The Second Presidential Debate Between the Vice-Presidential Contenders
October 5, 2000
Following is the full text of the vice-presidential debate in Danville, Kentucky, between Senator Joseph I. Lieberman of Connecticut and Dick Cheney. The moderator was Bernard Shaw of CNN.
MODERATOR:
From Centre College in historic Danville, Kentucky, good evening, and
welcome to this year's only vice presidential debate sponsored by the
Commission on Presidential Debates. I'm Bernard Shaw, moderator.
Tonight we come to you from the hall in the Norton Center for the Arts
on the campus of Centre College. Thank you to President John Rausch, the
faculty, students and community leaders state-wide, we thank you for
hosting this debate. The candidates are the Republican nominee, former
Defense Secretary Dick Cheney of Wyoming, and the Democratic nominee,
Senator Joseph Lieberman of Connecticut. The Commission, these
candidates and their campaign staffs have agreed to the following rules.
A candidate shall have two minutes to respond to the moderator's
question. The other candidate shall have two minutes to comment on the
question or the first candidate's answer. When I exercise the
moderator's discretion of extending discussion of a question, no
candidate may speak for more than two minutes at one time. This audience
has been told no disruptions will be tolerated. A prior coin toss has
determined that the first question will go to the Democratic candidate.
Senator, few hard working Americans would base their well-being on
bonuses they hope to get five or ten years from now. Why do you, and
you, Secretary Cheney, predict surpluses you cannot possibly guarantee to
pay for your proposed programs?
LIEBERMAN:
Before I answer that very important question, let me first thank you for
moderating the debate. Let me thank the wonderful people here at Centre
College and throughout Kentucky for being such gracious hosts, and let me
give a special thank you to the people of Connecticut without whose
support over these last 30 years I would never have had the opportunity
Al Gore has given me this year. And finally let me thank my family that
is here with me. My wife, Hadassah, our children, our siblings and my
mom. My 85-year-old mom gave me some good advice about the debate
earlier today. She said, sweetheart -- as she's prone to call me --
remember, be positive and know that I will love you no matter what you're
opponent says about you. Well, Mom, as always, that was both reassuring
and wise. I am going to be positive tonight. I'm not going to indulge
in negative personal attacks. I'm going to talk about the issues that
matter to the people of this country; education, health care, retirement
security and moral values. I'm going to describe the plan that Al Gore
and I have for keeping America's prosperity going and making sure that it
benefits more of America's families, particularly the hard-working middle
class families who have not yet fully benefitted from the good times
we've had. And Bernie, I'm going to explain tonight how we're going to
do all this and remain fiscally responsible. Let me get to your
question.
MODERATOR:
You have about ten seconds.
LIEBERMAN:
We're not spending any more than is projected from the experts. We're
setting aside $300 billion in a reserve fund. The projections the
nonpartisan experts make aren't quite right. Keeping America out of debt
is a way to keep interest rates down and the economy growing.
MODERATOR:
Secretary Cheney.
CHENEY:
I want to thank the people here in Danville, Kentucky, and I'm delighted
to be here tonight. I want to avoid any personal attacks. I promise not
to bring up your singing. (LAUGHTER)
LIEBERMAN:
I promise not to sing.
CHENEY:
Good. I think this is an extraordinarily important decision we'll make
on November 7th. We're really going to choose between what I consider to
be an old way of governing ourselves or a new course, a new era, if you
will, of high levels of spending, high taxes, ever more intrusive
bureaucracy. And Governor Bush and I want to offer that new course of
action. With respect to the surplus, Bernie, we have to make some kind
of forecast. We can't make 12-month decisions in this business. We're
talking about the kinds of fundamental changes in programs and government
that are going to affect people's lives for the next 25 or 30 years. And
while it may be a little risky in some respects from an economic
standpoint to try to forecast surpluses, I think we have to make some
planning assumption to proceed. We care a great deal about the issues at
stake here. One of the difficulties we have, frankly, for the last eight
years we ignored a lot of these problems. We haven't moved aggressively
on Social Security, on Medicare. There are important issues out there
that need to be resolved. It's important for us to get on with that
business. That's what Governor Bush and I want to do.
MODERATOR:
You alluded to problems. There's no magic bullet -- Secretary Cheney,
in this question to you -- no magic bullets to solve the problems of
public education. What is the next best solution?
CHENEY:
I think public education is a solution. Our desire is to find ways to
reform our educational system, to return it to its former glory. I'm a
product of public schools, my family, wife and daughters all went to
public schools. We believe very much in the public school system. But
if you look at where we are from the standpoint of the nation, recent
exams. For example, the National Assessment of Educational Progress, an
independent testing service, shows there's no progress on reading scores
in the last eight years. Almost no progress on math. We've had a
significant increase in spending for education nationwide, but it has
produced almost no positive results. That's unacceptable from our
standpoint. If you look at it and think about it, we now have in our
most disadvantaged communities, 70% of our fourth graders can't read at
the basic level of understanding. We've graduated 15 million kids from
high school in the last few years who can't read at a significant level.
What we want to do is to change that. We think we know how to do it.
Governor Bush has done it in Texas. We want to emphasize local control.
We want to insist on high standards. One of the worst things we can do
is fail to establish high standards. To say we don't have the same kind
of expectations from you that we have from everybody else. We want
accountability. We have to test every child every year to know whether
or not we're making progress with respect to achieving those goals and
objectives. We think it's extraordinarily important. Probably the
single most important issue in this campaign. Governor Bush has made it
clear that when he's elected this will be his number one priority as a
legislative measure to submit to the Congress.
MODERATOR:
Senator.
LIEBERMAN:
Al Gore and I are committed to making America's public schools the best
in the world. I disagree with what my opponent has said. A lot of
progress has been made in recent years. Average testing scores are up
and a lot of work is being done by tens of thousands of parents, teachers
and administrators all around America. There is more to be done. If
you'll allow me, I want to go back to your last question. It leads to
this question. I think both of us agree that leaving aside the Social
Security and Medicare surpluses, there's $1.8 trillion in surplus
available to spend over the next ten years. We're being fiscally
responsible about it. We're taking $300 billion off the top to put in
reserve fund. The rest we'll use for middle class tax cuts and invest in
programs like education. There's a big difference between these two
tickets. Our opponents with spend $1.6 trillion of the surplus projected
on a big tax cut that Al Gore talked about the other night so
effectively. We're saving money to invest in education. You cannot
reform education and improve it in this country without spending some
money. Al Gore and I have committed $170 billion for that purpose. To
recruit 100,000 new teachers to reduce the size of classrooms. To help
local school districts build new buildings so our children are not
learning in crumbling classrooms. And we're not just going to stop at
high school. We're going to go on and give the middle class the ability
to deduct up to $10,000 a year in the cost of college tuition. Now, that
is a tremendous life-saving change which will help people carry on their
education and allow them to develop the kinds of skills that will help
them succeed in the hi-tech economy of today.
CHENEY:
This is a very important issue, Bernie. Maybe we could extend on
education for a moment.
MODERATOR:
You're asking me to invoke the moderator's discussion?
CHENEY:
Yes.
MODERATOR:
It is so granted.
CHENEY:
Thank you, sir.
LIEBERMAN:
Do I have a chance to respond?
MODERATOR:
The secretary will have two minutes and then you'll have two minutes.
CHENEY:
The question of the surplus drives a lot of what we're talking about
here, Joe. If you look at our proposal, we take half of the projected
surplus and set it aside for Social Security. Over $2.4 trillion. We
talk roughly a fourth of it for other urgent priorities such as Medicare
reform and education, several of these other key programs we want to
support. And we take roughly one-fourth of it and return it in the form
of a tax cut to the American taxpayer. We think it's very important to
do that. It is a fundamental difference between our two approaches. If
you look, frankly, by our numbers and the numbers of the Senate Budget
Committee, which has totaled up all the promises that Vice President Gore
has made during the course of the campaign, there's some $900 billion in
spending over and above that surplus already and we still have a month to
go in the campaign. The fact is that the program that we put together we
think is very responsible. Suggestion that somehow all of it is going
for tax cuts isn't true. Another way to look at it is over the course of
the next ten years we'll collect roughly $25 trillion in revenue. We
want to take about 5% of that and return that to the American taxpayer in
the form of tax relief. We have the highest level of taxation now we've
had since World War II. The average American family is paying about 40%
in federal, state and local taxes. We think it is appropriate to return
to the American people so that they can make choices themselves in how
that money ought to be spent; whether on education, retirement or on
paying their bills. It is their choice and prerogative. We want to give
them the opportunity to make those kinds of choices for themselves and we
think this is a totally reasonable approach.
MODERATOR:
Senator?
LIEBERMAN:
Let me start with the numbers. With all due respect, the Senate Budget
Committee estimates that Dick Cheney has just referred to are the
estimates of the partisan Republican staff of the Senate Budget
Committee. We're using the numbers presented by the nonpartisan
Congressional Budget Office. We start with an agreement which the
surplus in the Social Security fund should be locked up and used for
Social Security. That's where the agreement ends. We also agree and
believe and pledge that the surplus in the Medicare trust fund should
also be locked up with a sign on it says that politicians keep your hands
off. Our opponents do not do that. In fact, they raid the Medicare
trust fund to pay for, well, their tax cut and other programs that they
can't afford because they've spent so much on the tax cut. Let me come
back to the remaining $1.8 trillion that we both talked about. The
numbers show that $1.6 trillion goes to the big tax cut which, as Al Gore
said the other night, sends 43% to the top 1%. Worse than that, when you
add on the other spending programs that our opponents have committed to,
plus the cost of their plan to privatize Social Security, they're $1.1
trillion in debt. That means we go back down the road to higher interest
rates, to higher unemployment, to a kind of self-tax increase on every
American family. Because when interest rates go up, so, too, do the cost
of mortgage payments, car payments, student loans, credit card
transactions. So if we've learned anything over the last eight years, it
is that one of the most important things the government can do, the
federal government, probably the most important, is to be fiscally
responsible. And that's why Al Gore and I are committed to balancing the
budget every year. In fact, the paying off the debt by the year 2012,
when by our calculation our opponent's economic plan still leaves America
$2.8 trillion in debt.
MODERATOR:
Time. The next question goes to you. Gentlemen, this is the 21st
Century. Yet on average an American working woman in our great nation
earns 75 cents for each $1 earned by a working male. What do you males
propose to do about it?
LIEBERMAN:
It's a good and important question. Obviously in our time, fortunately,
great advances have been made by women achieving the kind of equality
that they were too long denied. Bernie, your question is absolutely
right. Women -- actually the number I have received 72 cents for every
$1 a man receives in a comparable job. Al Gore and I have issued an
economic plan in which we've stated specific goals for the future. And
one of those goals is to eliminate the pay gap between men and women.
It's unfair and it's unacceptable. And the first way we will do that is
by supporting the Equal Pay Act which has been proposed in Congress which
gives women the right to file legal actions against employers who are not
treating them fairly and not paying them equally. Secondly, we're going
to do everything we can using governmental support of business agencies
such as the Small Business Administration to help women business owners
have an opportunity to invest and begin businesses and make larger
incomes themselves. And there are other civil rights and human rights
laws that I think can come to play here. So bottom line, this is an
unfair and unacceptable situation. And even though, as the economy has
risen in the last eight years, America's women have risen with it and
received more income, until women are receiving the same amount of pay
for the same job they're doing as a man receives, we've not achieved
genuine equality in this country. Al Gore and I are committed to closing
that gap and achieving that equality. In so many families women are a
significant bread earner or the only bread earner. So this cause affects
not only the women, but families and the children as well.
MODERATOR:
Mr. Secretary.
CHENEY:
I share the view that we ought to have equal pay for equal work
regardless of someone's gender. We have made progress in recent years,
but I think we have a ways to go. It's not just about the differential
with respect to women. If you look at our opponent's tax proposal, they
discriminate between stay-at-home moms with children that they take care
of themselves and those who go to work or who, in fact, have their kids
taken care of outside the home. You, in effect, as a stay-at-home mom
get no tax advantage under the Gore tax plan as opposed to the Bush
proposal. It provides tax relief for everybody who pays taxes. It's
important to understand the things we're trying to change and address in
the course of the campaign and what our agenda is for the future, or
plans are for the future focus very much about giving as much control as
we can to individual Americans, be they men or women, be they single or
married, as much control as possible over their own lives, especially in
the area of taxation. We want to make certain that the American people
have the ability to keep more of what they earn and then they can get to
decide how to spend it. The proposal we have from Al Gore, basically,
doesn't do that. It in effect lays out some 29 separate tax credits. If
you live your life the way they want you to live your life, if you behave
in a certain way, you qualify for a tax credit and at that point you get
some relief. Bottom line, though, is 50 million American taxpayers out
there get no advantages at all out of the Gore tax proposal, whereas
under the Bush plan everybody who pays taxes will get tax relief.
LIEBERMAN:
Might I have an opportunity to respond?
MODERATOR:
I caution you if you do this consistently we won't cover a lot of
topics. After the Senator responds, you don't have to feel compelled to
respond to the Senator. Depending on what he says.
LIEBERMAN:
This is an important difference between us. I want to clarify it
briefly if I can. The first thing is the tax relief program that we've
proposed, one of the many tax credits for the middle class includes a
$500 tax credit for stay-at-home moms just as a way of saying we
understand that you are performing a service for our society. We want
you to have that tax credit. Second, the number of 50 million Americans
not benefitting from our tax cut program is absolutely wrong. It's an
estimate done on an earlier form of our tax cut program and it's just
plain wrong. And secondly, although Governor Bush says that his tax cut
program, large as it is, gives a tax cut to everybody, as the newspapers
indicated earlier this week, the Joint Committee on Taxation, a
nonpartisan group in Congress, says the 27 million Americans don't get
what the governor said they would in the tax program. Al Gore and I want
to live within our means. We won't give it away as a tax cut and
certainly not to the 1% of the public that doesn't need it now. We're
focusing on the middle class in the areas they tell us they need it. Tax
credits for better and more expensive child care, tax credits for middle
class families that don't have health insurance from their employers.
The tax deduction I talked about earlier. Very exciting deduction for up
to $10,000 a year in the cost of a college tuition. A $3,000 tax credit
for the cost -- well, actually for a family member who stays home with a
parent or grandparent who is ill. And a very exciting tax credit program
that I hope I'll have a chance to talk about later, Bernie, that
encourages savings by people early in life and any time in life by having
the federal government match savings for the 75 million Americans who
make $100,000 or less up to $2,000 a year. Very briefly, if a young
couple making $50,000 a year saves $1,000, the government will put
another $1,000 in that account. By the time they retire, they'll not
only have guaranteed Social Security, but more than $200,000 in that
retirement fund. Now, that's --
MODERATOR:
Your time is up, Senator.
CHENEY:
You have to be a CPA to understand what he just said. The fact of the
matter is the plan is so complex that the ordinary American is never
going to ever figure out what they even qualify for. It's a classic
example of wanting to have a program, in this case a tax program, that
will, in fact, direct people to live their lives in certain ways rather
than empowering them to make decisions for themselves. It is a big
difference between us. They like tax credits, we like tax reform and tax
cuts.
MODERATOR:
Mr. Secretary, this question is for you. Would you support the effort
of House Republicans who want legislation to restrict distribution of the
abortion drug RU-486?
CHENEY:
The abortion issue is a very tough one, without question, and a very
important one. Governor Bush and I have empathy. We want to reduce the
incidence of abortion on our society. Many on the pro-choice side have
said the same thing. Even Bill Clinton has advocated reducing abortion
to make it as rare as possible. With respect to the question of RU-486,
we believe that -- of course, that it's recently been approved by the
FDA. That really was a question of whether or not it was safe to be used
by women. They didn't address the sort of the question of whether or not
there should or should not be abortion in the society so much as evaluate
that particular drug. What we would like to be able to do is to look for
ways to reach across the divide between the two points of view and find
things that we can do together to reduce the incidence of abortion. Such
things as promoting adoption as an alternative. Encouraging parental
notification. And we also think banning the horrific practice of partial
birth abortions is an area where there could be agreement. Congress has
twice passed by overwhelming margins, a significant number from both
parties, the ban on partial birth abortions. Twice it's been vetoed by
Bill Clinton and Al Gore. We hope eventually they would recognize that's
not a good position for them to be in. With respect to the RU-486
proposal, at this stage I haven't looked at that particular piece of
legislation. Governor Bush made it clear the other night he did not
anticipate that he would be able to go in an direct the FDA to reverse
course on that particular issue, primarily because the decision they made
was on the drug, not the question of whether or not it would support
abortion.
LIEBERMAN:
It's a very important question and one on which these two tickets have
dramatically different points of view. My answer is no, I would not
support legislation that is being introduced in Congress to override the
Food and Drug Administration decision on RU-486. The administration, FDA
worked 12 years on this serious problem. They made a judgment based on
what was good for women's health. A doctor has to pescribe and care for
a woman using it. I think it's a decision we ought to let stand because
it was made by experts. But let me say more generally that the
significant difference here on this issue is that Al Gore and I respect
and will protect a woman's right to choose. Our opponents will not. We
know that this is a difficult personal, moral, medical issue, but that is
exactly why it ought to be left under our law to a woman, her doctor and
her God. Now, one area in which we agree, Al Gore and I, we believe that
the government ought to do everything it can to reduce the number of
unwanted pregnancies. And, therefore, the number of abortions.
Incidentally, here there is good news to report. The number of abortions
is actually down in America over the last eight years. In fact, over the
last eight years the number of teenage pregnancies has dropped 20%. And
the reason it has is that there are good programs out there that Al Gore
and I will continue to support, such as family planning and programs that
encourage abstinence. But when the health of a woman is involved, I
think the government has to be respectful. I supported, in fact, a bill
in the Senate that would have prohibited late-term abortions except in
cases where the health or life of the mother was involved. I did not
support the so-called partial birth abortion bill because it would have
prohibited that form of abortion at any stage of the pregnancy regardless
of the effect on the health and life of the woman. That's unacceptable.
MODERATOR:
This question is for you, Senator. If Yugoslavia President Slobodan
Milosevic prevails, notwithstanding the election results, would you
support his overthrow?
LIEBERMAN:
Well, there's good news from Belgrade today, Bernie, as you know. It's
unconfirmed. The encouraging news is that the state news agency is
reporting that Mr. Kostunica is the president-elect. Some press reports
say that Milosevic has actually left Belgrade. They're not confirmed.
That is a very happy ending to a terrible story. It's the end of a reign
of terror. If that is not confirmed and does not happen, then I think
the United States, with its European allies, ought to do everything we
can to encourage the people of Serbia to do what they've been doing to
rise up and end the reign of terror by Milosevic and bring themselves
back into the family of nations where they will be welcomed by the United
States and others. You know, I'm very proud on this night as it appears
that Milosevic is about to or has fallen, of the leadership role the
United States played in the effort to stop his aggression and genocide in
Bosnia and Kosovo. I know opponents have said they thought it was
overreaching. It wasn't. It was a matter of principle in America's
national interest and values. The fact is that we stopped the
aggression, we stopped the genocide, and therefore strengthened our
relationship with our European allies in NATO. And, in fact, made the
United States more respected and trusted by our allies and more feared by
our enemies. I think that Vice President Gore played a critical role,
passionate role in leading the administration, along with Republican
supporters like Bob Dole and John McCain, to do the right thing in the
Balkans. And hopefully tonight we're seeing the final results of that
bold and brave effort.
MODERATOR:
Secretary Cheney.
CHENEY:
I noted, like Joe, I'm pleased to see what happened in Yugoslavia
today. I hope it marks the end of Milosevic. I think probably more than
anything else it's a victory for the Serbian people. They've taken to
the streets to support their democracy, to support their vote. In some
respects this is a continuation of a process that began ten years ago all
across eastern Europe and has only now arrived in Serbia. We saw it in
Germany, Rumania, Czechoslovakia, and the people of eastern Europe rose
up and made their claim for freedom. And I think we all admire that. I
think with respect to how this process has been managed most recently, we
want to do everything we can to support Mr. Milosevic's departure.
Certainly, though, that would not involve committing U.S. troops. I do
think it's noteworthy that there appears to be an effort underway to get
the Russians involved. I noted the other night, for example, Tuesday
night at the debate in Boston, Governor Bush suggested exactly that we
ought to try to get the Russians involved to exercise some leverage over
the Serbians. It's now clear from the press that, in fact, that's
exactly what they were doing. It's -- Governor Bush was correct in his
assessment and his recommendation. He has supported the administration
on Kosovo. He lobbied actively against passage of the Byrd-Warner
provision which would have set a specific deadline, one he felt was too
soon, for forcing the U.S. troops out. He's been supportive of the
policy that we've seen with respect to Yugoslavia. And I think he
deserves a lot of credit for that. I would go beyond that. I think this
is an opportunity for the United States to test President Putin of
Russia. Now is the time we ought to find out whether he's committed to
democracy. Whether he's willing to support the forces of freedom and
democracy there in the area of eastern Europe. And it's a test for him
whether he represents the old guard in the Soviet Union. One of the most
important challenges we face as a nation is how we manage that process of
integrating those 150 million eastern Europeans into the security and
economic framework of Europe.
MODERATOR:
Your question, Mr. Secretary. You and Governor Bush charge the
Clinton-Gore administration have presided over the deterioration and
overextension of America's armed forces. Should U.S. military personnel
be deployed as warriors or peacekeepers?
CHENEY:
My preference is to deploy them as warriors. There may be occasion when
it's appropriate to use them in a peacekeeping role, but I think the role
ought to be limited, a time limit on it. The reason we have a military
is to be able to fight and win wars. And to maintain with sufficient
strength so that would-be adversaries are deterred from ever launching a
war in the first place. I think that the administration has, in fact, in
this area failed in a major responsibility. We've seen a reduction in
our forces far beyond anything that was justified by the end of the Cold
War. At the same time we've seen a rapid expansion of our commitments
around the world as troops have been sent hither and yon. There was
testimony before the Joint Chiefs of Staff before the Armed Services
Committee that pointed out a lot of these problems. General Mike Ryan of
the Air Force with 40% fewer aircraft, he's now undertaking three times
as many deployments on a regular basis as he had to previously. We're
overcommitted and underresourced. This has had some other unfortunate
effects. I saw a letter the other day from a young captain stationed in
Fort Bragg, a graduate of West Point in '95 getting ready to get out of
the service because he's only allowed to train with his troops when fuel
is available for the vehicles and only allowed to fire their weapons
twice a year. He's concerned if he had to ever go into combat there
would be lives lost. It's a legitimate concern, the fact the U.S.
military is worse off today than it was eight years ago. It's a high
priority for myself and Governor Bush to rebuild the U.S. military and to
give them good leadership and build up the forces.
MODERATOR:
You're shaking your head in disagreement.
LIEBERMAN:
I want to assure the American people that the American military is the
best-trained, best-equipped, most powerful force in the world. And that
Al Gore and I will do whatever it takes to keep them that way. It's not
right, and it's not good for our military, to run them down essentially
in the midst of a partisan political debate. The fact is that you've got
to judge the military by what the military leaders say. Secretary Bill
Cohen and the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, will both tell you
the American military is ready to meet any threat we may face in the
world today. The fact is, judging by its results from Desert Storm to
the Balkans, Bosnia and Kosovo, to the operations that are still being
conducted to keep Saddam Hussein in a box in Iraq, the American military
has performed brilliantly. This administration has turned around the
drop in spending that began in the mid-'80's and right through the
Bush-Cheney administration, but now it's stopped. We passed the largest
pay increase in a generation for our military. And the interesting fact
here, in spite of the rhetoric that my opponent has just spoken, the
reality is if you look at our projected budgets for the next ten years,
Al Gore and I actually commit twice as much, $100 billion in additional
funding for our military than Governor Bush does. And their budget
allows nothing additional for acquisition of new weapons systems. That's
the same thing that the chiefs of the services will not be happy about.
They need the new equipment, the new systems that Al Gore and I are
committed to giving them.
CHENEY:
This is a special interest of mine. I would like a chance to elaborate
further, if I might. The facts are dramatically different. I'm not
attacking the military, Joe. I have enormous regard for the men and
women of the U.S. military. I had the privilege of working with them
while I was the Secretary of Defense. No one has a higher regard than I
do for them. It's irresponsible to suggest we shouldn't have that
debate, that we should ignore what is a major, major concern. If you
have friends and relatives serving in the U.S. military, you know there's
a problem. If you look at the data that's available, 40% of our Army
helicopters are not combat ready. The combat readiness level in the Air
Force dropped from 85% to 65%. Significant problems of retention. The
important thing for us to remember is that we're a democracy and we're
defended by volunteers. Everybody out there tonight wearing the uniform
standing on guard to protect the United States is there because they
volunteered to put on a uniform. When we don't give them the spare parts
they need, when we don't give our pilots the flying hours they need,
when we don't give them the kind of leadership that spells out what their
mission is and let's them know why they're putting their lives at risk,
then we undermine that morale. That's an extraordinarily valuable
trust. There is no more important responsibility for a President of the
United States than his role as Commander in Chief. When he decides when
to send our young men and women to war. When we send them without the
right kind of training, when we send them poorly equipped or with
equipment that's old and broken down, we put their lives at risk. We
will suffer more casualties in the next conflict if we don't look to
those basic problems now. This administration has a bad track record in
this regard, and it's available for anybody who wants to look at the
record and wants to talk to our men and women in uniform, and wants to
spend time with the members of the Joint Chiefs, wants to look at
readiness levels and other -- other indicators. Final point, the issue
of procurement is very important because we're running now off the
buildup of the investment we made during the Reagan years. As that
equipment gets old, it has to be replaced. We've taken money out of the
procurement budget to support other ventures. We have not been investing
in the future of the U.S. military.
LIEBERMAN:
It's important to respond to this. Yes, of course it's an important
debate to have as part of this campaign, but I don't want either the
military to feel uneasy or the American people to feel insecure. What
I'm saying now I'm basing on serving on the Senate Armed Services
Committee talking to exactly the people Dick Cheney has mentioned, the
Secretary of Defense, the Chiefs of Staff. I've visited our fighting
forces around the world. I'm telling you that we are ready to meet any
contingency that might arise. The good news here and the interesting
news is that we have met our recruitment targets in each of the services
this year. In fact, in the areas where our opponents have said we are
overextended, such as the Balkans, the soldiers there have a higher rate
of re-enlistment than anywhere else in the service because they feel a
sense of purpose, a sense of mission. In fact, this administration has
begun to transform the American military to take it away from being a
Cold War force to prepare it to meet the threats of the new generation of
tomorrow, of weapons of mass destruction, terrorism, cyber warfare. The
fact is that Governor Bush recommended in his major policy statement on
the military earlier this year that we skip the next generation of
military equipment; helicopters, submarines, tactical air fighters, all
the rest. That would really cripple our readiness. Exactly the
readiness that Dick Cheney is talking about. Al Gore and I are committed
to continuing this acquisition program, transforming the military.
There's fewer people in uniform today, but person-to-person,
person-by-person, unit-by-unit, this is the most powerful and effective
military, not only in the world today, but in the history of the world.
And again, Al Gore and I will do whatever is necessary to keep it that
way.
MODERATOR:
Senator Lieberman, this question to you. Once again in the Middle East,
peace talks on the one hand, deadly confrontations on the other, and the
flashpoint, Jerusalem, and then there's Syria. Is United States policy
what it should be?
LIEBERMAN
Yes, it is. It has truly pained me in the last week to watch the unrest
and the death occurring in the Middle East between the Israelis and the
Palestinians. So much work has been done by the people there with the
support of this administration. So much progress has been made in the
original Oslo agreements between the Israelis, the Palestinians, adopted
in 1993, and the peace between Israel and Jordan thereafter. And America
has a national strategic interest and principal interest in peace in the
Middle East, and Al Gore has played a critical role in advancing that
process over the last eight years.
What pains me is I watched the unrest in recent days between the Israelis
and the Palestinians. That these two peoples have come in some senses,
generations forward, centuries forward, in the last seven years. They
are so close to a final peace agreement, I hope and pray that the death
and unrest in the last week will not create the kinds of scars that make
it hard for them to go back to the peace table with American assistance
and achieve what I'm convinced the great majority of the Israeli and
Palestinian people want, and these people throughout the Middle East,
which is peace. Secretary Albright has been in Paris meeting with the
prime minister. I hope and pray her mission is successful, that there is
a cease fire, and the parties return to the peace table. We've been on a
very constructive course in the Middle East, played an unusual, unique
role. And I'm convinced that Al Gore and I will continue to do that. I
hope I might, through my friendships in Israel and throughout the Arab
world, play a unique role in bringing peace to this -- this sacred region
of the world.
CHENEY:
It has been a difficult area to work in for a long time. Numerous
administrations going back to World War II have had to wrestle with the
problem of what should happen to the Middle East. We made significant
breakthroughs at the end of the Bush administration because of the Gulf
War. We had joined together with Arab allies and done enormous damage to
the Iraqi armed forces. Iraq was the biggest military threat to Israel.
By virtue of the end of the Cold War, the Soviets were no longer a
factor. They used to fish in troubled waters whenever they had the
opportunity in the Middle East. With the end of the Soviet Union, the
implosion of the empire, that created a vacuum and made it easier for us
to operate there. We were able to, I think, reassure both Arabs and
Israelis would play a major role there. We would deploy forces if we had
to to engage in military operations to help our friends. We were able to
convene them in a conference. The first time Arab and Israelis sat down
face-to-face and began this process of trying to move the peace process
forward. I think also a lot of credit goes to some great men like Yitzak
Rabin. His tragic passing was a great tragedy for everybody who cares
about peace in the Middle East. He was a man who had the military
stature to be able to confidently persuade the Israelis to take risks for
peace. I think Barak has tried to same thing. I hope that we can get
this resolved as soon as possible. My guess is the next administration
is going to be the one that is going to have to come to grips with the
current state of affairs there. I think it's very important that we have
an administration where we have a president with firm leadership who has
the kind of track record of dealing straight with people, of keeping his
word so friends and allies both respect us and our adversaries fear us.
MODERATOR:
This question is for you, Mr. Secretary. If Iraq's president Saddam
Hussein were found to be developing weapons of mass destruction, Governor
Bush has said he would, quote, "Take him out." Would you agree with such
a deadly policy?
CHENEY:
We might have no other choice. We'll have to see if that happens. The
thing about Iraq, of course, was at the end of the war we had pretty well
decimated their military. We had put them back in the box, so to speak.
We had a strong international coalition raid against them, effective
economic sanctions, and an inspection regime was in place under the U.N.
and it was able to do a good job of stripping out the capacity to build
weapons of mass destruction, the work he had been doing that had not been
destroyed during the war in biological and chemical agents, as well as a
nuclear program. Unfortunately now we find ourselves in a situation
where that started to fray on us, where the coalition now no longer is
tied tightly together. Recently the United Arab Emirates have reopened
diplomatic relations with Baghdad. The Russians and French are flying
commercial airliners back into Baghdad and thumbing their nose at the
international sanctions regime. We're in a situation today where our
posture with Iraq is weaker than it was at the end of the war. It's
unfortunate. I also think it's unfortunate we find ourselves in a
position where we don't know for sure what might be transpiring inside
Iraq. I certainly hope he's not regenerating that kind of capability,
but if he were, if in fact Saddam Hussein were taking steps to try to
rebuild nuclear capability or weapons of mass destruction, you would have
to give very serious consideration to military action to -- to stop that
activity. I don't think you can afford to have a man like Saddam Hussein
with nuclear weapons in the Middle East.
MODERATOR:
Senator.
LIEBERMAN:
It would, of course, be a very serious situation if we had evidence,
credible evidence, that Saddam Hussein was developing weapons of mass
destruction. I must say, I don't think a political campaign is the
occasion to declare exactly what we would do in that case. I think
that's a matter of such critical national security importance that it
ought to be left to the Commander in Chief, leaders of the military,
Secretary of State to make that kind of decision without the heat of a
political campaign. The fact is that we will not enjoy real stability in
the Middle East until Saddam Hussein is gone. The Gulf War was a great
victory. And incidentally, Al Gore and I were two of the ten Democrats
in the Senate who crossed party lines to support President Bush and
Secretary Cheney in that war. We're proud we did that. The war did not
end with a total victory. Saddam Hussein remained there. As a result,
we have had almost ten years now of instability. We have continued to
operate almost all of this time military action to enforce a no-fly
zone. We have been struggling with Saddam about the inspectors. We're
doing everything we can to get the inspectors back in there. But in the
end there's not going to be peace until he goes. And that's why I was
proud to co-sponsor the Iraq Liberation Act with Senator Trent Lott where
I have kept in touch with the Iraqi opposition, broad base. We met with
them earlier this year. We are supporting them in their efforts and will
continue to support them until the Iraqi people rise up and do what the
people of Serbia have done in the last few days, get rid of a despot.
We'll welcome you back into the family of nations where you belong.
MODERATOR:
Senator Lieberman, this question is for you. Many experts are
forecasting continuing chaotic oil prices in the world market. Wholesale
natural gas prices here in our country are leaping. Then there are coal
and electricity. Have previous Republican and Democratic Congresses and
administrations, including this one, done their job to protect the
American people?
LIEBERMAN:
Not enough, but this administration and Vice President Gore and I have
had both a long-term strategy to develop energy independence and a
short-term strategy. In fact, if the -- this administration had been
given the amount of funding that it had requested from the Republican
Congress, we would be further along in the implementation of that
long-term strategy aimed at developing cleaner sources of energy, giving
tax credits to individuals and businesses to conserve and use energy more
efficiently. Aimed at a partnership for a new generation of vehicles
with the American automobile industry which is making great progress and
can produce a vehicle that can get 80 miles per gallon. We also have a
short-term strategy. To deal with exactly the kind of ups and downs of
energy prices. I know it was controversial, but Al Gore and I believed
it was important in the short-term to reach into the strategic petroleum
reserve, put it in the market, show the big oil companies and the OPEC
oil-producing countries that we have resources. We can fight back. We
aren't going to lay back and let them roll over our economy. We did it
also because gasoline prices were rising and home heating oil inventories
were real low. Both of our tickets agree on keeping the low income
housing assistance program, but our opponents offer no assistance to
middle-class families hit by rising gas prices and a shortage of home
heating oil. Now the price of oil on world markets has dropped $6 a
barrel. That's a good result and I'm proud of it.
MODERATOR:
Mr. Secretary.
CHENEY:
This is an area where I think again Joe and I have fairly significant
disagreements. My assessment is that there is no comprehensive energy
policy today. That as a nation, we are in trouble because the
administration has not addressed these issues. We have the prospects of
brownouts in California. We have a potential home heating oil crisis in
the northeast. We have gasoline price rises in various other places.
For years now the administration has talked about reducing our dependence
on foreign sources of oil, but they haven't done it. In fact, we've gone
exactly in the opposite direction. We have the lowest rate of domestic
production of oil now in 46 years. You have to go back to 1954 to find a
time when we produced as little oil as we do today. Our imports are at
an all-time record high. In June we imported almost 12 million barrels
of oil a day. We have other problems. We don't have refinery capacity.
We haven't built a new refinery in this country for ten years. They're
operating at 96% or 97% capacity. Even with more crude available they're
probably not going to be able to do very much by way of producing
additional home heating oil. We have a growing problem with our growing
dependence on foreign sources of energy. We ought to be able to shift
the trend and begin to move it in the right direction. We need to do a
lot more about generating the capacity for power here at home. We need
to get on with the business and we think we can do it very safely in an
environmentally sound manner. We don't think we ought to buy into this
false choice that somehow we cannot develop energy resources without
being cautious with the environment. We can. We have the technology to
do it and we ought to do it. We do support the low income energy
assistance program. We think it's important that senior citizens don't
suffer this winter, but we need to get on to the business of having a
plan to develop our domestic energy resources in producing more supplies,
and this administration hasn't produced them.
MODERATOR:
Senator, I'm going to continue. Thank you, sir. Your congressional
record, you sponsored a bill that said no to oil and gas exploration in
the Wyoming wilderness areas of your home state. However, you
co-sponsored a bill that said yes to drilling in the Arctic National
Wildlife Refuge. Your explanation?
CHENEY:
It shows I have a balanced approach to how we deal with environmental
issues.
MODERATOR:
Not a case of not in my backyard?
CHENEY:
I think we have to make choices. I worked on that with my good friend
Al Simpson for about four years. We set aside a part of Wyoming, nearly
a million acres of wilderness that ought to be separate and not be
developed. We think that was important. There are a lot of areas where
Governor Bush and I support restraint. We support the moratorium on
drilling off the coast of California, but there are places where we think
we ought to go forward and develop those resources. The Arctic National
Wildlife Reserve is one of them. It's on the north slope right next to
Prudhoe Bay. The infrastructure is there to be able to deliver that
product to market. We think we can do it given today's technology in a
way that will not damage the environment, will not permanently marr the
countryside at all, and so what we're looking for with respect to
environmental policy and energy policy is balance. We do have to make
choices, we recognize that. The way you phrased the question, frankly I
welcome because it shows, in fact, we are trying to pursue a balanced
approach and the suggestion that somehow all we care about is energy
development isn't true. But we do have to get on with developing those
resources or we're going to find ourselves ever more dependent on foreign
sources. We're going to find that the fact that we don't have an energy
policy out there is one of the major storm clouds on the horizon for our
economy. I think if you look for something that could develop, some
problem that could arise, that might, in fact, jeopardize our continuing
prosperity, it's the possibility that we might find ourselves without
adequate supplies of energy in the future. And there would be no quicker
way to shut down our economy than that.
LIEBERMAN:
Bernie, we agree on the problem but we couldn't disagree more on the
response to the problem. The problem is accurately stated. No matter
how strong we are economically, if we remain dependent on a source of
energy that is outside our control, we're not going to be as strong as we
should be. Others around the world can effectively yank our chain, and
we cannot allow that to continue to happen. I'm afraid that our
opponent's response to this is one-sided, and it is essentially to
develop the resources within the United States almost regardless of
where. I'm against drilling in the Arctic Refuge. This is one of the
most beautiful, pristine places that the good Lord has created on earth.
It happens to be within the United States of America. It's not worth it
to do that for what seems to be the possibility of six months' worth of
oil, seven to 12 years from now. That's not much of a response to the
immediate problem that gasoline consumers and home heating oil customers
are facing this winter. There are more resources within the United
States that we can develop. This isn't mentioned much and appreciated
much. In the last eight years drilling for gas on federal lands has gone
up 60% and it's been done in an environmentally protected way. The
administration has encouraged the drilling for deep gas and oil going on
in the western Gulf today. The answer here is new technology that will
create millions of new jobs. Let me just say this. If we can get three
miles more per gallon from our cars we'll get a -- we'll save 1 million
barrels of oil a day, which is exactly what the refuge at its best in
Alaska would produce. The choice to me is clear. We have to develop
fuel cells, alternative energy, encourage people to conserve and to be
efficient.
MODERATOR:
This question is for you, Senator. We all know Social Security is the
backbone of the retirement system in our nation. Can either of you
pledge tonight categorically that no one will lose benefits under your
plans?
LIEBERMAN:
Yes, indeed. I can pledge to the American people categorically that no
one will lose benefits under our plan for Social Security as far forward
as 2054. And let me come back and say, Bernie, that Al Gore and I view
Social Security as probably the best thing the government did in the
second half -- the last century. It has created a floor under which
seniors cannot fall, and so many of them depend on it for their basic
living, for their livelihood. It's critically important to protect it.
That's why Al and I have committed to putting that Social Security
surplus in a lockbox, not touching it. That's what allows us to keep
Social Security solvent to 2054. Our opponents have an idea for
privatizing Social Security that will jeopardize Social Security payments
to recipients. And I looked at this idea. If I may use an oil industry
analogy, which is to say that sometimes as you know, Dick, better than I,
you have to dig deep whether there's oil in a well. For a while I was
drilling into this idea of privatization of Social Security. It requires
taking as much as a trillion dollars out of the Social Security fund.
The independent analysts have said that would put the fund out of money
in 2023, or if it's not out of money, benefits will have to be cut by
over 50%. That's just not worth doing. Al Gore and I are going to
guarantee Social Security and add to it the retirement savings plan that
I mentioned earlier which will help middle-class families looking
forward. They will have not only Social Security, but a superb extra
retirement account as well. Social Security plus with us. With all due
respect, Social Security minus from the Bush-Cheney ticket.
CHENEY:
You won't be surprised if I disagree. The Social Security system is in
trouble. It's been a fantastic program and been there for 65 years that
has provided benefits for senior citizens over that period of time. For
my parents. It means a great deal to millions of Americans. And
Governor Bush and I want to make absolutely certain that the first thing
we do is guarantee the continuation of those payments, those benefits and
keep those promises that were made. But if you look down the road, you
say you're 30 years old today, and I have two daughters about that age.
They seriously question whether or not there will be any system left for
them. That's because the demographics that work out there, it's almost
an iron law. They know how many people there are, we know when the baby
boom generation is coming along it will drive the system into bankruptcy
unless we reform and deal with it. The reform we would like to offer is
to allow our young people to begin to take a portion of the payroll tax,
2% of it, and invest it in a personal retirement account. That does
several things. First of all, it gives them a stake in the Social
Security system. That becomes their property. They own it. They can
pass it on to their kids if they want. They don't have that kind of
equity in Social Security today. Secondly, we can generate a higher
return off that investment than you get in the existing system. You get
about a 2% return of what you pay into Social Security. We can generate
at least 6%. At least three times what we're able to get now. And
long-term by generating a bigger return, we'll put additional funds into
the system that will help to survive that crunch that is otherwise going
to hit in the future. Bottom line is there's a choice here. With
respect to Al Gore and Joe's plan, they don't reform Social Security.
They add another huge obligation on top of it that future generations
will have to pay. They don't reform it and don't save it. We have a
plan to do that and a plan to give our young people a choice and more
control over their own lives.
MODERATOR:
Mr. Secretary, this question is for you. Washington is a caldron of
political bickering and partisanship. The American people have had
enough. How would you elevate political discourse and purpose?
CHENEY:
Well, I think there are a number of ways to do it. First of all, I
agree with your assessment. I've been out of Washington for the last
eight years and spent the last five years running a company global
concern. And been out in the private sector building a business, hiring
people, creating jobs. I have a different perspective on Washington than
I had when I was there in the past. I'm proud of my service for 25
years, but also proud I had the opportunity to go out and get a different
experience. And you're absolutely right. People are fed up. They've
had enough with the bickering and the partisanship that seems to
characterize the debate that goes on in the nation's capital. I've seen
it done differently in Texas. I've watched George Bush. And one of the
reasons I was eager to sign on when he asked me to become his running
mate is because I've been so tremendously impressed with what he's done
as the Governor of Texas. He came in when he had a legislature
completely controlled by the other party. He managed to reached across
partisan lines and put them to work to achieve good things for the State
of Texas. Partly because he didn't point the finger of blame looking for
scapegoats he was quick to share the credit. He ended up, as a result of
that activity, having the top Democrat in the state, Bob Bulloch, endorse
George Bush for reelection. It's possible to change the tone. It is
possible to get people to work together and to begin to focus on
achieving results. I think it will take new leadership. I don't think
you can do it, with all due respect to Al Gore, with somebody who spent
all the last 24 years in that Washington environment and who campaigns on
the basis of castigating others, pointing the finger of blame at others
in terms of blaming business or various groups for failings. I think you
have to be able to reach out and work together and build coalitions. I
think George W. Bush has done it in Texas and can do it at the national
level.
LIEBERMAN:
You're absolutely right. There's too much partisanship in Washington.
It puzzles me. You think people in public life and politics would want
to do what would make them popular, and too often people in both parties
act in a way that brings down the institutions of government, and it's a
shame. I have tried very hard in my career to call them as I see them
and work with colleagues on both sides of the aisle to get things done.
I'm proud of my record in that regard, and I certainly think that would
be an asset that I could bring to the vice presidency. I worked with
John McCain on cultural values. I worked with Connie Mack on foreign
policy. Don Nichols on the International Religious Freedom Act. If I go
on much longer I'll get in trouble with my own party. That's the way
things get done. I'm proud of those partnerships. Let me say a word
about Al Gore. In his years in the house and Senate, he formed similar
bipartisan partnerships. If you look back over the last eight years, the
most significant accomplishments of this administration in which Al Gore
was centrally involved were the result, most of them, of bipartisan
agreements. After all, the Welfare Reform Act, which Al Gore promised to
lead the effort on to get people off of welfare to set time limits, to
get people to enjoy the dignity of work. That was a bipartisan act that
was adopted. The Anti-Crime Act that has helped to lower crime more than
20% in our country was also bipartisan. The Balanced Budget Act of 1997
which was critical to getting our economy to the point and our government
to the point of unprecedented surplus we enjoy today also was bipartisan,
and Al Gore was involved. I would say that's exactly the kind of
bipartisan leadership that he and I can bring to Washington to get things
done.
CHENEY:
With all due respect, Joe, there's an awful lot of evidence that there
hasn't been any bipartisan leadership out of this administration or Al
Gore. Medical problems have not been addressed. We have had eight years
of problems with prescription drugs not being addressed. Social Security
problems not been addressed. The educational problem has not been
addressed. They've been in a position of responsibility in the White
House. The powerful interests, if you will, in Washington, D.C. and been
unable to work with others. Medicare is a good example. A good effort
at a bipartisan solution for Medicare whether you bought or didn't buy
the answer that was generated, the fact is the administration set it up
and pulled the plug on it because they would rather have an issue, not a
solution. They haven't read from a bipartisan standpoint and I think Al
Gore's record isn't very good.
LIEBERMAN:
Dick Cheney must be one of the few people who think nothing has been
accomplished in the last eight years. Promises were made and promises
were kept. Has Al Gore -- did Al Gore make promises in 1992?
Absolutely. Did he deliver? Big time. Let me put it that way. That's
the record. Look at the 20 -- look at the 22 million new jobs. Look at
the 4 million new businesses. Look at the lower interest rates, low rate
of inflation, high rate of growth. I think if you asked most people in
America today that famous question that Ronald Reagan asked, "Are you
better off today than you were eight years ago?" Most people would say
yes. I'm pleased to see, Dick, from the newspapers that you're better
off than you were eight years ago, too.
CHENEY:
I can tell you, Joe, the government had absolutely nothing to do with
it. (LAUGHTER) (APPLAUSE)
MODERATOR:
This question is to you.
LIEBERMAN:
I can see my wife and I think she's saying, "I think he should go out
into the private sector."
CHENEY:
I'll help you do that, Joe.
LIEBERMAN:
I think you've done so well there, I want to keep you there. (LAUGHTER)
MODERATOR:
Dick Cheney, Joe Lieberman, you are black for this question. Imagine
yourself an African-American. You become the target of racial profiling
either while walking or driving. African-American Joseph Lieberman, what
would you do about it?
LIEBERMAN:
I would be outraged. It is such an assault on the basic promise that
America makes that the law will treat individuals as individuals
regardless of their status. That is to say their race, their
nationality, their gender, sexual orientation, etcetera, etcetera. And
the sad fact is that racial profiling occurs in this country. I have a
few African-American friends who have gone through this horror and, you
know, it makes me want to kind of hit the wall because it's such an
assault on their humanity and their citizenship. We can't tolerate it
anymore. That's why I supported legislation in Congress. It's the most
we could get done to do a hard study to make the case of the extent to
which racial profiling is occurring in our country. But it's also why
I'm so proud that Al Gore said two things. First we would issue, if
we're fortunate enough to be elected, an executive order prohibiting
racial profiling. And secondly the first Civil Rights Act legislation we
would send to Congress would be a national ban on racial profiling. It
is just wrong. It is unAmerican, and to think that in the 21st Century
this kind of nonsense is still going on. We have to stop it. The only
way to stop it is through the law. The law, after all, is meant to
express our values and our aspirations for our society. And our values
are violently contradicted by the kind of racial profiling that exists.
I had a friend a while ago who works in the government, works at the
White House, African-American, stopped, surrounded by police for no other
cause that anyone can determine than the color of his skin. That can't
be in America anymore.
MODERATOR:
Mr. Secretary.
CHENEY:
Bernie, I would like to answer your question to the best of my ability,
but I don't think I can understand fully what it would be like. I try
hard to put myself in that position and imagine what it would be like,
but I've always been part of the majority, never part of a minority
group. It has to be a horrible experience. We still have the sense of
anger and frustration that go with knowing that the only reason you were
stopped, the only reason you were arrested, was because of the color of
your skin would make me extraordinarily angry, and I'm not sure how I
would respond. I think that we have to recognize that while we've made
enormous progress in the U.S. in racial relations and come a very long
way, we still have a very long way to go. We still have not only the
problems we're talking about here tonight in terms of the problems you
mentioned in profiling, but beyond that, we still have an achievement gap
in education, income differentials, differences in life span. We still
have, I think, a society that -- where we haven't done enough yet to live
up to that standard that we'd all like to live up to. I think in terms
of equality of opportunity, that we judge people as individuals. As
Martin Luther King said, we ought to judge people on the context of their
character instead of the color of their skin. I would hope we can make
progress on that in the years ahead.
MODERATOR:
Senator, sexual orientation. Should a male who loves a male and a female
who loves a female have all -- all the constitutional rights enjoyed by
every American citizen?
LIEBERMAN:
Very current and difficult question. I've been thinking about it. I
want to explain what my thoughts have been. Maybe I should begin this
answer by going back to the beginning of the country and the Declaration
of Independence which says there at the outset that all of us are created
equal and that we're endowed not by any bunch of politicians and
philosophers, but by our Creator, with those rights of life, liberty and
the pursuit of happiness. At the beginning of our history, that promise
and ideal was not realized or experienced by all Americans, but over time
since then we have extended the orbit of that promise. In our time at
the frontier of that effort is extending those kinds of rights to gay and
lesbian Americans who are citizens of this country and children of the
same awesome God just as much as any of the rest of us are. That's why I
have been an original co-sponsor of the Employment Non-Discrimination Act
which aims to prevent gay and lesbian Americans who are otherwise
qualified from being discriminated against in the workplace. And I've
sponsored other pieces of legislation and taken other actions that carry
out that ideal. The question you pose is a difficult one for this
reason. It confronts or challenges the traditional notion of marriage as
being limited to a heterosexual couple, which I support. I must say I'm
thinking about this, because I have friends who are in gay and lesbian
partnerships who said to me, isn't it fair. We don't have legal rights
to inheritance, visitation when one partner is ill, to health care
benefits. That's why I'm thinking about it. My mind is open to taking
some action that will address those elements of unfairness while
respecting the traditional religious and civil institution of marriage.
MODERATOR:
Mr. Secretary.
CHENEY:
This is a tough one, Bernie. The fact of the matter is we live in a
free society, and freedom means freedom for everybody. We shouldn't be
able to choose and say you get to live free and you don't. That means
people should be free to enter into any kind of relationship they want to
enter into. It's no one's business in terms of regulating behavior in
that regard. The next step then, of course, is the question you ask of
whether or not there ought to be some kind of official sanction of the
relationships or if they should be treated the same as a traditional
marriage. That's a tougher problem. That's not a slam dunk. The fact
of the matter is that matter is regulated by the states. I think
different states are likely to come to different conclusions, and that's
appropriate. I don't think there should necessarily be a federal policy
in this area. I try to be open minded about it as much as I can and
tolerant of those relationships. And like Joe, I'm also wrestling with
the extent to which there ought to be legal sanction of those
relationships. I think we ought to do everything we can to tolerate and
accommodate whatever kind of relationships people want to enter into.
MODERATOR:
Your moderator has committed a boo-boo. I asked the sexual orientation
question of you. I should not have done that in terms of rotation.
Gentlemen, I apologize.
LIEBERMAN:
We forgive you.
MODERATOR:
Thank you.
LIEBERMAN:
You're human, like we are.
MODERATOR:
Mr. Secretary. Vice President of the United States of America, what
would you bring to the job that you're opponent wouldn't?
CHENEY:
We clearly come from different political perspectives. Joe is a
Democrat from New England, I'm a Republican from the west, from Wyoming.
And I think that weighs into it to some extent. Clearly we're both in
the positions we're in because of our personal relationships with our
principals. I think the areas that I would bring are the things that
Governor Bush emphasized when he picked me. That I have been White House
Chief of Staff and ran the White House under President Ford. Spent ten
years in the House, eight of that in the leadership. Served as Secretary
of Defense, and then had significant experience in the private sector. I
think that where there are differences between Joe and myself in terms of
background and experience, I clearly have spent a lot of time in
executive positions running large organizations both in private business
as well as in government. And that is a set of qualifications that
Governor Bush found attractive when he selected me. I'll leave it at
that.
MODERATOR:
Senator?
LIEBERMAN:
I have great respect for Dick Cheney. I don't agree with a lot of
things he said in this campaign. He was a very distinguished Secretary
of Defense, and I don't have anything negative to say about him. I want
to say with the humility that is required to respond to this statement
that I think what I would bring to the office of the vice presidency is a
lifetime experience. Growing up in a working class family, having the
opportunity to go to a great public school system, then to go on to
college and then to be drawn really by President Kennedy, as well as the
values of service my family gave me, into public life. Wanting to make a
difference. I have had extraordinary opportunities, thanks again to
those folks back home in Connecticut as a senator, attorney general
trying to enforce the law to protect them and the environment and
consumers, and to litigate on behalf of humans rights. And for the last
12 years as a member of the Senate of the United States focusing on
national security questions, environmental protection, economic growth
and values. But perhaps what I most bring is a friendship and shared
values and shared priorities with Al Gore. I have tremendous respect for
Al Gore. I've known him for 15 years. He's an outstanding person as a
public official and as a private person. His life is built on his
faith. It's devoted to his family. He volunteered for service in
Vietnam from the beginning. In Congress he's been willing to take on the
big interests and fight for average people. As vice president I think
he's been the most effective vice president in the history of the United
States and he has the right program to use the prosperity all the
American people have earned to help particularly hard working
middle-class families raise up their children to enjoy a better life. I
think that's what this is all about, why I'm so proud to be his running
mate.
MODERATOR:
And because of my boo-boo I'm going to direct this question again to
Secretary Cheney. Have you noticed a contradiction or hypocritical shift
by your opponent on positions and issues since he was nominated?
CHENEY:
We've been trying very hard to keep this on a high plane, Bernie.
LIEBERMAN:
Thanks, Bernie.
CHENEY:
I do have a couple of concerns where I like the old Joe Lieberman better
than I do the new Joe Lieberman. Let's see if I can put them in those
terms. Joe established an outstanding record, I thought, in his work on
this whole question of violence in the media. And the kinds of materials
that were being peddled to our children. And many of us on the
Republican side admired him for that. There is, I must say, the view now
that having joined with Al Gore on the ticket on the other side, that the
depth of conviction that we had admired before isn't quite as strong as
it was, perhaps, in the past. The temptation on the one hand to
criticize the activities of the industry, as was pointed out recently in
the Federal Trade Commission where they're taking clearly material meant
for adults and selling it to our children, while at the same time they
are participating in fundraising events with some of the people
responsible for that activity has been a source of concern for many of
us. We were especially disturbed, Joe, at a recent fundraiser you
attended where you got up and criticized George Bush's religion. I know
you're not responsible for uttering any words of criticism of his
religion. My concern would be, frankly, that you haven't been as -- as
consistent as you had been in the past. That a lot of your good friends
like Bill Bennett and others of us who had admired your firmness of
purpose over the years have felt that you're not quite the crusader for
that cause that you once were.
LIEBERMAN:
Bernie, you'll not be surprised to hear that I disagree. First let me
talk about that joke about religion which I found very distasteful. And
believe me, if anybody has devoted his life to respecting the role of
religion in American life and understands that Americans from the
beginning of our history have turned to God for strength and purpose,
it's me. And any offense that was done, I apologize for. I thought that
humor was unacceptable. Let me come to the question of Hollywood and
then answer the general question. Al Gore and I have felt for a long
time, first as parents and then only second as public officials, that we
cannot let America's parents stand alone in this competition that they
feel they're in with Hollywood to raise their own kids and give their
kids the faith and values they want to give them. I've been a consistent
crusader on that behalf. John McCain and I actually requested the
Federal Trade Commission report that came out three or four weeks ago
which proved conclusively that the entertainment industry was marketing
adult-rated products to our children. That is just not acceptable. One
finding was that they were actually using 10 to 12-year-olds to test
screen adult-rated products. When that report came out, Al Gore and I
said to the entertainment industry, stop it. If you don't stop it in six
months, we'll ask the Federal Trade Commission to take action against
you. We repeated that message when we went to Los Angeles. I repeat it
today. We won't stop until the entertainment industry stops marketing
its products to our children. Al Gore and I -- I'm out. Maybe I can
come back to it.
MODERATOR:
Please continue. You have about ten seconds.
LIEBERMAN:
Al Gore and I agree on most everything, but we disagree on some things.
But he said to me, be yourself, don't change a single position you have.
And I have not changed a single position since Al Gore nominated me to be
his vice president.
MODERATOR:
Gentlemen, now closing statements. A prior coin toss has determined that
you begin, Senator Lieberman.
LIEBERMAN:
That went very quickly. Thank you, Bernie, and thanks, Dick Cheney, for
a very good debate. I'm told tens of millions OF people have been
watching this debate tonight. I must say, I wish one more person were
here to watch and that is my dad, who died 15 years ago. If my dad were
here, I would have the opportunity to tell him that he was right when he
taught me that in America, if you have faith, work hard and play by the
rules, there is nothing you cannot achieve. And here I am even the son
of a man who started working the night shift on a bakery truck can end up
being a candidate for Vice President of the United States. That says a
lot about the character of this nation and the goodness of you, the
American people. I will tell you that Hadassah and I have traveled
around this country in the last couple of months and met thousands and
thousands of parents just like our moms and dads, hard working
middle-class people paying their taxes, doing the jobs to keep the
country running. Trying so hard to teach their kids right from wrong and
believing in their hearts that their kids can make it. I agree with
them. But to make it they need a leader who will stand up and fight for
them for good education, the best education in the world. For a sound
retirement system, for prescription drug benefits for their parents. And
for a government that is fiscally responsible, balances the budget.
Keeps interest rates down so they can afford to buy a home or send their
kids to college. To me Al Gore is that leader and will be that kind of
president. You know, for 224 years Americans have dreamed bigger dreams
and tried bolder solutions than any other people on earth. Now is not
the time to settle for less than we can be. As good as things are today,
Al Gore and I believe that with your help and God's help we can make the
future of this good and blessed country even better. Thank you, God
bless you and good night.
MODERATOR:
Mr. Secretary.
CHENEY:
Bernie, I want to thank you and Joe as well. I've enjoyed the debate
this evening. And thank the folks here at the Centre College in
Danville, Kentucky. This is a very important decision you're going to
make on November 7. We have a fundamental choice between whether or not
we continue with our old ways of big government, high taxes and ever more
intrusive bureaucracy, or whether we take a new course for a new era.
Governor Bush and I want to pursue the new course. We want to reform the
Social Security system to guarantee benefits will be there for our
retired folks, as well as make it possible for our young people to invest
a portion of their payroll tax into a retirement account that they'll
control and give them greater control over their own lives. We want to
reform the Medicare system to make certain the benefits are there for our
senior citizens, but also to provide prescription drug coverage for them
and give them a range of choices in terms of the kind of insurance we
have. We want to reform the education system. We want to restore our
public schools to the greatness they once represented so that every
parent has the opportunity to choose what is best for their child and so
that every child has an opportunity to share in the American dream. We
also want to reform the tax code. We think it's very important now that
we have a surplus, that a portion of that surplus go back to the people
who earned it. It's not the government's money, it's your money. You're
entitled to it, and we would like to see to it that we provide tax relief
for everybody who pays taxes. Finally, we think it's very important to
rebuild the U.S. military. The military is in trouble. The trends are
in the wrong direction. The finest men and women in uniform that you'll
find anyplace in the world but they deserve our support. They deserve
the resources that we need to provide for them and they deserve good
leadership. George Bush is the man to do this. I've seen him do it in
Texas. What we need is to be able to reach across the aisle. Put
together coalitions of Republicans and Democrats and build the kinds of
coalitions that will get something done in Washington. George Bush is a
man of great integrity that will make a first rate president.
MODERATOR:
Senator Cheney and Senator Lieberman, your debate now joins American
history. We thank you.
LIEBERMAN:
Thank you, Bernie. It was a great evening.
(Applause)
MODERATOR:
Well, you hear the appreciation here. Our thanks also to Centre
College, the community of Danville and, of course, the Blue Grass State,
Kentucky. Ladies and gentlemen, please join my colleague, Moderator Jim
Lehrer, for the next presidential debate next Wednesday night at Wake
Forest University in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. For the Commission
on Presidential Debates, I'm Bernard Shaw, good night from Danville,
Kentucky. (Applause)
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