Bush Hosts Unveiling of Clinton's Portrait
NewsMax.com Wires
Monday, June 14, 2004
WASHINGTON President Bush offered a glowing tribute to
former President Bill Clinton on Monday as the White House unveiled the
official portraits of the 42nd president and his wife, Sen. Hillary
Rodham Clinton.
Bush rode into office on a promise "to restore honor and
dignity" to the White House after eight years of Clinton, and he
was bitter at Clinton for defeating his father in the 1992
presidential contest. But on Monday, Bush delivered a lengthy,
forceful defense of his predecessor, and welcomed dozens of Clinton
administration officials back into the White House.
"As a candidate for any office, whether it be the state
attorney general or the president, Bill Clinton showed incredible
energy and great personal appeal," Bush said. "As chief
executive, he showed a deep and far-ranging knowledge of public
policy, a great compassion for people in need, and the
forward-looking spirit that Americans like in a president."
Bush left Clinton laughing so hard that his face turned red with
a jibe about Clinton's service in Texas to George McGovern's failed
1972 presidential campaign.
Mostly, though, Bush gave an almost nostalgic tribute to the
Democrat former president.
"Bill Clinton could always see a better day ahead and Americans
knew he was working hard to bring that day closer," Bush said.
"Over eight years it was clear that Bill Clinton loved the job of
the presidency. He filled this house with energy and joy. He's a
man of enthusiasm and warmth, who could make a compelling case and
effectively advance the causes that drew him to public service."
Clinton and his wife, now in the Senate, returned to the White
House for the official presentation of the portraits that will hang
in the White House. The former president's portrait will hang near
the Grand Staircase just inside the north entrance of the White
House. It will bump a portrait of the first President Bush to
another position in the hall. The portrait of Mrs. Clinton, now the junior U.S. senator from New York, will be
displayed one flight below with other former first ladies.
"She inspires respect and loyalty from those who know her, and
it was a good day in both their lives when they met at the library
at Yale Law School," Bush said of Mrs. Clinton and her husband.
Clinton said: "The president, by his generous words to Hillary
and me today, has proved once again that in the end, we are held
together by this grand system of ours that permits us to debate and
struggle and fight for what we believe is right."
"And because it's free, because it is a system of majority rule
and minority rights, we're still around here after over 200 years.
And most of the time, we get it right. And I'm honored to be a
small part of it."
Clinton's portrait was painted by Simmie Knox, a self-taught
artist born in 1935 in Aliceville, Ala., to a family of black
sharecroppers.
© 2004 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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