INAUGURAL ADDRESS, RONALD REAGAN, 33rd
GOVERNOR of
Lieutenant Governor Reinecke, our fellow
constitutional officers, leaders and members of the Senate and Assembly – my
fellow Californians:
Remembering our last meeting
here under these same circumstances and in spite of the general belief that
pain cannot be re-lived in memory, I recalled the cold of that day 4 years ago
and decided that cold’s ability to shrink and contract should be applied to my
remarks. We will soon be indoors and thawed out!
I do not know whether time has a
faster pace in
But it is almost a cliché to
remark that we live in a time of accelerating change. Events once measured
against a lifetime are compressed into a decade or even a year. Space and time
and distance have been both stretched and shrunk and yesterday is but a preview
of tomorrow.
Yet with all the change, some
things remain the same. Our goal, for example, of promoting the well being of
our people within a more just and perfect union – you will note I said promote
not provide.
On that day four years ago, I
asked that we set foot on a path leading toward a Creative Society. We have
traveled that road since and with all my heart I believe we should continue. It
turns away from increasing reliance on government and leads toward renewed
respects for – and greater reliance on – the collective genius and common sense
of the people.
It is not always an easy path
because, by design, it demands as much from those who elect, as it does from
those who are elected. This is of course the very reason it is a good road to
follow. When those who are governed do too little, those who govern can – and
often will – do too much.
When we first set foot on that
path I expressed a belief that the most meaningful words in our Constitution
are three in number, contained in the phrase, “We the people.” Those of
us who faced you from these historic steps then, and we today who have
been elected to constitutional office or legislative position, are in that
three word phrase. We are of the people, chosen by them to see that no
permanent structure of state government ever encroaches upon freedom or assumes
a power beyond that freely granted by the people.
We have just gone through the
ritual of election. By mandate of the people the power to govern will be
shared. Control of the Legislature rests with representatives of one party and
most of the constitutional officers and executive branch are of the other. To
conclude pessimistically – as some have – that little
progress can come from such a situation is to deny the value of the two-party
system which has served us so well. Those who mournfully predict there will be
little constructive action during this session of the Legislature do an
injustice.
Now I do not mean to suggest there
will not be certain differences of opinion and even some spirited debate in the
days ahead. But I have no doubt that together we can conduct the people’s
business in a constructive and effective way. In the first place, the people of
Unhindered by party lines, one
of the great engineering feats of all time, the California Water Project, is
nearing completion. We have continued to add to our network of modern high
speed highways and freeways and with every added mile we have saved the lives
of our citizens.
While traffic fatality rates
climb in the rest of the nation, ours continues to decline.
Our state has shown the way in
environmental protection. Much remains to be done of course, but we are meeting
the challenge. Legislation needed in the fight against air and water pollution
has been provided and we are united determination to preserve the magic beauty
of
With the entire nation plagued
by runaway crime rates and bulging prisons, our major
Our rehabilitation policies and
improved parole system are attracting nationwide attention. Fewer parolees are
being returned to prison than at any time in our history and our prison population
is lower than at any time since 1963.
It is the same in mental health
where the number of hospitalized mentally ill patients is half what it was four
years ago.
Since the tax increase of 1967,
more than 40 pieces of legislation have been passed easing the tax burden. More
than 5 percent of the annual budget is money returned directly to the
homeowner.
The Creative Society has
demonstrated its ability to reduce the size of government. The cost of actually
administering state government has increased less than the increase in
inflation alone. At the start of the fiscal year, there were fewer full-time
employees than there were four years ago, and the press reported the other day
what may be a first in the history of government – a great reduction in the
annual accumulation of paper to be filed and stored.
All of this has been
accomplished neither because of, nor in spite of, partisanship which explains
my optimism that progress will continue.
This brief re-cap was not
intended to gloss over or minimize the very real problems confronting the
people and government of
This is complicated by the
state’s fiscal situation. A subject which cries for more
light and less heat. So far, too many explanations and interpretations
have been couched in the rhetoric of campaign oratory. Confusion has led to
uncertainty and fear. There is cause for neither.
One week from tomorrow I will
appear before a joint meeting of the state legislature, the Senate and Assembly
combined, to discuss in some detail and make public the full extent of our
money problems. In the meantime some clarification here and now is appropriate.
The group of economists and
business experts, who for 25 years have been forecasting revenues and
expenditures upon which state budget are based, revised their estimate of
expected tax revenues downward last June as a result of the general slow-down
in the economy. There have been two revisions since – in late November and
mid-December – further reducing estimated revenues.
This slump in tax revenues,
however, is not our greatest problem. It just aggravated a situation that has
been growing worse year after year. Welfare costs have been increasing
more than three times as fast as revenue and in this present year have
escalated at an even faster rate. Californians do not have to worry about
proving their generosity and compassion for their less fortunate neighbors. On
a per capita basis, we spend more than double the national average for welfare.
In spite of this, we must face the fact that welfare has failed in its purpose.
For the truly destitute among us it is a tragic failure. It has done little or
nothing to eliminate the cause of dependency and it has spread itself so thin
that in spite of its overwhelming extravagance, many whose need is the greatest
are provided less than a minimum subsistence.
Under the aid to dependent
children program, incentives are offered to encourage mothers to take
employment. There can be no quarrel with this unless we look closely at how the
incentive and complex regulations actually apply. A recent survey of 3
counties, representing 48% of the welfare caseload in California (Monterey, Los
Angeles and San Diego Counties), showed the earnings or outside income of
employed recipients averages $346 a month and the average grant from welfare,
added to those earning, is $186 – for a total average of $532 a month. However,
the survey also disclosed mothers of dependent children who have no outside
income receive average grants of $207 – only $21 more than the grant to those
with outside income in order to increase our ability to help the totally
dependent.
Mandated by statute and federal
regulation, welfare has proliferated and grown into a Leviathan of
unsupportable dimensions. We have economized and even stripped essential public
services to feed its appetite. Now the economic downturn has brought us to the
moment of truth we have avoided for too long a time.
It has already been suggested
that we meet this situation by simply adding to the taxpayers’ heavy load. That
of course is an easy out – for everyone but the taxpayer who already pays too
much for government.
I’m inclined to believe you
didn’t send us here to find easy answers. A tax increase – even under the
illusion that it would be a temporary expedient – will not resolve this
problem. In the first place, temporary taxes have a way of outliving the
problems that caused their birth. Government may protest that it never gets the
money it needs, but it always manages to find a need for the money it gets.
Simply meeting this problem by
finding additional funds, or passing it on to another level of government, is
truly a temporary solution. Unless and until we face up to, and effect complete
reform of welfare, we will face a tax increase next year, the year after, and
the year after that – on into the future as far as we can see. There is no
limit to the potential growth of the present welfare structure, short of total
redistribution of the earnings of all who earn and produce.
We are faced with a choice. We
can be depressed by a seeming fiscal crisis, or we can recognize this as the
opportunity it really is. Let those who will wring their hands and cry doom.
They will not be typical of our people.
We have a chance to do what
might otherwise never have been done. Over the years we’ve talked about welfare,
studied welfare, applied alterations and streamlined it’s
administration where possible, but we’ve avoided facing up to it’s lack of a
goal. Seneca said, “He who knows no port to sail for, finds no winds
favorable.”
In the coming meeting with the
legislature eight days from now, I shall propose restructuring welfare – to
eliminate waste and the impropriety of subsidizing those whose greed is greater
than their need. The present confusion must be replaced with a program designed
to save, rather than destroy,
Here in
I believe we can change this.
There is no greater challenge facing the state or nation. Why shouldn’t
In recent months a few in our
midst have raised the haunting spectre of panic and
depression. It is time we inoculated ourselves against the contagion of fear
they would spread
The national government has
embarked on a campaign to slow an inflation which has threatened our economy.
There has been an understandable cooling off in the marketplace and a loss of
earnings and employment. I do not minimize the anguish of the man of woman
whose vocation or career has been interrupted. Everything possible must be done
to alleviate their distress and shorten the period of economic dislocation.
But let us measure our strength.
Let those who would play upon our fears ‘til we develop “an over the hill to
the poorhouse” psychosis look at this way of life we call
If this state were a nation, it
would rank among the top half-dozen economic giants of the world.
Our gross product will top one
hundred billion dollars this year. We will earn more and spend more than any
people anywhere in the world.
Eighty-four percent of us live
in cities of more than 25,000. Yet we lead then nation in agricultural wealth.
We are young, with a median age
of 30 – just inside that no-man’s land between the generations.
Our educational level is higher.
We have a higher percentage of professionals and skilled technicians, and more
than double our share of scholars and scientists.
In the decade which we embark
upon today, the average family income will go from a little over $13,000 to
more than $18,000 per year.
If all 20 million of us wanted
to live elsewhere, we would find 100 people willing to trade places with each
one of us.
Those who whine of a sick
society aren’t talking about us. Our young people seek a cause in which they
can invest their idealism, their youth and their strength. And we have
such a cause. But we must prove to them our own faith and belief, that
ours is the most innovative state in the union; that we have a history of
accepting change – indeed of making change happen.
For, as Mark
Twain once said: “The easy and slothful didn’t come to
It is time to ignore those who
are obsessed with what is wrong. Concentrate our attention on what is right –
on how great is our power and potential, and how little we have to fear.
As I told a group of your fellow
citizens who visited this capitol last fall, if
We owe our humble thanks to a
God who has blessed us possibly more than we deserve. Let us, in our
stewardship of all He has given us, at least try to match His bounty – try as
men to match his mountains.