Interview of the President by WGN, Chicago
                              THE WHITE HOUSE

                       Office of the Press Secretary

________________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                           January 10, 2001


                        INTERVIEW OF THE PRESIDENT
                              BY WGN, CHICAGO

                            Palmer House Hilton
                             Chicago, Illinois
                              January 9, 2001


                                              7:17 P.M. CST


     Q    Congratulations, sir.

     THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you.  Hi.

     Q    I understand you're working just as hard these last few weeks as
you have been the last eight years.  What's driving you?

     THE PRESIDENT:  Well, I get paid until January the 20th.  I think I
ought to show up for work.  Also, I think there's a lot of things to do.
We just had, in some ways, the best legislative year we've had, certainly
in the last four years.  We had the biggest increase in investment in
education, the first time we've ever gotten any funds for school repair and
construction, a big increase in funds for the after-school programs that
have been so important to Chicago.  We got the New Markets Initiative that
I worked hard on here with Congressman Danny Davis and Speaker Hastert,
across party lines, to get more investment into poor areas in America; and
big debt relief initiative for the poor countries.  We're doing a lot of
stuff here.

     And I went to Vietnam.  I was able to set aside some more land,
preserve it.  I'm still working, and I'm going to work to the very end.
And of course, I'm trying one last time to make peace in the Middle East.
I'm doing the best I can.

     Q    What are you going to miss most about Chicago?

     THE PRESIDENT:  Oh, the people.  I love it here.  But I'll still come
a lot.  It's still Hillary's home.  A lot of her people are from here.  A
lot of her friends are here, and I've got the friends of a lifetime here.
So I'll still come a lot.  And I hope that for the rest of my life I can be
a good citizen and really do some good things for America and around the
world.  So I'll be around.  I just have -- I fell in love with Chicago the
first time I came here, and nothing ever changed.  It just got better.

     Q    Tell me something about your relationship with the Daley brothers
we don't already know.  I know it's a good one.

     THE PRESIDENT:  It is good.  Well, the Mayor I've known for some time,
and I knew Bill actually a little before then.  I just think Mayor Daley is
a great mayor.  In addition to being a friend, he's a great Mayor.  He's
not afraid of new ideas.  He'll work with anybody.  He's always trying to
get something done.  And he enabled me to be an effective President,
because we had these -- whether it was welfare reform or housing or
economic development or you name it, whatever we were doing, I knew Chicago
would be on the cutting edge -- community policing, sensible gun safety
measures, all of that stuff.

     And Bill Daley, of course, and I have been very close, because he was
in my Cabinet.  He was an absolutely superb Secretary of Commerce.  I know
he's hated to leave it, but he answered Vice President Gore's call.  And
what I said tonight was true -- we were way behind when he took over, and
we won the popular vote, and when they get all the votes counted in
Florida, we'll see what happened there.  But Bill Daley's got a lot to be
proud of, and Chicago should be very proud of him.

     Q    What are you most proud of, sir?

     THE PRESIDENT:  I am most proud of the fact that all Americans, not
just a few, are better off than they were eight years ago, and that there's
a greater sense of community here.  I was very worried when I took office
that dividing our country was becoming a habit, and a bad one.  And I think
the country's more united now across racial and income lines and religious
lines.  And I think we understand we need each other.  So, yes, we're
better off economically, but we're a stronger country, too.  And I'm very
proud of that.

     Q    How do you hope Chicagoans and all Americans will remember
William Jefferson Clinton?

     THE PRESIDENT:  As a person who did what he said he'd do when he ran
for President, who put the American people first, who helped to prepare us
for the 21st century, and left the country a little better then he found
it.

     Q    Sir, what are you going to do?  Are you going to come back and
watch a couple Cubs games with us?

     THE PRESIDENT:  I certainly hope so.  I hope so.  Mr. Sosa says he'll
keep inviting me, and I want to do that.  I'll stay very active.  I now
have a United States Senator to support, and a daughter to finish
educating.  So I'm going to go out and make a living.  But I'm going to try
to spend about half my time on public service, and then as soon as I can do
so, I would like to spend my whole life just trying to give back what I've
learned and the experiences I've had as President.  I think I can do a lot
of good for the country and for the world as a citizen.  I'm going to do my
best.

     Q    May I just say that I've been so inspired by your drive and your
fire.  Can you tell the common man a little bit what it's like, from your
perspective as a common man from Hope, Arkansas, to be the man sitting
inside the Oval Office?

     THE PRESIDENT:  All I can tell you is it's still the biggest thrill --
it's as big a thrill for me today to land on the back lawn of the White
House in the helicopter, to walk into the White House and spend the night,
to walk over to the Oval Office every morning, it's as big a thrill for me
today as it was on the first day I showed up as President.  I believe in
the promise of this country, I believe in the American system.

     Politics is a rough game, and it's a contact sport, and if you can't
take a hit, you shouldn't play.  But if you're prepared to pay the price,
and try to bring people together, the American people can do anything, and
we can meet any challenge, we can overcome any obstacle, we can seize any
opportunity.  And for me, I will leave the White House more idealistic and
optimistic about America and its promise and its young people then the day
I took office.

     Q    Listen, I baked you a homemade pound cake, but it's stuck with
our makeup artist on the other side of the room.  So I'm going to have to
send you a fresh one to the White House.
     THE PRESIDENT:  Would you do it?  I'd be honored to have it.

     Q    Absolutely, and I want you to taste it.  Everybody in Chicago has
had it.  Ask Mayor Daley.  He gets one every year.

     THE PRESIDENT:  I'm nuts about pound cake.  I love it.

     Q    God bless you, God bless you, sir.

     THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you.

     Q    All the best to your family.

     THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you.

     END  7:23 P.M. CST


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