[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: WILLIAM J. CLINTON (2000-2001, Book III)]
[December 16, 2000]
[Pages 2718-2719]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks at a Memorial Service for Charles F.C. Ruff
December 16, 2000

    Sue, Christy, Carin, Maggie, other family and friends. I was sitting in this 
service listening to Chuck's family members, friends, partner speak 
about him, and I was thinking he'd be fairly embarrassed by all these 
attempts to canonize him. So they put one client on the program. 
[Laughter]
    I have been on the receiving end of all this wisdom you have been 
celebrating, and he always told me what he thought, especially when I 
did not want to hear it.
    Chuck Ruff became the White House Counsel at an unusual point in 
history, when the White House was in the hands of the Democratic Party 
and the Congress was in the hands of a particular wing of the Republican 
Party, and a lot of the work of the White House Counsel was generated by 
the attempts of Congress to turn every political difference into a legal 
issue.
    And Chuck had to be calm in the face of all of it: Attempts to prove 
that our policy on climate change, for example, was actually a secret 
socialist plot to destroy the free enterprise system; serious questions 
from a person who believed that a good form of criminal investigation 
was shooting bullets into a watermelon in his backyard. And Chuck never 
lost his cool, never lost his temper, and never let me entirely lose my 
sense of humor about what often was a patently absurd situation.
    And then there were the serious issues beneath all the rancor and 
back-and-forth. And every single day--every single day--I was so 
profoundly grateful that my Counsel was so strong and wise and good and 
that he believed so profoundly in our Constitution and rule of law.
    As others have said, he never sought the spotlight, but when the 
moment came, he certainly shined. Millions of Americans saw him at work, 
mind and spirit. He cared about justice. He taught it; he shared it; and 
he lived it. His whole life was about doing good and doing right.
    Others have commented on his propensity for doing two things at 
once. I liked that. He once said that he finally understood that he had 
been picked as the White House Counsel because he was the only person 
who was not distracted by my doing crossword puzzles when we reviewed 
our latest strategy in dealing with the congressional requests.
    He was famous in the West Wing for watching football and listening 
to opera at the same time. But really, that captures the best of who he 
was, a competitor with passion, equal parts grace and guts, someone 
determined to make the most of every moment.
    For those of us who knew and loved him, Chuck Ruff may have been in 
a wheelchair, but he had more moves than Magic Johnson or Michael 
Jordan, and when he heated up, he could hit any ball further than Tiger 
Woods, because he was so intensely committed to doing right and doing 
good.
    I also would like to say a special word of appreciation, in front of 
his family and friends, for the fact that, in spite of all of the high-
profile things Chuck did as the White House Counsel, one of the things 
that I most appreciated was that he was always there for the people in 
the White House, especially for the

[[Page 2719]]

young people. He was always there with a calming and reassuring word, 
even in the craziest of times. He could always help people stop and take 
a breath, listen a little better, think a little harder, gather up their 
energies, and go on. In a town so often contentious, it was truly 
amazing to be reminded that you can be civil and effective at the same 
time.
    I'd also like to thank him publicly for how much he loved the 
District of Columbia and how strongly he supported our administration's 
efforts to be a good neighbor and a good partner. Who can forget that he 
began his closing statement last year in the well of the Senate: ``My 
name is Charles Ruff. I'm from the District of Columbia. And we don't 
have a vote in the Congress of the United States.''
    I wish, in a way, this platform today in this house of God could be 
shared by every person in the White House who loved him. And I wish so 
much that every person out there on the streets of Washington, DC, whom 
he loved could know just a portion of what he labored to do for them. 
The reason I was proud to have him as my White House Counsel is that he 
was not a power lawyer; he was a powerful lawyer for people who had no 
power.
    No matter what he was asked to do, he did it with grace and honor, 
as if that alone was what God put him on Earth to do. And for that I am 
profoundly grateful.
    Chuck Ruff left us far too soon. But you can hear in the words and 
see in the voice of every person who has spoken today that he is still 
here. I hope he thinks we did all right by him today. I hope he is 
pleased by this vast assemblage of people, because he certainly always 
did more than all right by all of us.

Note: The President spoke at 11:25 a.m. at the National Cathedral. In 
his remarks, he referred to Mr. Ruff's wife, Sue, his daughters, 
Christina Ruff Wagner and Carin Ruff, and his mother, Margaret Carlson.