January 26, 1982
Thank you. Mr. Speaker thank you. Thank you very much. Mr. Speaker, Mr.
President, Distinguished Members of the Congress, honored guests and fellow
citizens:
Today marks my first State of the Union address to you, a constitutional duty as
old as our republic itself.
President Washington began this tradition in 1790 after reminding the nation
that the destiny of self-government and the “preservation of the sacred fire
of liberty” is “finally staked on the experiment entrusted to the hands of
the American people.” For our friends in the press, who place a high premium
on accuracy, let me say: l did not actually hear George Washington say that, but
it is a matter of historic record.
But from this podium, Winston Churchill asked the free world to stand together
against the onslaught of aggression. Franklin Delano Roosevelt spoke of a day of
infamy and summoned a nation to arms. And Douglas MacArthur made an
unforgettable farewell to a country he had loved and served so well. Dwight
Eisenhower reminded us that peace was purchased only at the price of strength
and John F. Kennedy spoke of the burden and glory that is freedom.
When I visited this chamber last year as a newcomer to Washington, critical of
past policies which I believe had failed, I proposed a new spirit of partnership
between this Congress and this Administration and between Washington and our
state and local governments.
In forging this new partnership for America we could achieve the oldest hopes of
our republic’s prosperity for our nation, peace for the world, and the
blessings of individual liberty for our children and, someday, for all of
humanity.
It’s my duty to report to you tonight on the progress that we have made in our
relations with other nations, on the foundation we’ve carefully laid for our
economic recovery and, finally, on a bold and spirited initiative that I believe
can change the face of American government and make it again the servant of the
people.
Seldom have the stakes been higher for America. What we do and say here will
make all the difference to auto workers in Detroit, lumberjacks in the
Northwest, steelworkers in Steubenville who are in the unemployment lines, to
black teen-agers in Newark a nd Chicago; to hard-pressed farmers and small
businessmen and to millions of everyday Americans who harbor the simple wish of
a safe and financially secure future for their children.
To understand the State of the Union, we must look not only at where we are and
where we’re going but where we’ve been. The situation at this time last year
was truly ominous.
The last decade has seen a series of recessions. There was a recession in 1970,
in 1974, and again in the spring of 1980. Each time, unemployment increased and
inflation soon turned up again. We coined the word “stagflation” to describe
this.
Government’s response to these recessions was to pump up the money supply and
increase spending.
In the last six months of 1980, as an example, the money supply increased at the
fastest rate in postwar history 13 percent. Inflation remained in double digits
and Government spending increased at an annual rate of 17 percent. Interest
rates reached a s taggering 21 1/2 percent. There were eight million unemployed.
Late in 1981, we sank into the present recession largely because continued high
interest rates hurt the auto industry and construction. And there was a drop in
productivity and the already high unemployment increased.
This time, however, things are different. We have an economic program in place
completely different from the artificial quick-fixes of the past. It calls for a
reduction of the rate of increase in Government spending, and already that rate
has been cut n early in half. But reduced spending alone isn’t enough. We’ve
just implemented the first and smallest phase of a three-year tax-rate reduction
designed to stimulate the economy and create jobs.
Already interest rates are down to 15 3/4 percent, but they must still go lower.
Inflation is down from 12.4 percent to 8.9, and for the month of December it was
running at an annualized rate of 5.2 percent.
If we had not acted as we did, things would be far worse for all Americans than
they are today. Inflation inflation, taxes and interest rates would all be
higher.
A year ago, Americans’ faith in their governmental process was steadily
declining. Six out of ten Americans were saying they were pessimistic about
their future.
A new kind of defeatism was heard. Some said our domestic problems were
uncontrollable that we had to learn to live with the-seemingly endless cycle of
high inflation and high unemployment.
There were also pessimistic predictions about the relationship between our
Administration and this Congress. It was said we could never work together.
Well, those predictions were wrong. The record is clear, and I believe that
history will remember this as an era of American renewal, remember this
Administration as an Administration of change and remember this Congress as a
Congress of destiny.
Together, we not only cut the increase in Government spending nearly in half, we
brought about the largest tax reductions and the most sweeping changes in our
tax structure since the beginning of this century. And because we indexed future
taxes to the r ate of inflation, we took away Government’s built-in profit on
inflation and its hidden incentive to grow larger at the expense of American
workers.
Together, after 50 years of taking power away from the hands of the people in
their states and local communities we have started returning power and resources
to them.
Together, we have cut the growth of new Federal regulations nearly in half. In
1981, there were 23,000 fewer pages in the Federal Register, which lists new
regulations, than there were in 1980. By deregulating oil, we’ve come closer
to achieving energy i independence and help bring down the costs of gasoline and
heating fuel.
Together, we have created an effective Federal strike force to combat waste and
fraud in Government. In just six months it has saved the taxpayers more than $2
billion, and it’s only getting started.
Together, we’ve begun to mobilize the private sector not to duplicate wasteful
and discredited Government programs but to bring thousands of Americans into a
volunteer effort to help solve many of America’s social problems.
Together, we’ve begun to restore that margin of military safety that insures
peace. Our country’s uniform is being worn once again with pride.
Together we have made a new beginning, but we have only begun.
No one pretends that the way ahead will be easy. In my inaugural address last
year, I warned that the “ills we suffer have come upon us over several
decades. They will not go away in days, weeks or months, but they will go away .
. . because we as Americans have the capacity now, as we’ve had it in the
past, to do whatever needs to be done to preserve this last and greatest bastion
of freedom. “
The economy will face difficult moments in the months ahead. But, the program
for economic recovery that is in place will pull the economy out of its slump
and put us on the road to prosperity and stable growth by the latter half of
this year.
That is why I can report to you tonight that in the near future the State of the
Union and the economy will be better much better if we summon the strength to
continue on the course that we’ve charted.
And so the question: If the fundamentals are in place, what now?
Two things. First, we must understand what’s happening at the moment to the
economy. Our current problems are not the product of the recovery program
that’s only just now getting under way, as some would have you believe; they
are the inheritance of decades of tax and tax, and spend and
Second, because our economic problems are deeply rooted and will not respond to
quick political fixes, we must stick to our carefully integrated plan for
recovery. And that plan is based on four common-sense fundamentals: continued
reduction of the growth h in Federal spending, preserving the individual and
business tax deductions that will stimulate saving and investment, removing
unnecessary Federal regulations to spark productivity and maintaining a healthy
dollar and a stable monetary policy the latter a responsibility of the Federal
Reserve System.
The only alternative being offered to this economic program is a return to the
policies that gave us a trillion-dollar debt, runaway inflation, runaway
interest rates and unemployment.
The doubters would have us turn back the clock with tax increases that would
offset the personal tax-rate reductions already passed by this Congress.
Raise present taxes to cut future deficits, they tell us. Well, I don’t
believe we should buy that argument. There are too many imponderables for anyone
to predict deficits or surpluses several years ahead with any degree of
accuracy. The budget in place when I took office had been projected as balanced.
It turned out to have one of the biggest deficits in history. Another example of
the imponderables that can make deficit projections highly questionable: A
change of only one percentage point in unemployment can alter a deficit up or
down by some $25 billion.
As it now stands, our forecasts, which we’re required by law to make, will
show major deficits, starting at less than $100 billion and declining, but still
too high.
More important, we are making progress with the three keys to reducing deficits:
economic growth, lower interest rates and spending control. The policies we have
in place will reduce the deficit steadily, surely and, in time, completely.
Higher taxes would not mean lower deficits. If they did, how would we explain
tax revenues more than doubled just since 1976, yet in that same six-year period
we ran the largest series of deficits in our history. In 1980 tax revenues
increased by $54 bil lion, and in 1980 we had one of our all-time biggest
deficits.
Raising taxes won’t balance the budget. It will encourage more Government
spending and less private investment. Raising taxes will slow economic growth,
reduce production and destroy future jobs, making it more difficult for those
without jobs to find th em and more likely that those who now have jobs could
lose them.
So I will not ask you to try to balance the budget on the backs of the American
taxpayers. I will seek no tax increases this year and I have no intention of
retreating from our basic program of tax relief. I promised the American people
to bring their taxes x rates down and keep them down to provide them incentives
to rebuild our economy, to save, to invest in America’s future. I will stand
by my word. Tonight I’m urging the American people: Seize these new
opportunities to produce, to save, to invest, and t together we’ll make this
economy a mighty engine of freedom, hope and prosperity again.
Now the budget deficit this year will exceed our earlier expectations. The
recession did that. It lowered revenues and increased costs. To some extent,
we’re also victims of our own success. We’ve brought inflation down faster
than we thought we could an d in doing this we’ve deprived Government of those
hidden revenues that occur when inflation pushes people into higher income tax
brackets. And the continued high interest rates last year cost the Government
about $5 billion more than anticipated.
We must cut out more nonessential Government spending and root out more waste,
and we will continue our efforts to reduce the number of employees in the
Federal work force by 75,000.
Starting in fiscal 1984, the Federal Government will assume full responsibility
for the cost of the rapidly growing Medicaid program to go along with its
existing responsibility for Medicare. As part of a financially equal swap, the
states will simultane ously take full responsibility for Aid to Families With
Dependent Children and food stamps. This will make welfare less costly and more
responsive to genuine need because it will be designed and administered closer
to the grass roots and the people it ser ves.
In 1984, the Federal Government will apply the full proceeds from certain excise
taxes to a grass roots trust fund that will belong, in fair shares, to the 50
states. The total amount flowing into this fund will be $28 billion a year.
Over the next four years, the states can use this money in either of two ways.
If they want to continue receiving Federal grants in such areas as
transportation, education and social services, they can use their trust fund
money to pay for the grants or, to the extent they choose to forgo the Federal
grant programs, they can use their trust fund money on their own, for those or
other purposes. There will be a mandatory pass-through of part of these funds to
local governments.
By 1988, the states will be in complete control of over 40 Federal grant
programs. The trust fund will start to phase out, eventually to disappear, and
the excise taxes will be turned over to the states. They can then preserve,
lower or raise taxes on th eir own and fund and manage these programs as they
see fit.
In a single stroke, we will be accomplishing a real realignment that will end
cumbersome administration and spiraling costs at the Federal level while we
insure these programs will be more responsive to both the people they’re meant
to help and the peopl e who pay for them.
Hand in hand with this program to strengthen the discretion and flexibility of
state and local governments, we’re proposing legislation for an experimental
effort to improve and develop our depressed urban areas in the 1980’s and
1990’s. This legislation will permit states and localities to apply to the
Federal Government for designation as urban enterprise zones. A broad range of
special economic incentives in the zones will help attract new business, new
jobs, new opportunity to America’s inner cities and rural towns. Some will say
our mission is to save free enterprise. Well, I say we must free enterprise so
that, together, we can save America.
Some will also say our states and local communities are not up to the challenge
of a new and creative partnership. Well, that might have been true 20 years ago
before reforms like reapportionment and the Voting Rights Act, the 10-year
extension of which I strongly support. It’s no longer true today. This
Administration has faith in state and local governments and the constitutional
balance envisioned by the Founding Fathers. We also believe in the integrity,
decency and sound good sense of grass roots Am ericans.
Our faith in the American people is reflected in another major endeavor. Our
private sector initiatives task force is seeking out successful community models
of school, church, business, union, foundation and civic programs that help
community needs. Suc h groups are almost invariably far more efficient than
government in running social programs.
We’re not asking them to replace discarded and often discredited Government
programs dollar for dollar, service for service. We just want to help them
perform the good works they choose, and help others to profit by their example.
Three hundred eighty-five thousand corporations and private organizations are
already working on social programs ranging from drug rehabilitation to job
training, and thousands more Americans have written us asking how they can help.
The volunteer spirit is still alive and well in America.
Our nation’s long journey towards civil rights for all our citizens once a
source of discord, now a source of pride must continue with no back sliding or
slowing down. We must and shall see that those basic laws that guarantee equal
rights are preserved and, when necessary, strengthened. Our concern for equal
rights for women is firm and unshakable.
We launched a new Task Force on Legal Equity for Women, and a 50-states project
that will examine state laws for discriminatory language. And for the first time
in our history a woman sits on the highest court in the land.
So, too, the problem of crime one as real and deadly serious as any in America
today it demands that we seek transformation of our legal system, which overly
protects the rights of criminals while it leaves society and the innocent
victims of crime witho ut justice.
We look forward to the enactment of a responsible Clean Air Act to increase jobs
while continuing to improve the quality of our air. We are encouraged by the
bipartisan initiative of the House and are hopeful of further progress as the
Senate continues i deliberations.
So far I have concentrated largely now on domestic matters. To view the State of
the Union in perspective, we must not ignore the rest of the world. There
isn’t time tonight for a lengthy treatment of social or of foreign policy, I
should say a subject I intend to address in detail in the near future. A few
words, however, are in order on the progress we’ve made over the past year
re-establishing respect for our nation around the globe and some of the
challenges and goals that we will approach in the yea r ahead.
At Ottawa and Cancun, I met with leaders of the major industrial powers and
developing nations. Now some of those I met with were a little surprised I
didn’t apologize for America’s wealth. Instead I spoke of the strength of
the free marketplace system a nd how that system could help them realize their
aspirations for economic development and political freedom. I believe lasting
friendships were made and the foundation was laid for future cooperation.
In the vital region of the Caribbean Basin, we’re developing a program of aid,
trade and investment incentives to promote self-sustaining growth and a better,
more secure life for our neighbors to the south. Toward those who would export
terrorism and subversion in the Caribbean and elsewhere, especially Cuba and
Libya, we will act with firmness.
Our foreign policy is a policy of strength, fairness and balance. By restoring
America’s military credibility, by pursuing peace at the negotiating table
wherever both sides are willing to sit down in good faith, and by regaining the
respect of America’s allies and adversaries alike, we have strengthened our
country’s position as a force for peace and progress in the world.
When action is called for, we’re taking it. Our sanctions against the military
dictatorship that has attempted to crush human rights in Poland and against the
Soviet regime behind the military dictatorship clearly demonstrated to the world
that America will not conduct “business as usual” with the forces of
oppression.
If the events in Poland continue to deteriorate, further measures will follow.
The budget plan I submit to you on Feb. 8 will realize major savings by
dismantling the Departments of Energy and Education, and by eliminating
ineffective subsidies for business. We will continue to redirect our resources
to our two highest budget prior ities: a strong national defense to keep America
free and at peace and a reliable safety net of social programs for those who
have contributed and those who are in need.
Contrary to some of the wild charges you may have heard, this Administration has
not and will not turn its back on America’s elderly or America’s poor. Under
the new budget, funding for social insurance programs will be more than double
the amount spent only six years ago.
But it would be foolish to pretend that these or any programs cannot be made
more efficient and economical.
The entitlement programs that make up our safety net for the truly needy have
worthy goals and many deserving recipients. We will protect them. But there’s
only one way to see to it that these programs really help those whom they were
designed to help, a nd that is to bring their spiraling costs under control.
Today we face the absurd situation of a Federal budget with three-quarters of
its expenditures routinely referred to as “uncontrollable,” and a large part
of this goes to entitlement programs.
Committee after committee of this Congress has heard witness after witness
describe many of these programs as poorly administered and rife with waste and
fraud. Virtually every American who shops in a local supermarket is aware of the
daily abuses that t ake place in the food stamp program, which has grown by
16,000 percent in the last 15 years. Another example is Medicare and Medicaid,
programs with worthy goals but whose costs have increased from 11.2 billion to
almost 60 billion, more than five times a s much, in just 10 years.
Waste and fraud are serious problems. Back in 1980, Federal investigators
testified before one of your committees that “corruption has permeated
virtually every area of the Medicare and Medicaid health care industry.” One
official said many of the people who are cheating the system were “very
confident that nothing was going to happen to them . “
Well, something is going to happen. Not only the taxpayers are defrauded the
people with real dependency on these programs are deprived of what they need
because available resources are going not to the needy but to the greedy.
The time has come to control the uncontrollable.
In August we made a start. I signed a bill to reduce the growth of these
programs by $44 billion over the next three years, while at the same time
preserving essential services for the truly needy. Shortly you will receive from
me a message on further re forms we intend to install some new, but others long
recommended by our own Congressional committees. I ask you to help make these
savings for the American taxpayer.
The savings we propose in entitlement programs will total some $63 billion over
four years and will, without affecting Social Security, go a long way toward
bringing Federal spending under control.
But don’t be fooled by those who proclaim that spending cuts will deprive the
elderly, the needy and the helpless. The Federal Government will still subsidize
95 million meals every day. That’s one out of seven of all the meals served in
America. Head St art, senior nutrition programs, and child welfare programs will
not be cut from the levels we proposed last year. More than one-half billion
dollars has been proposed for minority business assistance. And research at the
National Institutes of Health will be increased by over $100 million. While
meeting all these needs, we intend to plug unwarranted tax loopholes and
strengthen the law which requires all large corporations to pay a minimum tax.
I am confident the economic program we’ve put into operation will protect the
needy while it triggers a recovery that will benefit all Americans. It will
stimulate the economy, result in increased savings and provide capital for
expansion, mortgages for home building and jobs for the unemployed.
Now that the essentials of that program are in place, our next major undertaking
must be a program just as bold, just as innovative to make government again
accountable to the people, to make our system of federalism work again.
Our citizens feel they’ve lost control of even the most basic decisions made
about the essential services of Government, such as schools, welfare, roads and
even garbage collection. And they’re right.
A maze of interlocking jurisdictions and levels of Government confronts average
citizens in trying to solve even the simplest of problems. They don’t know
where to turn for answers, who to hold accountable, who to praise, who to blame,
who to vote for or against.
The main reason for this is the overpowering growth of Federal grants-in-aid
programs during the past few decades.
In 1960, the Federal Government had 132 categorical grant programs, costing $7
billion. When I took office, there were approximately 500, costing nearly $100
billion 13 programs for energy, 36 for pollution control, 66 for social
services, 90 for educati on. And here in the Congress, it takes at least 166
committees just to try to keep track of them.
You know and I know that neither the President nor the Congress can properly
oversee this jungle of grants-in-aid; indeed, the growth of these grants had led
to the distortion in the vital functions of Government. As one Democratic
Governor put it recent ly: “The national Government should be worrying about
“arms control not potholes.” The growth the growth in these Federal programs
has in the words of one intergovernmental commission made the Federal Government
“more pervasive, more intrusive, more unman ageable, more ineffective and
costly, and above all more accountable.”
Well, let’s solve this problem with a single, bold stroke the return of some
$47 billion in Federal programs to state and local government, together with the
means to finance them and a transition period of nearly 10 years to avoid
unnecessary disruption .
I will shortly send this Congress a message describing this program. I want to
emphasize, however, that its full details will have been worked out only after
close consultation with Congressional, state and local officials.
Now let me also note that private American groups have taken the lead in making
Jan. 30 a day of solidarity with the people of Poland so, too, the European
Parliament has called for March 21 to be an international day of support for
Afghanistan. Well, I urge all peace-loving peoples to join together on those
days, to raise their voices, to speak and pray for freedom.
Meanwhile, we’re working for reduction of arms and military activities. As I
announced in my address to the nation last Nov. 18, we have proposed to the
Soviet Union a far-reaching agenda for mutual reduction of military forces and
have already initiated negotiations with them in Geneva on intermediate-range
nuclear forces.
In those talks it is essential that we negotiate from a position of strength.
There must be a real incentive for the Soviets to take these talks seriously.
This requires that we rebuild our defenses.
In the last decade, while we sought the moderation of Soviet power through a
process of restraint and accommodation, the Soviets engaged in an unrelenting
buildup of their military forces.
The protection of our national security has required that we undertake a
substantial program to enhance our military forces.
We have not neglected to strengthen our traditional alliances in Europe and
Asia, or to develop key relationships with our partners in the Middle East and
other countries.
Building a more peaceful world requires a sound strategy and the national
resolve to back it up. When radical forces threaten our friends, when economic
misfortune creates conditions of instability, when strategically vital parts of
the world fall under the shadow of Soviet power, our response can make the
difference between peaceful change or disorder and violence. That’s why
we’ve laid such stress not only on our own defense, but on our vital foreign
assistance program. Your recent passage of the foreign assistance act sent a
signal to the world that America will not shrink from making the investments
necessary for both peace and security. Our foreign policy must be rooted in
realism, not naivet or self-delusion.
A recognition of what the Soviet empire is about is the starting point. Winston
Churchill, in negotiating with the Soviets, observed that they respect only
strength and resolve in their dealings with other nations.
That’s why we’ve moved to reconstruct our national defenses. We intend to
keep the peace we will also keep our freedom.
We we have made pledges of a new frankness in our public statements and
worldwide broadcasts. In the face of a climate of falsehood and misinformation,
we’ve promised the world a season of truth the truth of our great civilized
ideas: individual liberty, representative government, the rule of law under God.
We’ve never needed walls, or mine fields or barbwire to keep our people in.
Nor do we declare martial law to keep our people from voting for the kind of
Government they want.
Yes, we have our problems; yes, we’re in a time of recession. And it’s true,
there’s no quick fix, as I said, to instantly end the tragic pain of
unemployment. But we will end it the process has already begun and we’ll see
its effect as the year goes on.
We speak with pride and admiration of that little band of Americans who overcame
insuperable odds to set this nation on course 200 years ago. But our glory
didn’t end with them Americans ever since have emulated their deeds.
We don’t have to turn to our history books for heroes. They’re all around
us. One who sits among you here tonight epitomized that heroism at the end of
the longest imprisonment ever inflicted on men of our armed forces. Who will
ever forget that night when en we waited for television to bring us the scene of
that first plane landing at Clark Field in the Philippines bringing our
P.O.W.’s home. The plane door opened and Jeremiah Denton came slowly down the
ramp. He caught sight of our flag, saluted it, said, “God bless America,”
and then thanked us for bringing him home.
Just just two weeks ago, in the midst of a terrible tragedy on the Potomac, we
saw again the spirit of American heroism at its finest the heroism of dedicated
rescue workers saving crash victims from icy waters.
And we saw the heroism of one of our young Government employees, Lenny Skutnik,
who, when he saw a woman lose her grip on the helicopter line, dived into the
water and dragged her to safety.
And then there are countless quiet, everyday heroes of American life parents who
sacrifice long and hard so their children will know a better life than they’ve
known; church and civic volunteers who help to feed, clothe, nurse and teach the
needy; millions who’ve made our nation, and our nation’s destiny, so very
special unsung heroes who may not have realized their own dreams themselves but
then who reinvest those dreams in their children.
Don’t let anyone tell that America’s best days are behind her that the
American spirit has been vanquished. We’ve seen it triumph too often in our
lives to stop believing in it now.
A hundred and one hundred and twenty years ago the greatest of all our
Presidents delivered his second State of the Union Message in this chamber.
“We cannot escape history,” Abraham Lincoln warned. “We of this Congress
and this Administration will be re membered in spite of ourselves.” The
“trial through which we pass will light us down in honor or dishonor to the
latest generation.”
Well, that President and that Congress did not fail the American people.
Together, they weathered the storm and preserved the union.
Let it be said of us that we, too did not fail; that we, too, worked together to
bring America through difficult times. Let us so conduct ourselves that two
centuries from now, another Congress and another President, meeting in this
chamber as we’re meet , will speak of us with pride, saying that we met the
test and preserved for them in their day the sacred flame of liberty this last,
best hope of man on Earth.