Keyes on statesmanship...
Statesmanship is not just a matter of coping with the political challenges of the moment, or doing well at getting elected, or even meeting immediate problems the right way. You must approach them according to an understanding — according to a set of principles —
that reflects a sense of the permanent destiny of the nation.
Obviously, that was something characteristic of a lot of the folks who were part of the
founding generation. Of those people, obviously Washington stands out as someone who was of great character. And there we speak of something that doesn't have to do with
policy only, but has to do with
the kind of person he was, and the way in which he embodied the virtues that are required for leadership in a free society.
Also, I would point to Reagan as somebody I greatly admire. Now, that might have something to do with the fact that, in my lifetime, I think he was the president who has been most impressive, and who had, in my opinion, the greatest sense of instinctive grasp and commitment regarding the challenges that statesmanship faces in our time — particularly when he was dealing with the communist challenge, and understanding the extent to which it had to be dealt with as a
moral reality, not just as a question of geopolitical strategy.
And that, I think, reflected a sense that this country isn't just about our power in the world, but it has also to be about the extent to which we are able to realize the values and ideas that America is supposed to represent, not just for ourselves but for humanity, in the broadest sense of the term.
(From a C-SPAN interview, September 9, 1999)