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Transcripts For CSPAN2 Booknotes 20150110

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Cspan denny hastert, author of, speaker, what`s the granby roll . Guest the granby roll is a move in wrestling that you can score from the bottom. Not many people do it. And it`s good in wrestling, it`s probably good in politics, too. If you can score when you`re on the bottom and keep winning, that`s what it`s all about. Cspan where does the name granby come from . Guest Granby High School in norfolk, virginia. They were the instigator coach by the name of bill martin was instigated it and taught it. And it kind of passed through the east coast. I picked it up in the midwest, and it was one of our trademarks. Cspan when was the last time you were in a high school classroom, teaching . Guest probably was about a year or two ago. I try to go back to my district and talk in a classroom from time to time. Actually, teaching as a teacher, the last time i did it was 1981 cspan and what were you teaching . Guest i was teaching economics, history, government. I taught a business course over the years. I taught a speech course. And in a Small High School you did everything. I even drove the school bus from time to time. Cspan where`s this picture from, the one on top . Guest Yorkville High School cspan how old were you there . Guest i was probably 24 years old. Cspan i`m going to jump way ahead and show you a clip, and i`ll have you first, it`s a clip of Bob Livingston on the floor. Just so when people are watching it, they`ll know. Where were you in the chamber at that time . Guest i was sitting in the back row of the chamber, right near the door where folks come in off the elevator. That`s where i was chief deputy whip. That`s usually where i sat, and i kind of knew where everybody was on the house floor. That was kind of my position. Cspan what was the timeframe . Guest well, the timeframe was december 19. It was a saturday. We were back because of the impeachment of bill clinton. It was a house vote on the floor. I remember getting up that morning and thinking to myself you know, i taught history for years, and we went through the impeachment of andrew johnson, and it changed president ial history for years. And i`m thinking, what`s going to happen after we get done with this vote today . How`s history going to change . Little did i know that what would happen. Cspan so when Bob Livingston began to talk, you did not know what was going to happen . Guest well, we knew that bob had some problems, but we didn`t know what was going to happen. Cspan let`s watch the tape and then we`ll ask you about it. [video clip december 19, 1998] rep. Bob livingston, House Speaker nominee to the president , i would say, sir, you have done great damage to this nation over this past year. And while your defenders are contending that further impeachment proceedings would only protract and exacerbate the damage to this country, i say that you have the power to terminate that damage and heal the wounds that you have created. You, sir, may resign your post. [boos] unidentified male the house will be in order. Livingston and and. [boos] unidentified male the house will be in order. Livingston and i can only challenge you in such fashion if i am willing to heed my own words. To my colleagues, my friends and most especially, my wife and family, i have hurt you all deeply and i beg your forgiveness. I was prepared to lead our narrow majority as speaker, and i believe i had it in me to do a fine job. But i cannot do that job or be the kind of leader that i would like to be under current circumstances. So i must set the example that i hope president clinton will follow. I will not stand for speaker of the house on january 6. But rather, i shall remain as a backbencher in this congress that i so dearly love for approximately six months into the 106th congress, whereupon i shall vacate my seat and ask my governor to call a special election to take my place. [end video clip] cspan what was going through your head . Guest well, we were kind of stunned about the halfway after he had made his announcement, there was a page that came up, or one of our floor it wasn`t a page, one of our floor people came up, tapped me on the shoulder i was in the back row and said, the speaker wants to talk to you. He`s on the phone in the cloakroom. Cspan who was speaker . Guest it Newt Gingrich. And i went to the phone, newt says, you just heard what happened. You`re the only guy that can pull this conference together and lead it. And i was kind of dumbstruck at that point. Then people started to come up to me and said, you`re going to be the next speaker. And for somebody who hadn`t planned on, you know, being a speaker of the house and just doing his work, as i unintelligible a backbencher, that was really an astounding situation. Cspan you said you called your wife at some point. Guest right. I had called jean after people said, you know, you`re going to be the speaker. And i said, i give me a couple minutes to think about this. I need to talk to my wife. Bill paxon, who is a good friend of mine, anticipated i was going to say that. He called my wife first and said, you know, denny`s going to have to do this and you know so i called her. I thought jean would say you know, she doesn`t live in washington. We didn`t keep our home in washington. She didn`t necessarily want to get involved in everything. She was Teaching School at the time. And i would think i had thought that she`d say, well, you know, just for our life, we can`t really can`t do this. And so i called. It was the first day of christmas vacation, and i was anticipating you know, she was home. It`s was the first day home. It was a saturday morning. And i called her up and said what are you doing . And i thought she well, i`m baking cookies or fixing the tree or doing Something Like that. And she said, well, i`m watching tv. And i said, well, you know what`s going on here. And she said yes, i know. I said, well, what do you think . They want me to be speaker. Said, well, you have to do what you think`s right. And so i thought about it and contemplated and prayed a little bit and decided to do it. Cspan i wrote down two things that jean is quoted as saying why your book, or you say about her. You say she didn`t like politicians at one point, and then later you said, not thrilled with your current job which is speaker. Guest well, she she wasn`t thrilled when i became speaker. It was just a lot more intense. You know, i had been home i work my district every weekend. I didn`t have the National Responsibilities that i have today. I didn`t have to campaign all over the country, you know almost every week. And i was home. I was home on a thursday night or a friday morning, and we worked the weekend. And we also you know, i had at least a day or a dayandahalf off at home. And for me, going back to the district and getting my feet on the ground, being with real people, going to the Hardware Store or the grocery store, is a good way for me to unwind. And i needed to be back home. So i wasn`t sure what this job had entailed and how we`d handle it. Cspan in your book, you discuss the differences between you and Newt Gingrich. I have a question for you. When you retire some day, what will you do . Will you stay in washington, will you go back home . Guest well, i don`t live in washington now, so i really doubt that i`d stay in washington. I`ve thought about that a lot. And i guess that when i`m ready to retire, i`m going to have to face up to it. But you know, i think there`s opportunities out there. There`s a lot of things that you maybe would like to do. You know, there`s some ambassadorships maybe i would like to do. And i have a great interest in japan. I got some interest in europe. But you know, that`s down the road. I have never set my, you know, flag that way that i want to do it, and probably, it`s the first time i`ve ever said it publicly but so there`s some opportunities in the future that i think. But you know, i always said if you do the job that you`re doing now and do it well, you don`t have to worry about the next step. And i think i still could continue. I`m running for speaker again. And lord willing, if that happens, then i got another two years to do my job. And we`ll assess things from that point. Cspan the reason i ask you is that so many people who come to congress now, in the house in particular, do not stay there. They go to the senate or they go downtown and lobby. Guest right. Cspan and whether or not that was in your veins. Guest well, i you know, i`d never say never to anything i`m not going to run for the senate. I had an opportunity to run for the senate and decided i like the house. I like what we do in the house. We get things done. I think the senate is not my turf. But you know, in a way, you bring up an interesting thing because we`re facing six open seats across the country right now. So in a sense, we`re a victim of our own success. These people have run. They`ve been successful, and now they`re moving on to other careers. We have to fill those open seats. So in a sense, it`s something that we have to constantly keep up with. Cspan i was struck when i read your book that so many of the characters in your book aren`t there anymore. And i just wrote them all down as i was reading about it. Bob livingston, Newt Gingrich. Dick armey, bill paxon, steve largent, saxby chambliss, john sununu, lindsey graham, tom coburn, susan molinari, john kasich, bill zellef, and i know i`ve missed some. Guest right. Cspan almost other than tom delay and a couple of others the team that you started out with are gone. Guest well, you know, that happens in congress today. People used to say, well, you know, you go to congress, those people are there forever. The term limit you know, the term limit issue and all those things that we talked about you know, the average i don`t know what exactly the average term of a congressman, but it used to be for a long time. Today, it`s probably eight years or ten years is the average time that a person stays here. And they cycle off and do something else. A lot of those folks that you mentioned are either in the senate or headed for the senate so i mean, they step up and do other things. Saxby chambliss and lindsey graham, and coburn`s running for the senate, and others. So you know, there`s other careers, too. Cspan tom coburn did this show once, and it was i think i can say without exaggerating, it was a the book was a real criticism of the house in this town. Did you read the book . Guest i read excerpts from the book. Cspan if you were going to criticize your own institution over there, after you`ve now been there for how many years . Guest this is my 18th year that i`ve been in the congress. Cspan what would you tell those kids out there in civics class . Guest well, you know, i always said you know, i taught government for 16 years. And when i first went to the illinois general assembly, i said, you know, the real difference here is the difference between theory and practice, that this place is a people business. It`s how you treat people. It`s how you deal with people is really how you get things done not necessarily if you`re a great orator or if you`re a great attorney or, you know, a great writer. It`s how you can relate to people, bring them together and move them in a direction to get real legislation or real things accomplished. And i would say that probably the most the biggest hindrance in that today that, you know, this the congress was partisan when i came. I saw the huge difference in partisanship between the house of representatives and the Illinois Legislature that i was in. The Illinois Legislature we were on the floor together hours and hours and hours every day, and to go through the process. And we weren`t in as long, so things were compressed. Here you went across the aisle you talked to people, you shared a joke with somebody or a story with somebody from time to time and there was a collegiality there, even across the aisle. You know, one of the things in Congress Everybody goes back to their little own office and they watch a lot of the proceedings on tv. You come to the floor and vote. The people that you do get to know across the aisle might be people that you serve on a committee with or from time to time or have the opportunity to travel with. But there isn`t this really crosscultivization you know, crosspollinization, in a sense, that you don`t really get to spend time with people. I have some friends on the other side of the aisle, but they`re people that i`ve known for a long, long time and people that i respect. But you know, so the incivility that people talk about in the Congress Comes from two things. First, not spending a lot of time with people. You don`t you know, you`re off on your own thing. You`re in your office. You have constituents. You have, you know, your whole agenda, that your staff is driving you, that you`re busy all the time. And you don`t take enough time to deal with people on the floor. The second part of that is when i first came to congress, there were democrats over had a plurality of over 100, i think. It was a huge plurality. And you know, i remember stories about their discipline within their caucus at that time. If somebody didn`t vote with the party or, you know, didn`t go with tip o`neill or didn`t go with jim wright, they might have lost their parking place or their locks were changed in their office or they lost their telephone or you know, things like that, little subtle differences and disciplines that they had, saying that, you know, that`s a time past, that`s a generation past. And probably, they could get away with that. We can`t get away with that. I mean, we have such a tight margin that you know, sometimes when i first started it was a 5vote margin. Today we`re close to a 10vote margin. Depends on who`s here and who`s sick. But you have to deal with your own party all the time and keep people on board. You know, they call me a speaker, but i really they ought to call me the listener because i spend so much time listening to people`s problems trying to work through those problems, trying to make change possible for these people. And you have to pull your we`re so closely divided that you have to pull your Team Together all the time to get something done. And you just don`t reach across the aisle it`s impossible because they`re pulling their Team Together all the time, too, on a partisan basis. And you don`t get, you know, 20 boll weevils anymore to come over and cross and vote for a bill. Cspan you periodically in this book tell us how you feel about some other people. For instance, you say in the book that trent lott is not a good listener. Guest well, i mean, trent, i think, in his own way is a pretty dynamic leader. And he got things done, and he is a gotoit guy. But he doesn`t at least in my experience, he didn`t sit down and listen to what you had to say very well. I mean, you got his information first. Cspan how much listening do you do . Guest i do a lot of listening. I i would you know, i watch other people in government. For instance, i watch dick cheney operate. Dick cheney`ll come into a room, there`s a problem, he`ll sit and look over the top of his glasses and put his, you know, fingers on his cheek and listen maybe for 20 or 30 or maybe minutes or maybe an hour, and then finally say, well, we need to do this. I kind of do the same thing, not because i`m copying him, it`s just my nature. But i will listen to both sides of a story, both if there`s two people in conflict or two Committee Chairmen that you have to deal with or a person who wants to has a difficult time to vote for something, he needs to make sure that that bill can he can sell that bill back home or be represented back home in doing the right thing. And so if we have to make a change in the bill or an adjustment, i`ll sit and listen and or if somebody feels that they`ve been shortchanged by the leadership, you know, one way or another, the whole spectrum of leadership, i`ll sit down there and listen. I have to do that, and then try to solve those problems. Cspan you called mark shields and john mclaughlin, the two radio i mean, the Television Talk show hosts, loudmouths on television. Guest well, i did at one time. You know, if you watch john, john doesn`t give much credence to any other person`s opinion, and shields is just in your face all the time. So if you have those interviews, you don`t get much time to express. You maybe get banged on, but you never really get to express your opinion or your opinion is never really taken into focus. Cspan you give us an insider`s view of what happened around Newt Gingrich and the attempted coup. Start that story. Guest well, i was whipping. I was chief deputy whip. We had an appropriations bill on the house floor, and i couldn`t find tom, tom delay, anywhere, because we had a problem. We had the coal folks that wanted to keep coal gasification funds in place, and we there was an amendment out there for to do away with the fire roads into the National Forests environmentalists tried to do that. The people who were montana and the western folks that needed to keep their forests and try to keep fires down were fighting that amendment. So i thought there was a possibility to tie up an agreement with the coal people and the forest people to, you know, hold down, and they would, you know, help each other defeat those amendments. But before i did that, i wanted to check with delay and see that, you know, if that was ok and that would go along with what his plan for this bill. I went to look for him, couldn`t find him. And finally some you know called his office, said, oh, he`s not around. This was, you know, 8 00 or 9 00 o`clock at night, so he`s got to be around someplace. And finally, somebody said well, he`s down in paxon`s office, which was a hideaway down on the first floor, right across the hall from where tom delay`s office. Cspan congressman bill paxon of new york. Guest bill paxon`s office. And bill was the chairman of the leadership at that time. So i went down there and kind of knocked on the door and walked in. They`re having dinner. And boy, just you know, both of these guys were very, very Close Friends of mine. The conversation just stopped. And i knew that there was something going on, something wrong. And so i said to tom ,oh, yes, go do whatever you want to do, which isn`t natural for tom. So i did. I figured if they wanted to talk about what they had to talk about, that`s fine. And so later that night, i got called into back down there after we were out of session and said, well, you know, we have a real problem. There`s a group of young conservatives, mostly in the class of `94 but a few others, that want to depose newt. They want to vacate the chair. It`s a parliamentary procedure. What are we going to do . And you know, armey eventually came into that discussion, and we had a long discussion into the night. Delay went over and talked to those people. And as the story in the book goes on, it really kind of lays it out, what happened. Cspan well, what was the reason for wanting to oust Newt Gingrich at that time . Guest well, i think you know, this is in the eyes of people who i mean, there was the tom coburns and other folks like that, lindsey graham, that newt wasn`t living up to their expectations. A lot of those folks had never really served in a legislature before, and you know, they really i want to say, understanding or didn`t accept the compromise that you have to do to get things done. And i think newt had a lot of good ideas. He certainly was a revolutionary. Probably the most intellectual political mind that i`ve ever really dealt with since i`ve been in politics. I mean, he`s always thinking, always trying to think around the bend or over the horizon. And you know, he`s a great political strategist. But newt had a good idea every five or six minutes, and try to keep up with those things he moved around a lot. And the people wanted i think those folks wanted him to stay on a more conservative bent all the time. And quite frankly, some of those times, he newt had to work with, again, a fairly narrow majority. He had to deal with the moderates that put him in power cspan but you show us up close and personal in this situation that you describe that even in your own party, there were people not telling the truth. I mean, you suggested dick armey wasn`t telling the truth back then. Guest well, i mean, dick armey went into that meeting and said that, you know, he understood. Delay came back, and i think armey had the understanding that he would become speaker if this thing blew up. And you know, it was the kind of, what if . What do we do . Who does what . And delay came back from that meeting and said, all these conservatives don`t want you as speaker. And it really changed his mind and where he was going to be in his position. And you know, i kept saying, let`s come back and let`s talk to newt in the morning. We need to do that. Eventually, that`s what we did. Cspan bill paxon, who was involved in that is now what lobbying . Guest he`s lobbying, has work in a lobbying firm in washington. Cspan steve largent, who was involved in that, runs a Telecommunications Association cellular phone, lots of money. Guest yes. Cspan and then tom coburn is running for the United States senate. Guest right. And dick armey`s out lobbying as well. Cspan you were not happy when dick armey wrote an oped piece in the wall street journal. Guest you know, dick and i worked pretty closely together the first four years of my speakership. And i think dick was somewhat disappointed when livingston stepped down and he really didn`t get the nod to be speaker. And i think that`s a personal disappointment we would all have. And he was the next guy in line but it just happened that way. And you know, one of the things about speaker, anybody you know, if you have half the votes in your conference, you can get elected to a Party Position or a Conference Leadership position. But in order to get elected speaker, you have to have every one of almost every one of your people to get elected. That`s what happened to newt in the first place because we had 10 or 12 people, maybe 18 people, that weren`t going to vote for him for speaker on the floor. And you can`t get elected speaker. It just doesn`t happen. And i think that was the realization that dick had to face up to. But you know, we worked together very, very closely. And dick was a good ally of mine and a good friend. I was disappointed when he did the oped piece because he helped us put together the first medicare bill that we passed and the second medicare bill the one we did in the 106th congress, the one we did in the 107th congress, he was one of the leaders in helping put it together, and then criticized it in the 108th, when he wasn`t here. And i just didn`t i said, dick, if you`re going to do that, you owe me a headsup before you you know, i think i left him a memo on his phone. I said, you know, it`s not your enemies you have to worry about, it`s your friends that stab you in the back. Cspan as you know, they all have access to the floor, even though they`re not there anymore. Guest sure. Cspan they can go to the gym. They can go to the dining room. Do they come back, then, after you had these personal disappointments . Guest sure. Dick caught me the next day, and we had a good conversation. Cspan it doesn`t but you suggest in here that there are times when, you know you break that bond. I think you told a story about Dick Gephardt and the chaplain and you never were quite the same again. What`s the story . Guest well, you know, one of the things first things when i first became speaker the story is trust in this place that the only thing the only commodity that you have to sell, the only ability for you to work with people is your word, your bond, and trust that people have in you. If people lose that trust, then it`s very difficult to get anything done. It`s almost impossible to be a leader. And my situation, when i first became speaker, i knew that newt had a good a difficult time. I mean, he spent a lot of his time before he was in leadership, you know, bringing down jim wright. I mean, that was just the legacy that he inherited, that he, you know, had. And so there were a lot of democrats that just didn`t like him. I figured when i became speaker, i`d try to reach across the aisle. Even in my acceptance speech, i said, you know, i`m willing to go halfway, in some cases more than halfway. But you have to go halfway, too and i was willing to reach across and work. As a matter of fact, when the chaplain situation when reverend ford decided to retire as chaplain, i broke on tradition because the speaker had always just made that decision. You just did it. And. Cspan let me ask, though jim ford had been chaplain for how many years, roughly . Guest for 20 years. Cspan and he retired. Guest and he retired. Cspan and this would have been what year . Guest well, it was the first year i was speaker. Cspan in `99. Guest . First term in my speaker so it was probably 2000. Cspan in 2000. Guest and he came to me and said to me, i`d like to retire. And i said, well, i`d hate to see you go, but you know, let me know. Give me some time. So instead of just making that decision, putting out a Search Committee myself and making that decision, i thought, well, let`s do this on a bipartisan basis. And so we had seven or eight or nine members on each side, went out and did a search. I think they had 52 candidates some number like that. And i said, give me three candidates without prejudice saying, just give me three people. Don`t rank them. And then i`ll take it to leadership, to dick armey, myself, and Dick Gephardt, and we`ll make that decision. And tom bliley was the guy that kind of headed it up for me, and tom, you know, went through, and it was interesting because i kept talking to him. I said, well, how`re you doing . And you know, 52 people how are you winnowing this thing down . And i remember father father george from Georgetown University was one of the leading candidates. And all of a sudden out of nowhere, kind of out of the catholic ranks, was this kind of undercutting thing that, well, we can`t have a lobbyist, and this guy is a lobbyist, so he won`t, you know, be a good couldn`t be a good chaplain. I thought, boy, there`s some deeds going on here someplace. Somebody`s got some long knives out. And so the recommendations finally came down, and one of the recommendations was a fellow that was a swedish covenant minister, went to the north park college in illinois. And ted vandermead ph , who`s one of my counsel, is on the board of north park. And you know, he was a good candidate, he thought. Another was chuck wright, who worked with the Pennsylvania Legislature and was a presbyterian minister, did a lot of things here with the Prayer Breakfast and prayer groups on a bipartisan basis. As a matter of fact, tony. Cspan from ohio . Guest from ohio. Tony hall. Cspan tony hall. Guest . Was his nominee. A democrat guy put him forward. He had good credentials. And then there was tim o`brien, who worked with for Marquette University in a peopletopeople program or Student Exchange program. Cspan a catholic priest. Guest a catholic priest. He was the third guy. And as a matter of fact, i had some of my staffers who actually went through his program. And as a matter of fact, o`brien was scheduled to marry one of my people at one time. And so, you know, we decided to take all those but when tom bliley gave me the list, he had it ranked one, two, three. And i said tom, i want this without prejudice. I mean, just give me three names. I gave the list back to him, and he gave me the same three names back, only unranked. And so we went through the process. And it was interesting because the fellow from the swedish covenant i don`t even remember the fellow`s name but he had a good interview. But from my point of view and my impression, it wasn`t anything outstanding. And tim o`brien, i think, was one of the next guys we had. And in our conversation and interview with him he said something he said, you know i`ve been a scholar and worked with these kids and worked around congress a good deal of my life. And he said, i would really like to do this job because i can be the chaplain. I can continue my writing. And it was kind of a red flag that went off in my mind at that time. I said, you know, i don`t know if somebody if being a chaplain and working with, you know, personal conflicts that people have and doing all the things that you have to do with people`s own emotional situations around here, that i want somebody chroniclizing this, you know, putting this down and writing this thing. And that was kind of a negative to me. And then chuck wright came in, and a lot of our members were pushing him tony hall was pushing him and because he had worked with the Prayer Breakfast and some of these groups. And i was impressed by him. He wanted to work with families he wanted to bring people together. He wanted to do you know, almost like a parish minister or a parish priest, you know, work with the people. And that he was the only guy that really emphasized that part of it. So in my mind, i thought he was the best choice. I talked to armey, and he kind of thought that wright was the right choice, as well. And then i talked to i tried to get dick to come in, Dick Gephardt to come in and meet with us and so we could finalize this. It went on week after week after week. And he was campaigning. He was trying to run for speaker of the house at that time. And so it was an election year. And so finally, i got him on the phone, and i said, well, let`s just make a decision over the phone. I had these three candidates down to the fellow who was the swedish covenant minister. Cspan dr. Dvorak. Guest dvorak. Cspan dvorak, yeah. Guest dvorak, and then we had o`brien, and then we had wright. And i said, dick and i have talked about it; we kind of like wright. And he says, well, i kind of like dvorak. He was my choice. And he said, let me i`m not going to do that right now, let me get back to my people. I`ll call you back. Well, a couple of days later, he called me back and said, well, my people think we ought to go with dick did that, he never made a decision on the spot, he always went back to counsel or to his folks, people who he talked to, and he said they like o`brien, the catholic priest. And he said, that`s where i`m at on this. And i said, well, we`ve got a 21 split on this thing. I said, dick and i want to go with wright. He said, well, you know, i`m not going to oppose you on it. So we all signed a letter and named wright the chaplain. Then things started to come back. Mike stokke, who was my deputy chief of staff came back to me and said, you know, i was just a catholic. He said, i was at mass last sunday, and the priest came down to me afterward, or some Dedication Church it was something. He said, came to me after and said, we just had a meeting of bishops and this guy was the bishop of peoria. And somebody i knew and had actually played football with in high school. And he said, you know, there is a says hastert is anticatholic and armey is anticatholic. And i said, what are you talking about . And he said, well, that`s what is happening with these calls into bishops` meeting, and he said that`s serious stuff. So all of a sudden, this anticatholic thing started to build up. You had a couple of people in the democrat minority who were unhappy with the choice, decided this would be, in my opinion would make good political fodder and really drive a wedge in for this coming election. And so here we have. All of a sudden, we have a religious thing. I`ve never intended never you know, i tried to be open about it, and it was really a pretty nasty period and experience that i had to go through for the first year that i was speaker. And finally, it got to the point that it looked like that wright couldn`t become step in and really serve people as a chaplain. And i decided i just had to go and i wasn`t going to accept o`brien as somebody that wanted to come in politically and write about people`s lives. My impression of what he wanted to do. And so he was unacceptable to me. So i went to father or Cardinal George in chicago, a friend of mine, and said, look it, i`ve got a problem; give me three candidates, and he did. And i went and interviewed them one night in chicago, kind of quietly, and came down, and dan coughlin, who was the vicar of the diocese in chicago impressed me very well. I`ll never forget that day. We brought him in, i introduced him, passed the resolution, made him the chaplain. And we went down to a press conference right off my office or right outside my office off the floor, and, of course, all the press were there, just because this was a big issue. And they said, first question, they said, aren`t you walking into a lion`s den . What do you think about this job . He kind of looked at them and said, well, you know, my name is daniel, and that was the end of it. That was the end of it. But it was a nasty time. And, you know, gephardt, in my opinion, could have helped that and taken some leadership. He knew what the process was. He knew why we made those decisions. But he let this political thing fester, and i don`t think it was good for the house and i don`t think it was good for people`s ability to get together. Cspan but the way, you i was just noticing that you say in the book and i`m noticing that left leg is moving right now, that worries me because you say in the book that means something. Guest well, i think every time i used to sit on the bench when i was playing football or coaching, that leg would go. So, anyway. Cspan what does it mean . Does it mean that there`s a are you tenser when that leg moves . Guest i never went to a psychologist and asked, i don`t know. Cspan we have some videotape. I want you to look at it. You`re doing something in this videotape. This is from the reagan speech that you write about in the book that you don`t like. Let`s roll it and see if you know what i`m talking about. [video clip] guest it`s an honor and a privilege to be here tonight. This place honors a true American Hero and someone i personally look up to. [end of video clip] cspan can you tell what i`m talking about . Guest my glasses . Cspan no. You say you don`t like to read speeches ever. Guest right, right. Cspan why were you reading one there, then . Guest well, it was a pretty important occasion, and i think everybody had prepared remarks. Pretty formal. And actually, the remarks were printed for everybody, the distribution. But i think i am just better off talking off the top of my head and of course, you have to know a little bit about the topic or the subject. I hate to get tied down to text i`m just i`m not comfortable with it. Some people can bring it off well. But sometimes i can do that, too. But i think that speech probably turned out all right. But. Cspan did you ever write your speeches before you got to be speaker . Guest i never had to give that many speeches before i was speaker. But in the legislature, i always said when i first ran for the legislature, i had two speeches i had a fiveminute pep talk and a 40minute lecture. And i always knew my material, and if i wanted to motivate people, i knew what i had to do i did it my whole life. But giving speeches is just a little different game. Cspan why did you write this book . Guest you know, i felt there were two things i wanted to do. First of all, i felt that i had gone through some extraordinary experiences since i became speaker. Came in at the height of impeachment. There was a lot of bitterness in the house of representatives. People really didn`t trust government, weren`t sure about bill clinton. And then right after i became speaker, i remember i got called to the white house and we were going in to invade kosovo. The next thing that happened, we were in this campaign, and after through the war in kosovo but in this campaign, and had the hanging chad campaign. And for a while people said, well, you know, you`re going to be the next you`re going to be a temporary president constitutionally, and this thing was hung up and we couldn`t make a decision who was going to be the president. It went before the Supreme Court, and if that got dragged out beyond january 20, by law i would have been president of the United States, temporarily until this thing got resolved. Then we moved one of the largest tax reforms and tax cuts for the American People in American History right after that. Right after that, we were september 11 of 2001. We spent nine weeks, i remember, in my office, almost every night, working together, bringing people together on a bipartisan basis, trying to make sure that writing the patriot act, to make sure that we could have pursued terrorists, make sure the airlines would fly and have some ability to do that make sure that new york was put back together again, make sure that our defenses in this country, our Homeland Security was better. And that was an incredible time in itself. And then we had the war in afghanistan, we had the war in iraq and that kind of brings us right up to this next election. But it was an incredible six years. And i thought it`s better to write this down or to get this thing down while your memory is still fairly clear with it. And i tried to do that. And the second thing i felt actually, two other things i felt. You know, all my life i`ve had somebody kind of help me out from time to time. You know, bob michael was a great guy, he kind of took me under his wing when i first came to congress, kind of mentored me in a sense. Cspan from illinois. Guest and i had a football coach in high school that kind of made me realize that i could do some things that i never thought i could do before. And throughout my life, i had some people. Tom ewing, when i first came to the Illinois Legislature, helped me out, and then i helped him come back to congress. And just good friendships and people who really helped you. And i think that`s important. And i tried to do that in my own career, bring people along and make sure that they have an opportunity, even the most junior members, to see, you know, an opportunity to move forward. And the second thing in that respect you know, i`ve come from a pretty humble background, i guess you`d say. We were we had tough luck in a Small Business and changed businesses, we always worked hard. You know, i never got a paycheck until i was 18 years old. And but you always made do and you worked hard and you did everything you had to do. And partly, you had a responsibility as a family and working together. And whatever success i had in high school, you worked hard and, you know, i never went to an Ivy League School or never had a lot of means to do things as a matter of fact, 25 years ago if somebody told me when i was Teaching School and coaching, just 25 years ago that i`d ever be in congress, let alone speaker of the house, i would have laughed at them. I would have said, you know, that`s kind of a crazy idea. But ordinary people do have the opportunity to do extraordinary things if they`re given the opportunity. And i think that`s something that we can`t forget about this country. Cspan did i read in here that your original motivation to leave being a teacher, per se, was you needed money to put the kids into college . Guest well, i was looking for a little bit better economic help from the school district, a side job or whatever else. And it was kind of a story that i always talk about. I went to the superintendent and said, you know, i`m coaching i`m working part time, i`m department chairman, i`m teaching three or four topics, subjects, and i need a little help. Cspan how much were you making then . Guest i was making probably 19,000 a year. Cspan what year would that have been . Guest probably 1980, `79. So anyway, i went to him, talked to him about it, and he kind of scratched his head and said, what`s your masters do you have a master`s degree . And i said sure. So what`s it in . I said, history and philosophy. He looked at me, shook his head and said, that`s not going to do any good. We can`t do anything with that. And he said, tell you what, you go back to summer school, pick up six or seven hours in supervision, and he had an opening as a junior high principal. And not even be an assistant principal in a junior high, it was assistant principal in a junior high. And he said, you know, you can get on a better income track. The principal was a good friend of mine in high school. I used to go down there and he always has seven or eight chairs sitting outside of his office, they`re always full of kids that were, you know, kicked out of study hall or talking in english class or couldn`t behave on the bus, and he had to deal with these same kids every day. Other side of his office was teachers. You had to deal with teachers` problems, real problems, and help them along. And i said, you know, i don`t want to do that for the next 20 years. And there was an opening in the legislature, and so i just kind of said, well, i`m going to run for the legislature, and i did. And everybody kind of made fun of me, the wrestling coach running for wrestling you know, for legislature, that`s absurd, but i won, and spent six years there. I had six great years in the legislature. I was a republican leader on revenue, republican leader on appropriations, and rewrote the public utility act and the telephone act in those six years. So i had great opportunity. People helped me there, too. And then ran for congress in my little state rep district. I had parts of three congressional districts. Two of those congressmen resigned within three days of each other, after the nomination took place. It was george o`brien and john grapper, they both had terminal cancer and stepped down their nomination. So i thought, if i`m ever going to run for congress, it better be now. And i wasn`t even sure if i was ready. So in `86, i ran for congress and won. Came here in `87. 1994, you know, i was on both the Transportation Committee and i was on the energy and commerce committee, and worked with ed madigan, and all these things. And then we took the leadership in 1994. In that election, `95, i became chief deputy whip; four years later became speaker. I said, you know, life has come full circle, because in my office, i got a beautiful office, chandelier i`m a wrestling coach. Never thought i`d have an office with a chandelier in it. Beautiful view down the mall and the national capitol. But outside of my office, i have these seven or eight chairs, and i`ve got these people i have to talk with every day and try to solve problems. And people coming in my office all the time. So i`m kind of the principal of this place. Cspan do i count right that you`re the 51st person to be speaker of the house . Guest yes. Cspan and the republicans at one point had a sixyear or threeterm limit on the speakership. Guest it`s an eightterm limit. Cspan eight . Guest yes. Cspan do you still have it . Guest no. As a matter of fact, unsolicited by me, they decided to remove it last year, or last congress. Cspan and you have been elected you`ve been to the speakership how many years . Guest three. Three terms. Cspan so it`s six years. And there have been a bunch in the past who have had six years, including joe cannon, i believe. Guest i believe joe was there probably eight years. Cspan you got a book on joe cannon that you wrote about. Guest right. Right. Cspan who gave it to you . Guest one of the former staffers of john beginner`s former staff gave it to me. He`s now in the white house now but he gave me two books. One book was a book on joe cannon, and the other book was just a kind of anthology of a lot of different all the speakers. And the first book i started going through and looking at all these speakers that preceded me it was an older book, so it probably didn`t have the last couple of speakers in it, but all those speakers that preceded me, it kind of worked up the ladder. They started out as a lower party official, and then became maybe assisted conference leader, then a conference leader, then up to deputy whip and then whip and then, you know, majority leader, and then finally speaker. And you know, they were in their late 60s or 70s or maybe 80s by the time they got to be speaker and they lived two years and died. But when you are charged and entrusted with responsibilities by you my colleagues as i have been you deserve better. Moderation is required. Cspan what were we watching . Guest well this is after bill thomas and the Ranking Member of the ways and means he said something to me. There me. There was an altercation in the room. Asking the press to come in. It further irritated mr. Thomas, and he called the capitol police. They did not come, but it was an altercation that was about ready to happen and came to a situation tension on the house floor. Bill thomas is a brilliant legislator, a smart man. Huge intelligence with an intense drive to get things done. Sometimes the moderation of that gets in the way of accomplishment but that was a humbling time. Cspan did he change at all after that . Guest it worked out. He constantly amazes me. Cspan i was surprised to read this. You used to to have your kids read two books. Interesting that a conservative republican would have his kids read those two books. Guest i would have them read others as well. Those two i think, were important because i wanted kids to understand, if understand if you are teaching history, understand the culture the challenges so people could understand at that time stockyards in chicago. For. For a lot of kids when i 1st started teaching chicago meant going to the stockyards so they could relate to this, but they cannot relate to immigration. So this was a good book to read about struggle how things changed and why society basically changes. And grapes of wrath, the same thing dust storms in oklahoma, oklahoma, people who had to emigrate, living on a shoestring. It gives you a setting for history and you can better explain why president s got elected, issues, and so i like to use literature as a background for teaching history. Cspan you compare driving a school bus to running the congress of the United States. Guest a small school of 350 kids. If you coached, you had to drive the school bus. If you did that on a snowy day you got that call at 530 in the morning. Driving a school bus with a load of kids on it was like being speaker of speaker of the house. First of all you have to keep this huge machine or institution going straight down the road, make sure that charges you have behind you behave themselves and look at this huge mirror and watch your back. Cspan the speaker has what abilities and powers . Guest what we do as a Steering Committee every year is a. Chairman and other people to certain functions in the house but that is important. So many times chairmanship was just a function of seniority and the oldest guy standing ended up being the chairman. We tried to look at who could best energize carry out our policies and get things done. We do a screening process. The Steering Committee also appoints people to committees which is a powerful thing to be able to do. I had more votes than everyone else but cumulatively everyone else had more votes. Again, teamwork people elected to the Steering Committee and the leaders that sit on the community we tried to put the best people in place to get the job done. Teefor. Cspan what does jean think of your job now . Guest she has been very supportive. She is retired. She loves golf. I do the politics, you do the golf. She goes to the districts and i go from chicago to the mississippi river. River. The Vice President of the womens republican organization. They have 200 some women in the organization a very viable thing. I dont think she will ever be ready to come back to washington, but we dont live in washington. We live in illinois. Cspan how old are your boys . Guest 26 and 29. Cspan what do they do . Guest one in his final year of law school at northwestern this year and my other son works in washington. Cspan you say government consultants are not they like to be called government consultants. What kind of lobbyist to see . Guest we do not talk about what he does. Cspan do you worry that he uses your title . Guest we have an understanding. He does not do that. Cspan if you had to go back to the classroom today and teach government, what would you tell them that you did not no before . Guest i taught for a whole lot a whole while when i was in the legislature. Time management became an issue. I would emphasize rather than the mechanics of how a bill becomes a law and everything the tenets of the Supreme Court talk about real things, how real things get done how the dynamics work. Again i think those are lessons everyone has the desire and discipline to get something done needs to know. Cspan we will the relationship of money and congress ever change . Guest that goes back to the disk caching of mccainfeingold and a lot of things that happened they did not anticipate. As you know, i opposed mccainfeingold. The tenets of tenants of what they called soft money as opposed to hard money. Soft money came from corporations. And so what mccainfeingold did was eliminate the soft money to parties. I feel that parties traditionally in this country because if you wanted to help someone run for state representative for counsel or county board, you could do that you cant Even Campaign for president because you have to meld those two. It is difficult. It is almost taking the party out of the ability to decide who is going to build Party Organizations within a state or county. What it has is moved to soft money organizations. A guy like george soros can come in and stick ten or 20 million, no one knows where it comes from. You have a different type of soft money influence that i just think is wrong and not to be repealed. There are 22 things you need to do in campaignfinance reform. People are worried about the money and the process, then there has to be a transparency. If you get a 5 check or hundred dollar check or thousand dollars check there ought to be transparency. Within 20 minutes you can have that on the internet. Most of the money ought to come from that persons district at least the majority so that people who elect to have a say in how this candidate comes about and not outside interest groups. Cspan you no that from yourself . Guest absolutely. I want to watch this go through, but i am ready ready and prepared to do that. Cspan any interest in beating tip oneills record guest i think records are not necessarily in this business set to be broken. I just hope i can do a good job while there. Cspan what is it you are taking . Guest this is the book , dennis hastert. This is the book, speaker lessons from 40 years in coaching and politics. You are watching book tv. Up next Staughton Lynd talks about his work on the Labor Movement and more. [applause]

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