THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
(Houston, Texas)
For Immediate Release September 26, 1997 8:45 A.M. CDT
LIVE RADIO INTERVIEW OF THE PRESIDENT
BY TOM JOYNER'S MORNING RADIO PROGRAM
Little Rock, Arkansas
Q Mr. President, good morning.
THE PRESIDENT: Good morning. You're having a lot of fun there for this early in the morning. (Laughter.)
Q And you're having a lot of fun, too, aren't you? Now that Chelsea is gone you all are having some fun. (Laughter.)
THE PRESIDENT: That's what Hillary says. (Applause.)
Q Mr. President, when this happened 40 years ago, how old were you?
THE PRESIDENT: Eleven.
Q And what was going through your mind when you saw all this, what happened here in Little Rock?
THE PRESIDENT: I thought it was a bad thing. I didn't understand why people were so upset. But as I said yesterday, most of the white kids didn't think about it one way or the other until it actually happened, until the Little Rock Nine were turned away. I think most people didn't think about it one way or the other. Children are basically self-absorbed in their own lives. It's part of the privilege of childhood.
But then, all of a sudden, kids that had never thought about it before, it's all they talked about for weeks. And everybody then had to decide really how they felt about it. And it seemed obvious to me that sooner or later this was going
to have to be done; it might as well be done soon.
But I also -- I was always amazed at how there was an element in the South and probably in the rest of the country,
too, of people that were -- they always just needed somebody to hate, needed somebody to look down on. But it's no way to run a country and no way to run a life. Sooner or later, to me it was obvious it had to change.
Q Mr. President, there seems to be so much symbolism to the fact that you were opening the door yesterday for the members of the Little Rock Nine coming through, as well as this year that you have stepped before the nation, before the world, and telling them that you are taking this step into the 21st century and making a difference in terms of race relations. This is a year in which you are just really making us aware and bringing these things out to us. And I commend you for that.
THE PRESIDENT: Well, thank you. I think part of the symbolism yesterday was that -- thank you very much. I think yesterday, part of the importance of the symbolism was that political leaders closed the doors and stood in the doors in the '50s and '60s and kept people out of the doors. And apparently, that idea to open the door came from the students at Central High themselves. It was a great, wonderful idea, and I was glad to be a part of it.
Q Mr. President -- first of all, to the affiliates of 93 stations around the country on the Tom Joyner Morning Show, as you can tell, we are running long. We're going to go right through the break. We want you to hang with us.
Mr. President, you said that what happened 40 years ago really developed your idea of what race relations in this country should be about. At 11 years old, you were thinking race relations?
THE PRESIDENT: Well, it was discussed in my home because my grandparents were interested in it. That's what I said yesterday. So I had a chance to think about it earlier just because my grandfather expressed himself very strongly about it. He had once been a grocer and had a lot of black customers and he knew a lot about black people as human beings and about the troubles they were facing and the problems in their lives and the potential they had. He thought it was wrong.
My grandmother was a nurse and she had a lot more contact with black people in the '50s than most white people did, and she thought it was wrong. And they just had a big impact on me. And they talked about it a lot. And even though my grandfather died in 1957, and everybody was talking about this happening in the two years coming up to that, I still remember as a little boy, 9, 10 years old, sitting around the table, having him walk through this with me and telling me that this was something that had to be done.
Q Mr. President, Cybil asked you a moment ago about the symbolism of yesterday -- I want to ask you about the
substance, if I can. As you know, the two issues that are facing this country, certainly facing black America, with regard to education as we talk about this incident 40 years ago are the issue of school vouchers and this whole issue of resegregation of schools. You know, the NAACP was even considering earlier this summer reassessing their position on school integration. What are your thoughts specifically on how the issue of school vouchers and the issue of school integration are impacting the African American community? Where do you come down on that debate on those issues?
THE PRESIDENT: Well, let me say, first of all, school vouchers -- that is, giving people money that used to go to the school district that they can then use and spend in the school district or they can use it to defray the cost of tuition to private schools -- school vouchers are the most extreme version of more school choice for parents and students. I have supported for years and years giving students and parents more choice for the public schools their kids attend, and also the national charter school movement which allows groups of teachers and parents to organize schools on their own and be more loosely affiliated with public school districts, and to meet the special needs of the community, and then they can have a lot of freedom from the rules and regulations of the school districts and the state as long as they meet high standards.
I support the school uniform movement which a lot of private school have and which have made a big difference in a lot of school districts. The reason I have opposed school vouchers is that I think if you look at the facts, it's a relatively small financial contribution if you give somebody, for example, what the federal government gives to a school district, but if you take it away, you can have a big adverse impact on the school districts without helping any individual children very much.
Now, I will say this -- I believe that sooner or later there will be a lot of people who will try, going beyond Milwaukee and, I think, Cleveland unless we can prove that the public schools can work for children again. But I think, from my point of view, particularly with the federal dollars, I simply don't believe that we should be diverting resources when our schools have been relatively under-funded on the whole. Instead, we ought to be concentrating on making them excellent.
On the other hand, there ought to be some competition there. The parents ought to have some say, which is why I think they ought to have more choice over the schools their kids attend and they ought to have the right to participate in new schools that are outside a lot of the bureaucratic rules that burden school districts.
On the resegregation, I think that my own view is that we ought to continue to try to have integrated schools. We ought to recognize that segregated neighborhoods and different patterns in who has children of school age in various places have led to a resegregation of a lot of our schools. We still ought
to try to integrate these neighborhoods and mix them not only racially, but economically. We still ought to have, where reasonable, transportation plans that work and aren't too burdensome for the kids. But we shouldn't use the fact that a school is not especially integrated at this moment as an excuse not to give those kids an excellent education and do the very best we can. (Applause.)
Q Ten years ago, Mr. President, there was a 30-year celebration for the Little Rock Nine that you helped organize when you were Governor here in the state of Arkansas. It was a lot smaller celebration than the one we had this week, huh?
THE PRESIDENT: It was a lot smaller. I think they enjoyed it, but some of them -- I'm not sure, you'd have to ask them -- but I think there were a couple that hadn't been back to Arkansas very much before then. But everybody gathered. I wanted them to be able to come to the Governor's Mansion because it was the symbol of opposition to their efforts and it was the place where a lot of the plotting was done to keep them out of school. I thought it would be a good thing if they came into the house that had once shut them out. (Applause.)
Q If you were one of them back then, do you think you could have had the courage to do what they did, in all that adversity?
THE PRESIDENT: I don't know. Boy, I'd like to think I would have. I think we all would like to think we would have. But I think, to be honest, none of us can know. You don't know until you're in a situation like that. I wish I could say yes because I certainly would like to have been a part of it, and I can tell you this -- I'm glad they did. I'm certainly glad they did. (Applause.)
Q I'll tell you the President -- smooth, ain't he? Pretty smooth.
Q And, you know, Mr. President, I think your grandfather would be very proud of you for what you have done in terms of stepping forward not only yesterday, but as I said before, with taking people and making us take stock of ourselves and our relationships with others, people that don't look like us. And you've done that certainly in your Cabinet and on your staff of people who look like a lot of us that listen to the Tom Joyner Morning Show as African Americans. (Applause.)
Q Thank you, sir. And we're all FOBs.
Q Yes, we are.
Q We're FOBs.
THE PRESIDENT: Thanks. (Laughter.)
Q So how is Chelsea doing in school? Has she called for money?
THE PRESIDENT: Well, not for money yet. We've talked to her a couple of times and she's having a good time.
Q Well, tell her if she needs some campus fashion, Ms. Dupree (phonetic) has got some cousins who can hook her up. (Laughter.)
Q Thank you, Mr. President. Thank you for being a guest on the show and thank you for being a part of all the celebration here for the 40th anniversary of the Little Rock Nine. Thank you, sir.
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you. Good-bye, everybody. Thank you. (Applause.)