 Mr. Chief Justice, members of the court, ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the White House. And thank you for coming to witness this historic occasion. This ceremony is the culmination of our constitutional process which involves each of the three branches of government. I have had the honor of nominating Judge Kennedy to be an Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court. The Senate has confirmed my nomination, and I now ask that Chief Justice William Rehnquist administer the Constitutional Office to Judge Kennedy. Thank you, Mr. President. Before I administer the oath, let me say on behalf of my colleagues and all of us how grateful we are to you for having this very fine ceremony in the White House. We appreciate it. Anthony L. Kennedy, you solemnly swear. Anthony L. Kennedy, you solemnly swear. But I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States. But I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States. But I will well and faithfully discharge the duties of the office on which I am about to enter. The duties of the office on which I am about to enter. So help me, God. So help me, God. Mr. President and Mrs. Reagan, Chief Justice and Mrs. Rehnquist, distinguished and esteemed guests and friends. My family joins me, Mr. President, and again, expressing our deep appreciation for the confidence and the trust that you have been reposed in us. And we thank you, Mr. President, and we thank you, Mr. Chief Justice, for this gracious reception and for the warm welcome you have given us to the Court and to this city. We feel very much at home here. It is a singular privilege to succeed at the place left by Justice Powell, who served the Court and the President of the United States. We feel very much at home here. It is a singular privilege to succeed at the place left by Justice Powell, who served the Court and the country with such wisdom and distinction. In this, the year of the Bicentennial, it is appropriate to recognize an essential truth. And that is that the Constitution of the United States is the single fact, the single reality, the single idea, the single moral principle that sets the United States apart from other nations now and throughout history. I shall honor the Constitution. And at this gracious assembly and ceremony, it is appropriate to note also that the presidency, the Congress, and the courts are committed to the Constitution and to the rule of law and to the heritage of freedom. Thank you very much. Mr. Chief Justice and members of the Court and ladies and gentlemen, almost 200 years ago, President Washington sent a letter inviting five men to become the first associate justices of the United States Supreme Court. In that letter, Washington wrote, considering the judicial system as the chief pillar upon which our national government must rest, I have thought that my duty to nominate such men as I conceived would give dignity and luster to our national character. We gather here today to welcome as the newest associate justice of the Supreme Court a man I've known and respected for more than a decade and who, like those Washington-nominated will, give dignity and luster to our national character, Anthony M. Kennedy. Judge and now Justice Kennedy. Sounds good, doesn't it? Takes a distinguished seat on the high bench. It was first held by one of those initial Washington appointees, John Rutledge. A century and a half later, Hugo Black filled it. And for more than a decade it has been graced with the service of one of the great gentlemen of the American judiciary, a justice widely acclaimed for his decency and fairness, Justice Lewis Powell. Like his distinguished predecessor, Justice Kennedy's career has been marked by his devotion to a simple, straightforward and enduring principle that we are a government of laws, not of men. Our constitution, our form of government is built on a bedrock value. Self-government, yes. But self-government with a purpose, which is individual liberty. We often say that to preserve liberty, the Bill of Rights was added after ratification. But we should not forget that the Framers in Philadelphia didn't put a Bill of Rights in their original document because they believed that the system they'd constructed with all its checks and balances and its restrictions on the federal government's powers was a sufficient safeguard of freedom. This system was their answer to what they saw as and what was an almost impossible dilemma. The Framers had gone to Philadelphia with a clear mandate to, as the Annapolis Convention had instructed, render the Constitution of the federal government adequate to the exigencies of the Union, which was to say, to give it the power to tax, to regulate interstate commerce, and to raise an army and Navy to defend the nation. The absence of these powers under the Articles of the Confederation had led to trade wars among the states, local rebellions, international humiliation, the exhaustion of the government's finances, and the ruin of the economy. The question the Framers asked was, how can the central government receive the power to govern without also receiving the power to oppress? Their answer, as we know, define and divide power. The national government got only so much. The states and the people kept the rest. And what the federal authorities received, the Framers distributed, some to the legislature, and in fact some to one house and some to the other, and some to the entire legislature, then some to the executive and some to the judiciary. As Hamilton noted, the judiciary they created was the, I had trouble with it tonight. The judiciary they created was the least dangerous branch because it had neither force nor will but merely judgment. And yes, the convention did discuss giving judges more expansive powers. There was a move to establish a so-called Council of Revision, a panel drawn from the courts that could veto legislation because it was dumb or distasteful whether or not it was constitutional. I'm the only one that can do it because I'm dumb or distasteful. But Madison spoke for the proposal and so did others. But in the end, the convention listened to a different voice, one not in the room on those hot summer days yet heard clearly nonetheless. That of the French constitutional philosopher Montesquieu, who had warned that there is no liberty if the power of judging be not separated from the legislative powers. And so the role assigned to judges in our system was to interpret the Constitution and lesser laws not to make them. It was to protect the integrity of the Constitution, not to add to it or subtract from it, certainly not to rewrite it. For as the framers knew, unless judges are bound by the text of the Constitution, we will in fact no longer have a government of laws but of men and women who are judges. And if that happens, the words of the documents that we think governance will be just masks for the personal and capricious rule of a small elite. Well, Justice Kennedy has shown a consistent and a courageous dedication to preserving ours as a government of laws. And that's why I nominated him. In more than 12 years on the bench of the Ninth Circuit, he won the respect of his colleagues and of the entire legal community. Lawyers and judges of all persuasions characterize him as fair, open-minded, and scholarly. And considering the unusual division and intensity of views in the legal community of his circuit, that says a lot. And besides, anyone who teaches law in a powdered wig and a tri-cornered hat is all right by me on original content. So do Justice and Mrs. Kennedy and the entire family. Congratulations. Good luck and God bless you. And now I know that Justice Kennedy looks forward to greeting each of you in a few moments. So we can depart.