[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 24 (Wednesday, February 24, 2010)]
[House]
[Page H800]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REMEMBERING REPRESENTATIVE JACK P. MURTHA
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under a previous order of the House, the
gentleman from Georgia (Mr. Kingston) is recognized for 5 minutes.
Mr. KINGSTON. Mr. Speaker, I rise as a friend and mourn and share the
loss not just to the Murtha family, the State of Pennsylvania, but to
the entire Nation, and certainly every man and woman wearing a uniform.
I was proud to know Jack Murtha, proud to serve in the U.S. Congress
with Jack Murtha. He was a bipartisan guy. He was a knowledgeable guy.
He was a hardworking guy.
The military budget in appropriations is over $500 billion. It is a
very thick bill. You have to know airplanes from submarines, from tanks
to battleships. Jack Murtha knew that, and he would study it very
deeply.
Jack Murtha, though, beyond being a professional Congressman, taught
this Chamber many things.
For one thing, I learned as a guy who came up through some partisan
battles and some nonpartisan battles that the Murtha-McDade
relationship almost cast a certain circle around the State of
Pennsylvania that made it a special place, that the Pennsylvania
delegation had something that the other States did not have, and that
was two great leaders--Republican and Democrat--who kind of set the
tone not just for the entire State but for the rest of us to see how
things could be. And indeed, the Pennsylvania delegation has still had
great fellowship because of that legacy.
It was also reflected in his relationship with Bill Young. I can't
tell you what a joy it has been for all Members of Congress who come
and often see the battles that are so epitomized on the talk shows and
the name calling and so forth, and you think that is Congress. And then
you go into a committee room and you see Bill Young and Jack Murtha
working together, not always agreeing but always affectionate and
always having great respect for what the other one had to say.
And indeed, I can tell you as somebody who served here 18 years,
sometimes you couldn't tell who was chairman. They were that close and
that united and that focused on what was best for the troops. What a
great relationship. And again, what a great example for the rest of us.
Jack Murtha was an old-school guy. He liked to have his bill done in
a hurry. In fact, the chairman, Mr. Obey is there, and he knows while
it was one of the largest bills, it was also one of the fastest bills
to be passed so many times. He knew exactly where he wanted to go long
before the hearing started.
I remember I had an amendment that had to do with electronic
verification of social security numbers for people working on Federal
contracts. The chairman didn't like it. And I remember Mr. Murtha--I
submitted it, I worked the committee, the subcommittee very carefully,
and he said, ``Kingston, we're not going to do that.'' That was it.
That was my hearing. And when he said that, you knew that was it. The
curtain was closed. The case was over.
And this same chairman could turn around and say to you, you've got a
problem in Hinesville, Georgia, little old Hinesville, Georgia, a speck
on the map, that because it's the home of Fort Stewart, the 3rd
Infantry was expecting two more brigades, went out and built a lot of
roads and schools and infrastructure in preparation for another
brigade.
And then the Pentagon made a turn and decided not to send it to them.
And who stood up for Hinesville, Georgia? Jack Murtha. Who did I go to
and say, Look, if we're going to make this happen, we've got to do
something to help these people because the Pentagon has done them
wrong. They stood tall for the military but now the military has let
them down. We're not going to let that happen. And Jack Murtha pulled
through. Not just on that issue but time and time again.
Jack Murtha loved the United States of America. Jack Murtha loved the
military. Jack Murtha loved the soldiers. He stood up not just for
them, but for their families over and over again.
Congress has lost a great leader, as has the State and the United
States of America. But the American soldiers have lost a true friend
and a passionate guy who would do anything for the man and woman in
uniform.
I say God bless Jack Murtha and his memory and everything he has done
for the United States of America.
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