For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
July 31, 2001
Remarks by the President
On Federal Election Reform the Rose Garden
11:00 A.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you,
all. Please be seated. After the last election,
two former Presidents and a panel of distinguished Americans -- from
both political parties, I might add -- gathered to consider ways to
improve America's election system. And they have produced an
impressive report.
Today, I accept their report and recommend
the key principles drawn from the report as guidelines for meaningful
reform.
I want to welcome President Jimmy Carter
back to the Rose Garden and to the Oval
Office. (Applause.) President Gerald Ford could
not be with us today, but he is well represented by House Minority
Leader Bob Michel. Thank you for being here, Mr.
Leader. (Applause.)
I want to thank Phil Zelikow for being the
executive director of the commission. I want to thank all
the commission members who are here. And I appreciate the
Attorney General for being here, as well -- thanks for coming, John.
Our American democracy is really an
inspiration to the world. Yet, the work of improving it is
never finished. Presidents Jimmy Carter and Gerald Ford --
two men who took part in another close election, I might add, and who
went on to have a close friendship -- have come together to produce
recommendations for modernizing the electoral system.
I want to thank the University of
Virginia's Miller Center and the Century Foundation, as
well. Mr. Carter and Mr. Ford recruited a commission of 20
distinguished Americans from both parties and every region of the
country. I respect the members so much that I appointed one
of them to become the ambassador to Japan, Howard Baker.
The others continued to take
testimony. They held hearings in four states, listened to
dozens of witnesses and consulted widely with state and local
officials. They identified some important
concerns. For example, the over-eagerness of the media to
report the outcome of the elections. (Laughter.)
Some voting methods have much higher error
rates than others. And citizens with disabilities or limited
proficiency in English can encounter obstacles to the exercise of their
democratic rights.
The commissioners brought a broad
diversity of personal experience to bear. Seven
commissioners, in addition to President Ford and President Carter, have
been elected to office, themselves, and have seen Americans' voting
procedures up close and personal. Other members have had
experience enforcing our nation's civil rights and voting rights
laws. Others are experts in constitutional law and the
mechanics of government. This commission's idealism is
reinforced by deep practical experience.
The commissioners offer many
recommendations to strengthen our electoral system. Those
recommendations are grounded in four fundamental principles, which I
heartily endorse and recommend to the Congress.
First, our nation must continue to respect
the primary role of state, county and local governments in
elections. In 2000, more than 100 million Americans cast
votes in more than 190,000 polling places under the supervision of 1.4
million poll workers. Our nation is vast and diverse and our
elections should not be run out of Washington, D.C.
Second, the federal government can have a
limited but responsible role in assisting states and localities to
solve their problems with election administration so that our voting
technology and practices respect the value of every eligible vote.
Third, we must actively and vigorously
enforce the laws that protect the voting rights of ethnic and racial
minorities, of citizens who do not speak English fluently, and of the
elderly and persons with disabilities.
Let me say, by the way, how pleased I am
that the commission occasionally cited the great state of Texas for its
good work.
Fourth and, finally, we must act to uphold
the voting rights of members of the armed services and of Americans
living abroad. We must safeguard absentee ballots against
abuse, and we must ensure that those Americans who risked their lives
to defend American democracy are never prevented from participating in
American democracy.
These are some of the core principles
underlying the commission's report and they are principles that should
guide us all. I commend the commissioners for their
statesmen-like work. They have risen above partisan emotions
to put forth practical suggestions for improving democracy, and the
United States Congress should listen to them and follow their lead.
It is now my honor to call back to the
podium a man who has been here quite often in the past, the President
of the United States, Jimmy Carter. (Applause.)
END 11:06
A.M. EDT
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