[Congressional Record Volume 150, Number 80 (Wednesday, June 9, 2004)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6653-S6669]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO FORMER PRESIDENT RONALD REAGAN
Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, I rise today because a mighty oak has
fallen. Ronald Reagan has left his life here on Earth, but oh what a
life it was. Born in the middle of our great Republic in the beginning
of the last century, his was an American tale from start to finish.
Jack and Nelle Reagan brought a son into the world in Tampico, IL, in
1911. Jack was a shoe salesman with an Irishman's flare for
storytelling. Nelle was a devout Christian who made ends meet by doing
other people's sewing out of their home. When Jack first saw their
healthy baby in his crib, he looked at this little baby and said he
looked like a ``little fat Dutchman.'' And the nickname stuck,
``Dutch.''
Times were hard for the Reagans. He commented years later that:
Our family didn't exactly come from the wrong side of the
tracks, but we were certainly within sound of the train
whistles.
Even then, it was in Ronald Reagan's character to look for the Sun
behind the clouds. Growing up, he lived a typical American boy's life.
He was a lifeguard in the summer and a football player in the fall. In
the fading years, when Alzheimer's robbed him of most of his memory, he
could still summon up his youth in Illinois, proudly recalling the 77
lives he saved as a lifeguard from the teeming Rock River, notching
each one on a log on the shore.
In Illinois, he discovered there was more to life than just football
and lifeguarding. There was also acting. Connecting with an audience
plugged him into a broader world. As he later said:
For a kid suffering childhood pangs of insecurity, the
applause was music.
Ambition led him westward out of Illinois; Hollywood, to be exact.
There, as we all know, he started his successful acting career and,
more importantly, met a young actress from Chicago named Nancy Davis.
She became the love of his life. Nancy was focused, smart, and loved
her Ronnie. Jimmy Stewart once remarked:
If Ronnie had married Nancy the first time, he would have
won an Academy Award.
But gradually his time in front of an audience changed from the stage
and screen to the assembly hall. Time constraints prevent me from
following his ascent to the highest office in the land. Let me simply
comment that for most of us being a successful actor and pitchman,
union president, two-term Governor of our Nation's largest State, and a
national figure to boot would have been enough of a career, especially
at the age of 69. But Ronald Reagan had other thoughts, and so began
his run against President Jimmy Carter for the Presidency in 1980.
Neck and neck until the debate a week before the election, Reagan
broke it wide open when he closed by asking Americans a simple
question: Are you better off than you were 4 years ago?
On election day, Reagan won a smashing victory, winning 44 of 50
States. He would top that mark in 1984, winning 49 out of 50 States.
I have listened to and read countless people reflecting on what
President Reagan meant to them and to America. Were there enough time,
I would fill up the rest of the afternoon with my thoughts about this
great man. But I will limit my observations to what I think will be, in
addition to restoring America's faith in itself, the way history will
remember Ronald Reagan, the peacemaker.
I want to address the question, What does it mean to have won the
cold war? Revisionists suggest that Ronald Reagan had little to do with
the Soviet Union's fall which they now claim was just inevitable. I can
tell you no one thought that in 1979. Communism was on the rise and
freedom was in retreat. The United States was the toothless tiger with
the uncertain future. Energy shortages crippled us, and rampant crime
hunted us down. Interest rates for homes, cars, and businesses were sky
high. Our economy was wrenched back and forth between bouts of
recession and inflation, both at the same time. America's decline was
marked by new, unfamiliar words. We learned stagflation,
``taxflation,'' and, of course, we learned malaise.
America's economy was not the only thing in decline. So, too, was our
foreign policy. Still suffering from a Vietnam syndrome, we watched and
did
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nothing as Afghanistan was invaded by the Soviets, as hostages in Iran
were seized, and as Cuban puppets invaded Africa and Central America.
Our Navy was weak. Our planes couldn't fly. Our Army lacked volunteers
and morale. The nuclear balance was tipping, and our intelligence
services were ravaged by firings and mismanagement.
We were declining and the Soviet Union was rising. Some people were
ready to give up. Others suggested the Presidency was too big and
complicated a job for any single person. It seemed as if we had lost
our nerve. But not Ronald Reagan. You see, he had a vision.
In 1982, he explained his ``sick bear'' theory:
The Soviet Empire is faltering because rigid centralized
control has destroyed innovation, efficiency and individual
achievement. . . . The Soviet dictatorship has forged the
largest armed force in the world . . . by preempting the
human needs of its people and, in the end, this course will
undermine the foundations of the Soviet system.
With his customary humor, he had a memorable way of explaining this.
He talked of a Soviet citizen who went to a Soviet bureau of
transportation to buy a car. After paying and filling out all the
forms, he is told by the seller of the car: Come back in 10 years to
get your car.
The man asks: In the morning or the afternoon?
The official responds: Well, we are talking about 10 years from now;
what difference does it make whether it is the morning or afternoon?
The man replies: Well, the plumber is coming in the morning.
Beneath the humor, President Reagan knew the serious truth. The
Soviet Union was as inherently weak as the U.S. economy was inherently
strong, a fact too few recognized. So when President Reagan's policies
began to revitalize our economy, the confidence restored here was
matched by new uncertainty over in the Soviet Union.
Others have and will talk about the Reagan revolution here at home,
but in terms of our victory in the cold war, the Reagan economic
recovery was the first body-blow that eventually exorcized the demon of
communism from the Soviet Union.
The real trouble for the Soviet Union was not Reagan's policies, but
Reagan's values, his courage, and his willpower. Before he was ever
elected, President Reagan recognized that the Soviet Union was an
``arsenal of anarchy'' throughout the world. It was a sickness of the
human condition, he said. And President Reagan was never afraid to do
that which so many leaders lack the courage to do: look at evil and
call it by its name. In this regard, Reagan was like Churchill. Reagan
was the nemesis of communism, just as Churchill was of nazism. He
understood the evil that communism represented and what it would do if
unchecked.
Interestingly, Reagan's understanding of this evil did not begin with
the fate of millions, but of just one. In May of 1975, a 5-year-old boy
fell into the Spree River, which divided then-Communist East Berlin
from free West Berlin. As firemen from West Berlin--firemen, not
soldiers--started to go to the boy's rescue, an East German patrol boat
barred their entry into East German waters. The boy drowned.
The mayor of West Berlin described that refused rescue as ``an
incomprehensible and frightful act, placing political considerations
before the saving of a human life.'' But for Reagan, it was the sad
personification of a harsh and enduring reality: Communism is a system
where every human life is sublimated to the ruthless needs of the
state.
Focused on the value of a single human life, Ronald Reagan looked
across the globe and saw 600 million people living like slaves under
the Communist lash. He did not mince words or deeds. He dubbed the
Soviet Union the ``evil empire,'' a description brutally accurate, yet
offensive to the tender sensibilities of most of the media and
intelligentsia here at home. He called for a massive defense increase--
``peace through strength,'' he called it--and some even in his own
Cabinet opposed it.
In the face of criticism, Reagan strengthened our defense. He quoted
Demosthenes in dismissing the Soviets' empty assurances of their good
intentions on arms control:
What sane man would let another man's word rather than his
deeds tell him who is at war and who is at peace with him?
He then translated that demand into a Russian saying of no uncertain
words--doveryai, no proveryai. In Russian, that means ``trust but
verify.''
Ronald Reagan did not have timid dreams. He wasn't interested in
slowing the decline of freedom or just holding its position steady; he
wanted freedom to ring across the globe and communism to be relegated
to the ash heap of history. So he went to the Berlin Wall to call out
in front of that colossal affront to freedom: ``Mr. Gorbachev, tear
down this wall.''
He left Reykjavik when it was clear that Mr. Gorbachev was only
bargaining for the end of the Strategic Defense Initiative, which
matching, the Soviets knew, would spend them into oblivion. Margaret
Thatcher notes that Reykjavik, deplored as a loss by Reagan's critics,
particularly by the European and American intelligentsia, marked the
beginning of the end of the Soviet Union.
Of course, all the significant arms control reductions came after
Reagan walked away from Reykjavik. But today, President Reagan is
vindicated by some 600 million people who breathe freely because of the
collapse of the Soviet empire.
So what does it mean to liberate almost 600 million from fear and
terror? It means 49 million Ukrainians will never again worry about a
class purge.
It means 17 million former East Germans will never be grabbed in the
night by the STASI, the secret police of Eric Honneker.
It means 38 million Poles will never fear General Jaruzelski
attempting to crush the Solidarity free labor movement.
It means 22 million Romanians will never know the tortured madness
and human experimentation of Nicolae Ceausescu.
It means 16 million in the Czech Republic and Slovakia will never
hear tanks rumbling through their city streets to crush self-rule.
It means tens of millions of former West Germans lead lives oblivious
to the cosmic nervousness that gripped their mother's and father's
generation.
It means that 5 million in Finland no longer look across the Gulf of
Finland with dread at 7.2 million people in Latvia, Estonia, and
Lithuania, who lived in slavery as a warning to any neighbors who would
dare dissent from the Soviet world view.
In all, 600 million lives were emancipated by the victory in the cold
war--the greatest liberation in the history of mankind, and hopefully
for all time.
Now, having said all of that, let me just mention how much I miss
that sweet-hearted man, especially his sense of humor. I have been
reminded from all the replayed speeches just how wonderful he was. For
example, during an exchange with the press one day, he said:
I have given my aides instructions that if trouble breaks
out in any of the world's hot spots, they should wake me up
immediately--even if I am in a cabinet meeting.
It makes you wonder what President Reagan said to Saint Peter.
Something witty, no doubt, and delivered with a warm smile.
So now the long goodbye that Mrs. Reagan, his rock and strength and
the love of his life, has spoken of so movingly is nearly complete. So
I will close with President Reagan's own words in his courageous letter
to the American people upon discovery of the disease that would
ultimately bring about his fall. President Reagan said 10 years ago:
When the Lord calls me home, whenever that may be, I will
leave the greatest love for this country of ours and eternal
optimism for its future. I now begin the journey that will
lead me into the sunset of my life. I know that for America
there will always be a bright dawn ahead.
God bless Ronald Reagan, an American hero.
Madam President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Iowa.
Mr. HARKIN. Madam President, our Nation has come together this week
to mourn the passing of former President Ronald Reagan. However
anticipated his death may have been, it is still a profound loss for
the Reagan family. Our thoughts and prayers are with them all and
especially with former First Lady Nancy Reagan.
However, knowing the kind of man Ronald Reagan was, knowing his
relentless optimism and his sunny disposition, something tells me he
would
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prefer that Americans spend this week remembering and celebrating his
unique character and quality. ``America in mourning'' just does not
seem Reaganesque because Ronald Reagan was always about ``morning in
America.'' He always looked at the bright side of every situation or
circumstance. I remember the story he told about the little boy who
walked into a barn and encountered a huge pile of manure. The boy, who
was not the least bit disappointed, broke into a big smile and said: I
just know there is a pony in here somewhere. That was the Ronald Reagan
we remember and admire.
Iowans relate strongly to Ronald Reagan because his roots were our
roots. He grew up next door in smalltown Illinois and spent 5 formative
years in Iowa. In fact, this was where the young Ronald Reagan found
his voice as the Great Communicator--first as a radio announcer at WOC
Radio in Davenport and later at WHO Radio in Des Moines where he became
one of the most popular sports broadcasters in the region. That was at
the height of the Great Depression.
He remembered this period with obvious fondness. In his
autobiography, ``An American Life,'' he wrote:
I spent four years at station WHO in Des Moines and they
were among the most pleasant of my life. At 22, I'd
achieved my dream; I was a sports announcer. If I had
stopped there, I believe I would have been happy the rest
of my life.
During his two terms in the White House, I met President Reagan on
many occasions, and just about every time he would eagerly tell me he
had been an announcer at WHO Radio. He regaled me with stories of how,
sitting in his studio in Des Moines, he faked the play by play of the
Chicago Cubs baseball game based upon wire reports as they came
through. He seemed to have this fixed in his mind, that when he would
see me, it was Tom Harkin and WHO. If this is Harkin, I am going to
tell him about my time at WHO. It sort of became a thing that every
time we met, he, again, would tell me some story about his time at WHO
Radio. So that was my experience with the Reagan charm.
We disagreed on many important issues, but you could not come into
contact with this man and not feel his personal warmth and charm. In
fact, I have been struck this week by the bipartisan affection for this
former President. He was the genuine article, a man who embodied so
many of the traits we hold dear as Americans. We remember his
conviction, his courage, his lack of pretentiousness, and, yes, his
optimism.
On a personal note, I will always be grateful to President Reagan for
signing into law my bill to establish the National Institute on
Deafness and Communication Disorders at the National Institutes of
Health in 1988. Quite frankly, his advisers urged him to veto the bill,
but the President, who himself suffered from hearing loss, vetoed his
advisers. He signed the bill into law. As a result, we have had a
series of medical breakthroughs that are helping millions of Americans
cope with hearing loss and communication disorders.
Lastly, he and Nancy fought a heroic battle with Alzheimer's disease,
and they did a great deal to raise the level of awareness and
understanding of this terrible disease. I am especially proud of the
courageous leadership Nancy Reagan has displayed in our efforts to find
a cure for this deadly disease by her advocating a more expanded stem
cell research program in America.
As I said, the most fitting way to pay tribute to President Reagan is
not so much to mourn his death as to celebrate his life and to honor
his service to our country. As he lies in state at the Capitol this
week, a thankful American nation will say farewell to a truly unique
American.
Madam President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Texas.
Mrs. HUTCHISON. Madam President, I rise today to pay tribute to an
American legend, President Ronald Reagan. Like all Americans, I was
saddened to learn of his passing over the weekend. I had left our
Republican State convention at a time when it was moving across the
floor that he might be in his final hours. Of course, all of us started
reminiscing. It was a moment of great loss, but yet a recollection of
his humor, his contagious optimism, and the historic accomplishments he
made for our country really were comforting and engendered so many
wonderful moments.
Although I was not a Member of this body while he was in office, I
have lived and served under his conservative principles and ideologies.
He was in his political prime when I was just beginning in politics.
During his first campaign, my husband Ray was chairman of the Texas
Republican Party and spent many hours traveling with him across Texas.
In 1992, I was honored to be temporary chair of the Republican National
Convention in Houston, TX, when he delivered his very important message
that turned out to be his goodbye to America. It was there that he left
us with these final thoughts:
Whatever else history may say about me when I'm gone, I
hope it will record that I appealed to your best hopes, not
your worst fears, to your confidence rather than your doubts.
My dream is that you will travel the road ahead with
liberty's lamp guiding your steps and opportunity's arm
steadying your way. . . . May each of you have the heart to
conceive, the understanding to direct, and the hand to
execute works that will make the world a little better for
your having been here. . . . My fellow Americans, may every
dawn be a great new beginning for America and every evening
bring us closer to that shining city upon a hill.
At a time of great despair in our Nation, Ronald Reagan came into
office and restored hope. He was an unequaled champion of freedom,
smaller Government, and market-oriented principles. His philosophies
guided our Nation to become the economic and military superpower it is
today. Of course, he was often called the Great Communicator for his
ability to give a rousing speech that could both rally the troops and
yet make an individual in the crowd of thousands feel as if they were
having a heart-to-heart talk.
Beyond his optimism, his confidence, and graceful charm was a man of
action who implemented great change in the United States of America.
Under his leadership, our Nation sowed seeds of prosperity and reduced
regulatory burdens on small business. He lowered taxes for all
Americans, including reducing the top marginal rate from an oppressive
70 percent to approximately half that, offering new incentives to
create wealth and jobs and rebuild America.
He encouraged Americans to embrace their own destiny and realized
that Government was not the answer to social ills; people were. Good
people working in concert to better their communities and their fellow
man could accomplish far more than bureaucracy, from his vantage point.
Perhaps most important, President Reagan took the steps to ultimately
win the cold war. He pursued peace through strength and achieved an
overwhelming victory that was inconceivable to a generation that was
raised with fallout drills and backyard bunkers.
Who can forget the famous challenge he laid down when he cried, ``Mr.
Gorbachev, tear down this wall''? They were indeed great, dramatic
words but more importantly words of action. Two and a half years later,
what once seemed a permanent divider through the heart of Berlin was
torn down piece by piece, section by section, until it was reduced to a
pile of rubble.
Visitors to the Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center
in Washington, DC, can view a section of that wall donated by the
people of Berlin in honor of the President and in recognition of his
leadership. The segment, which is over 9 feet high and weighs almost 3
tons, is from a section of the wall near the Brandenburg Gate where
President Reagan issued that challenge. It stands as a stark reminder
of the great shift in global politics that spread freedom in Europe and
encouraged new generations to pursue democracy.
Today, we again find ourselves in a fight for freedom. This
generation, like their World War II grandparents and cold war parents,
has been called to stand and fight for freedom. Today, we are grappling
with a new threat: global terrorism, an enemy with no borders, no
uniforms, no respect for traditional rules of war, and more importantly
no respect for human life.
World War II took bitter years of fighting and sacrifice. The cold
war took decades of dedication and patience. This battle against
terrorism
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requires all that and more. The question is: Will our generation meet
the test? Will we have what it takes to win the peace? I believe we do.
I believe the strength, perseverance, and patriotism that Ronald Reagan
embodied will help see us through.
In 1987, he addressed a joint session of Congress saying:
Let it never be said of this generation of Americans that
we became so obsessed with failure that we refused to take
risks that could further the cause of peace and freedom in
the world.
Since learning of his passing last weekend, elected officials, former
Cabinet members, and newspapers across the world have been penning
eulogies, remembrances, and tributes to the beloved President.
James Baker, his former Chief of Staff and Treasury Secretary:
President Reagan restored America's source of pride and
confidence in itself. He was a wonderful person to work for
and a truly great President. His willingness to stick to his
principles changed the world.
Former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher:
He will be missed not only by those who knew him, and not
only by the nation that he served so proudly and loved so
deeply, but also by the millions of men and women who live in
freedom today because of the policies he pursued. To have achieved so
much against so many odds and with such humor and humanity made Ronald
Reagan a truly great American hero.
Secretary of State Colin Powell, who served as his National Security
Adviser, said:
President Reagan fueled the spirit of America. His smile,
his optimism, his total belief in the ultimate triumph of
democracy and freedom, and his willingness to act on that
belief, helped end the Cold War and usher in a new and
brighter phase of history.
Mikhail Gorbachev, once Reagan's adversary, called him:
A true leader, a man of his word and an optimist . . . He
has earned a place in history and in people's hearts.
Finally, his Vice President, later our President, George H.W. Bush,
has been giving interviews about how much fun he was and how they had
lunch every week together and sometimes they would talk substance,
sometimes they would talk policy, and sometimes they would just have a
good time. They were very close, and yet he never lost that laser beam
focus on the big issues, the things that really mattered that would
move us one step toward the peace through strength that was his guiding
principle.
Indeed, his lasting place in the hearts of all Americans has been
evidenced by the outpouring of love and admiration that we have seen
across the Nation and around the world. Ronald Reagan was a leader who
touched people with his words, inspired them with his actions, and led
by his example.
On November 5, 1994, nearly a decade ago, President Reagan announced
to the world that he had been diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease, the
illness that would ultimately take his life. His poise and hopeful
spirit, even in the face of the heartbreaking years ahead, were
remarkable. He said:
. . . Let me thank you, the American people, for giving me
the great honor of allowing me to serve as your president.
When the Lord calls me home, whenever that day may be, I will
leave with the greatest love for this country of ours and
eternal optimism for its future. I now begin the journey that
will lead me into the sunset of my life. I know that for
America there will always be a bright dawn ahead. Thank you,
my friends. May God always bless you.
Standing by his side through good times and bad, his beloved wife
Nancy, a beautiful woman, very slight in stature but strong as steel.
Theirs was a partnership in every respect and one of the great love
stories of our time. Ronald Wilson Reagan was a great President. He
left an indelible impression on our country. As we say farewell, our
thoughts and prayers are with Nancy and his family. We thank them and
we thank the Lord that he gave us Ronald Reagan at a time when our
country needed him the most.
I yield the floor, and I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. SUNUNU. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. The
Senator from New Hampshire.
Mr. SUNUNU. Madam President, as Americans gather in our Capitol and
across the country to remember and pay tribute to President Ronald
Reagan, we have been provided a very special opportunity to reflect on
his great achievements as our Commander in Chief, as well as the
tremendous personal strength which he brought to the Oval Office.
But as we salute President Reagan for his leadership, his integrity,
and his vision, I am struck by the very personal nature of so many of
these memories and stories. Whether here in Washington or out across
the country, whether it is a U.S. Senator or a teacher in a small
school, it seems that so many of these recollections begin with phrases
such as, ``I remember seeing him during his first visit to our State,''
or ``I shook his hand when he visited our factory,'' or ``I recall a
story that President Reagan loved to tell,'' or even ``because of
Ronald Reagan, I chose to run for office.''
These recollections are enormously personal, but I think they are a
testament to the way he touched people in a very deep and unique way.
He affected the lives of millions of people in America and around the
world in countless encounters. Many of these encounters may have been
for only a moment or two in a life that spanned decades, but his gift
was in his ability to make a strong connection that had real power, the
power to bridge generations, the power to last a lifetime, and the
power to change a life as well.
We remember his touch, his smile, and his encouragement, not simply
because when he walked into a room Ronald Reagan conveyed a great
personal warmth. That was certainly special in and of itself, and
something that anyone who had the chance to meet him or see him in
person would always remember, but it was because this personal
connection conveyed a sense of purpose, a sense of kindness, and an
enormous love for public service. That was the power of the Great
Communicator, the power of the personal connection that he made.
I consider this the greatest tribute of all. Despite the myriad and
extraordinary legislative and foreign policy victories of President
Reagan such as cutting taxes and reforming the code, rebuilding our
Nation's defenses, turning back the Soviets in Afghanistan, or leading
the West to a lasting victory in the cold war--despite the enormous
substance of these achievements, Ronald Reagan, in the end, is not
remembered first and foremost as a clever politician with great
machinations of political strategy or hardball political
tactics. Instead, the descriptive words that we heard here and across
the country over and over again are integrity, character, courage, and
leadership. These are qualities that transcend politics and qualities
that transcend time. They are qualities that inspire the young and
comfort the aged. They are the qualities of heroes.
Ronald Reagan was fond of describing the heroes he saw in audiences
at every speech he made or heroes he would see as he traveled across
the country in every corner of America and coming from every walk of
life. He saw in these men and women the very strength of character,
courage, integrity, and leadership that he knew made our country unique
and which kept our country prosperous and free. But by bringing these
very same qualities to the Oval Office and drawing on them time and
time again to guide our Nation through demanding and even dark times,
he left a legacy that shined like the city on a hill which he knew
America could be and would again become. It is a heroic legacy, and it
is the legacy of a great American.
Thank you, Madam President.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. WARNER. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Hagel). Without objection, it is so
ordered.
Mr. WARNER. Mr. President, I join with my colleagues in paying
profound respects to our late President Ronald Reagan, and I do so with
a deep, deep sense of humility.
It is interesting, I walked into my reception room just the other
day. No
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matter how long one is around here, I think you sort of have to go back
and refresh your recollection as to what you put up in your reception
room, and I found six different photographs of myself with the good
fortune to be in the presence of our former great President.
I think back over my 26 years in the Senate, having had the privilege
of working with all the Presidents in that period of time and, prior
thereto, those Presidents when I was in the Department of Defense.
Again, I say with a deep sense of respect and humility, I believe it is
clear in my mind that I had the greatest opportunity to work with
President Reagan, and probably had more opportunities to be with him in
a professional capacity than any other President.
I was ranking for a period of time on the Armed Services Committee
and in every way supported him in his remarkable vision to build and
restore the Armed Forces of the United States, which buildup, in my
judgment, was a major contributor, if not the major contributor, to the
eventual demise of the Soviet Union.
There are several pictures of when he visited my home, which was a
farm in Virginia, a farm in an area where I grew up in the summers as a
very young man. He loved coming down to the farm. My farm was adjacent
to the home of former President Kennedy, and the owner at that time was
Bill Clements, who was a former Deputy Secretary of Defense. I served
under him as Secretary of the Navy. He and I were very close friends. I
introduced him to that countryside, and he bought the Kennedy home,
which is a very small, modest home, reconstructed, so to speak, and
enlarged by President Kennedy and Jacqueline Kennedy, his lovely, dear
wife.
President Ronald Reagan and Bill Clements set it up so he could come
down there and spend some quiet downtime. And he loved to ride horses.
In those days, I had a pretty good collection of horses, and I was
happy to share them with him on occasion. He rode around on my farm. I
certainly enjoyed being with him on several occasions. I have one of
the pictures of the two of us riding together.
I mention that because in that informal setting when there was just
the two of us riding horses--I remember one time Mrs. Reagan was with
us--this particular time I remember very well. We rode high up on the
hill on the back of the farm. The hill has a vista down into the valley
of Virginia. We checked the horses and began to talk about his great
admiration for Stonewall Jackson and the various campaigns Jackson had
up and down that valley during the Civil War.
I was so impressed with his remarkable knowledge of the facts of that
period of history, and in later years, in other discussions with him,
again he would frequently make reference to the history of the United
States. His knowledge was really second to none. He had a
magnificent command of American history.
But on this particular day, he reflected on a little self-deprecating
humor, which he was very good at. He told me when Pearl Harbor
occurred, he was a lieutenant in the Army Reserve Cavalry, again
because he loved horses, he loved to ride. He promptly went down, Pearl
Harbor Day or the day after, whatever the case may be, and said: I want
to be activated. And sure enough, he was eventually activated. He
wanted to take, as we say in the horse world, the bit in his teeth and
charge--``Send me right away out to the front.''
I remember he gestured with his hand. But, no, they sent him to an
old cavalry post, which was down in one of the Indian territories, and
he laughed and joked and said: When we put those posts out there, the
primary thing was to secure the settlers and to hopefully strike a
peaceful balance with the Indians and make life such that those
territories could be developed.
But he said: I did a little homework--as he always did--before I went
to this cavalry post and studied who the commanding officer and the
other officers were.
Well, in those days, the custom in the military, particularly the
Army, was that when a soldier reported, perhaps with his wife, whatever
the case may be, the commanding officer would have them over to pay
their respects, to get to know each other as soon as they arrived on
the post. In the old days with the covered wagons, it was a long
journey. By the time they reached their destination, they were pretty
well exhausted--food and otherwise. So this was a chance to introduce
them.
Reagan described the evening with great humor. He said: I walked in
and there was the little colonel. He was a rather short fellow. He was
all dressed in his uniform, with his riding boots, his Sam Browne belt.
I was there in my lieutenant's uniform. He greeted me very warmly. He
looked at me.
And President Reagan had a remarkable way of cocking his head. His
body language was extraordinary. His walk, his mannerism, it was a
great part of his character that I admired, how he conveyed so much
feeling with just the way he would use his hands and his head, his
stride. It emulated such tremendous confidence he had in himself.
But anyway, the colonel said: Now, Reagan, where have I seen you? Do
I know you?
Lieutenant Reagan said: No, sir, we have never met.
The colonel failed to guess. He circled back again and said: Look
here, young man, I know somehow I have seen you. Let's figure out where
that was. What do you do?
And Lieutenant Reagan said: Well, sir, I am involved in making
movies.
Suddenly this colonel became silent. Then he said: That is where I
have seen you. You were in that movie called ``Brother Rat,'' which was
about the Virginia Military Institute, and that movie didn't exactly,
in my judgment, properly characterize the magnificence of that
institute. As a matter of fact, I think it reflected dishonor upon that
institute. And I remember you were in that movie. Lieutenant, your duty
on this post is over. I will transfer you.
In due course the President said he was transferred off the post, but
I mention that because those of us who had the opportunity to be with
him, particularly in informal settings, remember so well the
magnificence of this man, the lessons he taught each of us.
Again, going back to those days in the buildup of the Soviet Union,
he was very conscious of the fact that the Soviet Union was on pretty
shaky financial status at that stage and that the cold war posed a
threat to the United States--intercontinental missiles, the threat to
the standard forces of NATO, the Warsaw Pact nations, all of which are
now, save one, members of NATO.
Those of us who worked in the Senate--I remember John Stennis and
Barry Goldwater, Scoop Jackson, John Tower, to name but a few--formed a
group to work with the President in a bipartisan way on trying to
strengthen America such that we could send a strong signal to the
world, particularly the Soviet Union, that we mean business. Don't ever
entertain the idea of striking out against the free world, be it the
United States or our NATO allies.
And the rest is history. ``Tear down that wall, Mr. Gorbachev.'' And
that wall did come down. Those were extraordinary days I was able to
share with him, and I say that with the deepest sense of humility. But
I don't want to prolong my remarks.
I do want to tell one other chapter. Just a few days ago I was a part
of a delegation that went over to the Normandy 60th anniversary.
Senator Akaka was with me and the distinguished Senator from New Jersey
and his lovely new bride were with me. So there were three of us who
had some experience in World War II, of the six here in the Senate. We
spent a wonderful day at the ceremonies. But the next day we took time
to go out to Pointe du Hoc. It was fascinating.
There on June 6, 2004, I had been on that same spot of land 20 years
before with Ronald Reagan. I remember the delegation. Strom Thurmond
led it. Three of us went with him. Of course, Senator Thurmond had made
a landing on the beaches on D-day. Other Senators, the Senator from
Nevada, and Howard Cannon had likewise participated in the D-day
landings. Of course, I was at that time the youngster, 17 years old, in
that group back in the United States getting prepared to take our
training and become replacements someday. That is all history. There I
stood on that ground, and he had passed away within that 24-hour
period.
So I thought today I would read some of the remarks he made.
[[Page S6658]]
I ask unanimous consent to print the entire speech, a very short
speech, in the Record.
There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in
the Record, as follows:
President Reagan's Speech in Normandy on D-Day 40th Anniversary
June 6, 2004
We're here to mark that day in history when the Allied
peoples joined in battle to reclaim this continent to
liberty. For four long years, much of Europe had been under a
terrible shadow. Free nations had fallen, Jews cried out in
the camps, millions cried out for liberation. Europe was
enslaved, and the world prayed for its rescue. Here in
Normandy the rescue began. Here the Allies stood and fought
against tyranny in a giant undertaking unparalleled in human
history.
We stand on a lonely, windswept point on the northern shore
of France. The air is soft, but forty years ago at this
moment, the air was dense with smoke and the cries of men,
and the air was filled with the crack of rifle fire and the
roar of cannon. At dawn, on the morning of the 6th of June
1944, 225 Rangers jumped off the British landing craft and
ran to the bottom of these cliffs. Their mission was one of
the most difficult and daring of the invasion: to climb these
sheer and desolate cliffs and take out the enemy guns. The
Allies had been told that some of the mightiest of these guns
were here and they would be trained on the beaches to stop
the Allied advance.
The Rangers looked up and saw the enemy soldiers--at the
edge of the cliffs shooting down at them with machine-guns
and throwing grenades. And the American Rangers began to
climb. They shot rope ladders over the face of these cliffs
and began to pull themselves up. When one Ranger fell,
another would take his place. When one rope was cut, a Ranger
would grab another and begin his climb again. They climbed,
shot back, and held their footing. Soon, one by one, the
Rangers pulled themselves over the top, and in seizing the
firm land at the top of these cliffs, they began to seize
back the continent of Europe. Two hundred and twenty-five
came here. After two days of fighting only ninety could still
bear arms.
Behind me is a memorial that symbolizes the Ranger daggers
that were thrust into the top of these cliffs. And before me
are the men who put them there.
These are the boys of Pointe du Hoc. These are the men who
took the cliffs. These are the champions who helped free a
continent. These are the heroes who helped end a war.
Gentlemen, I look at you and I think of the words of
Stephen Spender's poem. You are men who in your ``lives
fought for life . . . and left the vivid air signed with your
honor''. . .
Forty summers have passed since the battle that you fought
here. You were young the day you took these cliffs; some of
you were hardly more than boys, with the deepest joys of life
before you. Yet you risked everything here. Why? Why did you
do it? What impelled you to put aside the instinct for self-
preservation and risk your lives to take these cliffs? What
inspired all the men of the armies that met here? We look at
you, and somehow we know the answer. It was faith, and
belief; it was loyalty and love.
The men of Normandy had faith that what they were doing was
right, faith that they fought for all humanity, faith that a
just God would grant them mercy on this beachhead or on the
next. It was the deep knowledge--and pray God we have not
lost it--that there is a profound moral difference between
the use of force for liberation and the use of force for
conquest. You were here to liberate, not to conquer, and so
you and those others did not doubt your cause. And you were
right not to doubt.
You all knew that some things are worth dying for. One's
country is worth dying for, and democracy is worth dying for,
because it's the most deeply honorable form of government
ever devised by man. All of you loved liberty. All of you
were willing to fight tyranny, and you knew the people of
your countries were behind you.
Mr. WARNER. I thought I would read part of this very moving speech.
It starts midway in the speech and lays out the history of the brave
men who participated in D-day landings, and in particular the Rangers.
Behind me is a memorial that symbolizes the Ranger daggers
that were first thrust into the top of these cliffs. And
before me are the men who put them there.
These are the boys of Pointe du Hoc. These are the men who
took the cliffs. These are the champions who helped free a
continent. These are the heroes who helped end a war.
Gentlemen, I look at you and I think of the words of
Stephen Spender's poem. You are men who in your ``lives
fought for life . . . and left a vivid air signed with your
honor.''
Forty summers have passed since the battle that you fought
here. You were young the day you took these cliffs; some of
you were hardly more than boys, with the deepest joys of life
before you. Yet you risked everything here. Why? Why did you
do it? What compelled you to put aside the instinct for self-
preservation and risk your lives to take these cliffs? What
inspired all the men of the armies that met here? We look at
you, and somehow we know the answer. It was faith and belief;
it was loyalty and love.
The men of Normandy had faith that they were doing what was
right, faith that they fought for all humanity, faith that a
just God would grant them mercy on this beachhead or on the
next. It was the deep knowledge--and pray God we have not
lost it--that there is a profound moral difference between
the use of force for liberation and the use of force for
conquest. You were there to liberate, not to conquer, and so
you and those others did not doubt your cause. And you were
right not to doubt.
You all knew that some things are worth dying for. One's
country is worth dying for, and democracy is worth dying for,
because it's the most deeply honorable form of government
ever devised by man. All of you loved liberty. All of you
were willing to fight tyranny, and you knew the people of
your countries were behind you.
The Presiding Officer, with his distinguished military service,
understands, as do I, those words. The vision that he had not only for
America but the free world, the strength of his convictions, the
strength of his actions--it reestablished the strength of the Armed
Forces which today have carried on, since that speech, with missions in
the Balkans, Afghanistan, Iraq, and other areas of the world.
It takes time to restructure and build up a military. I find this
President is doing just that, President Bush. I am happy and privileged
to be a part of the team that is working in the Senate to achieve that.
As a matter of fact, the bill for the Armed Forces in 2005 is the
current business before the Senate.
Before I leave the speech, I was privileged, because of Senator
Thurmond and the other Senators with me, we were not more than 15, 20
yards from the President when he gave the speech, right on this little
spit of land that I visited 2 days ago.
And suddenly you saw the Secret Service men sort of break and go off
and quickly perform the duties they have to protect the President.
There was this figure which came up the cliff unexpectedly,
unannounced, because there had been a reenactment with men of the Armed
Forces currently on duty to scale the cliffs for all to see. So that
part was over. Yet suddenly there appeared another individual who had
scaled the cliffs and the Secret Service tackled him. I remember the
President, always composed, stood there and looked at this scene.
Suddenly, an aide went over and whispered in his ear and the President
went over and grasped this man and gave him a hug. He was one of the
original rangers who scaled that cliff. He wanted to show the President
and the world that he was still able to do it. He had bits and pieces
of his own uniform on.
Last, what are the ways in which we can honor this great President?
Our hearts are so filled with gratitude and a sense of deep remorse at
his loss. But it was his wisdom and foresight that strengthened
America's military, and I think that requires some special recognition.
I don't have all the answers now. I will be happy to work with others.
I am not trying to be the sole author of anything, but some thought
has been given to the Department of Defense--and I went back last night
and did a little research, and this morning I called the former
Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird, a very dear and valued friend, under
whom I served as Secretary of the Navy, and we reminisced about our
days and some of the initiatives he took. He mentioned one
specifically. There was some thought about naming the Department of
Defense building for President Eisenhower. After some very considerable
thought, the decision was made not to do that. One of the main
reasons--and I remember this very well--is that that building stands as
a symbol of the bipartisanship that must be present as we work with the
men and women in the Armed Forces. I strive to achieve that, as does
the Presiding Officer and many others.
I am proud of the committee on which I have served--Armed Services--
for 26 years, under a series of chairmen and ranking members. We have
always tried to put partisanship aside and we have been successful. But
it is important that the building be viewed as bipartisan.
Therefore, I remember Secretary Laird saying the naming of the
building was not, in his judgment, what we should do. He confirmed that
this morning, and I shared that feeling. He said he conceived the idea
of naming a corridor for General Eisenhower. There is a technical thing
there. The corridor
[[Page S6659]]
is named after him as a general of the Armed Forces, a five-star
general. His picture in uniform and many other pieces of memorabilia
are along the corridor by the office of the Secretary of Defense.
Previous Secretaries of Defense have honored the commanders in chief,
the Presidents. So there is a corridor set aside for the commanders in
chief, with portraits of every President since George Washington. Five
living Presidents are there. You have Ford, Carter, George Herbert
Walker Bush, President Clinton, and our current President Bush. All of
their portraits are there. The way the Department of Defense has
handled this in the past is to treat with equality the Presidents and
their portraits, the recognition being bipartisan in nature in that
building.
We will have to put our minds together to see how best to do it.
There is no question that Ronald Reagan gave a tremendous impetus to
the concept of defending this Nation against missiles--missiles fired
in anger or accidentally. Those things happen. He had the star wars
concept. I was on the committee and we looked at this program. We began
to do the initial work in the Congress to give support to the
President's program. But eventually, from the standpoint of technology
and costs, we looked at different ways to achieve our defense against
missiles. It started way back under President Reagan when we put
emphasis on this situation. Some of the thinking preceded President
Reagan on how to defend this country against missiles. Today, we don't
have a thing to interdict an intercontinental ballistic missile that
would be fired in the direction of our 50 States. That is a separate
matter.
Therefore, I think we have to give a lot of careful thought and be
ever mindful of how we recognize our commanders, with five still
living, in terms of their contributions to the defense of this country.
We will come up with an idea. I hope we can, in some way, appropriately
recognize this great President for his extraordinary accomplishments in
strengthening America.
I conclude my remarks with the deepest sense of humility and
gratitude toward the recollection, modest friendship, and the teachings
I received from this great President.
I yield the floor and suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. CARPER. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
The distinguished Senator from Delaware.
Mr. CARPER. Mr. President, today and this week, as we pause to
reflect on the life of Ronald Reagan and his role in leading our Nation
and the State in which I lived when I was in the Navy, I was thinking
back and talking with my children this week about my first recollection
of Ronald Reagan.
My first recollection was when I was about their age, early in my
teenage years, seeing him on television. I may have seen him earlier
than that as a kid in the movies, but I do not remember. I remember
fully--and the Presiding Officer is probably too young to remember
this--a television show called ``Death Valley Days'' and watched later,
I remember, a television show called ``GE Theater.'' He was the host
and introduced each week's segment. My family would watch those shows,
not religiously, but regularly. I enjoyed them as a kid growing up in
Danville, VA.
At the time, Ronald Reagan, who, I guess, was maybe in his fifties at
that time, or maybe forties, had a reasonably successful career in
motion pictures, certainly a lot more successful than any of us, except
for former Senator Fred Thompson. But he had a reasonably successful
career. We were in this in-between place where television was coming of
age and playing a role with respect to ``Death Valley Days'' and ``GE
Theater.''
I remember my first thoughts of him were that he was a nice-looking
guy, a handsome kind of rugged fellow. He seemed to be amiable. He came
across as amiable and exuded a certain warmth and also a sense of
sincerity that came across clearly on that small television screen that
we owned back in those days.
I remember being surprised in 1964. I think I was 17 years old. I was
about to enroll in Ohio State University. I was going to be a Navy ROTC
midshipman. I was at the age of 17 a young Republican for Barry
Goldwater. I do not know how I ended up on this side of the aisle.
Churchill said: If you are young and not liberal, you don't have a
heart; if you are old and not conservative, you don't have a brain.
Somehow I ended up as a 17-year-old supporting Barry Goldwater.
I remember watching the convention which was in San Francisco at the
Cow Palace. Ironically, another one of our colleagues was there as a
Goldwater supporter, too. She was there as a ``golden girl.'' Her seat
is right behind me. It is ironic we both ended up where we are in the
U.S. Senate. I remember watching on television the 1964 Republican
Convention and actually watching the Democratic Convention that year.
I remember being surprised to see Ronald Reagan speak and address the
convention. I knew he had been a film star. I knew he played a role on
these two television shows I watched as a kid growing up, but I had no
idea. I heard he had been involved in the Actors Guild, sort of a labor
union for actors, but I had no idea he was involved in politics to any
extent and that he would end up with a major role at that convention
speaking on behalf of Barry Goldwater.
He came across in this speech a bit differently than he did in his
other roles on television, but he did project a great deal of
sincerity, a lot of conviction.
He also suggested a good-naturedness and a certain warmth I have
always found refreshing and enduring about him.
We learned that evening, as we watched that speech, that this was a
man who had some strong convictions and gave a powerful speech and one
who got a lot of people to think about him as a future leader. Not long
after that, he was elected Governor of California, served there for the
most part with distinction and then ran against Gerald Ford for
President, lost and came back a couple of years later, ran against
Jimmy Carter and won.
It is interesting, conventions were different then. The first
convention I ever remember paying much attention to was in 1964. It was
a convention with serious questions about who was going to be the
President.
We had the Republicans. Conservatives were supporting Barry Goldwater
and we had the Rockefeller Republicans. There was a lot of give and
take, and real primaries. It was hard fought right up until the
convention.
I remember in 1968 I was a supporter for Eugene McCarthy who was
running for President. I respected both McCarthy and Goldwater because
they were standup guys. They were willing to take tough positions and
not mince their words. I respected them both for that. Conventions were
different than they are today.
Although I was impressed by the speech that then-citizen Ronald
Reagan gave, I never imagined he would be Governor of California, and I
certainly never imagined he would be President of the United States. I
never imagined I would be a Congressman, Governor, or Senator, either.
I am probably more surprised by that than I am about him ending up as
Governor and President.
As luck would have it, he ended up as President of the United States
and I ended up here serving with our Presiding Officer, and that is
something I enjoy very much.
Before I was Governor, I served in the House of Representatives for
10 years. Ronald Reagan was elected President in 1980; I was elected to
the House in 1982. I had a chance to interact with him from time to
time during limited opportunities as a Democratic Congressman. He had
qualities I admired all those years ago when he was hosting those
television shows. His warmth, his sincerity, his good humor, those were
qualities he possessed in the real world off the TV screen.
Sometimes the folks we see or admire on television and film or other
venues do not turn out to be quite the same when we meet them in
person. He was very much the same.
While I did not always see eye to eye with him on environmental
issues, for
[[Page S6660]]
example, and I had concerns about the budget deficits we were starting
to rack up, and questions about deploying space weapons, star wars, and
the way we conducted our business in Central America, there was a lot
he wanted to do and sought to do with which I did agree. He was an
early proponent of welfare reform. He was a guy who believed work
should pay more than welfare. We have all heard of the earned income
tax credit. He was a major proponent of the earned income tax credit
because he felt people who worked ought to be better off than folks who
were on welfare.
He presided over big tax cuts in the early 1980s, 1981, and later on,
faced with ever-growing tax deficits, he presided over some of the
largest tax increases that were adopted in our Nation's history.
He was a staunch opponent of communism, but a fellow who could reach
out not just across the aisle but across the world to Gorbachev to
become friends, and they embraced one another at the end of their
tenures as they together helped to change the world in a better way.
I find in Ronald Reagan that he was someone who would stake out a
position; he would adhere to that position with his convictions for as
long as he could, and at the end, if he had to change, he would. He was
willing to do that, but he did not back off easily or readily. He was
willing in the end to compromise.
In reacting to folks in my own State in Delaware this week who asked
me for my reaction to what he was like, I said, well, whether or not
you liked the man's policies, it was hard not to like the man.
Since his death, there has been a fair amount of conjecture about
what we should do to pay tribute to him and his memory. Some people
have suggested we ought to rework Mount Rushmore and find a way to put
his image on Mount Rushmore. We have had a few people suggest maybe
Ronald Reagan's picture should be on the $10 bill instead of Alexander
Hamilton. I heard our Republican leader suggest yesterday that maybe we
should rename the Pentagon in honor of Ronald Reagan. I do not know
that those are good or bad ideas. I have not given those a lot of
thought.
I ask we consider a couple of other legacies that might even be more
important and more enduring. One of those deals with the disease that
dogged him for the last years of his life, Alzheimer's disease, a
disease my mom also suffers from. She lives in Kentucky. I visited her
over the weekend. She does not remember much. Actually, she remembers a
few things that happened a long time ago, but she does not have any
recollection of Ronald Reagan and all of those years we watched him on
television when I was a kid growing up.
My mom is going to be 82 years this August and my hope is she will
live to be as old as Ronald Reagan. I do not think that is likely, but
that would be wonderful if it happened. My mom is one of 4 million
people in the world today who suffers from Alzheimer's disease. It was
something we saw the first signs of 5, 6, 7 years ago, and we knew
where it was leading. Her mom suffered the same fate. Her grandmother
had suffered the same fate as well.
While there are roughly 4 million Americans today who suffer from
Alzheimer's disease, by the year 2020 we are told there could be as
many as 14 million Americans who suffer from Alzheimer's disease. It is
a tough disease not so much for the person who suffers from it but
certainly for their families and those who love them and who are unable
to have the kind of relationship we once did.
I know Senator Mikulski is going to be leading the effort, I think
with Senator Bond, for us to focus anew as a Congress, as a Senate, on
providing meaningful increases in funding to find a cure for
Alzheimer's disease; not simply a way to treat the symptoms, but a way
to stop it dead in its tracks. I commend them for their actions and I
stand fully ready to support them. I hope others will as well.
The other legacy I suggest that may be as important or we may be
inspired to address and do something about other than dealing with
Alzheimer's disease is civility. I am not the first person who has
noticed this of late, but there has been a huge loss of civility not
only in Washington, DC, but shortly after I heard of President Reagan's
death I was flipping through the radio channels in my car and I came
across one of these right-wing talk shows. There was pure vitriol
coming out of the speaker on my radio. I find it hard to listen to that
stuff so I turned it off. I find it hard to watch the television shows
anymore because it seems there is no meaningful discourse; they are
really shouting matches.
Ronald Reagan, for whatever faults he may have had, was a civil
person, he was a gentleman, and at a time when that kind of behavior
characterizes too little of what not only goes on here but what takes
place in politics throughout our country, he is a good role model in
that the way he treated people was the way he would like to have been
treated. It is a lesson that was good and meaningful then and it is one
we can certainly take again today.
I have heard our own leader, Tom Daschle, begin to speak of late of a
new civility, and we need a new civility. We need some civility, not
going through the formalities, but treating one another the way we
would want to be treated; not just in this Chamber, not just in this
Capitol, but throughout this country, even in a Presidential election
year.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Illinois.
Mr. FITZGERALD. Mr. President, as one of the two Senators from
Illinois, I am very proud of Ronald Reagan and his contributions to
this country. Ronald Reagan is the only American President who was, in
fact, born in Illinois. Many people think of Abraham Lincoln as having
been born in Illinois, but he was actually born in Kentucky and later
moved there. Of course, I think there is no question that Ronald Reagan
will join Abraham Lincoln as one of our Nation's greatest Presidents. I
only want to say a few words about him.
I didn't actually serve in the Senate when he was President. I didn't
ever have the opportunity to get to know him. I did, however, get the
opportunity to meet him once as a very young man, when I was about 20
years old or so and he was campaigning for President in 1980.
But my first real recollection of him came from watching his address
on television in 1976 at the Republican National Convention. He had
lost the primaries to incumbent President Gerald Ford but had
nonetheless had a very strong showing. He gave a speech at that 1976
convention that literally brought down the house and fired up the
delegates. I remember watching that at home and thinking, What an
outstanding leader. You could see that this man certainly still had a
great contribution to make.
He won against all the odds. All the pundits and many of the
commentators dismissed Ronald Reagan. They thought he was too old. They
thought he was too conservative to run and be elected President in
1980. But he proved them all wrong.
I think a pivotal moment came in 1980 during his primary elections.
At that time he lost the Iowa caucuses and he had a lot of pressure on
him to win the New Hampshire primary. Many of us will recall that New
Hampshire primary debate where he grabbed the microphone as they tried
to shut it off. He grabbed the microphone and said: ``Mr. Green, I paid
for this microphone.'' He wanted his other opponents to be allowed the
opportunity to speak at that debate, as opposed to just having a one-
on-one debate with George Bush, who later became his Vice President and
succeeded him as President.
I remember watching that Nashua, NH, debate in 1980 from the basement
television room of my fraternity house in Hanover, NH, at Dartmouth
College. I was very much paying attention to that primary because it
was happening in New Hampshire where I was attending college. I will
never forget seeing Ronald Reagan in that debate and his remarkable
performance.
Later, in 1980, I had the opportunity to meet him when he came to
Illinois to campaign for a U.S. Senate candidate in October of 1980,
about a month before Reagan was elected President. I was actually an
intern on the campaign of a fellow by the name of Dave O'Neal who was
running for the Senate in Illinois. He actually lost. But as an intern
on that campaign, I had the opportunity to meet Ronald
[[Page S6661]]
Reagan and to welcome him into the back room before we had the dinner
in honor of Dave O'Neal.
I will never forget Ronald Reagan. Everybody called him Governor at
that time. That was the most recent office he had. They didn't call him
President Reagan yet. But when he walked into the holding room, the
bartender immediately told him: Governor Reagan, we have squeezed some
fresh oranges for you. We have some freshly squeezed orange juice for
you. Would you like some of this?
Governor Reagan looked at him and said: I'll take it if you put a
little vodka in that.
I was struck immediately at the time by his charm and his sense of
humor and his relaxed nature, even though he was just a few weeks out
from the election day in what everyone thought would be a very close
election with President Carter. But, of course, as we know, Ronald
Reagan went on to win in a landslide.
He had a remarkable career. He was an enormous source of inspiration
to me as I was finishing college and going on to law school. I was very
proud at the time to be a Republican and to have him as the leader of
our party, but also to be an American and have him lead our country and
represent us in the world. I thought he handled himself with incredible
poise and dignity.
His achievements are monumental. You will recall that he had few
allies in Congress. The other party controlled both Houses of Congress
while he was President. Yet he was able to work his will through
Congress by calling upon the American people to lobby Congress for some
of his important initiatives, such as lowering taxes. President Reagan
succeeded in lowering the highest tax rates, which at that time were up
to 70 percent. He dramatically lowered the tax rates and unleashed a
flurry of economic activity that is with us today.
He went on to achieve major arms control agreements, and also, with
the threat of his willingness to spend whatever it took to defend our
country--his will in that regard, his sheer will to succeed in
defeating what he saw as an evil ideology, communism--in ending the
cold war with the Soviet Union, he ultimately succeeded in doing that.
No one has a greater claim on ending the cold war than Ronald Reagan
and, as Margaret Thatcher has said, he did so without firing a single
shot.
I think one of his greatest accomplishments occurred in his second
term, and that was the simplifying of the Tax Code. If you recall, we
went for a time where we got rid of a lot of the Swiss cheese loopholes
and deductions that are in our Tax Code. We dramatically simplified the
Tax Code, collapsed the rates, and it held for a few years. We have
gone back now and allowed all the special interests to fill up the Tax
Code with all sorts of special interest loopholes and giveaways to
politically connected interests. Sometimes I wish we were rereading
what Ronald Reagan said at the time about the necessity of cleaning up
that Tax Code.
One of the most cherished treasures in the State of Illinois is the
boyhood home in which Ronald Reagan grew up in the 1920s, in Dixon, IL.
That home has been purchased and lovingly restored by a foundation and
by members of the Dixon, IL, community. It is a wonderful place for
Americans who want to pay their respects to Ronald Reagan and his
legacy, to go by and visit on Interstate 88 in Dixon, IL, just off
Interstate 88. I certainly hope a lot more Americans who are interested
in the history of Ronald Reagan will visit that home.
Ronald Reagan himself went back to visit it, I believe, after he left
the White House even. He has recounted many tales of his growing up
there.
He was actually born in Tampico, IL, in an apartment above a
commercial building in downtown Tampico, and later moved to Dixon, IL.
Some of his fondest memories are of growing up in Dixon, along the Rock
River.
Of course, many people will remember Ronald Reagan talking about one
of his proudest accomplishments in life was actually saving 77 people
from drowning over the 7 years that he was a lifeguard along the Rock
River in Dixon, IL.
If you go to Dixon, IL, you can see this wonderful small town that
shaped Ronald Reagan, his character, his values, his common sense, his
Midwestern way of thinking, of looking at the world. I don't think that
ever left him.
There is also an interesting story not many people are aware of, but
President Reagan wrote about this in his biography. He graduated from
Eureka College, about 130 miles south of Dixon, in Illinois. After
graduating from college, he went back to Dixon and he applied for a job
in the sporting goods department, I believe, at a Montgomery Ward store
in Dixon, IL.
Guess what happened. Montgomery Ward turned down Ronald Reagan for
that job. That set him off in different pursuits, and he ultimately
went to Iowa and became an announcer, did Cubs games from a regional
radio station there. But he wrote in his biography he wonders what
would have happened had he actually gotten that job at the Montgomery
Ward store in Dixon, IL. He suspected he might never have left Dixon,
IL.
We need to thank somebody who failed to hire Ronald Reagan at
Montgomery Ward in 1932, I think, because it was that little twist,
that little turn in his life that turned out for the better, not only
for him but certainly for our entire Nation and the world.
I ask that we not forget the example of Ronald Reagan and his
cheerful optimism about our country and our future. No one could
communicate their thoughts as well as Ronald Reagan, in my judgment. I
know of no equal he had in public service in terms of communicating
with people. He was an inspiring leader.
Ronald Reagan came to the presidency of a self-doubting nation, a
nation more suspicious of its power than inspired by its possibilities.
And he understood--as magnificently as any American leader--the
restorative force of faith, of conviction, of pride. He was the Great
Communicator, not because he mastered the sound bite, but because this
midwestern man of 10,000 handwritten letters knew that words matter--
words with simple, self-evident integrity, words that reach into the
vagueness of a volatile democracy and perfectly describe the essential
goodness of our character.
Ronald Reagan returned us to ourselves. He did not work miracles. But
he emboldened us to see the grace of God in the destiny of our great
Nation. He enabled us to hear the still, small voice in the clamor of
great historical conflicts. He reminded us to treasure the simple
miracles of life, laughter and love.
This man, who survived into the 21st century, embodied as perhaps
none other the panoramic sweep of America's 10th century. Reagan was
born in the small town of Tampico, IL. It was 1911, the year of the
first coast-to-coast airplane flight, a 49-day ordeal with 69 stops and
16 crash landings. It was also the year of the first aircraft landing--
crude though it was--on a ship anchored in San Francisco Bay. A series
of ropes stopped the aircraft. Ninety years later, on March 4, 2001,
the United States christened the Navy's newest Nimitz-class aircraft
carrier, the USS Ronald Reagan, a 90,000-ton nuclear-powered fighting
ship, and the pride of the most powerful navy in the world.
Ronald Reagan fundamentally changed the face of American politics--
and profusely contributed his name to the new political lexicon. What
American before or since Ronald Reagan has become the popular namesake
for a theory of economics, a political and electoral sea change, and a
decisive partisan crossover? I speak of Reaganomics, the Reagan
Revolution, and Reagan Democrats.
The man was that large. He had strong and distinct views which he was
able to communicate with remarkable effectiveness. He had a
irresistibly winning personality and was irrepressibly optimistic.
Though the establishment of both political parties often ridiculed his
beliefs, the people somehow always seemed to have faith and confidence
in him. In fact, they loved as perhaps they have loved no other
President in modern history.
Conventional intellects and comfortable pundits were aghast when
President Reagan spoke so freely of ``evil'' in the world. In a world
where ``evil'' is neatly banished because it is too judgmental, the
moral declarations of Ronald Reagan were inevitably revolutionary. The
Great Communicator
[[Page S6662]]
understood perfectly well that communication without a moral compass
becomes all talk. And so we are the heirs of a more civilized and less
menacing world because Ronald Reagan had the courage to maintain firm
beliefs and to stand up for those beliefs.
As a Senator from Illinois, I am proud to remark briefly and
comparatively about another great son of Illinois, the only President
to be elected from Illinois, Kentucky-born but Illinois-settled Abraham
Lincoln, whom our history honors as few others. Lincoln and Reagan both
grew up humbly and gained a natural comfort with people from all walks
of life. They were both frequently underestimated by opponents who
imagined themselves intellectually, culturally or socially superior.
They both possessed an equanimity and fortitude that kept them serene
while navigating treacherous waters. They both loved the United States
of America. And they both cherished American freedom and staked their
public lives on the resolute promotion of it--for Lincoln, against the
forces of disunity and enslavement at home, and for Reagan, against a
godless imperial tyranny abroad. I am proud to hail from the State of
Illinois.
When we finally measure the worth of a statesman, the words of
political or ideological adversaries can speak volumes. And here Ronald
Reagan--a statesman with many more converts than implacable enemies--is
a shining beacon in his own shining city. When President Clinton
announced in 1996 that ``the era of big government is over,'' it was
homage to the durable influence--across the political landscape--of
Ronald Reagan's faith in the American people. When Mikhail Gorbachev
recently said of Ronald Reagan, ``he was sincere,'' he captured with
fitting simplicity the worldwide power of the American dream in the
hands of America's finest dreamer.
Ronald Reagan stayed the course, throughout and after his presidency,
until a progressive illness consumed him. Indeed, sliding irretrievably
into forgetfulness a decade ago, Ronald Reagan remembered to say
goodbye to his beloved American people. ``When the Lord calls me home,
whenever that may be, I will leave with the greatest love for this
country of ours and eternal optimism for its future,'' Reagan wrote.
``I now begin the journey that will lead me into the sunset of my life.
I know that for America there will always be a bright dawn ahead. Thank
you my friends. May God always bless you.''
May God rest his soul, and may God bless Nancy Reagan, who is also
from Illinois, and all the Reagan children and their families.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Sununu). The Senator from Illinois.
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, I join my colleague from Illinois in
paying tribute to the late President Ronald Reagan.
Today the Senate passed by an overwhelming vote a resolution
commemorating Ronald Reagan for his service to America and recalling
his legacy.
There has been a lot said on the floor about President Reagan. I come
to this task with a little different perspective than some. Were it not
for Ronald Reagan, I wouldn't be in the Senate today. I say that
because I made three vain and futile attempts to be elected to public
office. In 1982, I ran for the House of Representatives against an
incumbent Republican Congressman. Were it not for the sorry state of
the economy in Illinois after the first 2 years of President Reagan's
Presidency, I would have lost. But because of the economy and the
troubles faced at that moment in time, I was successful in my campaign
against a long-time Republican incumbent Congressman.
I will not mislead anyone before making these remarks. I will tell
you that while a Member of the House of Representatives during the 6
remaining years of President Reagan's Presidency, there were very few
things I agreed with in reference to him. In fact, over 90 percent of
the time we didn't see eye to eye. I had some very strong philosophical
differences with President Reagan on economic policy, foreign policy,
and many other things. But I will tell you this: He was an
extraordinary person, and I think even those of us who disagreed with
him politically respected him very much.
I recall when I was elected in one of the largest new classes of
Congressmen since Watergate, in 1982, that President Reagan and Mrs.
Reagan invited all of the new Members of the House of Representatives
and their spouses to come for a dinner at the White House. It was an
amazingly heady experience to walk in as Congressmen-elect with our
wives and shake hands with the President and Mrs. Reagan, realizing
full well that most of the people in the room were new Democratic
Congressmen who had been running against President Reagan and his
policies. But he was gracious to a fault and could not have been more
cordial to all of us who gathered that evening. One of my great
memories of that period of time between the election and being sworn in
was sitting there in the White House at this dinner hosted by President
Reagan and Mrs. Reagan. At the same table was my Senate colleague,
then-Congressman Mike DeWine, and his wife Fran, who had made the trip
from Ohio for that special dinner with the Reagans and new Members of
Congress days after she had given birth to a little baby girl, whom she
brought to the same dinner in a basket which she had right next to the
table. We have laughed about it all the time, because obviously after
23 years that little girl has grown up to be a remarkable young woman.
But those are some of the memories I have of President Reagan opening
the door and welcoming in some new Congressmen who had spent months
running against him and his policies.
The same thing held true when it came to his State of the Union
Addresses. I can remember so many different times when I marched to the
House of Representatives' Chamber for the State of the Union Address by
President Reagan. After a while I came to understand what the rules
were. The rules were these: You didn't have a chance as a Democrat to
say anything critical and be successful the night of President Reagan's
speech. He had such a magical style and was so affable and friendly and
approachable that after he concluded his State of the Union Address,
the best for the loyal opposition was to wave and leave the stage
because he was so good. He was one of the best. We did learn that after
24 or 48 hours had passed, perhaps a closer look at what he said could
lead to some constructive criticism. But we knew right off the bat when
President Reagan took to the floor of the House of Representatives for
the State of the Union Address and walked up those stairs, the best
thing the loyal opposition could do was to be quiet.
There was another aspect of Ronald Reagan which I miss so much. It is
part of the political life which unfortunately we don't have enough of.
He was President in an era of some great people--Tip O'Neill, Speaker
of the House of Representatives, and Bob Michel, Republican minority
leader from Illinois. They brought to this business of politics a
certain humanity and civility which we have lost almost completely.
I can recall the bitter battles we had on the floor of the House of
Representatives with President Reagan over very contentious issues and
the debates going on for days. Ultimately, someone would prevail, and
many times it would be President Reagan and his position. Without fail,
when it came to those critical votes, Tip O'Neill, then Speaker of the
House, the leading Democrat, would pick up the phone, call the
President and congratulate him. It was a gesture, but it was an
important gesture to say that, frankly, we have both given it a good
fight; the decision has been made; now let us move on to the people's
business.
President Ronald Reagan understood that, Tip O'Neill understood that,
and Bob Michel understood that. I wish our generation of leaders could
understand that more, that even though we disagree, and disagree with a
great deal of conviction, we should try to look for that human side we
can all share. I think time and again President Reagan did that. I
commend him for it.
Even though you have disagreed with him during the course of the
debate, when it was all over, you knew you would be treated with
respect.
Time and again, my wife Loretta and I would go down to the White
House for the Christmas party, the barbeques and picnics. It was always
a warm welcome and greeting, even though the President was of a
different party where there were very serious differences.
[[Page S6663]]
I would like to reflect, too, for a moment on the former First Lady,
Nancy Reagan. She has been a pillar of strength since it was announced
that the late President was suffering from Alzheimer's; 10 years
watching the man she loved the most of any in the world slip into
darkness. She said in a few interviews since President Reagan passed
away, the worst part was the advancing years and not being able to
share memories anymore because President Reagan was inflicted with
Alzheimer's disease. That takes a toll.
We have had friends who have gone through it. It takes a special
commitment and sacrifice to make it through that terrible illness. My
heart goes out to Nancy Reagan and her family, all of them, for what
they have endured for 10 years, standing by the former President while
he was afflicted with this disease.
My colleague Senator Carper mentioned earlier that many people are
now talking about tributes to President Reagan, and he is deserving.
Despite my differences with him politically, I voted for the renaming
of the Washington National Airport in his memory. I thought that was
appropriate for someone who had served our Nation as President of the
United States. Now people are trying to think of other things they can
do. They are kind of upping the ante: Well, you know, not the 50-cent
piece, maybe the $10 bill; no, maybe Mount Rushmore. I would like to
suggest to them the most enduring legacy for this President would be to
help others in his name. I can't think of anything more important to
ask for when the time comes for those to consider what to do in his
memory than the contribution suggested by our colleagues Senators
Mikulski and Bond, one which I think is worthy of our immediate
consideration. They called for the establishment of the Ronald Reagan
Alzheimer's Breakthrough Act of 2004. They believe we are near a
breakthrough in treating Alzheimer's and they want us to put special
attention and special resources and special efforts in that regard.
That not only will serve the memory of President Reagan and his
courageous family who stood by him, but it will also serve to help 4\1/
5\ million Americans inflicted with Alzheimer's disease today, and
their husbands, wives, children, and their loved ones who stand by
helplessly at their side as they drift into the darkness of this
dreaded disease. That would be such a great tribute to President
Reagan. I hope we can do it on a bipartisan basis with the civility and
humanity which President Reagan demonstrated during the course of his
life.
I might also add that the First Lady's commitment to stem cell
research is an exceptional statement on her part. She has broken with
some members of the Republican Party on this issue. I know her position
is controversial, even within this administration, but she understands,
as many do, that unless we are committed to medical research, including
stem cell research, the chances that we can successfully deal with
Alzheimer's, diabetes, spinal cord injuries, and other terrible
afflictions will be diminished. I salute the First Lady and I hope we
will, in recognition of her commitment and in memory of President
Reagan, also decide we will step forward in this critical area of
medical research involving stem cells.
I am honored that President Reagan was a friend, at least in passing,
on a political basis. I am happy he came from Illinois and happened to
believe that perhaps his Midwestern roots might have helped him in his
various careers. It certainly helped him serving this country as
President.
He had an amazing record of victories. I know because I was on the
losing end of a lot of those campaigns. I campaigned for his opponents
with little or no success. He carried 44 States in the first election
and 49 States in the second. Probably few Presidents in history have
had a mandate that substantial when they were reelected. It is a
tribute to the fact that America loved that President, America wanted
Ronald Reagan to serve, and he served our Nation so well.
I yield the floor and suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Ms. COLLINS. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Ms. COLLINS. Mr. President, over the past few days, more than 100,000
Americans have stood in line in California for 12 hours or even more to
pay their respects to President Ronald Reagan. This great show of
respect and affection will be repeated during the coming days in
Washington.
This overwhelming outpouring cannot be explained by merely citing the
traits for which he was so well-known--his likability, his wit and
optimism, his courage when attacked by a would-be assassin's bullet or,
at the end of his life, by a devastating disease, or even his skills as
the Great Communicator. Americans are standing in line because of
President Reagan's ideas and the principles and convictions that gave
those ideas their power: The God-given right to freedom, responsibility
for one's own actions, and charity toward others--the very ideas that
are the foundation of this great Nation were the foundation of
President Reagan's character.
President Reagan became President at a time when the world had begun
to question the strength of that foundation. It was a time when
freedom, balanced by personal responsibility and justified by charity,
was in danger of becoming just one of the many ways in which human
society could be organized. Rather than appease or accommodate
communism, he confronted it and exposed its moral bankruptcy.
President Reagan emboldened freedom-loving people everywhere--those
behind the Iron Curtain and those in danger of being enveloped by it--
and gave them faith and strength. He believed, as he said in his first
inaugural address, that no weapon in the arsenals of the world is so
formidable as the will and moral courage of free men and women. He was
right.
President Reagan became President at a time when America had begun to
question its place in the world and the values upon which this great
Nation was built. He opened the gate of the American spirit. He tore
down the wall of doubt.
Ronald Reagan was a great communicator because he had something great
to communicate. He was the right man for his time; and now he belongs
to all time.
He will be missed, but President Reagan's ideas will always be part
of the American experience.
Mr. President, I yield the floor and suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. CRAIG. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. CRAIG. Mr. President, I have, for the last day, listened to a
good number of my colleagues reminisce about the late President Ronald
Reagan, many of them quoting from his speeches, many of them quoting
from books written about him, about his phenomenal life, and his
phenomenal presence in this city as one of our Presidents. So I would
guess that by this moment nearly everything that can be said about
Ronald Reagan has been said but, then again, not everyone has said it.
I find myself in that situation in these moments just prior to the
adjournment of the Senate and hours before a coffin bearing President
Ronald Reagan will arrive at the Rotunda of our great Capitol.
What I might do for just a moment is reminisce about a couple of
personal experiences I had the privilege of having with the late
President that, to me, speaks volumes about the gentleman's personalty,
his style of Presidency, and what he meant to my State of Idaho.
Idaho, by its conservative character and its independence, was always
a strong Reagan State. It spoke out loudly for the President. It voted
in large numbers for the President. There was never a question where
Idahoans would be when it came to supporting Ronald Reagan for his
Presidency.
My relationship with him began at the very time he came to
Washington. I was a freshman in the House of Representatives in the
winter of 1981. Both
[[Page S6664]]
President Reagan and I were elected at the same time. I was one of
those of the large class of 54 Republican freshmen who entered the U.S.
House, many of them because of the strength of Ronald Reagan, and we
all became known as ``Reagan babies.'' I suspect that is a title that
at the age of 58 I still bear with some pride. Because we came at a
time when we had a President who was speaking of change; and the
American people were wanting it, demanding it, and his Presidency
embodied it.
The situation I want to relate for the record this afternoon occurred
during the first budget process of the Reagan administration. David
Stockman, a Congressman, had just been appointed Director of OMB. Of
course, the major tax cut that our President was so well known for--
that began to stimulate the economy and turn the American people back
into entrepreneurialism--was all at hand. But there were deficits. So
David Stockman came up with the idea that we should sell off our
strategic minerals stockpile.
Well, that is something you do not hear talked about hardly at all
today, but following World War II, Congress had passed legislation
saying that we should stockpile silver and magnesium and titanium and
zinc and a variety of other metals in case we got in another war, so we
would have these supplies of metals available for industrial purposes.
By 1981, it was largely determined on the part of the Reagan
administration and David Stockman that they were just not necessary any
longer. It was probably true that some Members of Congress believed the
same thing. So when the announcement of the sale of these stockpiles
became public--and the money then from their sale was to return to the
Treasury, and that money would offset some of the deficits that might
occur as a result of the tax cuts--the silver market plummeted. The
price of silver on the world market dropped because the large supply of
silver being held by our Government was going to enter the market at
some point. So the market out there was beginning to adjust and prices
fell.
Because Idaho at that time was a primary silver producer, not only
did prices fall in Idaho, but when they fell, many of our mines closed.
There were 400 or 500 miners--men and women--out of work in the Silver
Valley of Idaho, known as the Coeur d'Alene mining district, that was
in part a direct result of this announcement.
I was a freshman Congressman. That was my congressional district. I
had people out of work. This was largely still an old line labor
Democrat stronghold in north Idaho, and the hue and cry was very loud.
These men and women were out of work because of President Ronald
Reagan.
I had thought that if Ronald Reagan really understood the impact of
what he was doing, he might change his approach. But because it was a
directive from OMB, because it was a part of the budgetary policy of
this administration, my small voice simply was not getting heard.
I appealed one evening in a conversation to the then-Secretary of the
Interior, Jim Watt. I said: Secretary Watt, how do I get to the
President? How do I tell my story, our story, Idaho's story, about this
particular problem?
He said: Well, Larry, you have to get to the President directly.
Obviously, David Stockman is not interested in hearing your story. The
sale of the strategic metals, the sale of the stockpiles, is his idea.
He's not going to be your champion. So if you're ever down at the White
House, see if you can get the President's ear.
Well, freshmen Congressmen do not often go to the White House. But
because of the key tax votes that were coming up, I got invited to the
White House to visit with Ronald Reagan. I had presented on one, small
sheet of paper, on one side, a very brief, clear explanation of the
impact of the sale of the silver stockpile out of the strategic metals
stockpile on the people of Idaho. I put it in an envelope, and wrote
across it ``To President Ronald Reagan,'' and stuck it in my pocket.
Now I am down at the White House and conversations go forward. At the
end of the conversation, I say: Mr. President, here is a note I would
like to have you read. It's important to my people in Idaho. By your
actions, you have put 500 Idahoans out of work.
He said: Really?
I said: Yes, selling off the strategic metals.
He smiled and said: We are?
Well, that did not surprise me. The longer I am here in Washington, I
know not everybody knows every detail about everything. That is why you
hire and have around you competent people, and Presidents are certainly
no different than many of us.
He kept the note. I saw it go into the breast pocket of his suit
coat. A day and a half or two later, I got a call from the White House
saying: Congressman Craig, can you come down and visit with the
President about your problem in north Idaho and the sale of the silver
stockpile?
My, I was impressed. I went to the White House. There in the Oval
Office was the President and David Stockman, the Director of OMB, the
man who had established the policy of selling off the stockpiles to
bring money to the Treasury. We discussed it at length. In fact, David
Stockman and I had a small debate in front of the President about the
pros and cons of doing so.
What I said at that time was: Mr. President, I am not opposed to you
selling off the stockpile of silver, but it's how you are approaching
it, and how you are approaching it has had a dramatic impact on the
market. As a result of that, it has dropped the price of silver
worldwide, and men and women in Idaho are now out of work.
He said: Well--in his inevitable way--let me think about that.
A week later, there was a very small but very important announcement
that no longer would there be any more sale of the silver stockpile,
and, of course, the prices came back and the men and women in north
Idaho went to work.
What is the message? The message is that when this President, Ronald
Reagan, understood the impact of an action--if it was hurting people or
impacting them adversely, or if it was doing something that was against
his market ideas and his philosophical belief in limited government and
that government should not be the arbiter nor should government
infringe upon the well-being of citizens--he would make changes. And he
did. And of course, I have told that story many times in Idaho. It was
very clear to Idahoans that the market changed because Ronald Reagan
saw what he was doing or saw what his administration was doing and was
willing to make a very important change to impact people's lives.
Lastly, I remember coming to the U.S. Senate in 1990, certainly after
President Reagan had left this city. The first office I took in the
Hart Building had on a conference wall a very large map of the world.
It filled the whole wall, and it still had the Socialist Republics of
the Soviet Union written across that map. That will tell you how old it
was in 1990. I remember at the time looking at that map and saying:
Thank you, Ronald Reagan. You have made that map of the world obsolete.
You as the President--not single-handedly but certainly by the force of
your beliefs and by the force of your efforts--have made the Soviet
Union obsolete in such a way that it simply withered and died, almost
without a whimper. And that, of course, is one of the great legacies of
our President, and many of our colleagues have spoken about that.
We are not going to let revisionist historians suggest that the
Soviet Union would have crumbled anyway. There was a reality they had
to face. The reality was Ronald Reagan and the national resolve of this
country in the cold war, built on the strength and the beliefs of a
great President by the name of Ronald Reagan, that we not only could
overcome communism but we would, in essence, arm ourselves and build a
military ready and capable of defeating the Soviet Union. That
combination of efforts, put together with his willingness to deal with
Gorbachev and others, obviously changed the dynamics of world politics
and the environment I grew up in as a child, known as the cold war.
I will attend the ceremony in the Chamber tonight, and I will mourn
the loss of Ronald Reagan. But more importantly, I will celebrate. I
will celebrate a great President, a President who came to our country's
call at the right time in our history, to lead us with optimism and
enthusiasm and vision in a way few Presidents have. So while I will
certainly miss the presence
[[Page S6665]]
of the man, I celebrate his record and the history that will be written
about him.
I send my prayers and the prayers of my wife Suzanne to Nancy Reagan
and all of the Reagans. They stand with a great legacy they are
obviously very proud of, as we all are as Americans.
To Ronald Reagan I say: Thank you, you built a place in history that
is well deserving of the actions you took as President of the United
States.
I yield the floor and suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. LAUTENBERG. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. LAUTENBERG. Mr. President, I wanted to be sure to have an
opportunity to make some comments about President Reagan before we went
out of session tonight. I will take the opportunity to do so right now.
I join with my colleagues, so many of whom have already spoken, in
tribute to our Nation's 40th President, Ronald Reagan. My first term in
the Senate coincided with the last 6 years of his Presidency. I had the
opportunity to work with him on several occasions. As someone who came
from modest beginnings and a working-class family, I understood the
fact that he rose from his humble beginnings to become one of the
crucial world leaders. He was respected greatly. I had a chance to work
with him on several occasions, not the least of which was something as
simple as raising the drinking age to 21 across the country, thereby
saving thousands of families a year from having to mourn the loss of a
young person in their household. The bill was signed in the morning at
the White House, and I was pleased I was able to return from a
convention in San Francisco in time to be there and share those good
moments with President Reagan and then-Secretary of Transportation
Elizabeth Dole.
We did a lot of good for families across America with that
legislation, and also offered support to say to those who would pollute
our environment, ``If you pollute, you must pay to clean it up,'' and
that was Superfund. It had a very important beginning in those days.
President Reagan is appropriately being remembered for his
overpowering sense of optimism and rock-solid faith in the fundamental
goodness of America. Many of his actions stand as examples of ideas
that we ought to consider as we carry out our responsibilities in
Government. There was no doubt that he was the Great Communicator, and
his ideas and his words will long be remembered.
I just returned yesterday from the D-day celebration and
commemoration in Normandy. No one will ever forget President Reagan's
speech 20 years ago at Normandy commemorating the 40th anniversary of
the D-day invasion; it will be permanently etched in our memories. Or
his poignant remarks when the Space Shuttle Challenger exploded, and
how he helped America recover from that terrible national tragedy. Or
who can forget his insistence that helped break the iron grip of the
Soviet Union on millions of people around the globe?
President Reagan was known for his ideological zeal. But the
interesting thing about him at the same time was that he ultimately was
a pragmatist. Perhaps the clearest example of his pragmatic side is
what happened after he pushed through a massive tax cut in Congress in
1981. One thing that President Reagan disliked enormously was Federal
budget deficits. He thought the idea of borrowing from future
generations was truly repugnant.
On the campaign trail in 1980, he promised he would work to balance
the budget. When he took office, he argued that a tax cut was necessary
to stimulate the economy. He believed the Federal Government would end
up with more, not fewer, revenues. But when the revenues didn't
materialize as predicted, and the Federal Government began running huge
annual budget deficits, his pragmatism took over and he followed his
1981 tax cuts with tax increases that were necessary in 1982 and 1984,
determined to reduce the burgeoning budget deficits. His tax increases
were a tacit admission that the plan wasn't working as expected. He was
pragmatic enough to change the course.
His personality was so unique for someone in that high office. As
Mikhail Gorbachev wrote in Monday's New York Times op-ed page,
President Reagan was ultimately someone with whom you could negotiate.
His suggestion was that he was human enough, he was collegial, funny,
and gracious, and you could discuss serious issues with him and
accomplish goals.
One of President Reagan's last great acts of public service was to
acknowledge 10 years ago to the American people and to the people of
the world that he was suffering from Alzheimer's disease.
He handled his affliction with his customary grace, saying that he
was sharing the news with the public in the hope that it might
``promote a greater awareness of this condition.'' That was a
courageous thing to do. He went on further to say that he hoped it
might encourage a clearer understanding of the individuals and families
who are affected by it. He really brought a focus on the disease that
ultimately consumed his remaining years.
One truly meaningful way that we can honor President Reagan is to
pursue the kind of research that might produce a treatment, or even a
cure, for Alzheimer's disease and a host of other illnesses, something
his beloved wife Nancy has called for. Since we witnessed the pain of
the deterioration of this great individual, we have to be mindful of
that for the future.
His life yielded so many more things, besides those obvious ones,
during his service as President of the United States.
Mr. CHAFEE. Mr. President, I pay tribute to President Ronald Reagan,
a man for whom I had the utmost respect.
A strong, principled leader, President Reagan used his optimism and
humor to help the Nation feel better in a post-Vietnam, post-Watergate
country coping with an energy crisis and high inflation.
He brought strong leadership and could relate to people from all
walks of life very, very easily. Democrats controlled the House during
both of his terms, and the Senate during his last 2 years in office. In
order to advance his priorities, he had to bridge the partisan divide
and work with members of the other party. He was also very proud of his
good personal relations with Tip O'Neill and other Democratic leaders.
The proof of his good personal relations with Tip O'Neill and other
Democratic leaders. The proof of his appeal was his ability to carry a
Democrat stronghold like my state of Rhode Island in the 1984 election.
He was the last Republican Presidential candidate to do so.
With tremendous vision and dignity, President Reagan will ultimately
be remembered for ending the cold war and promoting freedom and
democracy throughout the world in a peaceful way.
In closing, I recall a large color photograph on my father's office
wall. It is a picture of merriment, Senator Robert Dole having just
cracked a joke, with President Reagan, Alan Simpson and John Chafee
standing by, smiling from ear-to-ear.
Later, my father obtained a copy of the photo and at a later meeting
with the President, slid it down the table towards him and asked if he
would sign it. Without hesitation, Reagan penned a line and slid it
back.
It read simply, ``John--some times it is fun, isn't it?''
Some times it is fun, isn't it? Ronald Reagan, with unfailing good
humor and optimism, made Americans feel good about their country again.
I believe that is his lasting legacy.
The Chafee family offers our sincere condolences to Nancy, and the
Reagan family.
Mr. DODD. Mr. President, I rise today to offer words in memory of
America's 40th president, Ronald Wilson Reagan.
Ronald Reagan was elected President on the same day that I was first
elected to the United States Senate. I was somewhat of an anomaly that
year, being one of only two freshman Democrats elected to the Senate,
compared with 16 Republicans.
Over the years, there is no question that when it came to matters of
policy, Ronald Reagan and I disagreed, in a
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very fundamental way, on a great many occasions.
But in today's very partisan atmosphere, it is easy to forget that
personality can be much more important than agreements and
disagreements. Many of the qualities that distinguished Ronald Reagan--
as a president, as a leader, as an individual--went beyond policies and
politics.
Ronald Reagan was one of our Nation's most personable presidents. His
congeniality, wit and trademark sense of humor could bring a smile to
the face of even the most ardent political opponent. And he had the
uncanny ability to communicate his thoughts to the American people.
As a Member of the opposite side of the political aisle, I had a
particular appreciation for Ronald Reagan's openness. As we all know,
President Reagan was a man of great conviction. It wasn't easy to
change his mind. But he was willing to sit down and talk. He was open
to listening to views that were different from his own, even if he
ultimately chose to disagree with them. Ronald Reagan was able, as the
saying goes, to disagree without being disagreeable.
Though we had our differences on many issues, I would never doubt for
a minute Ronald Reagan's commitment to this Nation, just as I don't
believe he doubted the patriotism of his political adversaries. Ronald
Reagan believed deeply in our country and in its values, and in its
place in the history of humankind. He correctly saw the former Soviet
Union, with its regime of repression, imprisonment, and stifling of the
individual spirit, as antithetical to everything in which we believe.
He presided over a historic time period during which we witnessed the
beginnings of a dramatic, global political sea change.
Ronald Reagan was a leader who reflected the optimism and spirit of
this great Nation. At the time he was elected president, our country
was experiencing a crisis of confidence. Many wondered if America's
best days were behind it. Ronald Reagan had an unflagging belief in
America, and he helped restore a sense of possibility in our land.
As a society, we often elevate our public figures to practically
mythological proportions, and our presidents are no exception. Towards
the end of Ronald Reagan's life, though, we were reminded of his
humanity. All of us, particularly those of us who have watched a loved
one struggle late in life, were inspired by the dignity, grace, and
courage with which he and his family battled a terrible and devastating
disease--a disease that ultimately took Ronald Reagan, in the words of
his wife Nancy, to a place where she could no longer reach him.
Many tributes have been and will be paid to President Reagan's
memory. But I can't think of a greater tribute than to commit our
Nation to fully researching the causes of, and cures for, diseases like
Alzheimer's that cause such great suffering for such great numbers of
people.
At this difficult time, my heart goes out to Nancy and the entire
Reagan family. America celebrated with you on so many happy occasions.
This week, we all join you in your sorrow.
I yield the floor.
Mr. JEFFORDS. Mr. President, I join my colleagues in remembering our
Nation's 40th President, Ronald Reagan, who passed away last weekend at
his home in Bel-Air, CA.
Of course, much has already been said, both in this Chamber and in
the media, about the legend of his large life. His career in movies,
his entry into politics and, of course, his two terms as President
during a most tumultuous time have been well documented in the past
several days.
By all of these accounts, Ronald Reagan was a most admired
politician, and while he and I had our policy differences, I have
always shared in that admiration.
Ronald Reagan held true to a strong conservative philosophy, which
often made it hard for the two of us to find common ground. I was a
Member of the House of Representatives during his 8 years as President,
and you might say I was often a thorn in his side. We were on opposing
sides when it came to many issues, most notably tax cuts and funding
for the arts.
But through all of our sometimes heated discussions and debates, it
was so evident to me that President Reagan held a deep and abiding
passion for his country, and an equally deep conviction for what he
believed was right.
As Americans take time this week to honor the life of President
Reagan, it is that passion and conviction that they will remember and
reflect upon. I believe, that those memories of our Nation's 40th
President will inspire our future leaders.
I extend my condolences to his wife Nancy, and to the entire Reagan
family on the passing of President Ronald Reagan. May the memories of
his life's accomplishments sustain them in their time of grief, and may
the Nation's prayers bring them comfort.
Mrs. LINCOLN. Mr. President, I rise today to pay tribute to former
President Ronald Wilson Reagan, our Nation's 40th President.
Like many Americans, I admired President Reagan's eternal optimism
and his belief in America and her people.
I am struck by the numbers of mourners who have paid their respects
to our former President. The outpouring of respect and grief is a
testament to the great impact that he had on so many Americans. I am
sure that one of the reasons so many have taken time to honor President
Reagan is because of the great optimism and purpose that he showed. His
trust in the fundamental decency and goodness of the American people is
a guide and inspiration to us all.
I admired his sense of civility and his ability to disagree with his
opponents without being disagreeable. He fought hard for the policies
in which he believed, but after the fight, he shook hands and moved on.
We need more of that kind of statesmanship in Washington today. And I
hope my colleagues will join me in trying to follow his example.
During one of our Nation's greatest challenges--the cold war--
President Reagan was a strong voice against the enemies of freedom. His
leadership and vision helped us to overcome our enemies.
In the final years of his life, he and Mrs. Reagan were an example of
the kind of sacrifice and love that we should all seek to emulate. Mrs.
Reagan's quiet dignity and support for her husband during the most
difficult of times should be an inspiration to us all.
My thoughts and prayers go out to his wife, Nancy, his sons, Michael
and Ronald, Jr., and his daughter, Patty.
Ronald Reagan lived a full life and was a great American. His
contributions to the American political system and to our way of life
will not soon be forgotten.
Ms. STABENOW. Mr. President, I rise today to pay tribute to Ronald
Reagan, our Nation's 40th President. First, my condolences and prayers
go out to Nancy Reagan, the Reagan family, and all of those who are
mourning his passing.
Ronald Reagan was an optimist. He was the best kind of optimist--a
living example of the fulfillment of the American dream. From a small
Midwestern town, he rose to become leader of the free world and was
respected around the world by both our allies and our Soviet bloc
opponents alike.
President Reagan was called the Great Communicator for a reason. Many
of his speeches touched the heartstrings of all Americans. Whether it
was his speech at the Berlin Wall or his 1984 tribute to those who died
on D-Day, President Reagan always conveyed a positive, optimistic sense
of our shared destiny. His words will long be remembered.
President Reagan loved America, and this love for our country shaded
every word he spoke to the Nation as President. He always wanted our
country to be the ``shining city'' on a hill.
I also pay tribute and convey my genuine respect to our former First
Lady Nancy Reagan, a woman whose unwavering commitment to her husband
not only provided a testament to their love but also extended hope and
empathy to countless Americans who share in the role of caregiver.
As we begin now to consider ways to pay proper tribute to our admired
former President, let us go beyond the erecting of a monument or the
etching of a portrait. Instead let us act to help the many Americans
who needlessly suffer from the debilitating effects of Alzheimer's
disease.
[[Page S6667]]
We should increase research funding for Alzheimer's and expand stem
cell research, which Nancy Reagan supports.
I am pleased to be a cosponsor of a Mikulski-Bond bill that will
double our investment in Alzheimer's research and refocus our efforts
to find a cure. This bipartisan measure, if passed, would leave a
lasting legacy to President Reagan.
Earlier this month, I joined with 57 other Members of this body, both
Republican and Democrat alike, to urge President Bush to broaden the
current Federal policy regarding stem cell research. By expanding stem
cell research beyond those stem cells derived by August 9, 2001, we
will take the necessary first step of helping millions of Americans who
are plagued by Alzheimer's--Americans, who like President Reagan, live
out their daily lives traveling an unknowable journey of solitude.
If we allow the medical experts to do stem cell research, we can
begin the work Mrs. Reagan so steadfastly promotes: finding a cure to
this devastating disease.
To find a cure of Alzheimer's would indeed be the greatest tribute we
could ever give to President Reagan.
In this time of grief, let us evoke President Reagan's gentlemanly
service, swift wit, jovial candor, and unconditional patriotism. With
differences in philosophy and politics aside, let's all praise a man
whose decorum and distinguished character exemplified the office for
which he held.
Mr. CONRAD. Mr. President, I want to take a few moments today to join
my colleagues in celebrating the life of our 40th President, Ronald
Wilson Reagan.
In many ways, Ronald Reagan embodied the American dream. He was born
in the small town of Tampico, IL, and grew up 30 miles down the road in
Dixon, another small town. His was a normal, middle class American
family, and he was the all-American boy-next-door: Good-looking,
popular, an actor, and an athlete. And from that modest background he
fulfilled the American democratic ideal that anybody can grow up to
become President of the United States.
That ideal--that anyone can grow up to become President--captures
America's optimism, so it is fitting that the word that comes most to
mind when remembering President Reagan is exactly that: optimism.
President Reagan was an incurable and infectious optimist when it came
to America. By insisting that, as he said, it was morning again in
America, he connected with Americans, lifted their spirits, and
restored their confidence in our future.
This power to communicate and connect with Americans from all walks
of life was central to his success as President. He could sway skeptics
and charm supporters with his simple eloquence and self-deprecating
wit. People came to know him and feel comfortable with him; and they
were moved by his simple, clear messages. President Reagan perfected
the art of selling his policies to the American people and using that
ability to pressure Congress to work his will. Not surprisingly, the
Great Communicator, as he came to be known, left office with the
highest approval rating of any recent President.
President Reagan was one of the truly larger than life figures of the
post World War II era. He brought a new conservative philosophy to the
White House, and he championed freedom at home and abroad. One of the
reasons for his success, I believe, was his willingness to compromise,
to put aside partisan politics and ideological purity to do what was
right for the country. When his 1981 tax cuts caused deficits to
skyrocket, President Reagan supported tax increases in 1982 and 1983 to
contain the damage. After tagging the Soviet Union as the Evil Empire,
he negotiated historic arms control treaties with the Soviets, coining
the famous phrase ``trust, but verify'' in the process. He had, as his
chief of staff Howard Baker once put it, ``a capacity to surprise.''
And throughout it all, he was a wonderful man, someone who you
couldn't help but enjoy being with. I met with president Reagan several
times during the last years of his presidency. The last time I was with
him, President Reagan was telling two or three of us in the White House
an Irish story full of warmth and wit. I believe that best describes
President Reagan himself--a man of endearing wit and great personal
warmth.
As America mourns his passing, my thoughts and prayers are with Nancy
and the rest of President Reagan's family and many, many friends. It is
my hope that their memories of his life, laughter, and legacy will be
of some small comfort in these days and weeks ahead.
Mr. CORZINE. Mr. President, on Saturday, June 5, 2004, President
Ronald Wilson Reagan, the 40th President of the United States, passed
away after a decade-long battle with Alzheimer's disease. I extend my
deepest sympathies to the members of his family, who have suffered a
terrible loss, and I want them to know that Americans throughout our
Nation, regardless of their political party or ideology, share in their
loss and mourn with them.
Ronald Reagan was an exceptional national leader who loved this
country and its people. He will long be remembered for his infectious
optimism and his faith in America's future. To President Reagan,
America was always a shining city on a hill--a beacon of hope for all
mankind. He understood just what a great country America is, and always
remained a committed advocate for the ideal of freedom that helps
define us as Americans.
President Reagan was known as the Great Communicator, and he richly
deserved the accolade. Few politicians, if any, have had his ability
not just to connect with the American people but to inspire them. His
speeches didn't just make a point, they touched a chord. He talked to
Americans in a powerful and personal way.
As is widely understood, Ronald Reagan had strongly held views about
public policy, from his support for lower taxes to his strong
anticommunism. But as is less widely appreciated, President Reagan was
not inflexible or dogmatic. He actually was a practical and pragmatic
leader who was willing to adjust his approach, sometimes dramatically,
when circumstances called for change.
For example, after pushing through a large tax cut at the start of
his Presidency, he reversed course and increased taxes when the deficit
started to explode. Perhaps most importantly, after denouncing the
Soviets as an ``evil empire,'' he was willing to work closely and
cooperatively with Mikhail Gorbachev, helping not only to end the cold
war but to liberate millions of people and change the course of world
history. In doing so, he was not following his party. He was not
following the polls. He was following his conscience. And the entire
world community owes him a deep debt of gratitude for his vision and
his leadership.
There were many issues about which I strongly disagreed with
President Reagan. But I always had great respect for him personally and
for the way he conducted himself while in office. President Reagan knew
how to disagree without being disagreeable. He knew that those in the
other party were not enemies. He knew that, at the end of the day, we
are all Americans and, though we may disagree about particular
policies, we all share a love of our country and a commitment to its
future.
President Reagan's life was marked by his fundamental personal
decency and his sense of dignity. That was never more evident than when
he announced to the world his struggle with Alzheimer's disease in
1994. His and Nancy Reagan's courageous fight against this debilitating
disease brought a new awareness to the devastation that accompanies
this illness. I hope it also will bring a new commitment to do what it
takes to find a cure for this horrible affliction.
In conclusion, Americans throughout our Nation are saddened at the
passing of President Reagan, and our hearts go out to his family.
Ronald Reagan was an extraordinary man whose impact on our Nation, and
our world, will be felt for generations to come. Today, we join
together to honor his memory and to give thanks for his historic
service on behalf of the country he loved so deeply.
Mr. KYL. Mr. President, Robert Robb is one of the great columnists in
American journalism today, and his tribute to Ronald Reagan is among
his best work. I ask unanimous consent to have the following article
printed in the Record.
[[Page S6668]]
There being no objection, the article was ordered to be printed in
the Record, as follows:
[From the Arizona Republic, June 9, 2004]
My First Fan Letter Was Signed ``Reagan''
(By Robert Robb)
Ronald Reagan wrote my first fan letter.
When he announced for president in 1976, I was editor of
the student newspaper at Occidental College in Los Angeles.
The Los Angeles Times had developed an obsessive dislike
for Reagan. And it pounded on his announcement speech,
denouncing it and him for superficiality and a lack of
specifics.
Of course, it's standard fare for announcement speeches to
enunciate broad themes. And the only thing that would have
unhinged the Times more than a lack of specifics form Reagan
would have been if he had been specific.
And so I wrote a column for the student newspaper having a
bit of sport with the Times' hypocrisy and disequilibrium.
Not much later, I was astonished to receive a letter from
Reagan. Apparently being defended in a student newspaper was
an unusual enough event to catch the attention of his
campaign.
Reagan thanked me for my ``generous words,'' and allowed
that ``a great part of my pleasure was your masterful
handling of the Times.
That purposeful understatement was characteristic of Reagan
in political combat. He was far more inclined to give his
opponents a gentle and humorous poke in the ribs, rather than
a rhetorical knife in the stomach--a restraint he maintained
even as the invective and bile against him mounted.
Bill Buckley invented modern American conservatism--a
sometimes uneasy blend of anti-communism, free-market
economics and traditional cultural values inspired and
informed by religious faith. Barry Goldwater launched it as a
political movement.
But Ronald Reagan embodied the conservative movement. He
was the glue that held its factions and strands together long
enough, for a time, to be politically triumphant.
This was no small feat. American conservatism is more
naturally a dissenting movement than a governing one.
Yet Reagan not only governed, he transformed the country,
indeed the world.
What began as Reagan Democrats are now simply Republicans,
and the Republican Party now competes with the Democratic
Party for majority status, rather than the semi-permanent
minority role the party seemed consigned to before Reagan.
To complete with Reaganism, Democrats had to overcome their
legacy from the 1960s and 1970s, a belief that there was as
much wrong as right about America. Democrats reconciled
themselves to America's essential goodness, as well as its
defining institutions and values: free markets, enterprise,
faith and family.
Bill Clinton was a reaction to Reaganism, and today's
Republican Party, unfortunately, is as much a reaction to
Clintonism as it is a legitimate heir to Reaganism.
Winston Churchill believed that history was the story of
great men altering its course. In his History of the English
Speaking Peoples, writing about Alfred the Great, who united
much of modern-day England in the ninth century, Churchill
described his ``sublime power to rise above the whole force
of circumstances.''
As much as Reagan dominated and transformed the domestic
political landscape, his greatness--his sublime power to rise
above the whole force of circumstances--was in the way he
managed the Soviet Union and communism.
Early in his presidency, Reagan described the Soviet Union
as an evil empire and said it and Marxism-Leninism would be
deposited on the ``ash heap of history.''
This was denounced by foreign policy sophisticates at the
time as naive and dangerously provocative.
Yet he quickly embraced Mikhail Gorbachev, who gained power
in 1985, and his perestoika reforms. This made conservatives
highly nervous, and they openly wondered whether Reagan was
being had.
But Reagan, having lived through the Hungarian and Polish
rebellions, intuited that the Soviet Union could not both
liberalize and remain intact.
Reagan also knew the moment to apply pressure, as in 1987,
when he stood before the Berlin Wall and, against the advice
of his entire foreign policy team, famously called upon
Gorbachev to tear it down.
A few years later, I was in Berlin, after the wall had been
torn down figuratively, but not yet physically. You could
travel freely in eastern Berlin, but it was like Dorothy
stepping from black-and-white into the colorful land of Oz,
only in reverse--from the vibrant feel of a free people into
the still-stale desolation of the repression of the human
soul.
You could visit the wall and even take a blow against it
yourself. So, I clawed loose a few chunks and brought them
home.
They're mounted now, pieces of history's sadness and joy. I
can never look at those chunks of concrete without thinking
about Ronald Reagan, a champion of freedom for our time.
Mr. EDWARDS. Mr. President, I rise today to pay tribute to the late
President Ronald Reagan.
We were of different parties and very different political
philosophies but I respected him as a strong leader--a man of principle
and dignity. He was also good-natured and affable, never letting
political differences drag him down into bitter partisanship.
I was always impressed with President Reagan's ability to communicate
and persuade and his talent for soothing our Nation in difficult times.
In good times and bad, he sought to appeal to the best in all of us, to
our hopes and better instincts, not our doubts and fears. And while he
enjoyed a good political fight, he never demonized his opponents or
accused those who differed with him of being unpatriotic. Ronald Reagan
seemed to understand that we could disagree without being disagreeable
and that we all love our country, even as we debate the best way to
move toward a more perfect Union. All of us can learn from his example.
As we pay tribute to our 40th President, this man who rose from
humble beginnings to the greatest heights, I offer my condolences to
Nancy Reagan and the Reagan family. I join my colleagues in saying
farewell to Ronald Reagan, a modest man who was larger than life.
Thank you, President Reagan, for your service to our Nation and for
the important example you set for us all.
Mr. BYRD. Mr. President, on Saturday, our Nation lost a good man and
a great American, the 40th President of the United States, Ronald
Wilson Reagan.
A former sports announcer, actor, television performer, and Governor,
this man from a small mid-western town was eventually elected to our
Nation's highest office, not once, but twice, in landslide victories.
His was a success story, an American success story. He demonstrated
that the key to the American dream is still determination, hard work,
and perseverance. He did it by appealing to our ``best hopes,'' not
``our worst fears.''
Historians will study and evaluate the impact of the Reagan
administration--his role in ending the cold war and the results of his
domestic policies.
What is beyond debate was his uncanny ability to connect with the
American people. He knew where he wanted to take the country and
attempted to do it with remarkable determination and charm. He restored
a much needed sense of optimism in America, and he did it with a
cheerfulness that was absolutely contagious.
His optimism was prevalent and penetrating and inspiring even during
the darkest moments of his administration. With the Challenger
explosion, we grieved and despaired, but when President Reagan spoke of
how those courageous astronauts reached out and ``touched the face of
God,'' suddenly all of us realized that we, as a country, would make it
through this grievous hour, and the American adventure into space would
go on. He was truly the Great Communicator.
I came to know and work with Mr. Reagan from a unique and important
perspective. I was the leader of the opposition party in the U.S.
Senate during both of President Reagan's terms.
From this position, I came to understand and appreciate, probably
even more than his strongest supporters, his hold on the American
people, and the importance of the leadership that he provided.
In fact, I found him to be as charming in person as he was when
speaking to an audience or appearing on television.
Never once did I hear him engage in personal attacks on his
challengers.
When we disagreed, which was more often than not, it was always in
civil tones. He was always smiling, patting you on the back, asking you
about your family, and wishing you the best. You simply could not help
but like him. He seemed not to confuse differences of opinion with
differences of ideals or values. After all, he liked to point out, ``we
are all Americans.''
That is the way American politics is supposed to be. That was the
decency of Ronald Wilson Reagan. He might consider me a political
opponent, but never a personal enemy. Just as I understood his
difficulties as the leader of the free world during 8 years of trial
and turmoil, he understood my role as the loyal opposition
As much as I admired and respected him when he was President, never
was
[[Page S6669]]
my appreciation for him and his wife Nancy stronger than in their
dealing with his last and greatest struggle--the struggle he eloquently
and heartbreakingly called the ``journey'' that would lead him ``into
the sunset'' of his life--his battle with Alzheimer's disease. He and
Nancy confronted this cruel, crippling disease with an openness and
dignity that inspired a Nation.
Mr. President, my wife Erma and I extend our most heartfelt
condolences to Mrs. Reagan. She has been an inspiration to America,
gracefully fulfilling the role of loyal, loving spouse even as she has
watched her greatest love drift away into the fog of Alzheimer's. In
the years when they should have been able to enjoy the warm memories of
their storybook life together, she endured personal emotional tortures
that are difficult to imagine. In these last years, the vigilance and
caring she displayed throughout their marriage led her to become an
outspoken advocate for medical research, a role for which she has
earned the immense respect and gratitude of the Nation.
A Sunset Fancy
(A poem by an unknown author)
I saw the sun sink in the golden west
No angry cloud obscured its latest ray;
Around the couch on which it sank to rest
Shone all the splendors of a summer day,
And long--though lost of view--its radiant light
Reflected from the skies, delayed the night.
Thus when a good man's life comes to a close,
No doubts arise to cloud his soul with gloom;
But faith triumphant on each feature glows
And benedictions fill the sacred room;
And long do men his virtues wide proclaim,
And generations rise to bless his name.
Mr. President, I yield the floor and suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. FRIST. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. FRIST. Mr. President, for the information of Senators, we are
going to do our wrap-up business, have a couple of closing statements,
and then we will adjourn for the ceremony tonight.
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