Landon
Lecture presented by
Senate Democratic Leader Tom Daschle
at Kansas State University
Monday, May 10, 2004
Can
We Talk? Free Speech and Civil Discourse in Turbulent Times
Thank
you, President Wefald. Thank you, Professor Chuck Reagan, for inviting
Linda and me to be here today. I also want to thank the K-State faculty
and staff and students. Thank you as well to the members of the community
who are here, especially any soldiers from Fort Riley. During World
War II, General George Marshall was asked if America had a secret weapon
to win the war. He replied, yes, we did. It was the best darned
kids in the world. Americas soldiers, sailors, airmen and
Marines are still the best in the world. From Fort Riley to Fallajuh,
they are carrying a heavy burden today and we are proud of them and
grateful to them.
Linda
and I are delighted to be here today. K-State enjoys a special place
in our family because of Lindas student days here and because
she started her professional career in aviation not far from here. In
fact you may not know this but a lot of South Dakotans
are Wildcat fans these days. The reason can be summed up in two words:
Megan Mahoney. Megan is from Sturgis, South Dakota. In her senior year
in high school, she was South Dakota girls basketball player of the
year. So many scouts came to see her, she added almost as much to the
local economy as the Sturgis Bike Rally, the worlds biggest Harley
round-up. Were incredibly proud of Megan and her teammates this
year: Co-Big 12 Champions! And thats just one of three Big 12
Championships for K-State this year. Youve also got the best football
and womens volleyball team in the Big 12. Now I know why my friend,
Pat Roberts, has been so happy all year.
It
is a truly an honor to be invited to speak at this prestigious forum.
For nearly four decades beginning with Governor Landons
prescient opening address in 1966 on the use of American military power
-- the Landon Lecture Series has given some of the most distinguished
leaders in the world a forum in which to discuss the most important
issues of the day. Landon lecturers have come from different political
parties, and different nations and they have addressed many different
and urgent questions. But there is a thread that runs through every
Landon Lecture: that is the shared belief that our best hope for the
future lies in honest, respectful discussion. I share that belief. That
is why I wrote my book. The two years that made up the 107th Congress
truly were, as the title says, like no other time in Americas
history. The events we experienced, and our reactions to those events,
changed the world profoundly, and they will continue to shape the world
for years, and probably generations, to come. As the Minority, and then
the Majority Leader, of the United States Senate, I had a closer view
of those events than all but a handful of people on Earth. I decided
to write about what I saw and heard because I believe that Americans
have the courage and intelligence to meet any challenge, and to make
wise choices about our future -- as long as people are given the facts
and the opportunity to reason through all the options.
The
107th Congress started, as we all remember, with a struggle for power
at the highest levels of our government. The 2000 Presidential election
marked the third time in our nations history that a Presidential
election was contested and the first time that a Presidential election
was decided by the Supreme Court. For five weeks, some feared we were
poised on the edge of a constitutional crisis, until Al Gores
gracious and patriotic decision to accept the Supreme Courts decision.
Vice President Gores decision, I believe, saved our nation severe
turmoil.
Incredibly,
the 2000 elections also produced a second electoral tie: the first-ever
50/50 Senate. 50 Democrats and 50 Republicans. Normally, whichever party
has the most senators controls the Senate. Members of the majority party
chair the committees. The Majority Leader decides which bills come to
the Senate floor and which dont. But there is no majority
party in a 50/50 Senate, so Trent Lott and I had to invent new rules
for sharing power in an evenly divided Congress. Many Washington insiders
said it couldnt be done -- and sometimes we feared that was true.
But after five weeks of negotiations, we came up with an agreement that
was fair and reasonable, and the Senate passed it unanimously.
Given
the tie in the Presidential race and the 50/50 Senate, the conventional
wisdom at the start of the 107th Congress was that President Bush would
have to pursue a moderate agenda.
Conventional
wisdom, as it turned out, was wrong. Instead of searching for consensus
solutions that could pass with broad, bipartisan support in Congress,
the administration, right from the start, seemed to prefer winning ideological
battles by narrow margins.
About
four months after President Bush took office, Senator Jim Jeffords of
Vermont was becoming deeply troubled by the administrations agenda
and by what he regarded as their uncompromising style. At the time,
Senator Jeffords held the longest continuously Republican seat in the
Senate. He said publicly that he thought the Presidents first
tax cut was too big, and that it would eat up money America needed for
education.
One
evening, he confided his frustration to Chris Dodd, a Democratic Senator
with whom he had worked on many education issues. That night, Chris
Dodd called me and said, I think theres a chance, under
the right circumstances, that Jim Jeffords might switch parties.
We decided to keep the lines of communication open and see what developed.
In mid-May 2001, the White House pointedly did not invite Senator Jeffords
to a Rose Garden ceremony at which the President announced the national
Teacher of the Year, who was from Vermont. As a fellow Vermonter --
and chairman of the Senate committee overseeing education -- he should
have been at that ceremony. His exclusion was widely seen as a snub,
the White Houses way of punishing Senator Jeffords for speaking
out about education and tax cuts.
The
following day -- a Friday -- Senator Jeffords was visibly upset and
told at least two other Republican Senators, on the Senate floor, that
he was considering leaving the party. We felt certain that was the end
of it. As soon as the news reached the White House, we thought the White
House would do whatever it took to prevent Senator Jeffords defection.
All weekend, we waited for the bad news. But to our astonishment, the
White House never called Senator Jeffords.
On
Monday, he called me to tell me his mind was made up. He couldnt
become a Democrat, but he would become an Independent. The next day,
he went home to Vermont and made it official. Never before had control
of the United States Senate turned on the decision of one Senator.
There
were some who urged Senate Democrats to use our new majority to get
even for what they regarded as excessive partisanship by Republicans.
I tried to avoid that as Majority Leader. I believed then, and I believe
now, that such retaliation would diminish both parties and hurt the
American people.
The
defining event of the 107th Congress was, of course, September 11. I
was in my office in the Capitol, meeting with John Glenn, when the first
plane hit the first tower. Someone on my staff ran in and said, A
plane has flown into the World Trade Center. We turned on the
TV just in time to see the second plane hit the other tower -- and mistakenly
thought we were watching a replay. Senator Glenn -- who knows something
about flying -- said simply, Pilots dont fly planes into
buildings. He knew instantly that American was under attack.
I
stepped into a meeting with other Senators in a nearby room. Suddenly,
Senator Patty Murray, from Washington state, looked out the window and
gasped, My God, theres smoke above the Pentagon. Moments
later, a Capitol Police officer burst in, said, Senator, we are
evacuating the Capitol. Now, and rushed us out of the building.
Its
hard to describe the chaos of those first moments. There was no real
evacuation plan for the Capitol. The police took all four Congressional
leaders to the Capitol Police headquarters two blocks away. For security,
someone pulled down the window shades. Cell phones didnt work;
the circuits were all overloaded. So we took turns using the one land
line in the room to call our families and make sure they were okay.
After
a while, we were helicoptered to one of those secret, undisclosed
locations.
There,
we decided that members of Congress would regroup that evening on the
Capitol steps to show the world that terrorism would not shut down American
democracy.
On
the steps, all four Leaders made very short statements. Then someone
spontaneously began singing God Bless America, and we all
joined in. Some of us were a little off-key, but we were as united as
I have ever seen the United States Congress.
In
the weeks that followed, Congress passed an historic series of bills
to help the victims of September 11 and to prevent future terrorist
attacks, and the war in Afghanistan began.
Then,
on October 15, 2001, the anthrax letter was opened in my office. That
attack remains the largest bioterrorism attack ever on U.S. soil. It
also remains a mystery. Twenty-eight people in the Hart Senate Office
Building -- including 20 members of my staff were exposed to
up to 3,000 lethal doses of anthrax. Tragically, five people -- among
those presumably exposed to much lower levels of anthrax outside the
Senate during those attacks -- died. The fact that everyone who was
exposed in the Senate is healthy today is the result of luck, some very
skilled and caring doctors and, I believe, the grace of God.
The
107th Congress also saw Americans faith in the private sector
shaken badly as scandals at Enron, Worldcom and other big corporations
robbed tens of thousands of Americans of their jobs, and millions more
of their life savings and retirement security. In reaction to those
scandals, and against strong initial opposition from the White House,
Democrats fought successfully to pass the most far-reaching corporate
accounting reforms since the Depression.
We
also faced months of opposition from the White House to our calls to
create a new Homeland Security Department and to establish an independent
commission to investigate September 11 the commission now co-chaired
by former Governor Tom Kean and former Congressman Lee Hamilton.
Even
in the final days of 107th Congress, history continued to be made. Weeks
before election, Robert Torricelli, the incumbent Democratic Senator
in New Jersey, dropped his re-election bid and was replaced by another
candidate. In Minnesota, less than two weeks before the election, another
Democratic Senator, Paul Wellstone -- a man I loved -- was killed in
a plane crash, along with his wife and daughter and four others. His
place on the ticket was filled by Walter Mondale -- a former Senator,
former Vice President and former Presidential nominee another
historic first.
On
election day 2002, Democrats ended up retaining a Senate seat in New
Jersey it had appeared we might lose and in Minnesota, we lost a seat
it had seemed increasingly likely we would keep. In the end, we also
lost our majority in the Senate. We went from one vote up, to one vote
down. What disappointed many of us wasnt just the outcome of the
2002 elections. It was also the startling meanness in many of the races.
Most disturbing was the calculated decision by Republican operatives
to use September 11 as a political weapon in the elections.
In
my state, South Dakota, my fellow Senator, Tim Johnson was running for
re-election. Out of 535 members of Congress, Tim Johnson was the only
member who actually had a child fighting in uniform in the war on terrorism.
His son Brooks is a staff sergeant in the Armys 101st Airborne
Division. He has served in Iraq, Bosnia and Kosovo. In the fall of 2002,
while Brooks Johnson was fighting the Taliban in Afghanistan, Republicans
ran TV ads in South Dakota comparing Tim Johnson to Osama Bin Laden.
In
Georgia, Max Cleland, a man who lost both of his legs and one of his
arms in Vietnam, was accused of not caring about Americans security
because he dared to have a different idea about one aspect of one bill.
He, too, was compared in TV ads to Osama Bin Laden. And he lost his
seat.
The
ugliness, unfortunately, did not end when the 2002 elections. And
let me be clear is not limited to the right. A while back, the
left-leaning website Moveon.org hosted a contest for the best 30-second
anti-Bush TV ad. One of the ads they received, and posted
briefly on their website, compared President Bush to Adolf Hitler. There
is no excuse for such an outrageous attack; it damages our political
discourse.
Lately,
I have felt almost sickened at times by the efforts of some on the right
and the left to exploit the sacrifices and even the deaths of American
service members for political gain.
When
Nightline dedicated an entire program to reading the names and showing
the faces of service members who have died in Iraq, Sinclair Broadcasting
System which reportedly aspires to be the next FOX News
refused to air the show on its ABC affiliates. Its lawyers said, We
find it to be contrary to the public interest.
How
can it be contrary to the public interest simply to speak
the names of soldiers who have given their lives in service to our nation?
What kind of war is it when it is somehow unpatriotic to utter the names
of our war dead?
On
the other side, I was appalled to see the cartoon by Ted Ralls calling
Pat Tillman an idiot for giving up a multi-million dollar
NFL career to defend this nation after September 11.
Pat
Tillman was a patriot, and so were the soldiers whose names were read
on Nightline. If people cant see that on the left and the
right it is because they have allowed politics to blind them.
I
have had the privilege of working with some extraordinary patriots in
Congress.
Bob
Dole was Majority Leader when I first became the Senate Democratic Leader
more than nine years ago. The conditions for a good working relationship
could not have been much worse. Democrats had just lost the majority
in the Senate. Newt Gingrich had just become Speaker of the House. Bill
Clinton was halfway through his first term as President -- and Senator
Dole was widely expected to challenge him for re-election.
When
Senator Dole resigned from the Senate in June 1996 to run for President
full-time, some people urged him to use his farewell address to drive
a wedge. Instead, he spoke with pride about the bipartisan accomplishments
he helped forge: the School Lunch program that he created with George
McGovern, the Civil Rights Act, the Voting Rights Act, and the Americans
with Disabilities Act. He also recalled with great fondness three men
he had met decades earlier in a veterans hospital in Michigan,
where they were all recovering from war wounds, and with whom he later
served in the United States Senate. Two of the three were Democrats.
Nancy
Landon Kassebaum is another American patriot. She is truly her fathers
daughter a proud Republican. Yet, in 1994 on the eve of
another historic mid-term election she was one of five Senate
Republicans who voted to support and help pass President Clintons
crime bill. In 1996, she joined with Ted Kennedy to pass the Kassebaum-Kennedy
bill, which limits discrimination in health insurance based on pre-existing
conditions.
There
is nothing inherently wrong with partisanship. To the contrary, pride
in ones party and the principles for which it stands can be admirable.
But it should be principled. It should acknowledge as Senators
Dole and Kassebaum and others do that there are things that matter
more than political parties; there are lines we should not cross, regardless
of the advantage we think it might give our party. Demonizing those
with whom we disagree politically does not serve the interests of democracy.
It does not resolve differences. It inflames passions and deepens divisions.
America
has real enemies in this world. Creating false enemies among us to score
political points does not make us safer; it makes us more vulnerable.
And trying to bully and intimidate others into silence or compliance
does not lead to progress. It leads to increased polarization and eventually,
paralysis.
There
are questions of enormous consequence facing our nation today -- questions
that will define what kind of nation we are, and what sort of future
we will leave for our children.
How
do we balance freedom and security in a post-September 11 world?
When
Congress passed the PATRIOT Act immediately after September 11, we deliberately
included an expiration date so that Congress and the public would have
a chance to review whether the law was working and decide whether it
should be changed, renewed, or simply allowed to expire.
In
his campaign speeches, the President routinely calls for the PATRIOT
Act to be expanded and made permanent. Is that the right thing to do?
We ought to debate that, and people ought to be able to ask questions
and voice their ideas freely without being accused of aiding
and abetting the enemy.
Four
years ago, the federal government has just experienced the largest budget
surplus in our history, and economists predicted we would accumulate
additional surpluses totaling a $5.6 trillion by 2011. Today, the budget
picture is radically different. This year, the deficit is expected to
hit $400 to 500 billion -- a half-trillion dollars! The federal government
is borrowing a million dollars a minute!
People
talk about the death tax. I worry about the birth tax. Linda
and I have two grandchildren. The minute they were born, they both inherited
$30,000 worth of public debt. Is that right? Is that moral? Americans
ought to be able to discuss our national priorities and obligations
without worrying about being called obstructionists -- or
worse.
Americans
are hungry for an honest, civil, national discussion about these and
other big questions. I dont have all the answers. But let me quickly
suggest seven ways I believe we can begin to restore civil discourse
and bipartisan consensus in American politics.
First,
campaigns should focus on real issues, not wedge issues. In 1963, Barry
Goldwater proposed to his friend, John Kennedy, that they make a series
of joint appearances the next year to debate the great issues of the
day one-on-one in cities across the country. President Kennedy liked
the idea. Thats how they imagined the 1964 Presidential election.
Americans today deserve that same kind of honest debate on the issues
that truly matter.
Second,
the perpetual campaign must end. When Pat Nixon died in 1993, a reporter
was startled to see George McGovern among the mourners. When the reporter
asked Senator McGovern why he would pay his respects to the wife of
a man who had fought him so hard and so unfairly, George McGovern replied
simply, You cant keep on campaigning forever. Too
many people in politics today dont seem to understand this. They
get elected to office and continue their feuds as if the campaign never
ended. After the ballots are counted, you have to stop thinking about
how you can beat the other side and start thinking about how you can
work with them to do good and constructive things.
Third,
we need to reject the idea that civility is a weakness and compromise
is a sin. Everett Dirksen, the great Republican Leader of the Senate
when Dwight Eisenhower was President, said, I am a man of fixed
and unbending principles and one of my principles is flexibility.
The result of hardball, all-or-nothing politics is usually nothing.
We need to restore respect for principled compromise.
Fourth, this ugly business of impugning other peoples patriotism
because they see things differently, or they want to try to reach a
good-faith compromise must stop. It is corrosive and destructive and
it is fundamentally un-American. As President Eisenhower said, "Here
in America we are descended in blood and in spirit from revolutionists
and rebels -- men and women who dared to dissent from accepted doctrine.
As their heirs, may we never confuse honest dissent with disloyal subversion."
Fifth,
we should reject the idea that the family members of political figures
are fair game, to use the term Karl Rove reportedly used
to justify the outing of former Ambassador Joe Wilsons
wife as an undercover CIA operative. I have heard my own wifes
career misrepresented and her character impugned for no reason other
than to damage me politically. I have seen other political families,
Republicans and Democrats, attacked in similar ways. It is ugly, and
it only coarsens the political process. It should stop.
Sixth,
we must protect free and independent media. Democracies cannot function
without informed citizens. Manhattan is fortunate to have the Mercury,
one of the vanishing breed of family-owned newspapers. Such independent
voices are disappearing quickly today because of rapid consolidation
among media conglomerates, which is one reason so many members of Congress
-- Democrats and Republicans -- oppose the new FCC media ownership rules.
We cant have a handful of giant corporations controlling what
Americans hear, read and see. We need reasonable rules that protect
the independence of the media.
Seventh,
and finally, the media must use their extraordinary freedoms responsibly.
They should rake the important muck, not just the sensational.
In
closing, there is another Kansan I admire greatly. He was a Teddy Roosevelt
sort of Republican, one of the leading voices of the Progressive movement
in American politics at the beginning of the last century. He ran for
Governor of Kansas in 1924 as an Independent, was branded as un-American
and finished third -- after two candidates who were endorsed by the
Ku Klux Klan. But his greatest work was done in newspapers. He was one
of the truly great muckrakers. Im speaking, of course, about William
Allen White, the legendary editor of the Emporia Gazette.
In
1922, William Allen White faced arrest and a possible jail sentence
over his public argument with the states then-Governor about labor
rights and free speech. In response, he wrote one of his most famous
editorials, titled To an Anxious Friend. After it appeared,
the charges were dropped, and White won a Pulitzer Prize.
This
is part of what William Allen White wrote in that column -- and its
still true today.
Peace
is good. But if you are interested in peace through force and without
free discussion ... your interest in justice is slight. And peace without
justice is tyranny, no matter how you may sugarcoat it with expedience.
...Whoever pleads for justice, helps to keep the peace; and whoever
tramples on the plea for justice, temperately made in the name of peace,
only outrages peace and kills something fine in the heart of man which
God put there when we got our manhood. When that is killed, brute meets
brute on each side of the line. ...
So,
dear friend, put fear out of your heart. This nation will survive, this
state will prosper, the orderly business of life will go forward --
if only men can speak in whatever way given them to utter what their
hearts hold by voice, by posted card, by letter, or by press.
Reason has never failed men.
The
107th Congress was filled with historic events, from the first day to
the last. Today, enormous new challenges and opportunities confront
us. We will not meet those challenges or seize those opportunities if
we indulge in the brutal politics of division, if we attempt to silence
those who have other ideas. Listening to each other and working with
each other, however, there is nothing Americans cannot achieve. We proved
that on September 11. We can do so again.
Thank
you all for allowing me this chance to speak my mind. Now, I would be
happy to hear what you think, and to try to answer any questions you
may have.
Kansas State University
is a comprehensive, research, land-grant institution first serving students
and the people of Kansas, and also the nation and the world.