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Text of Clinton's Dec. 11 speech to the nation
The following is the text of President Clinton's Dec. 11 speech to the nation, delivered from the White House Rose Garden just moments before the House Judiciary Committee passed the first article of impeachment.
Good afternoon.
As anyone close to me knows, for months I have been grappling
with how best to reconcile myself to the American people, to
acknowledge my own wrongdoing and still to maintain my focus on the
work of the presidency.
Others are presenting my defense on the facts, the law and the
Constitution. Nothing I can say now can add to that.
What I want the American people to know, what I want the
Congress to know is that I am profoundly sorry for all I have done
wrong in words and deeds.
I never should have misled the country, the Congress, my friends
or my family. Quite simply, I gave in to my shame. I have been
condemned by my accusers with harsh words.
And while it's hard to hear yourself called deceitful and
manipulative, I remember Ben Franklin's admonition that our critics
are our friends, for they do show us our faults.
Mere words cannot fully express the profound remorse I feel for
what our country is going through and for what members of both
parties in Congress are now forced to deal with. These past months
have been a torturous process of coming to terms with what I did. I
understand that accountability demands consequences, and I'm
prepared to accept them.
Painful as the condemnation of the Congress would be, it would
pale in comparison to the consequences of the pain I have caused my
family. There is no greater agony.
Like anyone who honestly faces the shame of wrongful conduct, I
would give anything to go back and undo what I did.
But one of the painful truths I have to live with is the reality
that that is simply not possible. An old and dear friend of mine
recently sent me the wisdom of a poet who wrote, "The moving
finger writes and having writ, moves on. Nor all your piety nor wit
shall lure it back to cancel half a line. Nor all your tears wash
out a word of it."
So nothing, not piety, nor tears, nor wit, nor torment can alter
what I have done. I must make my peace with that.
I must also be at peace with the fact that the public consequences of my actions are in the hands of the American people and their representatives in the Congress.
Should they determine that my errors of word and deed require
their rebuke and censure, I am ready to accept that.
Meanwhile, I will continue to do all I can to reclaim the trust
of the American people and to serve them well.
We must all return to the work, the vital work, of strengthening
our nation for the new century. Our country has wonderful
opportunities and daunting challenges ahead. I intend to seize
those opportunities and meet those challenges with all the energy
and ability and strength God has given me.
That is simply all I can do the work of the American people.
Thank you very much.
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