THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary (Christchurch, New
Zealand)
For Immediate Release |
September 15, 1999 |
REMARKS BY PRESIDENT CLINTON
AND PRIME MINISTER SHIPLEY IN AN EXCHANGE OF TOASTS
Wigram Air Museum Christchurch, New Zealand
6:56 P.M. (L)
PRIME MINISTER SHIPLEY: Ladies and gentlemen, as we prepare
to end this very important state visit by the President of the United States, I
know that you wish to welcome him to this gala dinner, the last official
occasion that he will take part in.
Mr. President, you are very welcome here, and the people of
New Zealand have just loved having you. And I asked the guests to welcome you
formally. (Applause.)
Mr. President, thank you for your leadership. Leadership in
an international sense matters. And the people of New Zealand feel that we
share common values as we cherish freedom and try to do what is important.
People respect the leadership that you exercise on behalf of many of us in the
free world.
Thank you for your leadership in regional terms. New
Zealanders have been privileged to see you this week be able to bring your
expertise, your ability, your relationships and associations together so that
when it matters, people can be galvanized into action, and by knowing each
other and working together, things can make a difference. And in this instance,
in the relationship -- or in relation to East Timor, I believe your presence
here at APEC and in New Zealand has significantly made a difference to this
important regional issue. (Applause.)
Thank you also for your friendship in bilateral terms. New
Zealand and the United States have been able to make some very good progress
over recent months. And your visit here today and our talks up at the Sign of
the Takahe have been symbolic, but also significant. We have taken one or two
very important steps forward. And New Zealanders appreciate the relationship
between New Zealand and the United States. And we thank you for that clarity
and decisiveness today.
Thanks also for bringing such style to this visit. You wore
the black coat and the silver fern in the way that New Zealanders would want
you to, and we appreciate that. (Applause.) You've been able to show a warmth
to our people and they have responded. And I know that New Zealanders would
want me to say that they have welcomed your visit. And I hope that you've had a
sense that the relationship between New Zealanders and the people of the United
States is as strong as it ever was. And they wanted to demonstrate that to you.
Thank you also for allowing us to showcase our beautiful
country. This is a small, smart nation, and we are very proud of who we are and
what we've got. And by your presence and your positioning, we have allowed the
world to look through our window with you there, and that world has been able
to also see our country.
So thank you for helping us let the world know that we do
exist, and that we do value things that are important; that we are at the
cutting edge of many things that we think others should come and look at. And
we think that you've been a pretty good ad for the things that matter to us.
(Laughter and applause.)
PRESIDENT CLINTON: Thank you.
PRIME MINISTER SHIPLEY: So what matters, Mr. President, in
relationships, are those things that endure. New Zealand and the United States
have enjoyed a strong relationship for many years. Your visit to New Zealand, I
think, has been a huge step forward in cementing the strength of that
relationship, and I thank you for that.
I believe that New Zealanders can look forward to moving
from strength to strength. And we hope that before you finish your presidency,
you will pick up that opportunity you referred to this morning, of coming again
to New Zealand on your way to Antarctica, a place that both of us value as
well.
Ladies and gentlemen, it's my pleasure, on behalf of all of
you here, to ask you to raise your glasses, and to drink to friendship between
the people of the United States and the people of New Zealand, people who are
very good friends.
Mr. President, to friendship.
(The toast is offered.)
PRESIDENT CLINTON: Thank you very much. Forgive my
hoarseness.
First, Prime Minister, to you, your family, your government
and the people of New Zealand, I cannot thank you enough for the wonderful
welcome that our party and my family members have received here. I apologize
for having to rush home, but all of you know of the great storm that is now
hitting the American coast. We had to move over 2.5 million people today in an
attempt to minimize the loss of life. So I hope you'll forgive me, but let me
say I have had a wonderful time here.
I'm glad that the fashion people approved of the way I wore
the beautiful outfit you gave me. (Laughter.) You know, I've been President
seven years now, I've been all over the world, I've received any number of
items of clothing. And when you go to these meetings very often the people who
are there get the native dress and we wear them. And usually, when I go home
there is someone making fun of how I looked in the dress of whatever country I
was. This is the smartest outfit I've ever been given. (Applause.)
In the calendar cycle, we in the Northern Hemisphere are
moving in the opposite direction, so we're coming into fall and winter. And if
you watch the television, I'll probably in your outfit several times more
before the end of the year. (Applause.)
Let me say from the bottom of my heart, this has been a
magical trip. I think every person, when he or she is young, dreams of finding
some enchanted place, of beautiful mountains and breathtaking coastline and
clear lakes and amazing wildlife, and most people give up on it because they
never get to New Zealand. This has been an amazing thing for me and for all of
us.
You might be interested to know that on the front page of
The Washington Post today, there is a picture of my National Economic Advisor
bungy jumping. (Laughter and applause.) We all had to remind him that he wasn't
supposed to be Houdini and slip the cords, you know. (Laughter.) And so the
whole story was about how much fun we were all having.
I hope that it will also be reported that at this meeting
we took a strong stand for freedom and human rights in East Timor, and we are
going in there, together with our friends from Australia and others in this
region, to try to protect the integrity of the referendum for democracy and
independence, and save lives. And I thank New Zealand for its leadership in
this cause.
We also stood for the proposition that we can best lift the
world's fortune by having more free and fair trade. And that, too, was
profoundly important.
We celebrated today our partnership in Antarctic and talked
about the importance of Antarctica to our whole future. I have mentioned often
that, as all of you know probably, when the new millennium dawns it will dawn
first on New Zealand. I will be proud to cross that bridge into the 21st
century with you, knowing that we will be partners for peace and prosperity,
and a more decent and humane future for all our children. And I thank you for
that partnership.
I'd like to ask all of you to join me in a toast to the
Prime Minister, to her wonderful husband, to her government, and to the people
of New Zealand.
(The toast is offered.)
Thank you very much. (Applause.)
END 7:06 P.M. (L) |