him have lost a
loyal friend. I had the privilege of visiting Senator Russell in the 
hospital just a few days before he died. He never spoke about himself. 
He only spoke eloquently about the need for a strong national defense. 
In tribute to one of the most magnificent Americans of all time, I 
respectfully ask that all those here will rise in silent prayer for Senator 
Russell. 
Thank you. 
Mr. Speaker, before I begin my formal address, I want to use this 
opportunity to congratulate all of those who were winners in the rather 
spirited contest for leadership positions in the House and the Senate 
and, also, to express my condolences to the losers. I know how both of 
you feel. 
And I particularly want to join with all of the Members of the House 
and the Senate as well in congratulating the new Speaker of the United 
States Congress. 
To those new Members of this House who may have some doubts 
about the possibilities for advancement in the years ahead, I would 
remind you that the Speaker and I met just 24 years ago in this 
Chamber as freshmen Members of the 80th Congress. As you see, we 
both have come up in the world a bit since then. 
Mr. Speaker, this 92d Congress has a chance to be recorded as the 
greatest Congress in America's history. 
In these troubled years just past, America has been going through a 
long nightmare of war and division, of crime and inflation. Even more 
deeply, we have gone through a long, dark night of the American spirit. 
But now that night is ending. Now we must let our spirits soar again. 
Now we are ready for the lift of a driving dream. 
The people of this Nation are eager to get on with the quest for new 
greatness. They see challenges, and they are prepared to meet those 
challenges. It is for us here to open the doors that will set free again the 
real greatness of this Nation-the genius of the American people. 
How shall we meet this challenge? How can we truly open the doors, 
and set free the full genius of our people? 
The way in which the 92d Congress answers these questions will 
determine its place in history. More importantly, it can determine this 
Nation's place in history as we enter the third century of our 
independence.
Tonight I shall present to the Congress six great goals. I shall ask not 
simply for more new programs in the old framework. I shall ask to 
change the framework of government itself---to reform the entire 
structure of American government so we can make it again fully 
responsive to the needs and the wishes of the American people. 
If we act boldly--if we seize this moment and achieve these goals--we 
can close the gap between promise and performance in American 
government. We can bring together the resources of this Nation and the 
spirit of the American people. 
In discussing these great goals, I shall deal tonight only with matters on 
the domestic side of the Nation's agenda. I shall make a separate report 
to the Congress and the Nation next month on developments in foreign 
policy. 
The first of these great goals is already before the Congress. 
I urge that the unfinished business of the 91st Congress be made the 
first priority business of the 92d Congress. 
Over the next 2 weeks, I will call upon Congress to take action on more 
than 35 pieces of proposed legislation on which action was not 
completed last year. 
The most important is welfare reform. 
The present welfare system has become a monstrous, consuming 
outrage--an outrage against the community, against the taxpayer, and 
particularly against the children it is supposed to help. 
We may honestly disagree, as we do, on what to do about it. But we 
can all agree that we must meet the challenge, not by pouring more 
money into a bad program, but by abolishing the present welfare 
system and adopting a new one. 
So let us place a floor under the income of every family with children 
in America-and without those demeaning, soul-stifling affronts to 
human dignity that so blight the lives of welfare children today. But let 
us also establish an effective work incentive and an effective work 
requirement. 
Let us provide the means by which more can help themselves. This 
shall be our goal. 
Let us generously help those who are not able to help themselves. But 
let us stop helping those who are able to help themselves but refuse to 
do so.
The second great goal is to achieve what Americans have not enjoyed 
since 1957--full prosperity in peacetime. 
The tide of inflation has turned. The rise in the cost of living, which 
had been gathering dangerous momentum in    
    
		
	
	
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