[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 36, Number 19 (Monday, May 15, 2000)]
[Pages 1026-1030]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

<R04>
Remarks at a Reception for Hillary Clinton in Little Rock, Arkansas

May 7, 2000

    Thank you very much. Vic, thank you for being here. Marion, thank 
you for being here. Vic Snyder was one of the bravest people in the 
Arkansas State Senate when I was Governor. When he ran for Congress, I 
told Hillary, I said, ``I'm afraid he can't get elected. He's got too 
much guts. He'll say what he thinks about everything.'' But he got 
elected, and he got reelected. And I thank--when Marion Berry ran for 
Congress after doing a stint in our administration in the Agriculture 
Department, Dale and David and I really felt that he was entitled to be 
in Congress, almost as a conciliation prize for having hosted us at the 
coon supper in Gillette all those years. Anybody who could get us to eat 
coon for 10 or 15 years in a row should be given a seat in Congress, 
just as a matter, of course. But I thank them so much.
    The other night when I was home, a couple of weeks ago--or maybe it 
was last week--to dedicate the law school here to Bill Bowen and to do 
the event in honor of our friend, Daisy Bates, Dale and David and I went 
to dinner alone, just the three of us. And we needed adult supervision. 
[Laughter]

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If there were a tape of the conversation we had--we relived everything 
we had ever done together, and amplified it all in an unconscionable 
way. I don't know when I've had as much fun. And Barbara, you should 
have been there to give us a little civilizing influence, but we had a 
good time.
    Today mostly is a day for us that is full of sentiment and 
gratitude. I want to thank you for all you've done for us over the 
years. I want to thank you for things large and small when I was 
Governor and for backing us in the two times I ran for President. 
Yesterday I did have a chance to travel the backroads of Logan and 
Franklin and Madison and Washington and Benton Counties and to relive my 
first race for Congress in 1974. We went to Stephanie Streett's wedding 
in the beautiful chapel in Subiaco. I thought about all my old friends, 
including a lot of them, unfortunately, who aren't around anymore.
    And Hillary and I both agreed that if we hadn't had to start our 
careers in public life in a place where you actually had to go see 
people and listen to them, instead of someplace where you just spent all 
your time raising funds to run television ads, our lives would have been 
very different, and I never would have had a chance to be the President.
    I also was reminded of the first time I brought Hillary to Arkansas, 
and I picked her up at the airport here in Little Rock, and instead of 
going to Hot Springs, I drove her up to River Valley, and then we drove 
down Highway 7, a fairly indirect way, but I wanted to give her a sense 
of what I hoped she was getting into.
    I'm looking forward to building this library and policy center, and 
we're going to have big apartment on top of the library. We're 
finalizing the plans now. I'm trying to keep this library to a 
reasonable price, somewhere around $125 million. But I want it to be a 
world-class building, a place that is beautiful and distinctive for our 
State, that will capture the imagination of the people and that will in 
some way, some small way, try to repay the people of Arkansas for all 
they have done for me. And we're going to have a nice apartment there, 
and I'll be there a lot. Even Senator Hillary will be there some, too, 
when I can work it out.
    I want to say a few things that are more comfortable for me to say, 
I think, than Hillary, before I bring her on. When Senator Moynihan 
announced that he would not run for the Senate again and the New York 
Democrats were trying to decide, you know, what they were going to do, 
they didn't just want to give the Senate seat back to the Republican 
Party and to Mayor Giuliani, and they knew he would be a very formidable 
candidate, that it was a seat that had been occupied by Robert Kennedy 
and then by Pat Moynihan. And all these House Members started calling 
Hillary. Then they started calling me to lobby Hillary.
    And we talked, and I had always hoped she would have a chance to run 
for office and to serve because I thought she would be so good. But we 
decided she needed to go up there and just visit people, just the way we 
did so long ago in all those communities I went through yesterday. Every 
town of any size, I had been in every store in town more than once that 
we went through. And so she did and came back and said, ``You know, the 
stuff I've worked on all my life is really what they need. Someone who 
cares about the education of our children; how families balance work and 
child-rearing; somebody who knows something about health care; somebody 
who knows something about bringing economic opportunity to 
underdeveloped areas.'' If New York State, upstate--that's exclusive of 
the suburbs and the city--were a separate State, it would be 49th in job 
growth in my tenure as President, something that I have tried to help 
on. And much of what needs to be done there is what we've tried to do in 
the Delta and other rural areas of our State.
    And she had so many people who wanted her to run and wanted her to 
do it that she really decided that she ought to try. And then I just 
practically beat her up time and time again, working on this 
announcement speech. She said, ``I've given a zillion speeches. Why do 
you keep doing this?'' I said, because an election is a job interview, 
and if you get the job, it helps to have decided in advance what you 
intend to do when you get there.
    And one of the reasons I think that the people here were good enough 
to elect me

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Governor five times is I always tried to be the candidate of change. I 
always tried to lay out what I wanted to do, and I always tried to be 
doing what I said I would do in the election. And one of the things I'm 
proudest of, a little known fact, is that in 1995, a Presidential 
scholar who at that time I had never met said that by '95 I had already 
kept a higher percentage of my campaign promises than the previous five 
Presidents. And I'm proud of that.
    So she worked on that. And I thought she gave a terrific speech that 
day, with a wonderful program. And she showed that movie, which has a 
lot of Arkansas in it, as you saw.
    Now, I want to make one general statement before I bring Hillary up 
here. This is a huge election. This election is just as important as 
what happened in '92, when this country was in terrible trouble. A lot 
of people have forgotten how bad it was in '92. And that's not good. 
It's just as important as it was in '96, when the American people 
decided to give me another chance to try to finish what I'd set out to 
do.
    But we have worked so--I've tried hard to take good care of this, 
and Hillary has been involved in so many of the things we have done 
together these last 8 years. But so much of the time we spent--Dale and 
David were saying they were glad they were part of it--all we did was 
make unpopular decisions in '93 and '94, because we had to do hard 
things to get this country turned around again. Hillary made fun of me 
today. She said there was some article talking about that I had real 
good job ratings, and if they could just take out the first 2 years, 
they'd be perfectly astronomical. Well, in the first 2 years, I had to 
do all the hard stuff that made it better the last 6.
    And so we got the country turned around. And the unemployment rate 
last month was 3.9 percent, for the first time in over 30 years. And 
that's good. The welfare rolls have been cut in half; 90 percent of our 
kids immunized for the first time, something I know is very important to 
Dale and Betty Bumpers. Today the statistics were to be released, or 
have already been released, showing that crime has come down every year, 
down another 7 percent across the board. Only about three dozen cities 
in the United States last year, in the whole country, had an increase in 
the crime rate.
    So things are going in the right direction. But the big test for a 
country is, what do you do when things are going well? What do we 
propose to do with our prosperity, with the fact that our social 
problems are lessened, with the fact that we've got the lowest African-
American and Hispanic unemployment rate ever recorded? What are we going 
to do with this?
    And in all fairness, one of the reasons that our adversaries in the 
other party, beginning with the Presidential nominee, are sort of trying 
to blur all these issues and say, ``We care about all those things that 
Bill Clinton and Al Gore worked on for 8 years,'' is that they hope that 
people will forget what it was like in '92. But there are huge decisions 
before you.
    And as sentimental as I feel today, elections are always about 
tomorrow. And what I wanted to do with all my heart is literally build a 
bridge for this country to the 21st century, so that when I left office, 
America would be in a position to build a future of our dreams for our 
children. To me, that's what this whole thing was about. And I was 
furious and disappointed in 1991, when I saw our country just paralyzed 
in Washington--nobody getting anything done, everybody fighting, 
partisan politics the order of the day, which, unfortunately, there's 
still too much of there.
    And so we set about doing things. But it's important for all of you 
to focus--if you believe that the results were good, it's not just 
because you knew me and you saw I gave a good speech and I was a pretty 
good guy. What we did was--those were the right things to do. You can be 
as eloquent as you want, and if you advocate the wrong thing, you'll get 
the wrong result.
    That's what--this election for the Senate is a big issue. It really 
matters who is in the Senate. The Republican Senators from Texas just 
announced a couple of days ago that they weren't even going to even 
permit a hearing on an Hispanic judge who was from El Paso, who 
graduated cum laude from Harvard and Harvard Law School and was endorsed 
by every single organization with an informed

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opinion. Why? Because he wasn't ideologically far enough to the right.
    This is a big election, and I can tell you who's in the Senate makes 
a huge difference, for good or ill. And you're going to have to decide, 
including in Arkansas, whether you want to build on the progress for the 
last 8 years or reverse the policies. Do you like this economic policy? 
If you do, you better stick with it and build on it. Do you believe that 
it's a good thing that the educational attainment is going up, the 
college-going rate is going up, more people than ever before can afford 
to send their kids to college? If you do, you've got to build on it, and 
the same thing with the environment and the same thing with health care 
and with national security. The other party is honestly opposed to the 
Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty. And if they do what they say they're 
going to do, there's a real chance we could have a new arms race again 
in the world, which is the last thing in the wide world we need. We've 
got enough problems out there with the terrorists and the drug runners 
and the organized criminals, without setting off another arms race.
    So, you know, I'd like to come home and just make this a perfectly 
happy thing, but I'm telling you, this is a big decision that the people 
will take. And this election of 2000 is every bit as important, even 
though I'm not on the ticket--and a lot of you did a lot for me. You 
went to New Hampshire. You did all the things in the wide world. What 
was going on in '92 and '96--that was important, but the 2000 election 
will determine whether we really like the direction of the country and 
we want to continue to change built on that, or whether we say, ``Well, 
we feel so good now, what they say sounds good; I think we'll go back to 
their economic policy and their education policy and their health care 
policy and their environmental policy and their foreign policy.'' This 
is a huge, huge decision.
    And that's why I thought it was a good thing for Hillary to run. 
Because I've been doing this a long time. I never--I don't think any 
State ever had two Senators working together that were remotely as good 
as Dale Bumpers and David Pryor. They were the best team I ever saw. I 
have--I served with 150 Governors, and I've seen another 100 run through 
the White House since I've been there. I've got--you know, I realize I 
am prejudiced in this, but I know a lot about public service and public 
service efforts. And I have spent the last almost 30 years now, having 
conversations with my wife about every conceivable issue.
    I watched her when she started the Arkansas Advocates for Children 
and Families. I watched her when she ran this education standards 
program here, when a lot of our kids couldn't even get science and math 
courses in their schools. I watched her labor to try to get rid of all 
the ridiculous Federal barriers to people adopting children and to try 
to get us to adopt policies up there that would enable working families 
to afford health insurance and deal with a whole lot of other issues.
    And in my whole life, I have never known anybody that had a better 
grasp of the issues, a better ability to organize, a better ability to 
get people who thought they would never get along to work together and 
could get up every day and just keep going, than Hillary, never--not a 
person.
    So, I think the Senate would be a much better place if she were 
there. I think she would do a superb job for the people of New York. I 
think she would be great for America. I think you know that, and you 
will never know how grateful we are that you're here today. And I hope 
you'll make her feel welcome.
    Come on up, Hillary.
    Thank you.

 Note:  The President spoke at 2:50 p.m. in Hall A at the New Statehouse 
Convention Center. In his remarks, he referred to William H. Bowen, 
former dean, University of Arkansas at Little Rock School of Law; 
Representatives Vic Snyder and Marion Berry; former Senator Dale Bumpers 
and his wife, Betty; former Senator David H. Pryor and his wife, 
Barbara; Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani of New York City; Enrique Moreno, 
nominee, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. The transcript 
released by the Office of the Press Secretary also included the remarks 
of the First Lady.

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