[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 35, Number 40 (Monday, October 11, 1999)]
[Pages 1938-1940]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

<R04>
Remarks on the Unveiling of a Portrait of Former Secretary of Commerce 
Mickey Kantor

October 6, 1999

    Thank you very much, ladies and gentlemen. Secretary Daley, thank 
you for your comments and your extraordinary leadership. I thank 
Secretary and Mrs. Glickman, Secretary Richardson, Ambassador 
Barshefsky, John Podesta, Ambassador Zuzul from Croatia for being here, 
and the many friends and family members of Mickey Kantor, but especially 
Heidi, and Leslie and Bruce, and Doug and Allison, and Alix--and of 
course, Ryan and Zachary.
    I think that when they're old enough to watch the videotape of this 
ceremony, they will enjoy it a lot. They will see that their father was 
one of America's greatest public--their grandfather was one of America's 
greatest public servants. They also, because of what I am about to say, 
will know that he's known for something other than cuddles and hugs. 
[Laughter] After all, you don't earn the title he actually earned in a 
poll once, there of the ``third most hated man in South Korea''--
[laughter]--by being Mr. Nice Guy all the time. [Laughter]
    I went to South Korea, and I gave a speech to the South Korean 
Parliament--and it's always a big deal, the American President goes to a 
foreign parliament. I spoke to the French Parliament; I've spoken to 
parliaments all over the world, and they're always so excited and happy, 
not because of me but because it's the United States. Not in Korea. 
[Laughter] They all sat there glumly, with--and they held up little 
protest signs that said, ``Rice.'' [Laughter] Thanks a lot, Mickey. It 
was great. [Laughter]
    Secretary Daley has already alluded to this, and I just want to say 
briefly, in April of 1996, after Ron Brown and the other fine people 
from the Department of Commerce died in that terrible plane crash, I 
really thought there was no one else I could turn to to run this 
Department. I hesitated to ask Mickey to do it. I thought that he had 
been one of the truly most outstanding and effective Trade Ambassadors 
we had every had.
    But when I did ask him, without a moment's hesitation, even though 
he'd rather carry his own scheduling book and make his own deals, he 
came over here to this massive Government Department to do the Nation's 
work again. And he did it out of loyalty to me, to Ron, to the thousands 
of grieving Commerce Department employees, and to the United States. And 
I am very grateful.
    I like this portrait an awful lot. Mr. Polson, you did a remarkable 
job. But on the way over here, I was sort of hoping that you'd break the 
mold and you would lift this curtain and I would see Mickey in his 
Speedo bathing suit, flexing his biceps. [Laughter] But instead he's got 
that double-breasted suit on, he can afford now that he's left 
Government service. [Laughter]

[[Page 1939]]

    I want to thank Mickey for many things. I've been a close friend of 
his for what seems like forever now, more than 20 years. Bill mentioned 
his service in the Navy. I think it's worth, for the record, to point 
out that he served on an aircraft carrier. What you may not know is that 
he and the rest of the crew of the U.S.S. Wasp were on the frontlines of 
the Cuban missile crisis, locked eyeball-to-eyeball with Russian sailors 
for those 14 harrowing days.
    I think it was good preparation for the rest of his life and the 
constant, constant occasions he has had to call upon his steel nerves. 
This has served Mickey well in everything he's ever done. In turning 9th 
inning double plays at Vanderbilt, to dealing with 11th hour crises in 
our '92 campaign, to closing the deal on some of the largest trade 
negotiations in America's history.
    Back in 1993, when Mickey was using those nerves of steel in a 
series of complex negotiations with the Japanese, some teenagers were 
spotted at Japanese Disneyland with a T-shirt that sums it up well. 
Mickey Kantor was drawn to look like Mickey Mouse calmly beating the 
dickens out of sumo wrestlers 10 times his size. [Laughter]
    We all like watching Mickey work. If we want to watch Mickey at all, 
we have to like to watch Mickey work. [Laughter] We've all seen him up 
for days and nights at a time on some difficult negotiation. Instead of 
just throwing in the towel or throwing a chair, he sort of does that 
``I'm just a country lawyer from Tennessee'' routine, and you turn 
around, and you've lost your wallet.
    We all know that Mickey has on occasion shown displays of temper--at 
least he has to me, but I deserved it, and it served the conversation 
well at the time. But let me say to all of you, the thing that I like 
about him so much is that he does have passion, and he does have nerves 
of steel. He has courage and a good mind, but he also, most importantly, 
has the right kind of heart.
    When he was a teenager, he was profoundly moved when his father lost 
his job on the Nashville School Board because he had the temerity to 
believe that Nashville ought to abide by the Supreme Court's order to 
desegregate our schools. Later he was inspired by the activism of Caesar 
Chavez and went down to Florida to defend poor farm workers against 
labor abuses.
    As Secretary Daley mentioned, Mickey worked with Hillary on the 
board of the Legal Services Corporation when President Carter served 
here, helping to secure every American's right to equal justice under 
the law. He also served on the board of the Mexican American Legal 
Defense and Education Fund and created an award and scholarship in 
Valerie's name. He created the Los Angeles Conservation Corps, giving 
hundreds of young people a chance to make a difference in their 
communities and exposing me to the Corps in 1991 and 1992, which was, 
along with City Year in Boston, for me, the model that led to 
AmeriCorps, and has now given over 100,000 young Americans the chance to 
serve in their communities and earn some funds to go on to college--in 
just 5 years, more people than served in the first 20 years of the Peace 
Corps. I am very proud of that and very grateful to Mickey for giving me 
the inspiration.
    Mickey has done things that, I think, are important for America's 
politics beyond the jobs that he's held. He's always believed we could 
fight for the underdog and make life good for everyone else. He was the 
prototypical New Democrat, before the phrase became popular.
    When we were working on this campaign, in '91 and '92, whenever he 
sensed the message of the campaign drifting he would always say, ``We 
have to prove that our party can grow the economy, can get the deficit 
down, is committed to expanding trade, not running away from the 
globalized future we all face. We have to prove that we believe in 
welfare reform, that able-bodied people can work and raise their 
children and succeed.'' And he used to talk all the time about how 
important it was for us to follow policies that would drive down the 
crime rate and make America safer, things that didn't always fall within 
the direct ambit of his work in the campaign and later as trade 
negotiator. And whenever he felt we were drifting away, he would call me 
on the phone and say, ``Remember what we ran; remember what we promised; 
remember what we've got to do.'' And still--even though he's not in 
public

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service--and now that he's not in my employ--sometimes with greater 
color--[laughter]--he calls and reminds me of that, if he ever senses 
any drift.
    So Mickey, before I turn the program over to you and give you a 
chance to rebut the charges of the Koreans, the Japanese kids, and your 
President, let me say, thank you for 21 or more remarkable years of 
genuine friendship. Thank you for astonishing public service. Thank you 
for being a good model, as father and husband and citizen. And thank you 
for believing in things and people, enough to fight for what you believe 
in. Our country is much better because you have served it.
    Thank you.

Note: The President spoke at 6:05 p.m. in the main lobby at the Herbert 
C. Hoover Building. In his remarks, he referred to Secretary Glickman's 
wife, Rhonda; Croatian Ambassador to the U.S. Miomir Zuzul ; and artist 
Steven Polson, who painted the portrait.