[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: WILLIAM J. CLINTON (2000, Book I)]
[April 4, 2000]
[Pages 619-621]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks at a Reception for Senator Patrick J. Leahy
April 4, 2000

    Thank you. Well, first, let me say to Bobby and Solange, thank you 
for having us in your home. I actually came to hear you sing, 
Emmylou, so you've got sing for me when I 
finish.
    I want to thank Pat and Marcelle for 
being wonderful friends to me and to Hillary during our sojourn here in 
Washington. I may have been younger than you when I got here, but I'll 
be older when I leave. [Laughter] I want to thank Senator Reid for being here. My great

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friend and former Senator DeConcini, thank 
you, sir, for being here.
    I want to thank all of you for being here for Pat Leahy. I have been 
in public life now for more than 25 years. I have, among other things--
when I was a Governor, I served with over 150 Governors. I have known 
hundreds of Members of Congress. And I think that Pat Leahy is one of 
the ablest and most visionary legislators and one of the finest people I 
have ever served with in 25 years of public life.
    And Mr. Axworthy, I appreciate your being 
here, but you can't have him. [Laughter] And he also, by the way, tells 
a pretty good joke now and then. [Laughter]
    I'll be very brief. I think the American people are going to be 
tested this year in this election season and in the years ahead, because 
of our prosperity and because all the social indicators appear to be 
going in the right direction. Normally, democracies can be summoned to 
any sacrifice or difficult decision when people are evidently under the 
gun. And sometimes, therefore, they are most at risk of making foolish 
choices or going in the wrong direction when things seem to be going 
very well. In that way, groups of free people are like individuals. Most 
of us who are over 30, anyway, can recall at least one time in our lives 
when we made a serious mistake not because things were going so poorly 
but because things seemed to be going so well.
    And I say that because I think there really are very clear choices 
now between the direction that someone like Pat Leahy would take in his 
work for peace, for the health of our children, for the health of our 
environment, for research or a whole range of issues, and the choice 
that the majority in Congress would take or their nominee for 
President would take.
    Yet, it may seem to many voters that, oh well, there may not be much 
difference; things are rocking along here; the economy is on automatic. 
And I think it's very important that people like you get together to 
help people like Pat Leahy. I also think it's very important that you be 
able to tell your friends and neighbors who never come to political 
events like this why you came and what the stakes are.
    And I'm old enough now where I remember things sometimes I wish I 
didn't remember. I was in this city 32 years ago today, when Martin 
Luther King was killed in Memphis, and I remember it. I was in this city 
32 years ago driving down Massachusetts Avenue, 32 years ago 5 days ago, 
when Lyndon Johnson told us he couldn't run for reelection because the 
country was split right down the middle over the Vietnam war.
    What does all that have to do with this? In February we celebrated 
the longest economic expansion in American history. So I had all my 
economic team in, and we were celebrating, and we were happy. And we 
were happy because we also had a 20-year low in poverty, a 30-year low 
in unemployment, the lowest African-American and Hispanic unemployment 
rates ever recorded, the lowest female unemployment rate in 40 years. It 
was a wonderful time.
    And we were talking about the State of the Union Address, where I 
kept saying we've got to do these big things now, these big things. And 
I said, ``Hey, just for my information, when was the last longest 
economic expansion in American history?'' And it turns out it was 
between 1961 and 1969. And I will go back to what I said in the 
beginning, how you're in danger, when things seem to be going well, of 
breaking your concentration and not making good decisions, not just 
individuals but nations.
    I graduated from high school in 1964, when there was low inflation, 
low unemployment, high growth, and we thought it would go on forever. 
Lyndon Johnson had united the country after President Kennedy's tragic 
assassination, and we thought then the civil rights challenges of 
America would be handled in the courts, in the Congress, not in the 
streets. We knew that we had a few people in Vietnam, but nobody thought 
we'd have over 500,000 or that 58,000 would die or that it would tear 
the country apart.
    And then 4 years later, all this stuff I just told you started to 
happen, so that by the time I graduated from college at Georgetown on 
June 8th, it was 2 days after Robert Kennedy was killed, 2 months after 
Martin Luther King was killed and the city burned, 9 weeks after Lyndon 
Johnson said he couldn't run for reelection. And a few weeks after that, 
President Nixon was elected on the first sort of divide-and-conquer 
campaign of the modern era. He represented the Silent Majority, which 
means people like me were in the loud minority. It was ``us'' and 
``them.'' And just a few months after that, the longest economic 
expansion in American history was history.
    Now, I am very optimistic; I'm the most optimistic person in this 
room. But what I want

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to tell you is, I have a memory, and I have waited for 35 years for my 
country to be in a position once again to be free to build the future of 
our dreams for our children, to be responsible citizens of the world, to 
lead the world toward peace and freedom and security. That's what this 
is all about. And we can't afford to let a single American treat this 
election in a casual fashion because of the evident responsibilities we 
have and because of the opportunities we have.
    I know Pat Leahy is not on the ballot this year, but I'm glad you're 
out here helping him, because I told you the truth. In 25 years, he's 
one of the finest people and one of the ablest, most visionary public 
servants I've ever known. That's what you need to think about all year 
long. And tomorrow if people ask you why you came here, you need to be 
able to give them this answer. And if you're around my age, you need to 
remind them of what happened to the last longest economic expansion in 
American history, when we were casual and careless enough to think it 
was on automatic. There's nothing we can't do. But we have to work at 
it, and we have to work together.
    Thank you very much.

 Note:  The President spoke at 8:20 p.m. at a private residence. In his 
remarks, he referred to reception hosts Robert Muller and Solange 
MacArthur; singer Emmylou Harris; Marcelle Leahy, wife of Senator Leahy; 
former Senator Dennis DeConcini; Foreign Minister Lloyd Axworthy of 
Canada; and Gov. George W. Bush of Texas.