Source: Associated Press May, 8 By Jim Abrams WASHINGTON (AP) House Speaker Newt Gingrich announced new political objectives Thursday, saying the focus on drugs, education and teen pregnancy will be even more important than balancing the budget. Gingrich, RGa., said his goal was to achieve a drugfree America by Jan. 1, 2001, following a ``national crusade fully as intensive as the effort to balance the budget.'' Gingrich was addressing the National Religious Broadcasters about where he and the Republican Party are going after reaching agreement with the White House on the GOP's longtime goal of balancing the budget by 2002. On the budget side, he said the $5.5 trillion national debt could be eliminated by 2024 if spending were held at 1 percent below revenues every year after 2002. But he outlined his main goals as eliminating drugs, improving education and reducing teen pregnancy by the start of the new millennium in 2001. On drugs, he said those caught crossing borders or producing commercial quantities of drugs should get mandatory life sentences on first conviction, and the death sentence for second convictions. ``If you sell it we're going to kill you,'' he said. He suggested using the Air Force to help track traffickers and recommended religionbased drug rehabilitation programs. He said schools today are ``often no more than holding pens for our children,'' and said he would push for a system in which children who attend poor schools should be given vouchers to ``go to a school that actually cares.' He said he would promote private efforts to prevent single teenage girls from having children. He said half of girls under 18 who have children out of wedlock will be longterm welfare recipients, and 70 percent of juveniles in state reform institutions were raised in fatherless homes. Gingrich told the religious broadcasters that it was ``vital that we reassert the centrality of faith in the definition of America.'' He endorsed a proposed constitutional amendment on school prayer, saying a society divorced from religion is a ``hopeless, empty desert of despair.'' Gingrich later joined a news conference by the House education committee to release a letter to President Clinton questioning whether federal education dollars were being spent wisely. The letter said an investigation by the subcommittee on oversight and investigations found 760 education programs run by 39 agencies, boards and commissions at a cost of nearly $100 billion annually. The Clinton administration and other Democrats have called the list misleading because it contains such items as training for air traffic controllers, and programs that are still on the books but get no money.