Thank you very much, and thank
you very much, Governor Tom Kean. My friends, Frank Holman, Members
of the Congress, it's great to see you all. You know, I have a spot
in my heart for Governors -- [laughter] -- due to about 8 years of
that experience. And just recently, I was -- well, as a matter of
fact, yesterday I was telling a story I hadn't told for a long time
about my own days as Governor. I'd come into a situation in
California as a newcomer, and the situation was just about as bad as
it was at the Federal level in 1980. And I was on my way to work one
morning with the car radio on, and I heard a disc jockey. And out of
the clear blue sky he spoke a line that endeared him to me forever.
He said, ``Every man should take unto himself a wife, because sooner
or later something is bound to happen that you can't blame on the
Governor.'' [Laughter]
But I've come here just to let you know that I have officially
appropriated the saying of the State across the river there, and I
just want to say, I love New Jersey! It's wonderful to be here. I
saw Tom Kean a few months ago when I was visiting Bloomfield, and I
told him I wanted to come back soon, and he very conveniently
arranged this fundraiser just to accommodate me. Wasn't that sweet
of him? [Laughter] Incidentally, I should apologize to -- and I
should have done this when I first started talking here -- about
keeping you waiting for so long. But, you know, the whole hitch was
that the plan called for an airplane from Washington to here and
then a helicopter closer to here and then an automobile for the last
few minutes, and the helicopter had to be canceled. But if it will
encourage you, this gray stuff is all the way to Washington --
[laughter]. And I can tell you from having been up there, if you
just want to go 2,000 feet straight up, you're in the clear
sunshine. [Laughter] It's that low.
Well, it used to be that, centuries ago, that New Jersey was said
to be a valley of humility between two mountains of pride. Well, if
that is still true, and humility is a virtue, then I think, Jersey,
you'd better be aware of the important place that you hold in our
White House. I want you to know -- and I'm serious about this --
I've been watching New Jersey these past few years and seeing it as
a bellwether for the national recovery. There are reasons for this.
In many ways New Jersey is a perfect reflection of our country as a
whole. You're both industrial and agrarian; you're a big
manufacturing State, and you're the ninth largest State in
population, and you have one of the lowest unemployment rates in the
country. And as your Governor just told you, you just passed
yourselves a tax cut bill, a State tax cut bill. So, New Jersey is
in good shape; it's in great shape. You've got the Giants and the
Jets, Springsteen and Sinatra, and the single most popular Governor
in the history of the State of New Jersey.
I'm here to tell you that I am keen on Kean. [Laughter] But I
know that he's one of the most decent and able administrators,
leaders, and political figures and Governors in America. Now, that's
just my humble opinion. [Laughter] Let me ask -- you're an impartial
nonpartisan group -- [laughter] -- does New Jersey like Tom Kean,
too? [Applause] Well, I'm with you. And there's another great race
in this great State. It's been mentioned already, the race for
``Assembly Majority '85.'' The Republican Party of New Jersey is
within five seats of control of the State assembly, and you're going
to win it this year, and you're going to make Chuck Hardwick
majority leader, and you're going to return the GOP to the dominance
that it deserves.
This, too, is an experience that I shared, because as Governor of
California for 8 years, 7 of those had a majority of the other
party. If the people of the State believe enough in the things that
Tom Kean is doing, then they ought to give him the help that he
needs and the capital to get those things done, instead of making an
uphill fight for him. And then next year, I'd like to talk to you
about another body. [Laughter] But the race for the State assembly
and the race for the Governor's mansion won't be easy. They'll
require all your commitment, your time, your efforts, and, as well,
some of your cash. [Laughter] But it's going to be a good cause.
Ultimately, it's going to help the party that stands for economic
growth and economic justice; the party that cares that the poor get
a piece of the pie; the party that has finally put an end to the tax
enslavement of the middle class in America. It's our party that has
worked for years now to get government spending down.
And I want you to know that I have just come from Washington
where this morning we announced an historic agreement to put our
nation on the road to a balanced budget. We are uniting with the
leaders of the Senate to support the balanced budget and emergency
deficit control act of 1985. This is a measure that will lock us
into spending reductions and lead us to a balanced budget by 1990.
Let me just tell you something unusual about this. Over in the
west wing of the White House, we have been huddling over the idea of
a plan -- that it isn't good enough just each year to see if we can
haggle the budget down and get a little more money out of it. We
needed a plan leading toward a balanced budget, and so we were
talking about looking for 5 years of a declining pattern of
deficits. There's no way this deficit can be eliminated in 1 year,
we know, but 5 years -- and then at the end of the 5 years, let's
get that balanced budget amendment that the Federal Government will
have to stop spending more than it takes in after we get it. But
while we were doing that in the White House, all of a sudden, a few
days ago, we discovered that up on the Hill, two of our Senators
were working on exactly the same kind of plan -- 5 years and then
our balanced budget. And so, this morning was to announce that -- I
don't know whether the extrasensory perception was going that way,
from the White House or from the Hill down to us, but we were all on
the same track, and we are working together now with the Congress to
bring this about and pass as quickly as we can this 5-year plan so
that from now on, when somebody wants to bust the budget for some
particular spending program, they will be breaking into a
well-organized plan that is aimed at, as I say, the balanced budget.
But the GOP is, in my view, the party of the American family; the
party whose tax reform proposals, to touch on another subject, would
expand the personal exemption, increase the standard deduction, and
make IRA's -- you know, those are those individual retirement
accounts -- equally available to those who work both inside and
outside the home. The GOP is the party that adheres to the old
Jeffersonian philosophy that that government governs best that
governs least. Incidentally, Thomas Jefferson made a little-known
statement about the Constitution just about the time it was being
ratified. He said it only had one flaw: It did not contain a
provision preventing the Federal Government from borrowing money.
[Laughter] Well, we're going to make Tom Jefferson, wherever he is,
happy. [Laughter]
Well, it's the GOP that would keep political power near the true
roots of that power -- in the neighborhood, the town, the county,
and then the State. Such an approach to governmental justice demands
creativity on the part of the local elements who would lead and
govern. Happily, it's the Republican Party that strives for
creativity on the local level, that encourages and develops it. The
Republican Party sees the challenges of the world with clear eyes
and recognizes the difference between the totalitarians and the
freedom fighters and rejects the former and hails the latter.
And finally, it's the Republican Party that has stood up, with
the help of many Democrats, for SDI, our strategic space shield.
They call it Star Wars; there's nothing in that, descriptive of what
we're talking about. We're talking about a defensive shield that
won't hurt people, but will knock down nuclear weapons before they
can hurt people. We will go forward with seeing if it cannot be made
into a great protector of our people and the people of the world. It
could be the device, if the research pans out -- we can perfect this
-- it could be the thing that would eliminate nuclear weapons
because they wouldn't have any use any more. Demands to abandon a
program with real potential for strengthening deterrence and
enhancing Western security do not deal with the real issue of peace.
What we need are good-faith discussions, and we're seeking to
discuss even now with the Soviets in Geneva the vital relationship
between strategic offense and defense. I see where he made a
statement in a recent interview, where he said that he did not
believe that the God above could have done something -- would
prevent the people of the world from doing something for themselves.
And I have to believe if he's talking to God we ought to be able to
get along, because so am I.
But much is at stake when we talk about the principles of our
party. And much is at stake when we ask New Jersey to get out there
and elect a Republican assembly. It'll be another step toward the
political realignment that's been going on for a few years now and
that needs an extra push from your wonderful State. And remember the
whole country will be watching. What you do in a few weeks will make
a difference. And I just want to thank all of you for caring and
sharing your time. You're the troops of a mighty movement, you are
the movement, and God bless you all.
And I thank you kindly for your reception here today. I was here,
as I say, just a few months ago, and I'll be back again soon. I love
New Jersey!
Note: The President spoke at 2:40 p.m. in the Grand Ballroom
at the Hilton Hotel. He was introduced by Gov. Thomas H. Kean.
Following his remarks, the President attended a reception at the
hotel for major donors to the State Republican Party. He then
returned to Washington, DC.