Remarks at Swearing-In Ceremony of Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton

Date: Feb. 2, 2009
Location: Washington, DC


REMARKS AT SWEARING-IN CEREMONY OF SECRETARY OF STATE HILLARY RODHAM CLINTON PRESIDER: GLADYS BOLUDA, ACTING CHIEF OF PROTOCOL, DEPARTMENT OF STATE
ALSO PRESENT: VICE PRESIDENT JOSEPH BIDEN; SENATE MAJORITY LEADER SENATOR HARRY REID (D-NV); SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE NANCY PELOSI (D-CA)

BENJAMIN FRANKLIN ROOM, DEPARTMENT OF STATE

Copyright ©2009 by Federal News Service, Inc., Ste. 500, 1000 Vermont Ave, Washington, DC 20005 USA. Federal News Service is a private firm not affiliated with the federal government. No portion of this transcript may be copied, sold or retransmitted without the written authority of Federal News Service, Inc. Copyright is not claimed as to any part of the original work prepared by a United States government officer or employee as a part of that person's official duties. For information on subscribing to the FNS Internet Service at www.fednews.com, please email Carina Nyberg at cnyberg@fednews.com or call 1-202-216-2706.

MS. BOLUDA: Good afternoon. Distinguished guests, ladies and gentlemen, my name is Gladys Boluda. I'm the acting chief of protocol of the United States of America.

It is my pleasure to welcome you to the Department of State's Benjamin Franklin Room for the swearing in of Hillary Rodham Clinton as the 67th secretary of State of the United States of America. (Cheers, applause.)

Mr. Vice President, we are truly honored to have you here today. Thank you. (Applause.)

I would also like to offer a special welcome to President Clinton -- (applause) -- Chelsea -- (applause) -- Mrs. Dorothy Rodham and the extended Rodham family -- (applause) -- Speaker Nancy Pelosi -- (applause) -- Senator Harry Reid -- (applause) -- and numerous other distinguished members of Congress, Governor Jon Corzine, Governor Martin O'Malley, former secretaries of State Henry Kissinger, James Baker, Lawrence Eagleburger and Madeleine Albright.

Let's give them a welcome. (Cheers, applause.)

We'll begin our ceremony this afternoon with remarks by the vice president. This will be followed by the administration of the oath of office and remarks by Secretary Clinton. Following her remarks, the secretary and her family would like to greet all of you. We will form a receiving line in the John Quincy Adams, here on the eighth floor, for that purpose.

Now it is my distinct honor and privilege to present the vice president of the United States. (Applause.)

VICE PRESIDENT BIDEN: My name is Joe Biden, and I'm a Hillary Clinton fan. (Laughter, applause.)

Madame Secretary, Mr. President, distinguished guests, it's an honor to be back at the State Department. Today we swear in the 67th secretary of State of the United States. And history will record that Hillary Rodham Clinton is the 15th secretary of State from New York state. (Cheers, applause.)

Throughout American history, presidents have looked to New York for statesmen: Seward, Root, Stimson and many others, and now a stateswoman from New York state -- (applause) -- Hillary Rodham Clinton -- (applause) -- someone to begin once again to lead American diplomacy.

In selecting Senator Clinton for this critical task, I think the president selected a person of unrivaled talent and experience. While serving as the first lady and as a United States senator, she's already represented the United States in over 80 countries, and is equally at ease in the great diplomatic halls of Europe as she is in the small villages in Africa.

The national security challenge before this administration is great. We're engaged in two wars. We face a continued threat of terrorist attack by al Qaeda and its allies.

We face numerous transnational threats, including this threat of lethal weapons, climate change, disease and -- that require common action, common action.

And to meet these threats, our military might is absolutely necessary. But to state the obvious, it is not sufficient. We must use the totality of America's strengths, starting with our diplomacy and the ideas and ideals that inform it.

This department is filled -- and many of you are in this room -- with thousands of dedicated women and men of great talent. But Madame Secretary, I have to tell you something else. With your presence, this building and our missions around the world are also filled with a sense of genuine excitement and enthusiasm that I haven't seen in a while -- (applause) -- and it's because of you. No one who was here when Secretary Clinton and the president announced the envoys -- the appointment of envoys George Mitchell and Richard Holbrooke could have missed that sense of enthusiasm as you walked in and through this building. It is contagious. And that's a statement about your ability to inspire, Madame Secretary, as well as to lead.

And so it's with great pleasure I get the honor -- and I think it's a singular honor -- of being able to -- never did I think, by the way, Madame Secretary, I'd get to swear you in as secretary of State. (Laughter.) Never did I think about being vice president. (Laughter.) But it -- but it is truly one of the great honors of the job.

So at this moment, Madame Secretary, if you can get some help from that fellow standing to your left, I'd like to turn and swear you in and administer the oath, if I may.

(Oath administered.)

(Cheers, applause.)

SEC. CLINTON: Thank you all very much. Thank you. (Cheers, applause.) Thank you. Thank you.

It is an overwhelming honor to be sworn in to assume this position on behalf of our country. I thank my dear friend Vice President Biden. And I thank President Obama for investing the trust and confidence in me during a particularly challenging time in our nation's history.

I look out and see so many friends and colleagues. I particularly want to thank the speaker and the majority leader, Speaker Pelosi and Leader Reid, for being here and for providing the leadership that you both are doing in the Congress.

I also want to thank my colleagues in government and my former partners in the Congress. I'm very grateful to all the members of the House, who are here today, and particularly those with whom I served, over eight wonderful years, who represent New York. And I'm very grateful to all of you.

And to my friends in the Senate, I see the faces of people with whom I have shared so much. And I am deeply grateful to each and every one of you. But I have to single out the chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, who after all presided over my confirmation, for which I am very grateful, Senator Kerry.

(Applause.) And I look forward to working with all of you, particularly the appropriators -- (laughter) -- who are here this afternoon. We have a lot of work to do, and it is such important work that lies ahead.

I also want to thank two wonderful friends of mine, governors, Governor Corzine from New Jersey and Governor O'Malley from Maryland, who are here. (Applause.)

And I am particularly honored to have four of my predecessors with us today. I have sought their advice and their counsel, and I have to publicly thank each and every one of them. With us today, Secretary Kissinger and Secretary Baker and Secretary Eagleburger and, of course, my dear friend and fellow Wellesley alum Secretary Albright. (Applause.)

And I also want to thank Secretary Rice and Secretary Powell, and Secretary Shultz, with whom I had a wonderful visit just last week when he came to the seventh floor, and Secretary Haig, all of the former secretaries of State, who have been so generous with their time. And I think I can predict I will be asking for advice as we move forward.

Because this ceremony takes place at a real hinge of history times. There is so much that lies ahead, in terms of challenges but also opportunities. When I came into this building for the first time a week or so ago now, I told the assembled State Department employees, and then repeated it again at USAID, that we are all on the same team, and it is America's team.

And we have, in the leadership of President Obama, someone who wants us to reach out to the world, to do so without illusions, understanding that the difficulties we face will not be wished away but meeting them forthrightly and smartly and that we want to seize the opportunities that exist as well.

I talked, in my confirmation hearings, about smart power. Well, smart power relies on smart people. And we have an abundance of them in this building and at USAID. But I've also told my teammates in the State family that we're going to have to be smarter about how we do what we must for our country.

There are many ways that we can improve on what we do on a daily basis. And I want to work with my friends in Congress, on behalf of our administration, to really look for those deficiencies and those changes that will make what we do more effective, more cost effective, so that we can be out there, around the world, delivering America's message, certainly doing all we must, to protect and defend our security, but also advancing our interests and furthering our values.

So for me, this has been an amazing personal journey. As Joe laughingly referenced, neither one of us thought that we would be standing here together, doing what we are now doing together. Life has a funny way of unfolding. And politics is even stranger. (Laughter.)

So we are joined in this incredible mission on behalf of our president and our country. And it's one where it's not only those of us holding positions, whether elected or appointed, must perform to the very best of our ability. We're asking everyone in our country to think about how each of you can make a contribution, so that we ensure that America's future is even brighter than our storied past.

I'm excited by seeing so many familiar faces. There are friends in this audience who have known me my entire life.

And there is the next generation, you know, my niece and my two nephews who are here. I get up every morning thinking about what I must do to make this world of ours safer and more prosperous and to make our country all that it can be.

As difficult as the times are, I am an optimist. I believe that we can do what we set our minds to do. And so it is the power of our ideals and the intelligence and dedication of our people -- I could not be standing here before you today without all of you, but in particular the three people who stand with me on this stage. It's literally true I wouldn't be here without my mother. (Laughter, applause.) And so I'm especially delighted that she can be with me.

And to my daughter, who I am just bursting with maternal pride over, but who I look to, also, for advice and frankly for some cultural cues that I might otherwise miss -- (laughter) -- and finally to my husband, who understands so well the awesome responsibilities resting on the shoulders of President Obama and Vice President Biden and all of us who serve with them. I am so grateful to him for a lifetime of all kinds of experiences -- (laughs, laughter) -- which have given me a -- (applause) -- which have given me an extraordinary richness that I am absolutely beholden to and grateful for.

So now let me thank Gladys and her crackerjack protocol operation that put this together. We had to schedule it around two schedules that were hard to mesh -- Vice President Biden and Chelsea Clinton. (Laughter.) And when we finally got a time when both of them could be in the same place, we rushed to fill it. So if you're wondering why you didn't get an invitation until Thursday, Friday, Saturday or Sunday -- (laughter) -- it's because we just had to make sure that we had the main people here. But I do want to greet all of you individually and obviously my family wants to say hello as well.

So we're hard at work already, and we're working hard with a great team of people, here in this building and at USAID. And we're looking forward to fulfilling the excitement and the promise that the Obama administration represents here at home and around the world.

Thank you all very, very much. (Applause.)

MS. BOLUDA: Thank you, Madame Secretary. Distinguished guests, ladies and gentlemen, we have concluded our official ceremony.

END.


Source
arrow_upward