'Unshakable sense of right and wrong'
Stuart Eizenstat, who was former President Jimmy Carter's chief domestic policy adviser, praised Carter's "unshakable sense of right and wrong."
"His faith brought integrity to the presidency after Watergate and Vietnam," Eizenstat recalled. "'I will never lie to you,' he promised the American people -- a vow he fulfilled."
Carter is known for his deep faith, and Eizenstat noted how Carter's "faith respected other religions -- he was the first president to light a Hanukkah menorah and he created the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum."
"This president from the deepest part of the Deep South championed civil rights, appointing more people of color and women to senior executive positions and judgeships than all previous 38 presidents," he said.
"President Carter parked politics at the Oval Office door, to do what he believed was the right thing -- tackling controversial challenges regardless of the political consequences. Much of his agenda passed with bipartisan support, a quaint notion in today’s hyper-polarized politics," Eizenstat said.
He said Carter "was the first president to make human rights a priority for U.S. foreign policy, which led directly to the freeing of thousands of political prisoners in Latin America, stimulating a lasting democratic movement."
"He ushered in a new era in hemispheric relations with the Panama Canal Treaties, the toughest legislative battle of his presidency," Eizenstat said, as President-elect Donald Trump looked on. Trump this week slammed Carter for overseeing diplomatic negotiations to turn over the Panama Canal.