[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 36, Number 32 (Monday, August 14, 2000)]
[Pages 1849-1851]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

<R04>
Remarks at a Dinner for Hillary Clinton in New York City

August 10, 2000

    First of all, I want to thank John and Margo and Dennis and Mike and 
Peter and everybody else that made this dinner possible tonight. And I'd 
like to thank Attorney General Spitzer and Comptroller McCall for 
coming. And all the rest of you, I thank you for being here for Hillary 
and for our country.
    I can be quite brief, but I won't be. [Laughter] I will be. I will 
be. The only thing that I'm concerned about in this election is whether 
people really know what it is about and believe it's important. In over 
200 years, the American people have almost always gotten it right when 
they had the facts and the time to digest them, and that's why we're all 
still around here, why it's still a great country. It's why we've done 
what we've done as a people and taken in wave after wave after wave of 
immigrants and met crisis after crisis, challenge after challenge. 
Democracy actually works.
    And we have to trust the people, if they know what it's about. And 
the only thing--as I said, what's concerned me is I have repeatedly seen 
stories to the effect that many people didn't think this was such a big 
election. I mean, after all, things are going so well, and you couldn't 
mess up the economy if you tried, so is it really a big deal? And then 
the second thing that's bothered me is I've seen lots of stories which 
indicate that people don't have any idea what the real differences are 
between the parties, the candidates for President, the candidates for 
the New York Senate race and other things.
    A big story in USA Today about 3 weeks ago: What's the difference in 
the Vice President and Governor Bush's economic policy? A story just 10 
days ago interviewing suburban women who favored greater gun safety 
legislation--our candidate had a six-point lead. And then when this 
polling outfit just read the positions of the two candidates--and by the 
way, they had nothing to do with either party; this was an independent 
polling outfit--they just said, ``Okay, here's their positions''--they 
went from 45 to 39, to 57 to 29.
    So what I want to say to you--you came here tonight; you've helped 
Hillary. I am profoundly grateful, and I want to say a few words about 
that. But every one of you has friends who are less political than you 
are. Every one of you has friends who may not even be active Democrats. 
You have networks of people you contact. And what I want to ask you to 
do is to remind people that this is a big election. And how many times 
in your lifetime have you a chance to vote in an election solely on the 
basis of how we can use this astonishing prosperity and social progress 
and national self-confidence to build the future of our dreams for our 
kids? It may never happen again in your lifetime. So to pretend that 
this is like a no-
consequence election because we don't feel like we're on the edge of a 
cliff about to be pushed off, I think is a grave error.
    The second thing I want to say is, there are huge differences. And 
we mustn't be shy in pointing out to the best of our ability what we 
think those honest differences are. We

[[Page 1850]]

don't have to say bad things about our adversaries, but we do have to 
say what the differences are.
    It tickles me--a lot of these folks that spent years kind of 
attacking their opponents, now act like the Democrats are being negative 
if they just point out what the voting record was. [Laughter] It's like, 
``How dare you do something so mean. I have a right to keep from the 
people what my positions are.'' [Laughter]
    So we have to create a climate here where we have a good old-
fashioned election: no personal destruction; no personal attacks; an 
honest effort to identify what the major issues are, what the stakes 
are, and what the differences are; and just trust the people.
    And I can just tell you that there are massive differences on 
economic policy, on crime policy, on education policy, on the 
environment, on health care policy, on a woman's right to choose, and 
the appointment of judges and the ratification of judges, the approval 
in the Senate. And the American people need to know what they're doing 
here. And we just need to trust them. But you need to help us with 
clarity of choice.
    The second thing I'd like to say in asking Hillary to come up here 
is that I'm actually very proud of her for doing this after all we've 
been through the last 8 years, and most of it's been quite wonderful. 
But all our friends who leave the White House and go back to private 
life tell us that they don't even get out of physical pain for about 6 
months--[laughter]--that they had no idea how tired they were until they 
left. And we were looking forward to spending the last year making all 
these trips together, having people come into the White House. And it's 
wonderful to have our daughter home, and she can come campaign with 
Hillary and make a few trips with me. But we wanted to have this last 
year just to celebrate the millennial year and have more of these 
lectures that Hillary organized and celebrate the preservation of our 
natural heritage.
    And instead, she decided, for the first time in 30 years, to 
actually get in and run for herself instead of help somebody else do it. 
And she did it after a half a dozen or so New York House Members came 
and asked her to consider doing it and then traveling all over the State 
and concluding that the work that she'd done all of her adult life is 
basically the kind of thing that New York needs and wants now.
    And I just want to remind you of a few things. First of all, when I 
met her in 1971, in the springtime, she was already completely obsessed 
with the issues of children and families, and she took an extra year in 
law school to work at the Yale Child Study Center and the children's 
ward of the Yale University hospital, so that when she got a law degree 
she would actually have detailed knowledge about health, psychological, 
and other issues relating to children and their parents.
    Secondly, the first job she ever had was for a group that became the 
Children's Defense Fund.
    Thirdly, when she came home to Arkansas to be with me, she--and we 
helped Jimmy Carter get elected President--she became the youngest chair 
ever of the Legal Services Corporation to try to provide legal aid to 
poor people.
    Then when I became Governor, she helped to establish a neonatal 
nursery at the Children's Hospital in our home State, what my 
predecessor affectionately, or not so affectionately, referred to as a 
small Southern State. By the time we left--Hillary ran all the 
fundraising every year for the Children's Hospital, did all that. By the 
time we left office, the Arkansas Children's Hospital was the seventh 
biggest children's hospital in the United States of America.
    And after she became First Lady, she has worked on dramatically 
improving the adoption laws, making it easier for people to do cross-
racial adoptions, getting a $5,000 tax credit for people who adopt 
children with disabilities, doing more for children who age out of 
foster care--a really big issue in New York State, a huge issue--doing 
more to give health insurance for children, doing more to promote child 
care and to deal with the challenges of early childhood.
    There's really--I doubt very seriously that any person has ever been 
First Lady who's had the range of detailed involvement and interests she 
has. And along the way, she wrote a best selling book and gave 100 
percent of the profits away to children's charity.

[[Page 1851]]

    And in 30 years, all she ever did was try to help other people. 
Every year I was Governor, she gave away lots and lots of income to help 
other people. This is the first time she's ever, ever done anything 
where she was asking people to help her. And all I can tell you is, in 
the over 30 years now I've been involved in politics in one way or 
another, I have worked with hundreds of people that I liked and admired, 
that I thought were gifted, patriotic, and devoted. There is no 
question, even though you can say, well, I'm biased, and I'll get a 
better night's sleep if I say this--[laughter]--but I'm just telling 
you, I love my country enough to say that even though I'm kind of 
missing this last year that we had looked forward to, I'm glad she's 
doing it. Because of all the people I've ever known, I have never known 
anybody that had the same combination of mind and heart and knowledge 
and organizational ability and constancy--constancy--I'm talking about 
30 years of constancy--that she has.
    So if you will get her elected, she will be a magnificent Senator. 
And all these people who wonder whether they should be for her now 
because--why is she doing this now, and why is she doing it in New 
York--after she's been there about 60 days, they will never have another 
question. They will never have another question.
    So what you've got to do is get out here and stir around and tell 
people that. Tell people what the differences are between her and her 
opponent and what the two parties' differences are and personally 
validate what you see and know. And if you do, she's going to win. And 
it won't be long until everybody else will think they voted for her, 
too. [Laughter]
    Thank you very much. Please come up, Hillary.

 Note:  The President spoke at 10:07 p.m. at a private residence. In his 
remarks, he referred to dinner hosts John and Margo Catsimatidis; dinner 
cohosts Dennis Mehiel, Michael Sherman, and Panayiotis (Peter) 
Papanicolaou; New York State Attorney General Eliot Spitzer; New York 
State Comptroller H. Carl McCall; and Republican Presidential nominee 
Gov. George W. Bush of Texas.