and how this had
happened, or they would have caught him again. And he was in Washington, there, still speaking
out for what he believes in. And what was his sin in the eyes of the Sandinista government? He'd
prayed and prayed with some of the people, the citizens there who still wanted to have
religion.
When it comes to the Communists and what they're doing to their country, well, Daniel Ortega's
money-run to the Soviet Union should have come as no surprise. Still, for many, it took this last
trip to dispel their final illusions and to make it clear that the Nicaraguan Communists are no more
and no less than agents of Soviet expansionism and the sworn enemies of freedom.
But still, in spite of what some keep saying, we remain committed to a peaceful solution. And so
do the democratic opposition in Nicaragua. But while they're waiting for their own government to
talk to them, they must survive. And that's what our assistance is designed to do -- to give peace a
chance and to keep alive the goal of freedom in Nicaragua.
Congress is now reconsidering its aid cutoff to the freedom fighters. In fact, the Senate vote
comes up today. So, I'm afraid Jerry and I are going to have to do a quick disappearing act after
my speech to get him up there in time to cast his vote to give freedom a chance in Nicaragua.
If aid to the freedom fighters passes the Senate, which I have faith it will, then it'll be up to the
Democratically controlled House to show the Sandinista Communists that they're not fooling
anybody; that when it comes to supporting freedom and reconciliation in Nicaragua, the United
States can be counted on. America stands as one.
This, as I mentioned, is a day of anniversaries, proud and happy ones. But a few weeks ago on the
other side of the globe, another terrible and bitter anniversary was noted -- the 10th anniversary of
the fall of South Vietnam to the Communists. Today the Vietnamese Communists can celebrate
the transformation of their nation into one of the poorest countries on Earth. They can celebrate
the creation of new Vietnamese gulags, 10 years of torture and forced relocations, and the flight
of nearly a million refugees and boat people.
Americans visiting Vietnam have been surprised to find out how warmly they're received, to see
people rushing up to them with smiles of joy, and to hear the Vietnamese use all the English at
their command to say, ``America, number one.''
Well, 10 years later, after a prolonged season in hell, the memory of freedom still survives. The
young children may have known only the darkness of Communist tyranny, but even they have
parents and older relatives who tell them of South Vietnam before the fall and bring a ray of hope
into their lives. The Vietnamese people say that America is number one because America tried to
give freedom a chance in Vietnam. And 10 years later, the people for whom our brave American
soldiers fought and died and sacrificed are still profoundly grateful.
The Vietnamese Government says they also want us back. They want to normalize relations with
the United States. But we have made it clear there is only one way this can take place. The
American people demand the fullest possible accounting for our POW's and MIA's. This and a
peaceful resolution of their brutal occupation of Cambodia would help bring Vietnam out of
international isolation.
For almost 8 years, Jeremiah Denton endured the inhuman trials and tortures of North Vietnamese
prison camps, but his faith and the love of his family and country not only gave him the courage to
survive but to alert the world of the horrors of the Vietnamese gulag. He became in those 8 years
not only a great hero to his country but a hero to the cause of human freedom. He learned then
that the struggle for liberty is the struggle for life, itself. And he learned that Abraham Lincoln's
words were never truer -- that the United States is still the ``. . . last, best hope of earth.''
I think Jeremiah Denton said it best when, after almost 8 years of unimaginable suffering and
hardship, he stepped from that plane and onto his home soil. And I remember seeing that early in
the morning in Sacramento on television, without any knowledge that we would ever be standing
here in this particular situation. And I think we can all say with him today what those of us who
were watching saw him say then -- the simplest, truest words ever spoken -- ``God bless
America.''
Thank you, thank you all. God bless you all, and God bless America. Thank you.
Note: The President spoke at 12:48 p.m. in the main hall at the Birmingham-Jefferson Civic
Center. Prior to his remarks, the President attended a reception at the civic center for donors to
Senator Denton's campaign. Following his remarks, the President returned to Washington,
DC.