[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: WILLIAM J. CLINTON (2000, Book II)]
[October 10, 2000]
[Pages 2111-2113]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks on Signing Legislation on Permanent Normal Trade Relations With 
China
October 10, 2000

    Thank you very much. Thank you. Thank you very much, Secretary 
Albright; Mr. Speaker; Senator Roth; Senator 
Moynihan; Chairman Archer; Representative Rangel. I 
thank you all so much for your steadfast leadership in this important 
cause.
    I also want to thank Senator Lott and Senator 
Daschle in their absence and, indeed, all 
the Members who are here. And if you would just indulge me in one 
personal remark, this is probably the largest gathering of Members of 
Congress anywhere in Washington today, except in the Chambers of the 
House and Senate.
    And I would like to take a moment to pay my respects to the memory 
of our friend Congressman Bruce Vento, who 
passed away earlier today, a great teacher, a great Representative, a 
wonderful human being.
    I also want to join the previous speakers in thanking all those who 
worked so hard on it, Charlene Barshefsky and Gene Sperling, who 
accompanied her to China, and they worked on this deal until the 11th 
hour. We knew it would take until the 11th hour. We only hoped by then 
they wouldn't be too tired to tell time, so we would be able to finish.
    I thank Secretaries Glickman, 
Summers, and Mineta; and Secretary Slater, 
Secretary Shalala, who are here, John 
Podesta and Sandy Berger. I can't thank Bill Daley and 
Steve Ricchetti enough for the 
extraordinary job they did to lead our efforts to secure passage of this 
initiative, along with Chuck Brain and Mary 
Beth Cahill.
    I want to thank all the State and local officials, the retired 
officials and business leaders who helped us, and I would like to 
acknowledge two great champions of trade who I just saw in the audience, 
just because I'm glad to see them, former Congressman Sam 
Gibbons and former Congressman and Agriculture 
Secretary Mike Espy. Thank you both for being 
here.
    This is a great day for the United States and a hopeful day for the 
21st century world. This signing ceremony marks the culmination of 
efforts begun almost 30 years ago by President Nixon, built on by 
President Carter, who normalized our relations with China, pursued 
firmly by Presidents of both parties to normalize ties with China in 
ways that preserve our interests and advance our values.
    During that time, China has grown more prosperous and more open. As 
the world economy becomes vastly more complex and interconnected, 
China's participation in it, according to the rules of international 
trade, has only become more important for America, for Asia, and the 
world. Today we take a major step toward China's entry into the World 
Trade Organization and a major step toward answering some of the central 
challenges of this new century. For trade with China will not only 
extend our Nation's unprecedented economic growth, it offers us a chance 
to help to shape the future of the world's most populous nation and to 
reaffirm our own global leadership for peace and prosperity.
    I guess I ought to point out that our work's not over when I sign 
the bill. For China must

[[Page 2112]]

still complete its WTO accession negotiations and live up to the 
agreements it has negotiated with us and our partners before it can 
join. But when it happens, China will open its markets to American 
products from wheat to cars to consulting services, and our companies 
will be far more able to sell goods without moving factories or 
investments there.
    Beyond the economy, however, America has a profound stake in what 
happens in China, how it chooses to relate to the rest of the world, and 
whether it is open to the world, respectful of human rights, upholding 
the rule of law at home and its dealings with other nations.
    Of course, opening trade with China will not in and of itself lead 
China to make all the choices we believe it should. But clearly, the 
more China opens it markets, the more it unleashes the power of economic 
freedom, the more likely it will be to more fully liberate the human 
potential of its people. As tariffs fall, competition will rise, 
speeding the demise of huge state enterprises. Private firms will take 
their place and reduce the role of government in people's daily lives. 
Open markets will accelerate the information revolution in China, giving 
more people more access to more sources of knowledge. That will 
strengthen those in China who fight for decent labor standards, a 
cleaner environment, human rights, and the rule of law.
    We also will continue to press China to meet its commitments on 
stopping the transfer of dangerous technology and deadly weapons. We 
will continue to be a force for security in Asia, maintaining our 
military presence and our strong alliances. We will continue to support, 
from the outside, those who struggle within China for human rights and 
religious freedom.
    I want to say a special word of thanks to Congressmen Levin and Bereuter. Because of 
them, we will have both normal trade relations and a good new policy 
tool to monitor our human rights concern. They made this a better bill, 
and all Americans are in their debt. Thank you.
    There are so many Members here today, I can't introduce them all, 
but some who had no institutional mandate to do so also joined us in 
fighting hard for this bill. Among them, Senator Baucus, Congressman Matsui, 
Congressman Dooley, Congressman 
Dreier, Congressman Kolbe, and Congressman Crane. I, in 
particular, thank those of you who worked so closely with me in this 
regard, and all the rest of you who fought hard for this.
    Let me say, in case you've all forgotten, this thing was hard to 
pass. [Laughter] This was a lot of trouble. And I would just like to 
close in reiterating something that I often said in these endless 
meetings we had in that room right up there on the third floor where, 
ironically, President Franklin Roosevelt had his office during World War 
II.
    I do think this is a good economic deal for America. I think it will 
increase our exports and, over the long run, will strengthen our 
economic position in the world. But I think, by far, the most important 
reason to ratify this agreement is the potential it gives us to build a 
safer, more integrated world.
    You heard Senator Moynihan talking about the day he joined the Navy. 
In the last 60 years of the 20th century, we fought three major wars in 
Asia. We can build a whole different future there now. We concluded a 
trade agreement with Vietnam. Today a very high official from North 
Korea came into the Oval Office to bring a 
message from the leader of North Korea. But 
nothing--nothing--can enhance the prospects of peace and the prospects 
of a very different 21st century like having China take the right path 
into the future.
    Like all people in the United States, the Chinese people ultimately 
will have to pick their own path. And they will make their own 
decisions. We can't control what they do, but we can control what we do.
    We overcame fears, misgivings, honest disagreements, to come 
together in a stunning bipartisan coalition. One Republican House Member 
shook hands with me today, and the first thing he said is, ``Well,'' he 
said, ``I'm glad to see you, Mr. President. This is the first time I've 
ever come here since you've been here.'' [Laughter] And I thought, 
``Well, if there had to be just one time, this is the time,'' because we 
did something together here that gives our children and our 
grandchildren the chance the live in a world that is coming together, 
not coming apart. It gives all of us the chance to meet the common 
threats of the future together as free and interdependent people.
    Our children will live in a world in which the information 
technology revolution, the biotechnology revolution, and the increasing 
globalization of the economy will force them to find ways to meet our 
common challenges

[[Page 2113]]

and seize our common opportunities together. It's hard to imagine how 
that future will work if China is not a part of it.
    So to every one of you, from every part of America, those in 
Congress and those who lobbied the Congress, I hope for a long time to 
come you will remember this day and be proud of what you did to bring it 
about. And I hope and believe that our children and grandchildren will 
be the beneficiaries of your labors.
    Thank you, and God bless you.

Note: The President spoke at 4:52 p.m. on the South Lawn at the White 
House. In his remarks, the President referred to former Secretary of 
Commerce William M. Daley; and National Defense Commission First Vice 
Chairman Cho Myong-nok and President Kim Chong-il of North Korea. The 
transcript released by the Office of the Press Secretary also included 
the remarks of Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, Speaker of the 
House J. Dennis Hastert, Senator William V. Roth, Jr., Representative 
Bill Archer, Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan, and Representative Charles 
B. Rangel. H.R. 4444, approved October 10, was assigned Public Law No. 
106-286.