[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: WILLIAM J. CLINTON (1999, Book II)]
[August 2, 1999]
[Pages 1363-1365]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks at a Memorial Service for Dan Dutko
August 2, 1999

    First, I would like to say on behalf of Hillary and myself how 
grateful we are for the life of our friend and how grateful we are for 
all of you who have come to be with us in honoring it and for those who 
have spoken before. I have now laughed, and I have cried, and I still 
miss him terribly.
    Of all the metaphors we might use about Dan, most of which are 
funny, I think one which is not funny that really is best is that he was 
a gardener, for in all of our lives he planted seeds that bore fruit. In 
the Psalms, it says, ``A good man shall be like a tree planted by the 
rivers of water. His leaves shall not wither. Whatsoever he do, it shall 
prosper.'' Dan made the Earth bloom, wherever he planted himself.
    The work and the people he touched were his blossom. All of us in 
this room, those of us who are in politics, those of us who are in 
private life, however he knew or touched us, he made us blossom more 
than we would have otherwise. And therefore, as decreed in the Psalms, 
his memory will never wither.

[[Page 1364]]

    Now, I have a story to tell. I met Dan Dutko 27 years ago, in one of 
our great lost causes. [Laughter] I mean, this is a doozy. [Laughter] We 
were in the McGovern campaign in Texas. [Laughter] Now, it was bad 
enough to be in the McGovern campaign anywhere in Texas. [Laughter] Dan 
insisted on leading the effort in west Texas--[laughter]--where it was 
hard to find anyone who would mention Senator McGovern's name.
    He wanted to work for the campaign. He actually ran our effort in 
Tom Green County, where we got 30 percent of the vote. I might add, that 
was only 3 percent less than we got in the whole State. [Laughter] And 
everyone who looked at it thought it was the most remarkable performance 
of the entire campaign.
    Well, all his life he loved big challenges. He stayed with me, and I 
turned out to be a bigger one than he bargained for. [Laughter] He was 
really--you know, talk about big words--he was sort of an oxymoron in 
popular imagination. He was someone others might call a lobbyist, whose 
integrity, honor were unquestioned. He became a person of consequence in 
Washington, even though he was born without a nickel to his name, 
because of that integrity and honor, because of energy and ability, and 
because, as you see, he had a huge network of devoted friends--enough, 
Rabbi, that probably we are violating some 
fire code here today.
    He lived too briefly, but he did live the American dream. And he was 
a self-made man who never forgot where he came from. That's why he 
stayed in the Democratic Party and loved it so much. He thought 
everybody ought to have a chance to live out their dreams and become 
what God meant for them to be.
    I want to say just one thing that meant a particular--a lot to me. 
When we got our brains beat out in the congressional elections of 1994, 
a lot of people became sunshine soldiers and were running for cover. Not 
Dan Dutko; man, he stepped out. He said, ``This is just the sort of 
thing I'm looking for.'' [Laughter] Everyone wrote us off for dead, said 
the Democratic Party was becoming a historical artifact. Al Gore and I 
would have to next appear in a wax museum somewhere. [Laughter] Not Dan 
Dutko. He never had a doubt. He never paused. He never shirked. He was 
there in '96. The Vice President mentioned his role in our Inaugural in 
'97. He was there in '98. He was always the guy on our team that no one 
ever had to buck up. He was always the one who was lifting everyone else 
up. He was always the one who had that miraculous combination of an 
infectious smile and a steely will and a genuinely good heart. But most 
of all, he was a gardener. He planted, and what he planted bloomed.
    One of the previous speakers mentioned how much he liked to take 
promising young people and mentor them and help them flourish. So many 
of you here are a testament to that, including the new Senator from my 
home State, Blanche Lincoln, who 
started her career in Washington here as his personal assistant.
    One of the things that I am most grateful that he nurtured was 
AmeriCorps, our national service program, which Debbie now leads magnificently. Whenever we were having 
trouble in Congress, he was there. His heart was there. His soul was 
there. His determination was there. And it came not just from his 
devotion to his wife but from his belief that 
all young people should have a chance to serve.
    In no small measure, because of Dan Dutko, 100,000 of those young 
people have had their chance to serve. Hillary told me that even over our last weekend together in 
Aspen, Dan was talking to her about AmeriCorps' fifth anniversary and 
asking folks to help out with the celebration.
    So we are grateful to him not only for his help to me and the Vice 
President but for his role in making America a better place. Most of 
all, we're grateful for his friendship. We loved having Dan and Deb over 
to the White House to watch movies. He was like me; he liked action 
movies. We thought there should be a category at the Academy Awards for 
best performance in totally inane film. [Laughter] The last one, we saw 
together just last month.
    I don't think I ever met a man with a more genuine smile, more 
direct, clear, undebatable sense of good will just coming at you over 
and over and over again. I'll miss the way he talked about his 
wife and his 
sons. I'll miss the fact that he was always 
there, in the rain as well as the sunshine.
    I want Deb, and most of all, his sons, to know that he 
was one of the principal reasons that I had a chance to serve our 
country as President. And I want them to know that we all know he was a 
good and loving father and husband--cared more for them than his own 
life. And that is something that can sustain them for their lives.

[[Page 1365]]

    This is a town obsessed with success. We normally score it by 
winning and losing. So if I might, I would like to close with Ralph 
Waldo Emerson's definition. He must have written it about Dan Dutko. 
``To laugh often and much, to win the respect of intelligent people and 
the affection of children. To appreciate beauty, find the best in 
others. To leave the world a little better, whether by a healthy child, 
a garden patch, or a redeemed social condition. To know even one life 
has breathed easier because you have lived--this is the meaning of 
success.'' And the meaning of our friend's life.

Note: The President spoke at 2:05 p.m. at Temple Sinai. In his remarks, 
he referred to former Senator and 1972 Democratic Presidential nominee 
George McGovern; Rabbi Fred N. Reiner of Temple Sinai; and Mr. Dutko's 
widow, AmeriCorps Director Deborah Jospin, and his sons Jonathan and 
Matthew.