William
J. Clinton Inaugural Address
January 20, 1997
My fellow citizens, at this
last Presidential Inauguration of the 20th century, let us lift
our eyes toward the challenges that await us in the next century.
It is our great good fortune that time and chance have put us
not only at the edge of a new century, in a new millennium,
but on the edge of a bright new prospect in human affairs, a
moment that will define our course and our character for decades
to comes. We must keep our old democracy forever young. Guided
by the ancient vision of a promised land, let us set our sights
upon a land of new promise.
The promise of America was
born in the 18th century out of the bold conviction that we
are all created equal. It was extended and preserved in the
19th century, when our Nation spread across the continent, saved
the Union, and abolished the awful scourge of slavery.
Then, in turmoil and triumph,
that promise exploded onto the world stage to make this the
American century. And what a century it has been. America became
the world's mightiest industrial power, saved the world from
tyranny in two World Wars and a long cold war, and time and
again reached out across the globe to millions who, like us,
longed for the blessings of liberty.
Along the way, Americans
produced a great middle class and security in old age, built
unrivaled centers of learning and opened public schools to all,
split the atom and explored the heavens, invented the com puter
and the microchip, and deepened the well-spring of justice by
making a revolution in civil rights for African-Americans and
all minorities and extending the circle of citizenship, opportunity,
and dignity to women.
Now, for the third time,
a new century is upon us and another time to choose. We began
the 19th century with a choice: to spread our Nation from coast
to coast. We began the 20th century with a choice: to harness
the industrial revolution to our values of free enterprise,
conservation, and human decency. Those choices made all the
difference. At the dawn of the 21st century, a free people must
now choose to shape the forces of the information age and the
global society, to unleash the limitless potential of all our
people, and yes, to form a more perfect Union.
When last we gathered, our
march to this new future seemed less certain than it does today.
We vowed then to set a clear course to renew our Nation. In
these 4 years, we have been touched by tragedy, exhilarated
by challenge, strengthened by achievement. America stands alone
as the world's indispensable nation. Once again, our economy
is the strongest on Earth. Once again, we are building stronger
families, thriving communities, better educational opportunities,
a cleaner environment. Problems that once seemed destined to
deepen, now bend to our efforts. Our streets are safer, and
record numbers of our fellow citizens have moved from welfare
to work.
And once again, we have
resolved for our time a great debate over the role of Government.
Today we can declare: Government is not the problem, and Government
is not the solution. We—the American people—we are the solution.
Our Founders understood that well and gave us a democracy strong
enough to endure for centuries, flexible enough to face our
common challenges and advance our common dreams in each new
day.
As times change, so Government
must change. We need a new Government for a new century, humble
enough not to try to solve all our problems for us but strong
enough to give us the tools to solve our problems for ourselves,
a government that is smaller, lives within its means, and does
more with less. Yet where it can stand up for our values and
interests around the world, and where it can give Americans
the power to make a real difference in their everyday lives,
Government should do more, not less. The preeminent mission
of our new Government is to give all Americans an opportunity,
not a guarantee but a real opportunity, to build better lives.
Beyond that, my fellow citizens,
the future is up to us. Our Founders taught us that the preservation
of our liberty and our Union depends upon responsible citizenship.
And we need a new sense of responsibility for a new century.
There is work to do, work that Government alone cannot do: teaching
children to read, hiring people off welfare rolls, coming out
from behind locked doors and shuttered windows to help reclaim
our streets from drugs and gangs and crime, taking time out
of our own lives to serve others.
Each and every one of us,
in our own way, must assume personal responsibility not only
for ourselves and our families but for our neighbors and our
Nation. Our greatest responsibility is to embrace a new spirit
of community for a new century. For any one of us to succeed,
we must succeed as one America. The challenge of our past remains
the challenge of our future: Will we be one Nation, one people,
with one common destiny, or not? Will we all come together,
or come apart?
The divide of race has been
America's constant curse. And each new wave of immigrants gives
new targets to old prejudices. Prejudice and contempt cloaked
in the pretense of religious or political conviction are no
different. These forces have nearly destroyed our Nation in
the past. They plague us still. They fuel the fanaticism of
terror. And they torment the lives of millions in fractured
nations all around the world.
These obsessions cripple
both those who hate and of course those who are hated, robbing
both of what they might become. We cannot, we will not, succumb
to the dark impulses that lurk in the far regions of the soul
everywhere. We shall overcome them. And we shall replace them
with the generous spirit of a people who feel at home with one
another. Our rich texture of racial, religious, and political
diversity will be a godsend in the 21st century. Great rewards
will come to those who can live together, learn together, work
together, forge new ties that bind together.
As this new era approaches,
we can already see its broad outlines. Ten years ago, the Internet
was the mystical province of physicists; today, it is a commonplace
encyclopedia for millions of schoolchildren. Scientists now
are decoding the blueprint of human life. Cures for our most
feared illnesses seem close at hand. The world is no longer
divided into two hostile camps. Instead, now we are building
bonds with nations that once were our adversaries. Growing connections
of commerce and culture give us a chance to lift the fortunes
and spirits of people the world over. And for the very first
time in all of history, more people on this planet live under
democracy than dictatorship.
My fellow Americans, as
we look back at this remarkable century, we may ask, can we
hope not just to follow but even to surpass the achievements
of the 20th century in America and to avoid the awful bloodshed
that stained its legacy? To that question, every American here
and every American in our land today must answer a resounding,
"Yes!" This is the heart of our task. With a new vision
of Government, a new sense of responsibility, a new spirit of
community, we will sustain America's journey.
The promise we sought in
a new land, we will find again in a land of new promise. In
this new land, education will be every citizen's most prized
possession. Our schools will have the highest standards in the
world, igniting the spark of possibility in the eyes of every
girl and every boy. And the doors of higher education will be
open to all. The knowledge and power of the information age
will be within reach not just of the few but of every classroom,
every library, every child. Parents and children will have time
not only to work but to read and play together. And the plans
they make at their kitchen table will be those of a better home,
a better job, the certain chance to go to college.
Our streets will echo again
with the laughter of our children, because no one will try to
shoot them or sell them drugs anymore. Everyone who can work,
will work, with today's permanent under class part of tomorrow's
growing middle class. New miracles of medicine at last will
reach not only those who can claim care now but the children
and hard-working families too long denied.
We will stand mighty for
peace and freedom and maintain a strong defense against terror
and destruction. Our children will sleep free from the threat
of nuclear, chemical, or biological weapons. Ports and airports,
farms and factories will thrive with trade and innovation and
ideas. And the world's greatest democracy will lead a whole
world of democracies.
Our land of new promise
will be a nation that meets its obligations, a nation that balances
its budget but never loses the balance of its values, a nation
where our grandparents have secure retirement and health care
and their grandchildren know we have made the reforms necessary
to sustain those benefits for their time, a nation that fortifies
the world's most productive economy even as it protects the
great natural bounty of our water, air, and majestic land. And
in this land of new promise, we will have reformed our politics
so that the voice of the people will always speak louder than
the din of narrow interests, regaining the participation and
deserving the trust of all Americans.
Fellow citizens, let us
build that America, a nation ever moving forward toward realizing
the full potential of all its citizens. Prosperity and power,
yes, they are important, and we must maintain them. But let
us never forget, the greatest progress we have made and the
greatest progress we have yet to make, is in the human heart.
In the end, all the world's wealth and a thousand armies are
no match for the strength and decency of the human spirit.
Thirty-four years ago, the
man whose life we celebrate today spoke to us down there, at
the other end of this Mall, in words that moved the conscience
of a nation. Like a prophet of old, he told of his dream that
one day America would rise up and treat all its citizens as
equals before the law and in the heart. Martin Luther King's
dream was the American dream. His quest is our quest: the ceaseless
striving to live out our true creed. Our history has been built
on such dreams and labors. And by our dreams and labors, we
will redeem the promise of America in the 21st century.
To that effort I pledge
all my strength and every power of my office. I ask the Members
of Congress here to join in that pledge. The American people
returned to office a President of one party and a Congress of
another. Surely they did not do this to advance the politics
of petty bickering and extreme partisanship they plainly deplore.
No, they call on us instead to be repairers of the breach and
to move on with America's mission. America demands and deserves
big things from us, and nothing big ever came from being small.
Let us remember the timeless wisdom of Cardinal Bernardin, when
facing the end of his own life. He said, "It is wrong to
waste the precious gift of time on acrimony and division."
Fellow citizens, we must
not waste the precious gift of this time. For all of us are
on that same journey of our lives, and our journey, too, will
come to an end. But the journey of our America must go on.
And so, my fellow Americans,
we must be strong, for there is much to dare. The demands of
our time are great, and they are different. Let us meet them
with faith and courage, with patience and a grateful, happy
heart. Let us shape the hope of this day into the noblest chapter
in our history. Yes, let us build our bridge, a bridge wide
enough and strong enough for every American to cross over to
a blessed land of new promise.
May those generations whose
faces we cannot yet see, whose names we may never know, say
of us here that we led our beloved land into a new century with
the American dream alive for all her children, with the American
promise of a more perfect Union a reality for all her people,
with America's bright flame of freedom spreading throughout
all the world.
From the height of this
place and the summit of this century, let us go forth. May God
strengthen our hands for the good work ahead, and always, always
bless our America.
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