President Discusses Compassionate Conservative
Agenda in Dallas
Remarks by the President to the 122nd Knights of Columbus Convention
Hyatt Regency Dallas
August 3, 2004
THE PRESIDENT: Thanks for the warm welcome. Welcome to Texas. (Applause.) And
thanks for inviting me so I can come home. (Laughter.) I really appreciate the
Knights of Columbus. This strong organization believes in families and faith,
and compassion for those in need. And I'm honored you'd invite me to the 122nd
Convocation of this great organization.
I appreciate Carl Anderson, and his leadership. I've gotten to know Carl
because, you see, he's more than just an introducer of Presidents. (Laughter.)
He's a person who works with Presidents -- at least this President. And I'm
proud to have his help. (Applause.)
It's good to see my family friend, Virgil Dechant. Virgil, it's good to see
you, sir. Thank you for such a warm greeting in the photo op line and reminding
me of some great days gone past. I'm proud to be here with Cardinal McCarrick.
It's good to see you, sir. He's a neighbor in my temporary residence.
(Laughter.) I appreciate Cardinal Egan. I appreciate Cardinal Rigali, of the
great city of Philadelphia; Cardinal Francis George of Chicago; Cardinal Keeler
of Baltimore, Maryland. I'm honored you all are here. Thank you for your
presence.
I'm honored to be in the presence of Cardinal Macharski, the Archbishop of
Krakow, who succeeded the Holy Father in that role. Welcome to the United
States. Appreciate you coming, sir.
I appreciate Bishop Wilton Gregory's leadership, of the Conference of
Catholic Bishops. I appreciate Your Eminences, and Your Excellencies, Reverends,
Monsignors, Fathers and Deacons. Nuestros amigos de Mexico. I appreciate the
officers and directors, state deputies, board of directors, delegates, ladies
and gentlemen, Knights, and my fellow American. Thanks for having me.
(Applause.)
Two months ago, I had the privilege of visiting His Holy Father Pope John
Paul II at the Vatican. It was my third meeting with His Holy Father since I
took office, and for those of you who have ever met him, you know I'm telling
you the truth when I tell you being in his presence is an awesome experience. He
is a true presence. On the occasion, I had the special honor of presenting him
with America's highest civil award, the Presidential Medal of Freedom. It was my
chance to express our nation's respect for a devoted servant of God and a true
hero of our time.
Pope John Paul II has been a unique and commanding voice for the cause of the
poor, the weak, the hungry, and the outcast. He has challenged our nation, and
the entire world, to embrace the culture of life. He's called upon us to uphold
and affirm the dignity of every person, rich and poor, able and disabled, born
and unborn. He's called us to love and serve our neighbors in need. Few
organizations have worked harder and done more and met this challenge than the
Knights of Columbus. (Applause.) I know you're proud of your organization, and
you should be.
The Knights were born in New Haven, Connecticut. Come to think of it, so was
I. (Laughter and applause.) From your foundations in a small church basement,
you have raised up one of the great America organizations dedicated to charity
and mutual assistance and the fight for civil liberties.
I'm proud to say that my family has contributed to your ranks. A few years
ago, Governor Jeb -- (applause) -- became a Knight. (Applause.) And he -- yes --
and he recently took his Third Degree. (Applause.) I'll see him this weekend.
His son is getting married. I'll pass on the word, aim for the Fourth. (Laughter
and applause.) Jeb knows, as I do, that your works of mercy are making our
society more compassionate, changing the lives of millions of citizens.
Compassionate work changes our society one heart and one soul at a time.
Last year, the Knights raised and donated a record $130 million to charity.
That's a phenomenal record. (Applause.) You also volunteered for an
unprecedented 61 million hours of community service. (Applause.) You obviously
have heard the call.
I was pleased to hear this story about the Knights in Corpus Christi, Texas,
at the Mother Teresa Day Shelter. They're a daily presence there -- they're
mopping the floors, collecting laundry soap, blankets, and food for 130 homeless
men and women. They're not giving the orders, they're serving the people.
Patricia Henry, the shelter director, put it this way: "If I need help, I just
give the Knights a call." (Applause.) Such a powerful example. Americans across
this great land know that they can do the same, that they can serve our country
by helping someone in need.
We're grateful for your service to the men and women in uniform and to our
nation's veterans. You've sent hundreds of thousands of prayer books to those
working to make our country more secure and to bring freedom in parts of the
world that are desperate for freedom. You bring comfort and strength to our
soldiers, sailors, airmen, and Marines. I want to thank you for taking time to
visit our wounded and disabled veterans, for providing comfort to their
families, to give them a word of thanks.
See, you're -- the Knights are soldiers in the armies of compassion. You're
foot soldiers. You've heard the call. You're helping this nation build a culture
of life in which the sick are comforted, the aged are honored, the immigrant is
welcomed, and the weak and vulnerable are never overlooked. (Applause.) You have
a friend in this administration. You have somebody who wants to work with you to
change America for the better.
We have a responsibility in government to do things to help overcome
recession and corporate scandal. It's easier to be a hopeful society when people
are working. That's why I put forth an economic stimulus plan to encourage small
business growth, a plan that will help get jobs moving, so people can work and
do their duty as a mom or a dad and put food on the table. And we're making
progress.
When I came to Washington, I was concerned about a school system that simply
shuffled children through grade after grade, year after year, and hoped for the
best. Oftentimes, what we found out was kids with great hearts were graduating
from schools, but couldn't read. I challenged the soft bigotry of low
expectations by raising the bar, insisting on high standards, by making sure the
money we spent -- and we did spend more money -- went to help those who needed
extra help early, before it was too late. I believe you've got to measure in
order to know. If you believe a child can read, you've got to measure to
determine whether or not that child is reading, and if not, get them help early,
before it's too late. (Applause.)
Because we measure, we know that now more minority children are learning to
read at grade level, and that's good for America. I want to thank the Knights --
(applause) -- I want to thank the Knights for their help in helping low-income
parents in Washington, D.C. escape from schools -- have their children escape
from schools that will not teach and will not change. Because of the work of the
Knights of Columbus, and other concerned citizens in our Nation's Capital, poor
parents now have a choice. They'll have a $7,500 scholarship so they can afford
to send their school -- their child to a private school or parochial school,
their choice to make. (Applause.)
You know, one of the great statistics of this modern era is the fact that
more people are owning their own home. It seems like to me, an optimistic
society is one that encourages ownership, more people owning their own business,
people owning and managing their own health care account, people being -- own a
piece of their retirement policy that they can pass on from one generation to
the next, and people owning their own home. I love a society in which more and
more people are able to say, welcome to my home; come to my home. (Applause.)
This country has added more than 1.6 million minority homeowners in the past
two years. Today, the American homeownership rate is the highest ever, and the
highest ever for minorities. When you own something you have a vital stake in
the future of your country. (Applause.)
I want to work with the Knights for reasonable and compassionate immigration
reform, to bring good, hardworking people out of the shadows of American life,
and to ensure that America is always a welcoming nation. I recognize, like you
recognize, that amidst the great prosperity of America, amongst our great
wealth, there are pockets of despair in this country, and we've got to do
something about it. We must address despair so America is hopeful for every
single person.
See, we got fellow citizens who are trapped in the misery of drugs and gang
violence and the collapse of the family. Our society and our government have a
responsibility -- you have a responsibility, those of us honored to hold high
office have a responsibility. We're doing some practical things. We've got a
community-wide effort to help educate kids to the dangers of using drugs. We
believe in collaborative efforts; people all throughout society must work to
reduce the demand for drugs. Listen, we'll do all we can to bust the thugs,
interdict the drugs coming in from foreign -- overseas. But we've got to work on
demand. And teen use of drugs is down by 11 percent from 2001 to 2003. That's a
hopeful sign. A hopeful America is where our children are learning --
(applause.)
There's a lot of work to be done on health care, but one place I know we can
continue to work together on is health care for the poorest of the poor. We've
expanded and built over 600 community health centers in America. I want to
double the number, so the 16 million poor Americans can get primary health care
without putting a strain on the emergency rooms of our hospitals, whether they
be public or private.
We've got to pay for -- we've got to work on additional welfare reforms to
help people find a job, help them have the skills necessary to work, so they
realize the dignity that comes from being independent from government, and at
the same time, strengthen marriage and the family as part of welfare reforms.
(Applause.)
But I believe one of the most effective ways our government can help those in
need is to help the charities and community groups that are doing God's work
every day. That's what I believe government ought to do. I believe government
needs to stand on the side of faith-based groups, not against faith-based
groups, when they come to saving lives. (Applause.)
Government can hand out money, and of course, there will be arguments whether
we're handing out enough or not. But what government can never do is put love in
a person's heart, or a sense of purpose in a person's life. You see, in order to
heal -- help the lonely, it works every time when a loving soul puts their arm
around and says, what can I do to help you; how can I help you in your life;
what can I do to make your life better. Many are called by God to do so, and
government must stand on the side of those millions of acts of mercy and
kindness that take place on a daily basis.
And so the faith-based initiative that I've launched recognizes the need
there be separation of church and state -- the state should never be the church,
and the church certainly should never be the state. But the state should never
fear the good works of the church. (Applause.) And the truth of the matter is,
there's a culture inside government which resents and fears religious charities,
and has discriminated against them. We're changing that. I want to thank the
Knights for their help in changing that attitude in Washington, D.C. (Applause.)
Our goal is to end the unfair discrimination against faith-based charities by
the federal government. And we're making substantial progress. In December 2002,
I issued an executive order -- I was hoping, frankly, that Congress would pass a
law. I got tired of waiting. (Laughter.) I got tired of the process debate. See,
I'm focused on results. I want there to be positive results. I want lives to be
saved, as best as possible. The process bogged down. For those of you who pay
attention to Washington, you know what I'm talking about when I say the process
bogs down.
So I signed an executive order, mandating equal treatment for faith-based
charities in the federal grant-making process. What that means is that
faith-based groups ought to be allowed to apply for federal grants just like
everybody else should be allowed to apply. (Applause.) Faith-based groups will
not be allowed to discriminate against who they serve, and they won't use the
federal money to proselytize. But they're allowed to use the money to change
hearts and souls, to help save lives, to embetter the world we live in.
And so here's the principle we've established: Religious charities that are
effectively helping the poor should have a fair and equal chance to compete for
federal money. That's the new -- those are the new rules. And this -- in 2003,
discretionary grants to faith-based programs was over a billion dollars. We're
making progress. We're using federal taxpayers' money for effective use in
helping to save lives. We're providing a social network of loving -- helping
loving souls interface with people so they can realize a better tomorrow.
Three years ago I established the Compassion Capital Fund. It's an innovative
idea. It was a -- the fund gives money to intermediary organizations that
provide faith-based and community organizations with training, technical
assistance -- what it is, is like a little incubator. If you want to access
federal money, here's how you do it. If you want to start up a faith-based
program, here's some of the lessons learned. In other words, what we're trying
to say is not only are we going to allow those faith-based programs that already
exist to access federal money, we want to help others spring up and understand
the pitfalls to succeed.
The fund provides grants to faith-based and community organizations, as well,
to help them fund their programs for the poor and the hungry and the homeless.
We've awarded $56 million under this program. Today I release another $43
million to the compassionate federal grant program.
We're moving forward on another initiative which is mentoring for the
children of prisoners. I mean, if the job of government is to try to set
priorities, a priority is to help children of prisoners find love. Imagine what
a tough life it is for a young boy or girl to go see his or her mom or dad
behind prison bars. These are children who need help. They're vulnerable to
gains and crime and despair. They're desperate for responsible adults in their
life who can give them what many of them long for, which is love and tenderness.
The best way to do that is to encourage all groups, including faith-based
groups, to provide mentors. And it's happening in America. For those of you who
are mentoring the children of prisoners, thank you for what you're doing to make
America a more welcoming place. (Applause.) We've awarded grants -- today we've
unleashed another $45.5 million of grants to programs, all aimed at doing this.
I'll tell you another program that's important is to help the addict, is to
help the person so stuck on drugs that they can't realize the great human
potential that God has given them, and they need desperate help. I believe that
some counseling programs work, no question about it. But I also know programs
that change the heart work. When a person changes their heart, they change their
habits. Government is not good at changing hearts. The Almighty God is good at
changing hearts -- (applause) -- which happens to be the cornerstone of
effective faith-based programs. And therefore, when it comes to spending federal
money to help addicts, I've asked the Congress, and the Congress has agreed to
allow us to use vouchers to go to the person who is seeking help. That person
can use that voucher at any kind of program he or she chooses, including
faith-based programs to help heal hearts and save lives.
In other words, some of these are the ways that -- (applause) -- what I'm
telling you is, things are changing in the Nation's Capital when it comes to
invigorating the faith-based initiative, and the Knights have helped a lot. I
appreciate your efforts to level the playing field when it comes to
grant-making. And because of your efforts, America is changing for the better.
I needed someone to lead this program, so guess who I turned to? The Knights.
(Applause.) I found Towey. Jim Towey is the Director of the White House Office
of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives. He's with me. You know what his job
is? His job is to help the faith community -- by the way, all faiths, all faiths
-- Christian, Jew, or Muslim -- all faiths understand what is possible now. His
job is also to make sure the federal government is a hospitable place for faith
programs to work with. Let's be frank about it. Many faith-based programs don't
want to interface with government. You know why? They're afraid of losing the
ability to practice their faith. How can you be a faith-based program if you're
not allowed to practice your faith?
Towey's job -- (applause) -- so Towey has got a big job, it's to change a
culture, a suspicious culture, and we're making progress. A suspicious culture
in Washington, a suspicious culture in the grassroots. Here's Towey's story. He
goes to meet Mother Teresa for the first time. He shows up at one of her homes
for the dying in India, and the sister who greeted him assumed he was there to
work. (Laughter.) That's what I assume every day that Towey shows up.
(Laughter.) So she gave Jim some cloth, and said, go clean the sores of a dying
man. He says it changed his life, that experience. He went on to work full-time
for the Missionaries of Charity. Incredibly enough, Jim Towey, Director of the
Office of Faith-Based Initiatives in the White House, was Mother Teresa's
lawyer. I ask you, what kind of society is it where Mother Teresa needs a
lawyer? (Laughter and applause.) It's a society that needs tort reform.
(Laughter and applause.)
I appreciate your good work, friend. Thanks for coming today.
The Knights of Columbus are transferring lives with works of compassion, and,
just as importantly, you're defending the values of faith and family that bind
us as a nation. I appreciate your fight to protect children from obscenity. I
appreciate your working to protect the Pledge of Allegiance, to keep us "one
nation under God." (Applause.) I want to thank you -- I want to thank you for
the defense of the traditional family. That is a most fundamental institution
for our society. I appreciate the fact you're promoting the culture of life.
(Applause.)
We're making progress here in America. Last November, I signed a law to end
the brutal practice of partial-birth abortion. (Applause.) This law is
constitutional; this law is compassionate; this law is urgently needed; and my
administration will vigorously defend it in the courts. (Applause.)
I was pleased to sign the Born Alive Infants Protection Act. I want to thank
the Knights on that piece of legislation. (Applause.) I signed the Unborn
Victims of Violence Act. Common sense and conscience tells us that when an
expectant mother is killed, two lives are ended, and the criminal should answer
for both crimes. (Applause.)
I was pleased to sign legislation supporting maternity group homes. We'll
continue to work to help crisis pregnancy centers. We'll work together to
strengthen incentives for adoption and parental notification laws. The Knights
have been helpful -- (applause) -- the Knights have been helpful and I
appreciate your help.
My 2005 budget, I proposed to more than triple federal funds for abstinence
programs in schools and community-based programs above 2001 levels. (Applause.)
I'll continue to work with Congress to pass a comprehensive and effective ban on
human cloning. (Applause.) Human life is a creation of God, not a commodity to
be exploited by man. (Applause.)
I look forward to working with the Knights to defend the sacred bond of
marriage. (Applause.) A few activist judges have taken it upon themselves to
redefine the institution of marriage by court order. I support a constitutional
amendment to protect the sanctity of marriage by ensuring it is always
recognized as the union of a man and woman as husband and wife. (Applause.) I
appreciate the Knights' stand on this issue.
I also appreciate the Knights' of Columbus stand on the federal judiciary. I
have a responsibility as President to make sure the federal judicial system runs
well. I have nominated superb men and women for the federal -- for the federal
benches who will strictly and fully interpret the law, not legislate from the
bench. (Applause.)
In all these areas, caring for the poor, and protecting the vulnerable,
affirming life, and defending the family, we're depending on the goodness and
compassion of the American people. And that's good, because the American people
are good and compassionate. See, the strength of this country is not our
military might, it's not the size of our wallet. The strength of this country is
the hearts and souls of the American people. (Applause.) And it is an incredible
honor to be the President of such a nation, a President of a nation of
compassion and decency and honor, and such powerful values that we're able to
bring people from all walks of life under the rubric of being an American.
I appreciate the prayers of the people of this country. People I'll never get
to say thanks to in person lift Laura and me up in prayer. It's a remarkable
aspect of the presidency. More significantly, it's a remarkable aspect of the
life of the United States of America. I'm grateful for your prayers; I'm
grateful for your great service and the example you set for our country.
Thanks for having me today. May God bless your organization, and may God
continue to bless our great country. Thank you. (Applause.)
END 3:39 P.M. CDT