My fellow Americans, we have crossed the bridge we built to the 21st century. And on that score, we will be held to a high standard, indeed, because our chance to do good is so great. For we, all of us, will be judged by the dreams and deeds we pass on to our children. But we must not let this confidence drift into complacency. In 1992, we just had a road map today, we have results.īut even more important, America again has the confidence to dream big dreams. We've engaged 150,000 young Americans in citizen service through AmeriCorps, while helping them earn money for college. We've helped parents to succeed at home and at work, with family leave, which 20 millions Americans have now used to care for a newborn child or a sick loved one. We ended welfare as we knew it - requiring work while protecting health care and nutrition for children, and investing more in child care, transportation, and housing to help their parents go to work. We cut crime, with 100,000 community police and the Brady law, which has kept guns out of the hands of half a million criminals. With the smallest federal work force in 40 years, we turned record deficits into record surpluses, and doubled our investment in education. We reinvented government, transforming it into a catalyst for new ideas that stress both opportunity and responsibility, and give our people the tools they need to solve their own problems. We restored the vital center, replacing outmoded ideologies with a new vision anchored in basic, enduring values: opportunity for all, responsibility from all, a community of all Americans. In the best traditions of our nation, Americans determined to set things right. The title of a best-selling book asked: "America: What Went Wrong?" Then our nation was gripped by economic distress, social decline, political gridlock. My gratitude also goes to those of you in this chamber who have worked with us to put progress over partisanship.Įight years ago, it was not so clear to most Americans there would be much to celebrate in the year 2000. My fellow Americans, the state of our union is the strongest it has ever been.Īs always, the real credit belongs to the American people. And next month, America will achieve the longest period of economic growth in our entire history.Īnd our economic revolution has been matched by a revival of the American spirit: crime down by 20 percent, to its lowest level in 25 years teen births down seven years in a row adoptions up by 30 percent welfare rolls cut in half to their lowest levels in 30 years. We begin the new century with over 20 million new jobs the fastest economic growth in more than 30 years the lowest unemployment rates in 30 years the lowest poverty rates in 20 years the lowest African American and Hispanic unemployment rates on record the first back-to-back budget surpluses in 42 years. Never before have we had such a blessed opportunity - and, therefore, such a profound obligation - to build the more perfect union of our founders' dreams. Never before has our nation enjoyed, at once, so much prosperity and social progress with so little internal crisis and so few external threats. We are fortunate to be alive at this moment in history.
Vice President, members of Congress, honored guests, my fellow Americans: 304 William Jefferson Clinton's Eighth State of the Union Address 2000 Bill Clinton