 the public and senator from the line. And two, and to you so that everyone knows where George really is tonight, George Montage. You was in 1980, October of the 20th specifically, when you had your great debate in Cleveland, Ohio with a guy named Jimmy Carter. Do you remember that? President, I'm not going to have that opportunity to share my vision for Ohio in a debate. The senator who said debates are the way candidates submit themselves to the public has broken his promise to Ohioans. I think I'm very proud of her and what the cause that she is speaking or addressing herself gives her a lot of country. I know that there's a lot of talk now when you heard about it. Nancy was speaking to a school group or classroom in Oakland, California, and little girls stood up and said, what do we do when someone moved? The two Georges stand as proud defenders and promoters of a vibrant economy, limited central government, strong national defense, and the American system, and the American people. Yes, ladies and gentlemen, I say it again. There are two Georges this year. And I don't know of a better, more able, and more principled public servant than the man who was going to be the next senator from the state of Ohio, George Boinevich. Game Mayor Cleveland in 1979, George found the city treasury mired in debt to the tune of $111 million. On June 20th, 1987, he paid off the last of that debt. People said it couldn't be done, but they didn't understand that George Boinevich is the Charlie Hussle of Ohio politics. That kind of accomplishment is what we need money. And then have the nerve to go on television on the Sunday morning shows and complain that there's a budget deficit. Now there's something that is going around the country saying, and I'm going to say it again tonight, the president doesn't spend a dime of the nation's money. It's Congress that appropriates, Congress that authorizes, and Congress that spends. George Boinevich knows what you are against, the line item veto and the balanced budget amendment. The liberals oppose these measures because despite what they tell Dave Brinkley, they don't want a balanced budget, and they don't want to stop their big spending. They want pork, pork, pork. You know what that means. It means taxes, taxes, and taxes. Well, one of the liberal tax and spend ringleaders in Washington is the fellow who's running against George Boinevich this year. The nonpartisan Washington Publication Congressional Court, they called him the liberal master of obstruction. Needless to say, he voted for those boondoggle bills. He's voted for so many of them. He's been given the dubious distinction of winning a big spender award from the National Taxpayers Union. I think they're going to give him thumbs down. Boinevich's opponent has carried a stealth candidacy to New Heights by refusing to debate George even once, as he told you. With his record, I can understand why. No Ohio liberal believe they opposed the death penalty, or at least the Ohio liberal did until the selection. He had a sudden change of heart and decided to support for drug cave-ins. Not that, but for a political opportunism. Who knows what he'll support next year? With your point of vision, George, punishment, and I agree, difference in values, that explains why the liberal sometimes seem to care more about the rights of criminals than the rights of honest and law-abiding Americans. You see, they have reliable evidence obtained reasonably and in good faith by our police to be used in criminal prosecutions. That's the kind of position they take on crime. And they're just plain wrong who invoke the Constitution when they take it. I don't see a word of it. January the 11th, I had the honor of presenting you a key to the city of Cleveland. And I presented it to you. And I said, I hope that it would remind you that you were key to the door of the Democrat-controlled United States Senate. And Ohio is key to sending someone to the United States Senate that has your values and your institution.