Excerpts from Press Briefing by Ari Fleischer,
October 3, 2002 (Full
transcript)
MR. FLEISCHER: Good afternoon. I want to give you a report
on the President's schedule, and then I have an opening announcement
about Hurricane Lili.
The President began his day with a phone call to the Prime
Minister of the Slovak Republic, followed by an intelligence
briefing and an FBI briefing. And then the President spent a good
portion of the morning urging Congress to focus on the domestic
agenda. The President made the case to the Congress about the
importance of passing legislation to create the Department of
Homeland Security, as well as to create 300,000 jobs in the economy
by passing the terrorism insurance legislation that's pending on the
Hill.
QUESTION: With respect to the administration's economic
policy, as you know, former Vice President Gore yesterday widely
criticized your current course, called for a mid-course correction,
suggested a stimulus package which would include extending
unemployment benefits after they run out in December when Congress
is not in town. What is the White House reaction to some of their
suggestions which, as you know, the President himself has proposed,
particularly the small business tax relief?
MR. FLEISCHER: Well, I addressed this earlier. I was asked
about a UI extension and I talked about it earlier, so there's
really no change from what I said just before. Q But as you know, it
runs out in December, when Congress isn't in town. So is there an
urgency to get something on the books before –
MR. FLEISCHER: Well, as I indicated, we're going to
continue to work with Congress on all issues involving the economy
and restoration of growth. But the President thinks that the number
one, most concrete thing that can be done now is to create jobs. And
Congress has within its power right now the ability to create some
300,000 jobs, particularly in the hard-hat and construction
industry.
QUESTION: But, as you know, that's just one income sector
and unemployment benefits would extend in a broad spectrum to others
that are unemployed.
MR. FLEISCHER: There are a number of issues that have been
talked about on the Hill that can create growth and opportunities
for people so they don't have to collect unemployment, so they can
collect paychecks. And there remain a number of conversations on the
Hill about all these topics.
QUESTION: Secondly -- I'm sorry -- but –
MR. FLEISCHER: Thirdly.
QUESTION: -- point -- thirdly -- that was made in his
speech yesterday is that it would not be unprecedented, particularly
in a time when the deficit is moving upward, to increase taxes to
offset previous tax cuts. And the precedent he set was that of
President Ronald Reagan, who in '82 did increase taxes to offset
previous tax cuts. Is that something the administration at any point
in time would ever consider doing?
MR. FLEISCHER: Well, I think there is no question that
there is a growing movement inside the Democratic Party to raise
taxes, and President Bush is going to resist that. I think many
Democrats have tried to talk around the issue by saying they're not
really raising taxes, they're just stopping the tax cuts that have
been promised the American people from ever going into place. And
that's like saying to an American worker that if your boss says
you're about to get a pay raise next year and he takes it back --
well, you were never going to get that pay raise anyway, so you
won't miss it.
Well, that's taking money away from somebody that was promised to
them. And when Washington does that, it's called a tax hike. And the
President will strongly fight those who believe that we should raise
taxes.
QUESTION: So are you saying President Reagan, then, did
that?