[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 89 (Tuesday, June 15, 2010)]
[House]
[Pages H4427-H4437]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
RECEPTION OF FORMER MEMBERS OF CONGRESS
The Speaker pro tempore presided.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. On behalf of the House, I consider it a high
honor and a distinct personal privilege to have the opportunity of
welcoming so many of our former Members and colleagues as may be
present here for this occasion. We all pause to welcome them.
The Chair now calls on the Honorable John J. Rhodes, president of the
association, to take the chair.
Mr. RHODES (presiding). It is my pleasure at this point in time to
yield the floor to the vice president of the association and my great
friend, the gentleman from Michigan, Mr. Hertel, for the purpose of
making a presentation.
Mr. HERTEL. I thank the gentleman from Arizona.
It is always a distinct privilege to be back in this revered Chamber,
and we appreciate the opportunity to present today the annual report of
the U.S. Association of Former Members of Congress.
Our association's president, Jay Rhodes of Arizona, along with some
of our colleagues, will report on the activities and projects of our
organization. Before we get to this report, however, it is my distinct
honor and pleasure to present our 2010 Distinguished Service Award to
William H. Gray of the great State of Pennsylvania.
Bestowing our association's highest award on Bill Gray was an easy
decision and one that was long overdue. The reward recognizes
distinguished
[[Page H4428]]
service, and few Members have served their community and country with
more distinction than Bill Gray did before, during and after his years
here on Capitol Hill.
Majority Whip Gray embodies the spirit of our award, having spent his
post-congressional career as an education leader, which he believes is
his higher calling for our entire country. As president and CEO of the
United Negro College Fund, he worked to elevate historically black
colleges, and believes they provide vital educational bridges that need
continued support. We are thrilled to honor him today. Bill, please
join me here at the dais.
You know, Bill first of all had to have the political hard sense and
experience to become the whip to be elected by the caucus. And then
once he was the whip, on a daily and weekly basis he had to lead us and
be able to count those votes in such a political way. So it is not just
education and public service, it is being one of the greatest
politicians that we have had in the history of our House. On behalf of
the U.S. Association of Former Members of Congress, it is a great
pleasure and honor for to me to present our 2010 Distinguished Service
Award to William H. Gray of Pennsylvania.
The plaque is inscribed as followed:
The 2010 Distinguished Service Award is presented by the United
States Association of Former Members of Congress to Chairman William
Herbert Gray, III, for his lifetime of exceptional public service. Both
in and out of Congress, Minister Bill Gray has demonstrated his
tremendous dedication to civil rights, fairness and equality.
Representing the State of Pennsylvania with great distinction, he
served as the first African-American majority whip and the first
African-American chairman of the House Budget Committee. His leadership
helped young Americans obtain the dream of a college education, his
perseverance contributed to the fall of apartheid, and his humanity
brought relief to the people of Haiti. Congressman Bill Gray is an
inspiration to us all, and his former colleagues from both sides of the
political aisle salute him today.
Mr. GRAY. Thank you to the president, the distinguished gentleman
from Arizona, to my former colleague from Michigan, to all of you who
are here, those who I had the privilege of serving with, and those that
I have known over the years through outstanding service since or
before.
It is a real privilege and a pleasure to be here today and to receive
this award because of the group that is making it, the former Members
of Congress who gave service not only when they were elected officials,
but continue to give service, inspiring fellow Americans to get
involved in public service and understand that democracy must have
participation by all of its citizens.
Sometimes the debate can get kind of tough. But one thing we all
learned long ago, and that is that civility is the cement that holds
the bricks of democracy together. And so we must always keep in mind in
our public service that although we disagree, we can never have the
point that we reach in our society where we think of each other as evil
because of our disagreements. We are all fellow Americans fighting for
the best.
I want to recognize one of our former Members, because in a way our
partnership symbolizes that civility, that working together, even
though we probably in the 10 or 12 years that we spent together here in
the House of Representatives, he and I never voted alike on anything,
not even the approval of the Journal, I don't think. He was from Texas,
from San Antonio, and a rock-ribbed conservative, and I was from
Philadelphia, a rock-ribbed progressive, and today we are partners in a
firm. And that is Tom Loeffler, who came to the House about the same
time as I did, and yet today we are working together.
So I want to thank all of the members of the Former Members
Association for this outstanding award. I enjoyed immensely my years on
this floor and in this body serving with so many of you. I have enjoyed
immensely my work in education. But above all, I have enjoyed my work
of 45 years as a Baptist preacher.
Today I thank you for this award, and continue to say what my father
said to me years ago. He said, ``Service is the rent you pay in the
house of democracy.'' Thank you, and let us continue to work together
to pay good rent for the next generation and broaden the house of
democracy.
Thank you, Mr. President.
Mr. RHODES. Congressman Gray, thank you very much for being with us
today, and for all that you have done for this institution, and this
country, and for our God. Thanks, Bill. I appreciate it.
I am going to yield the chair in a moment to the gentleman from
Michigan to preside over the balance of the meeting. I want to take a
special moment--actually, I am going to take several special moments,
because the majority leader has entered the Chamber, and it's my hope
that he will have some comments and remarks to make for us.
Mr. HOYER. Good morning and welcome back.
Many of you, of course, visit on a relatively regular basis. Others
of you we don't get to see as often. I now have been here long enough
to know almost all of you, and have served with almost all of you. And
I am always pleased to join here to welcome you back to the House.
I have my own Connie Morella from Maryland and Bev Byron. You know
the story about Bev Byron. We met in 1962. She was wondering who this
skinny kid was who had written to her husband, ``Dear President
Byron.'' He was president of the Young Democrats of Maryland. And I
signed it ``Steny Hamilton Hoyer,'' and she has not let me forget the
officiousness of that letter.
But I am so pleased to be with all of you. I have lamented on
numerous occasions welcoming you here that when I first came here it
was 1981, and clearly the partisanship was starting to elevate.
All of you know, because I have said on so many different occasions,
what respect and deep, deep affection I have for Bob Michel. Respect in
the sense that I thought he brought the best of what the American
people want and represented to the House of Representatives. He brought
a philosophical judgment as to what policies we ought to support,
direction the country ought to go, but he also brought a deep
conviction that what the American public expected of us was to work
together, respect one another, and try to do the best that we could for
the American people.
Unfortunately, as all of you have seen, we are a deeply polarized
Congress. That does not mean that we don't sit down together and talk
about issues from time to time. Leader Boehner has just walked in. He
and I are working on a joint enterprise that we think may have some
real positive effect. And hopefully, we can win the day on that issue.
But for the most part, we are not working together as collegially as I
think the American public would like us to do.
The problems that confront our country, as all of you know, are very,
very substantial. We have an immediate crisis, the oil crisis, which
has given to the American public a sense of almost helplessness that
their government is not responding in a way that can stop this oil from
leaking. Clearly, BP and the entire oil industry has extraordinary
incentive to do that. They have been technically unable to do it. We
are in deep water both figuratively and literally on this issue.
John and I were on a television program on Sunday morning together on
which we both agreed that, A, BP ought to be held responsible, and B,
we need to do everything we possibly could to not only stop the oil,
but to help those who have been hurt, which nobody can contemplate
exactly how broad that will be.
The other issue that we are grappling with that I feel keenly about
that has gotten cumulatively worse during the 30 years that I have been
here, and that is the fiscal crisis that confronts our country. We are
in deep debt. We are approaching or about at 90 percent of GDP in terms
of our debt load. We are moving towards 100 percent. No country in the
world can sustain that kind of debt load for very long and remain
healthy, vibrant, and growing.
So we need your continued wisdom and counsel. Notwithstanding the
fact you are not voting, you are all very, very influential people in
this country and in your States and in your districts still. And your
voice is needed, as we try to reach some bipartisan consensus on how to
achieve a more positive fiscal picture confronting our country.
[[Page H4429]]
But notwithstanding those serious issues, as someone who just turned
71 yesterday, and I am sending the message to my constituents that I
have no intention of retiring; I hope they have no intention of
retiring me. I enjoy my service here. I continue. And I enjoyed serving
with all of you on both sides of the aisle.
So on behalf of Speaker Pelosi, John will speak for himself,
obviously, but I know in a very bipartisan way we welcome all of you
back here. We enjoy seeing you. We enjoy reminiscing about the good
times, about the challenges, and about how we got things done, and how
we might apply those lessons of the past to the solving of the problems
that confront us today.
So thank you all very, very much. Enjoy this day, and make sure that
you come back on a regular basis to give us, as I said, not only advice
and counsel, but perhaps even encouragement. Not everybody in America,
as you have noticed, is giving us encouragement.
You know, the bad news for Democrats is that we are very low down in
the polls. The good news for Democrats is Republicans are there with
us. They don't like any of us. They don't think any of us have got it.
So working together, perhaps we can reinstate their confidence and
reinstate a positive, more confident America as we move forward, as you
have done when you served America so well in this body. Thank you very
much.
I now, if I might, the distinguished gentleman from Arizona, I know
he wants to recognize him, but I would be pleased to yield to my friend
with whom I from time to time have the opportunity to work together,
but always try to have a cordial and positive relationship with, the
Republican leader, Mr. Boehner.
Mr. RHODES. Mr. Hoyer, my wife and I own a little piece of property
in Calvert County which happens to be in a major part of your district,
and one of the things that we constantly notice is between Prince
Frederick and Solomon's Island, roughly every half mile there is a post
office. Now, I know that you and everybody else thinks that earmarks
are not good, but you are not going to be defeated as long as you keep
building those post offices.
Mr. HOYER. I appreciate your confidence, Mr. Speaker.
Mr. RHODES. The Chair recognizes the Republican leader.
Mr. BOEHNER. Mr. Speaker, this is the first time in my 20 years here
that I have seen the Speaker lobbying from the podium.
Let me welcome all of my colleagues here to the Capitol today. There
are a good number of you. I would hope that some of you would work to
get more of your colleagues to come back for what really is a very
special day, and we, on a bipartisan basis, really do welcome you and
glad to see many of you. Some of you, this is the only day of the year
I get to see; others I get to see a little more often, like these two
over here.
To Bill Gray, congratulations. Bill Gray has spent a lifetime of
service to his country, whether it was the years that he spent here,
the years that he spent with a number of organizations where he has
provided exemplary service, and I am very pleased that Bill is being
honored today by all of you. He and I had a chance to serve together. I
was a young pup, he was one of the senior leaders in the other party,
but we still always had an opportunity to talk to one another.
As all of you know, we continue, as Steny said, to face big
challenges, and what is really of interest to me and I'm sure to Steny
is the political rebellion that is going on in America today. I have
never seen anything like this. When you look at what is happening,
we've got people who have been driven off the couch, off their easy
chair, away from their TV, and into the streets protesting what their
government is doing. The result of this, we will see what happens in
November, but it really is--there's nothing short of a political
rebellion going on in the country, something like I have never seen in
my lifetime. It is creating more challenges for the Members that are
here and clearly will create challenges for candidates on both sides of
the aisle as we get into November.
Let me just once again say thank you for being here. Anytime that we
can be of service to all of you, we would certainly like to do that.
Mr. RHODES. Thank you, Mr. Leader.
I wasn't aware that I was lobbying, but if that's the way you take
it, then that's fine.
I am going to yield the chair to the gentleman from Michigan, but
before I do, I want to pay special recognition to my Republican leader,
Bob Michel, and to three individuals who were elected at the same time
that I was in 1986: Jack Buechner, Ernie Konnyu and Connie Morella. I
appreciate you being here.
The Chair recognizes the gentleman from Michigan.
Mr. HERTEL. I thank the gentleman from Arizona.
I want to thank the majority leader who has always taken the time to
participate with us and to welcome us here on the House floor but has
always participated in our other activities, too, and encouraged us to
continue in serving our country in the capacity of former Members. He
reminds me of 30 years ago when he talked about Minority Leader Bob
Michel, who we all looked to for advice, and those times of, as he
said, really the beginning of increased partisanship.
But just as Majority Leader Hoyer and Mr. Boehner were last year at
our golf tournament for the wounded warriors playing golf and there
were some press excerpts of them working together, the majority leader
has always reached out to the other side because, while we have
partisan differences, as I saw with him back 30 years ago with our
esteemed Speaker Tip O'Neill and our revered minority leader, Bob
Michel, they were able to show us how you fight for what you believe
in, you fight for your partisan position, you fight for your party
position, but in the end, you're elected by the people to serve this
country and to reach the best accommodation and policy in the interest
of the United States for the future and the people of our country.
In that light, the president of our association, Jay Rhodes, has set
up a bipartisan day tomorrow where we have former Speakers of the
House, Foley and Hastert, and Dick Gephardt and others coming forward,
a full day over at the National Archives to talk about the need for
bipartisanship and what it has meant in the past. I know of Tip
O'Neill's great respect for Bob Michel; I know of Tip O'Neill's great
love for Jerry Ford, who was minority leader and then President of the
United States; and there was never anybody who would give an inch on an
issue that he believed in than Speaker O'Neill and neither was there
from President Ford from my State of Michigan. And yet as partisan as
they were in their leadership, there is no one in this country who
doesn't know how their leadership really was embodied for the entire
Nation and the people of this country, to serve them and to move things
forward.
That's the example that we see, just as we saw yesterday Minority
Leader Boehner coming out to our golf tournament again for the wounded
warriors and showing his leadership again today by welcoming us with
the majority leader and the comity that they have in working together
on policy issues for our country.
Again, I am reminded of the foresight of our leader from Arizona,
having this bipartisan day tomorrow, but not just a day. It's a
yearlong program that he has established to talk about the need for
bipartisanship and the examples of bipartisanship in our future.
So, today, I would like to ask President Jay Rhodes to step down here
to the dais with me, and before you deliver our association's report to
the Congress of what has been going on this last year under your
leadership, I want to thank you for 2 years of outstanding leadership
as president of this organization. Our membership and board of
directors really appreciate all that you have done for the Former
Member Association, and we really can't capture all the time that
you've spent, all the hours, all the leadership, all of your iconic and
ironic wit that you've demonstrated in this last year of leadership and
also here on the House floor, but all the hard work you've done on our
international issues, on our national issues, on the Congress to Campus
program, Jay, and the way that you've taken time to listen to all the
members of our association to implement their ideas and to involve all
the different members of our association to move things forward.
[[Page H4430]]
So I would like you to come down here, Jay, because we have a special
plaque for you.
Mr. RHODES. I don't think it's appropriate to leave the chair
unattended.
Mr. HERTEL. Well, I will come up to you, then.
Let me read this, which is presented to the Honorable John J. Rhodes,
III:
In recognition and appreciation of his strong leadership as President
of the U.S. Association of Former Members of Congress. His tremendous
enthusiasm and effectiveness will always be remembered by his very
grateful colleagues.
Washington, D.C., June 15, 2010.
Jay, we want to thank you for all that you've done in your continued
service with us as a past president, how much we appreciate it. And we
are anxious to hear your report of our organization.
Mr. RHODES. Thank you, Mr. Soon-to-be-President Hertel. I have really
enjoyed the time that you and I have spent together, along with the
members of the board and the executive committee. I look forward to
continuing my relationship with the association, and I look forward to
your presidency--which is not formal yet, so don't get too excited.
I now yield the chair to the Honorable Dennis Hertel.
Mr. HERTEL (presiding). The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Indiana, Mike Pence, the Republican Conference Chair. Thank you for
coming.
Mr. PENCE. Thank you, Mr. President. Thank you all.
Those of you that don't watch C-SPAN incessantly may not know I serve
as the House Republican Conference Chairman now, and I am just honored
to be here with our former leader, a man deeply admired, and to see so
many familiar faces back on the floor, back in the people's House. To
Congressman Rhodes, it is wonderful to see you. Congratulations on a
great tenure in leadership.
Thank you all for being here. We just adjourned the House Republican
Conference, and I think you will see former colleagues and current
Members coming over to say hello. We just appreciate your continued
leadership. I appreciated what John Boehner said about your continued
role in the leadership of this country. So many of you have gone on
from Congress and played an even greater role in the life of this
Nation in various industry and philanthropic ways, and I want to
commend you for that.
But let me also say I want to commend Congressman Rhodes and our new
president for the call for bipartisanship. In the 9 years that I have
served on Capitol Hill, I remain convinced that we could learn an awful
lot from those who have gone before on this floor in this current time.
As we think about the extraordinary challenges facing this country at
home and abroad, the hard choices that we are going to have to be
making that can only be made if we act as Americans first and not on a
partisan basis, please know that we're going to continue to turn to the
men and women who have served in this place before.
We will have a competitive election, I expect, this fall. The
American people will decide what the composition of this place looks
like. I want to tell you as I came onto the floor and I saw a lot more
people on this side than on that side, it's kind of how it feels for us
Republicans right now, but whatever the American people decide. I want
to thank you for being here today. Thank you for your involvement in
the former Members group; some men and women that I have had the
privilege of serving with are here.
But I also want to challenge you, the extraordinary and intractable
problems--rising deficits and debts, a difficult economy--we need to
turn to the wisdom of the men and women who have been here before. We
need to turn to you to facilitate an environment of good will where we
can solve these problems for this and future generations of Americans,
and I know that we will. When I see where we have come from, the part
of this national life that you've been a part of, I know that we will
meet these challenges and make this the next great American century.
Thank you all for your involvement. God bless you all. It's an honor
to speak to you this morning.
Mr. HERTEL. Thank you very much for taking the time. We appreciate
the gentleman from Indiana for coming today.
I was reminded of--well, two things. I see Mike Barnes here joining
the two gentlewomen from Maryland; I wish every State had the same
representation as Maryland does here at our meeting today. But I am
reminded to tell about the victory of the Democrats yesterday at the
golf tournament for the wounded warriors. I think it's the second year
in a row that Democrats have been successful. Marty Russo reminded me
of that today.
And now, I will call on our president, the gentleman from Arizona,
for his annual report on the association's work under his leadership.
Mr. RHODES. Thank you, Mr. Speaker. I hope that the Democrats enjoyed
their victory yesterday, and I trust that that will be just about the
end of it.
We are very constrained in terms of the time that we have available
to us; we have to vacate the floor by 11 o'clock.
There are three of our association members who have reports to
deliver about some of the activities of the association over the course
of the past year.
I would first like to recognize the gentleman from New York, Mr.
McHugh, distinguished former president of the association and a
tremendous asset to the association, for his report on the Congress to
Campus program.
Mr. McHUGH. Thank you very much, Jay. It's a great privilege, as
always, to report again on this outstanding program.
As you have indicated in the past, this Congress to Campus program
has been administered by our association now for 3 years in cooperation
with the Stennis Center. During that time, the program has experienced
marked growth and has expanded to include a number of community
colleges as well as traditional universities.
As most of you know, this is the association's flagship program. It
sends bipartisan teams of former Members to colleges, universities, and
high schools across the country to educate the next generation of
leaders on the importance of civic engagement. The participating
students benefit from the interaction with our association members,
whose knowledge and experience clearly are a unique resource. Our
members at the same time benefit through their continued involvement in
public service and the ability to engage young people on issues of real
importance to them.
During each visit, our bipartisan team conducts classes, meets
individually with students and faculty, speaks to campus media,
participates in both campus and community forums, and meets with local
citizens. The program has made both domestic and international visits
this academic year, including two separate visits to campuses in the
United Kingdom. During the 2009-2010 academic year, the program has
made a total of 22 campus visits. More than 35 former Members
participated, and I want to thank all of you who took the time from
your busy schedules to do so. I also want to encourage those who have
not yet had the opportunity to seriously consider doing so. It's a
great way to continue our public service after Congress.
I also want to thank the faculty, staff members and students who
worked so diligently on each of these visits. Without the hard work of
these folks, these visits would not have been possible at all.
We have continued our relationship with the Stennis Center for Public
Service in the administration of the program, and we owe a special debt
of gratitude, I think, to Tracy Fine of our staff and to Brother Rogers
of the Stennis Center for their fine work throughout the year. Our
staffs work very closely together to make the program such a success
and we also appreciate the continuing financial support from the
Stennis Center. We look forward to our continuing association in the
years ahead.
In addition to the expansion of the program to community colleges,
and with the help of a grant from the U.S. Department of Education, the
program has also commenced a concerted effort in partnership with the
University of Central Florida and the Lou Frey Institute of Politics
and Government to reach out to high school students
[[Page H4431]]
through a series of webcasts. These programs focus on specific topics
related to Congress and the legislative process and are designed as a
tool for teachers to showcase these topics and encourage involvement in
government. During the fall and the spring, the program was piloted to
high schools in Florida and around the country. The broadcasts were
taped and streamed live with an in-studio audience of high school
students in Washington as part of the Congressional Youth Leadership
Council.
We have also continued our working relationship with the People to
People Ambassador Program that brings young people to our Nation's
capital for a week of events centered on the concepts of character and
leadership. This year, the association sent former Members to 30
different speaking engagements in this area and reached hundreds of
students through these appearances. These students are younger than
those who participate in Congress to Campus activities, but they have
already demonstrated a commitment to the ideals that Congress to Campus
seeks to promote. The association's involvement in this program allows
our members living in the Washington area to speak to these younger
students on the importance of public service and to answer their many
questions about our country and its government. A number of our members
continue to work full-time, and the People to People engagements allow
them to continue their public service in this way. The events are
typically held in the early morning at suburban locations. Again, I
want to thank my colleagues, especially Orval Hansen, Jack Buechner and
Martin Frost, who have participated in this program regularly over the
past year.
Finally, Jay, I want to say again how grateful we are to those who
have made the Congress to Campus program such a great success, and I
strongly encourage all of my friends and colleagues to participate in
this program either by making a visit to a school or by recommending a
school to host the program. As you know, a democracy can prosper only
if its citizens are both informed and engaged. As former legislators,
we have a particular opportunity and responsibility to encourage such
involvement. This program gives us the chance to do so, particularly
with our young people.
Again, many thanks to you for your leadership. My congratulations to
our friend and colleague, Bill Gray, on this award, and it is great to
see all of you back again.
Mr. RHODES. Thank you, Matt. Your continued association and your
continued leadership in this organization is unparalleled, and we
appreciate it extremely much.
Speaking of unparalleled service, I would like to recognize a former
Member, the former president of the association, the Honorable Lou Frey
from Florida. I am not going to ask you to make a speech because that
would take up the rest of the time.
Lou and I, a month or so ago, were privileged to go to China
together, and we had a very, very fascinating trip. He has written
eloquently in his Lou Frey reports about that trip, and I hope that you
will have an opportunity to review those reports because he has
encapsulated, basically, what we did and what we saw.
I would now like to recognize my friend from Maryland, Connie
Morella, who will discuss the activities of our various study groups.
Ms. MORELLA. Thank you, Mr. President, and thank you for your
exemplary service as president.
Congratulations also to Bill Gray, a great statesman of the year. It
is nice to see Bob Michel in this great reunion. I'm Connie Morella and
I approved this message.
My message is to give you a little synopsis of the Congressional
Study Groups for which the former Members are so noted. The association
is pleased to oversee and to administer the Congressional Study Groups
on Germany, Turkey and Japan, which create invaluable opportunities for
current Members of Congress to engage with their counterparts in the
legislative branches of those countries.
The Congressional Study Group on Germany is the association's
flagship international program, and it is the largest, most active
parliamentary exchange program involving the U.S. Congress and the
legislature of another country. Since its inception, which was almost
30 years ago, the study group has offered lawmakers a unique forum to
discuss potential avenues of cooperation on issues ranging from the
current economic global crisis to NATO's role in Afghanistan. A group
of current Members of Congress chair the study group in a bipartisan
manner. In the House of Representatives, Congressman Russ Carnahan of
Missouri serves as the chairman, and Congressman Phil Gingrey of
Georgia serves as the vice chairman. In the Senate, Senators Evan Bayh
(D-IN) and Jeff Sessions (R-AL) serve as co-chairs.
The study group on Germany's programming consists of three pillars:
the Distinguished Visitors Program, which offers monthly roundtable
discussions on Capitol Hill for Members of Congress, featuring visiting
dignitaries from Germany; annual seminars, which meet in Germany and in
the United States on a rotating basis; and a senior congressional staff
study tour to Germany. Recent Capitol Hill discussion partners include
the German Federal Minister of Economy and Technology, the Minister-
President of Hessen, and the Minister-President of Lower Saxony.
The highlight of each programming year is the annual Congress-
Bundestag seminar, which brings together Members of the U.S. Congress
with their counterparts in the German Bundestag for in-depth
discussions about issues that affect the transatlantic relationship. In
addition to current and former lawmakers from the United States and
Germany, representatives from the State Department, the German Foreign
Ministry and the business and academic community also participate.
Discussion topics are dictated by current events and issues influencing
U.S.-German relations. The 27th Annual Congress-Bundestag took place
the second week of May in Washington, DC and St. Louis, Missouri.
Seminar sessions examined prospects for peace in the Middle East,
mutual national security risks, as well as outlook on the 2010 mid term
elections. The 2010 Senior Congressional Staff Study Tour to Germany
took place at the end of March, bringing 10 House chiefs of staff to
Berlin and Cologne.
Since its inception, the Congressional Study Group on Germany has
received generous grants from the German Marshall Fund of the United
States. The association would like to thank the German Marshall Fund's
president, Craig Kennedy, for his support and trust in the study group.
Additional funding to assist with administrative expenses is received
from a group of organizations that make up the study group's Business
Advisory Council. This council is chaired by former Member of Congress
Tom Coleman of Missouri, who served as the chairman of the
Congressional Study Group on Germany in the House in 1989. Current
Business Advisory Council Members are Airbus, Allianz, BASF, Daimler,
Deutsche Telekom, DHL, Eli Lilly, Fresenius, Inc., Lufthansa, RGIT, and
Volkswagen.
The Congressional Study Group on Turkey, the second study group, was
established in 2005, and it quickly has become a major focus for the
Former Members Association, obviously. The study group offers lawmakers
a unique educational forum to examine issues ranging from the current
economic global crisis to cooperation in the Middle East peace process.
Taking the successful and long-running Congressional Study Group on
Germany as a model, the Congressional Study Group on Turkey has grown
into a highly relevant and productive program for American and Turkish
legislators. The study group is currently active in the House of
Representatives, and is co-chaired by Congressman Steve Cohen of
Tennessee and Congresswoman Virginia Foxx of North Carolina.
Congressman Ed Whitfield of Kentucky remains active in the study group
as immediate past chair.
Similar to the study group on Germany, the Congressional Study Group
on Turkey hosts roundtable discussions on Capitol Hill for Members of
Congress featuring visiting dignitaries from Turkey and U.S.
administration officials as part of its distinguished visitors program.
The study group has recently hosted the Turkish Minister of Foreign
Affairs and the Chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the
Turkish Grand National Assembly, among others.
[[Page H4432]]
The Congressional Study Group on Turkey also conducts an annual U.S.-
Turkey seminar, which brings together American and Turkish lawmakers to
discuss current issues pertinent to the bilateral relationship. The
fifth annual U.S.-Turkey seminar took place at the end of August 2009
in Ankara and Istanbul, Turkey, and the 2010 annual U.S.-Turkey seminar
is slated to take place this summer in Washington and in
Chicago. Discussion topics will examine current issues in Turkish-
American relations, such as the Strategic Cooperation Framework on
Trade, the Middle East peace process, and energy security. The study
group will also take this opportunity to inform the visiting
parliamentarians about the 2010 mid term elections in the United States
via meetings with journalists, think-tank representatives, and
policymakers.
In the past, the Congressional Study Group on Turkey continued to
receive a generous funding boost from the German Marshall Fund of the
United States and a group of corporate sponsors making up its Business
Advisory Council. The Study Group's current Business Advisory Council
members include Eli Lilly and the Turkish-American Business Council.
The Association also organizes and administers the Congressional
Study Group on Japan. Founded in 1993 in cooperation with the East-West
Center in Hawaii, the Congressional Study Group on Japan brings
together Members of the U.S. Congress and members of the Japanese Diet
for a series of discussions covering issues of mutual concern. A group
of current Members of Congress chair the study group in a bipartisan
manner. In the House of Representatives, Congressman Jim McDermott of
Washington and Congresswoman Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia
serve as co-chairs. In the Senate, Senators Jim Webb of Virginia and
Lisa Murkowski of Alaska take an active role in study group
programming. The Congressional Study Group on Japan is funded by the
Japan-U.S. Friendship Commission.
Finally, last year the association launched a new program called the
Trilateral Renewable Energy Roundtable for legislators from Germany,
India and the United States. Together with the Alliance for U.S. India
Business, the Bertelsmann Foundation, the Robert Bosch Foundation and
TERI North America, we brought together German, Indian and America
lawmakers in Washington, DC, for a series of discussions on renewable
energy solutions and ways of cooperation in a trilateral framework. We
aim to replicate this successful dialogue in the near future, possibly
involving Japanese lawmakers in the project.
The Congressional Study Groups on Germany, Turkey, and Japan, as well
as the Trilateral Roundtable, demonstrate the significant role that the
U.S. Association of Former Members of Congress plays in assisting
current Members in maintaining a strong dialogue and personal
relationships with their counterparts around the globe. We are very
proud of the work that is done by the association to keep these study
groups as vital programs in the association, and I hope that all of you
will look forward to further participation in them.
Mr. RHODES. Thank you, Connie.
The Study Groups are very important and they are very enjoyable.
Congress to Campus is a very viable program and I hope more of you will
take advantage of it. The gentleman from Kansas and I are living proof
that a bipartisan approach to Congress to Campus can be survived.
Mr. Slattery is going to deliver a report on our election monitoring
expedition to Iraq. Mr. Slattery is within 2 weeks of losing his
exalted position as the immediate past president of this association,
but I hope that that does not mean you're going to diminish your
activities.
Mr. SLATTERY. Thank you, President Rhodes, for the opportunity to
report on the International Election Monitors Institute and its March
mission to Iraq. I also want to thank you, Jay, for your dedicated
service as president of this association. You have done a terrific job
and we all appreciate it. We know the time commitment that you have
made to making this association more vital and more actively involved
in all the projects we're involved in.
I also want to congratulate my chairman, Bill Gray. It was always an
honor and a pleasure to serve with you on the Budget Committee. As I
look back on those days, I can't help but recall with some fondness our
intense debates around deficits at that time that we were trying to get
under $200 billion. Chairman Gray, you did a great job and it was an
honor to serve with you.
I want to also join those who have already previously recognized our
friend, former Leader Bob Michel, who is really one of the true
patriots to have served in this body. What an honor to have known and
worked with you during those years and to continue our friendship. Bob
Michel, terrific. It's great to see you here today.
It was an honor to travel to Iraq and participate in this project. As
you have mentioned, Jay, the International Election Monitors Institute
was created in 2005, under the leadership of our good friend, Jack
Buechner, when he was president of the association. It is a joint
project of the U.S. Association of Former Members of Congress, the
Association of Former Members of the European Parliament, and the
Canadian Association of Former Parliamentarians. In addition to
conducting annual workshops for former legislators to train them for
election monitoring missions, the International Election Monitors
Institute has sent delegations to places like Morocco and Ukraine. Our
most recent mission was our most ambitious. We sent six former
legislators to observe the March parliamentary elections in Iraq.
Our team was invited to monitor this election by the Independent High
Electoral Commission of Iraq. Six former legislators from the United
States, Canada, Sweden, and the United Kingdom, including former
Congressman Scott Klug and myself, traveled to Iraq to witness these
elections.
On March 7, 2010, the brave people of Iraq gave the world another
inspirational example of their commitment to freedom and democracy.
This was a pivotal election, with more than 300 accredited political
entities, more than 80 having candidates competing in the election.
There were 6,292 candidates competing for 325 seats. Nearly 300,000
poll workers staffed 52,000 polling stations in 8,600 polling centers.
In addition, there were 314 out-of-country voting precincts located in
16 countries.
To get an overall idea of what was happening during the elections, we
met with people from all sides of the political spectrum. We spoke to
people from several election-oriented NGOs, members of the
international community, the Iraqi High Election Commission staff,
political parties, and people at special needs polling stations.
With the world's attention on Iraq for these elections, many Iraqi
people were ready, inspired, and really excited to go to the polls. To
me and our team's amazement, Iraqi citizens made it to the polls even
with the explosion of nearly 50 bombs in Baghdad by noon on election
day. I have monitored elections in other troubled countries, including
the Nicaraguan election in 1990 and the Orange Revolution in Ukraine in
2004, but I have never seen security at the level it was in Iraq. My
two-person team was accompanied by a group of 16 armed guards in five
armored vehicles provided by the U.S. Government.
On election day, we visited 25 polling stations. We were welcomed by
each person we met. They were obviously happy to see neutral officials
monitoring their election. The Iraqis working the polls were passionate
about the election. The staffers were well trained in voting policies
as well as the fact that an adequate amount of supplies were provided
for each voter at the polling stations. There was also a sense of pride
and camaraderie among the Iraqis who voted that day. We were happy to
see that there was no discrimination based on age, ethnicity, religion,
or political parties at the polling stations we visited. In addition,
both the Shia and Sunni sects were encouraged to vote by their leaders,
rather than boycott the election as they had been instructed to do in
previous elections.
Let there be no mistake. Iraq has a long way to go in developing a
western style democracy where the threat of death is not associated
with active political participation. And while there was no conclusive
outcome on election day with no one party winning more
[[Page H4433]]
than 40 percent of the vote, we believe that this election was a giant
step forward. Nearly 60 percent of registered voters voted in a free,
democratic election, in spite of the violence. There were, of course,
some problems with this election, just like there are issues with every
election. But in the final analysis, all of us who observed this
election were confident that it mechanically went off as good as could
be expected. We are confident that it was a great improvement over the
last election, and we are confident that it's a giant step toward that
day when America's incredible military personnel can withdraw from this
troubled land, which likes to think of itself as the ``cradle of
civilization,'' and leave the people of Iraq in the hands of a stable
democracy.
Thank you again for the opportunity to serve on this mission and to
report on its outcome today.
Mr. RHODES. Thank you, Jim. I appreciate that very, very much. The
interesting thing to me about giving people the vote is that they
hunger for it, and they are willing to take all kinds of risks to
exercise it. My first experience with something like that was in 1970
in Vietnam. Like Jim, I saw what happened in Nicaragua, I saw what
happened in Ukraine, I saw what happened in Afghanistan, and when
people are given the opportunity to express themselves, they jump at
it, and they are excited about it.
I would like to include my formal remarks in the Congressional Record
at this point. I want just simply to put in a pitch for our bipartisan
programs of tomorrow. I'm not sure I know what bipartisanship is, but I
do know what civility is. And I do know that when we were first elected
and when Mr. Mitchell was the leader and Mr. O'Neill was the Speaker,
civility was the rule. I would hope that we can return to the days when
the Members of this body are civil to each other, even if they do not
agree. And so if bipartisanship is not a definable term, I know that we
know what civility is.
The U.S. Association of Former Members of Congress, 2010 Annual Report
to Congress, June 15, 2010
I. Introduction
This report outlines the activities of the U.S. Association
of Former Members of Congress for the period June 2009
through June 2010. Pursuant to the Association's
Congressional charter requirement, the Association's
President, former Member of Congress John J. Rhodes, III,
delivered this report to the Congress on June 15, 2010. The
report was preceded by the presentation of the Association's
2010 Distinguished Service Award to former Member of Congress
William H. Gray. The inscription read:
The 2010 Distinguished Service Award is presented by the
United States Association of Former Members of Congress to
Chairman William Herbert Gray, III for his lifetime of
exceptional public service. Both in and out of Congress,
Minister Bill Gray has demonstrated his tremendous dedication
to civil rights, fairness and equality. Representing the
State of Pennsylvania with great distinction, he served as
the first African-American Majority Whip and the first
African-American Chairman of the House Budget Committee. His
leadership helped young Americans obtain the dream of a
college education, his perseverance contributed to the fall
of Apartheid, and his humanity brought relief to the people
of Haiti. Congressman Bill Gray is an inspiration to us all
and his former colleagues from both sides of the political
aisle salute him.--Washington, DC June 15, 2010.
The Association also presented to its outgoing President
the following plaque in appreciation for his 2 years of
service: Presented to The Honorable John J. Rhodes, III in
recognition and appreciation of his strong leadership as
President of the U.S. Association of Former Members of
Congress. His tremendous enthusiasm and effectiveness will
always be remembered by his grateful colleagues.--Washington
DC, June 15, 2010.
II. General Overview about Association
Mr. Rhodes: Let me take this opportunity to also
congratulate Bill Gray on this well-deserved honor. You are
an inspiration to us all and we thank you for your many years
of distinguished public service.
As President of this organization, it is now my duty to
report to the Congress about the activities of the U.S.
Association of Former Members of Congress since our last
annual meeting in June of 2009.
Our Association is nonpartisan. It was chartered by
Congress in 1983. The purpose of the U.S. Association of
Former Members of Congress is to promote public service and
strengthen democracy, abroad and in the United States. About
600 former Senators and Representatives belong to the
Association. Republicans, Democrats and Independents are
united in this organization in their desire to teach about
Congress and the importance of representative democracy. We
receive no funding from the Congress. All the activities
which we are about to describe are financed either via
membership dues, program-specific grants and sponsors, or via
our fundraising dinner. Our finances are sound, our projects
fully funded, and our 2009 audit by an outside accountant
came back with a clean bill of financial health.
We again have had a very successful, active, and rewarding
year. We have continued our work serving as a liaison between
the current Congress and legislatures overseas; we have
created partnerships with highly respected institutions in
the area of democracy building and election monitoring; we
have developed new projects, which we are in the process of
expanding, including our webcasting civics education program,
and we again sent dozens of bipartisan teams of former
Members of Congress to university campuses here in the United
States and abroad as part of our Congress to Campus Program.
III. Association Domestic Programs
a. Conference on Bipartisanship
We were incorporated on June 18th, 1970, almost 40 years
ago to the day. Let me quote from our original by-laws as
they describe the purpose for which the Association was
created: purposes include the promotion of the cause of good
government at the national and international level by
strengthening and improving representative government, by
teaching about our system of government, and by sending
delegations to help countries as they develop democratic
systems of government.
You will find that all the programs we have initiated meet
one or more of the goals outlined in our bylaws. For example,
tomorrow we will host a one-day conference focused on the
issue of bipartisanship. The conference is a joint project
with the National Archives and the Bipartisan Policy Center.
Three different panels will examine our current political
discourse, how bipartisanship--or the lack thereof--has
influenced our political decision making, the way our media
influences this nation's political climate, and what concrete
steps we might be able to take to foster a more civil
relationship across the aisle. Panelists and speakers include
current Members such as Senator Ron Wyden, and former Members
such as Speaker Tom Foley. The media is represented, for
example by Judy Woodruff and Jackie Calmes. This will be an
outstanding conference and it is a good example of the type
of contribution former Members can make to the issues that
affect us all.
Our founders 40 years ago envisioned former Members
teaching about Congress and encouraging public service. They
were hoping that former Members could inspire the next
generation of America's leaders. No program of ours does a
better job implementing that vision than the Congress to
Campus Program. Established many years ago as a way to reach
college students, it has since grown to also bring former
Members into the high school civic education classroom as
well as connecting with students as young as middle school
age.
We continue to work with the Stennis Center for Public
Service, but all administration of this great program is now
done in-house by Association staff. I will now yield to a
former President of our Association, Matt McHugh of New York,
who co-chairs the Congress to Campus Program.
b. Congress to Campus Program
Mr. McHugh: Thank you, Jay, for the opportunity to report
on this outstanding program. As you indicated, the Congress
to Campus Program has been administered entirely by
the Association in cooperation with the Stennis Center for
three years now. During that time, the program has
experienced marked growth and has expanded to include
community colleges. As most of you know, this is the
Association's flagship program for its members. It sends
bipartisan teams of former Members to colleges,
universities and high schools across the country to
educate the next generation of leaders on the importance
of civic engagement. The participating students benefit
from the interaction with our Association members, whose
knowledge and experience are a unique resource. Our
members also benefit through their continued involvement
in public service, and the ability to engage young people
on issues that are important to them.
During each visit, our bipartisan team conducts classes,
meets individually with students and faculty, speaks to
campus media, participates in both campus and community
forums, and meets with local citizens. Institutions are
encouraged to market the visit to the entire campus
community, not just to those students majoring in political
science, history or government. Over the course of two and a
half days, hundreds of students are exposed to the former
Members' message regarding the significance of public
service.
The program has made both domestic and international visits
this academic year, including two separate visits to campuses
in the United Kingdom. During the 2009-2010 academic year,
the program has made 22 campus visits, including visits to
the United States Naval Academy, Boise State University in
Idaho, Waubonsee Community College in Sugar Grove, Illinois,
Cabrini College in Radnor, Pennsylvania, and Miami University
Hamilton in Ohio.
More than 35 former Members participated, and I want to
thank all of you who took time from your busy schedules to do
so. I also want to encourage those who have not yet
[[Page H4434]]
had the opportunity to seriously consider doing so. It is
truly a great way to continue your public service after
Congress.
I would also like to extend our thanks to the faculty,
staff members and students who worked so diligently on each
visit. Without their hard work, these visits would not have
been possible. We rely heavily on the universities to take
the lead in coordinating logistics related to each visit, and
appreciate the time they devote to ensuring that their
students receive the full benefit of the program.
We have continued our relationship with the Stennis Center
for Public Service in the administration of the program, and
we owe a special debt of gratitude to Tracy Fine of our staff
and to Brother Rogers of the Stennis Center for their fine
work. Our staffs work very closely together to make the
program such a success and we also appreciate the continuing
financial support we receive from the Stennis Center. We look
forward to our continuing association in the years ahead.
In addition to the expansion of the program to community
colleges, and with the help of a grant from the U.S.
Department of Education, the program has also commenced a
concerted effort in partnership with the University of
Central Florida and the Lou Frey Institute of Politics and
Government, to reach out to high school students via a series
of webcasts. These programs focus on specific topics related
to Congress and the legislative process, and are designed as
a tool for teachers to showcase these topics and encourage
involvement in government. During the fall and spring, the
program was piloted to high schools in Florida and around the
country. The broadcasts were taped and streamed live with an
in-studio audience of high schools students in Washington as
part of the Congressional Youth Leadership Council. We want
to thank the U.S. Department of Education, the University of
Central Florida, the Lou Frey Institute of Politics and
Government, George Washington University School of Media and
Public Affairs, and the Congressional Youth Leadership
Council for their support of this great program. In the 2010-
2011 academic year, the project will continue to reach out to
high school students. While these ``virtual'' visits cannot
replace the person-to-person experience of a traditional
Congress to Campus visit, they can play an important
supplemental role in teaching about representative democracy
at the high school level.
We have also continued our working relationship with the
People to People Ambassador Program that brings young people
to our nation's capital for a week of events centered on the
concepts of character and leadership. This year the
Association sent Former Members to 30 different speaking
engagements in this area and reached hundreds of students via
these appearances. These students are younger than those who
participate in Congress to Campus activities, but they have
already demonstrated a commitment to the ideals that Congress
to Campus seeks to promote. The Association's involvement in
this program allows our members living in the Washington area
to speak to these younger students on the importance of
public service and to answer their many questions about our
country and its government. A number of our members continue
to work full time, and the People to People engagements allow
them to continue their public service in this way. The events
are typically held in the early morning at suburban
locations, and I want to thank my colleagues, especially
Orval Hansen, Jack Buechner, and Martin Frost who have
participated in this program regularly over the past year.
Finally, I want to say again how grateful we are to all of
those who have made the Congress to Campus Program such a
success and to strongly encourage all of my friends and
colleagues to participate in the program, either by making a
visit to a school, or by recommending a school to host the
program. As you know, a democracy can prosper only if its
citizens are both informed and engaged, and as former
legislators we have a particular opportunity and
responsibility to encourage such involvement. This program
gives us the chance to do so, particularly with our young
people. Thank you.
c. Political Rules of the Road
Mr. Rhodes: One of the lessons we have learned from
interacting with America's college students, is that there is
a void of real-life experience and advice when it comes to
civic education textbooks. To fill that void former Member of
Congress Lou Frey of Florida collected the words of wisdom
our membership had to offer and edited two books we have
since published. The first, Inside the House--Former Members
reveal how Congress really works--was published several years
ago and is being used by political science professors across
the country. This past summer, we published a follow-up
volume entitled Political Rules of the Road. This book
focuses on some of the rules of the road we all have learned
during our political lives, and I thank the many former
Members who took the time and submitted contributions for
this terrific collection. We have over 500 rules by almost
200 former and current Members as well as several U.S.
Presidents! The book has received quite some attention; as a
matter of fact Lou Frey did a call-in show on C-Span late
last year. Please visit our website at wwww.usafmc.org for
more information about ordering either one of these
publications.
d. Statesmanship Award Dinner
None of these projects would be possible without funding.
We do not receive a single taxpayer dollar from the Congress
for our organization. All programs are self-financed via
membership dues, grants, contributions and our annual
fundraising dinner. We have taken the occasion of the
fundraiser to recognize former or current Members of
Congress who have inspired others through their leadership
or statesmanship. Our 2010 Statesmanship Award Honoree was
Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood. Early on we
decided to dedicate our 40th anniversary year to the theme
of bipartisanship. It was therefore a very easy decision
to recognize Secretary LaHood for his many years in the
Congress and in the current administration as a public
servant who strives to reach across the aisle, create
dialogue, and work with others regardless of their
political persuasion. The dinner was a rousing success and
we are so pleased that we had a chance to recognize
Secretary LaHood for the good work he did in the Congress
and the good work he is doing as Secretary of
Transportation.
e. Charitable Golf Tournament
Two years ago we took a 35-year-old tradition--our annual
golf tournament which pits Republicans against Democrats--and
gave it a new and much bigger mission: we converted it into a
charitable golf tournament to aid severely wounded vets
returning from Afghanistan and Iraq. Our beneficiary, the
Wounded Warrior Project of Disabled Sports USA, is as
impressive and remarkable an organization as you are likely
to find anywhere in this country. They use sports to help our
wounded veterans readjust to life after a severe injury, they
involve the entire family in the sport, and they take care of
all the equipment and training. We held the third golf
tournament yesterday and between the three tournaments we
have raised almost $200,000 for this outstanding
organization. We are very proud of this new focus for our
organization and hope to be able to support our wounded
heroes for many years to come.
IV. Association International Programs
a. China Delegation
According to our bylaws and articles of incorporation, we
are tasked with promoting representative democracy at home
and abroad. We therefore have created a number of programs
with an international outreach.
For example, earlier this year I was privileged to lead a
delegation of former Members of Congress to China. Our
bipartisan group had a number of meetings in Beijing as well
as in Shanghai. The purpose of the trip was to learn about
China firsthand, engage Chinese officials in a frank
dialogue, shed some light on current U.S. politics and
foreign policy, and gain knowledge about U.S.-Chinese trade
relations from U.S. corporate representatives in Asia. To
conduct this mission we partnered with the China Association
For International Friendly Contact and the China U.S.
Exchange Foundation. Our discussion partners included the
Vice Chairman of the NPC Standing Committee, the Assistant
Minister of Commerce, and the Deputy Minister of Foreign
Affairs. In addition, we met with a number of Chinese
university students, Chinese cultural representatives, and
the Deputy Governor of China's central bank. Our talks were
frank and productive, we learned an awful lot and were able
to dispel some myths. Most importantly, we established an
avenue for an exchange of views and ideas. This was a very
successful trip and we are planning a followup in the fall.
Another example of our international outreach is the work
we do via the International Election Monitors Institute.
Created in 2005 under the leadership of our then-President
Jack Buechner, the IEMI is a collaborative effort
administered in conjunction with our Canadian and European
Union sister organizations. IEMI takes former legislators
from the United States, Canada and Europe and trains them in
proper election monitoring techniques and a code of conduct.
To this end we have been able to put together a two-day
training course which we've now administered numerous times
in Ottawa. The course, as well as a host of other
achievements for the Institute, was made possible via a
three-year grant from the Canadian International Development
Agency. Dozens of U.S., Canadian, and European former
legislators have gone through the training and are now well
versed in the actual set of responsibilities and challenges
that come with election observation. Our most recent mission
was also our most ambitious undertaking: we were one of only
two organizations with U.S. election monitors in Iraq for
that country's March parliamentary elections. Former Member
of Congress Jim Slattery was in Baghdad as an IEMI election
observer and will report on this project.
b. IEMI Iraq Election Monitoring Mission
Mr. Slattery: Thank you, Jay, for the opportunity to report
on the International Election Monitors Institute and its
March mission to Iraq. It was an honor to be able to travel
to Iraq and participate in this endeavor and to be part of
such an important moment for democracies around the world.
As you mentioned, the IEMI was created in 2005 under the
leadership of our good friend Jack Buechner, when he was
President of our Association. It is a joint project of the
U.S. Association of Former Members of Congress, the
Association of Former Members of the European Parliament, and
the Canadian Association of Former Parliamentarians. In
addition to conducting multiple annual workshops for former
legislators to train them for
[[Page H4435]]
election monitoring missions, IEMI has sent delegations to
places such as Morocco and Ukraine. Our most recent mission
was arguable our most ambitious, when we sent six former
legislators to observe the March parliamentary elections in
Iraq.
A team from the IEMI was invited to visit Iraq and monitor
the 2010 elections by the Independent High Electoral
Commission of Iraq. Six former legislators from the United
States, Canada, Sweden, and the United Kingdom, including
myself, traveled to Iraq to witness the elections.
On March 7, 2010, I had the opportunity to observe the
elections in Iraq and see how the brave people of that
country gave the world another inspirational example of their
commitment to democracy. This year was a pivotal election
year with over 300 accredited political entities, more than
80 having candidates competing in this election. There were
6,292 candidates competing for 325 seats. Nearly 300,000 poll
workers staffed 52,000 polling stations in 8,600 polling
centers. In addition, there were 314 out-of-country voting
precincts located in 16 countries.
In order to get an overall idea of what exactly was
happening during the elections, we met with people from all
sides of the spectrum. We spoke to people from several
election-oriented NGOs, members of the international
community, IHEC staff, political parties, and people at
special needs polling stations.
With the world's attention on Iraq for these elections,
many Iraqi people were ready, inspired and excited to go to
the polls. To me and my team's amazement, Iraqi citizens
still made it to the polls even with the explosion of nearly
50 bombs in Baghdad by noon on Election Day. I have monitored
elections in other troubled countries, including the
Nicaraguan election in 1990 and the Ukrainian election in
2004, but I have never seen security at the level it was in
Iraq. My two-person team was accompanied by a group of 16
armed guards in 5 armored vehicles, provided by the U.S.
Government.
On Election Day, we visited 25 polling stations. We were
welcomed by each person we met. They were happy to know that
there were neutral officials coming to monitor the elections.
The Iraqis working the polls were passionate about these
elections. All of the staffers were well trained in voting
policies and procedures. Instructions on the voting process
as well as an adequate amount of supplies were provided for
each voter at the polling stations. There was also a sense of
pride and camaraderie amongst the Iraqis who voted that day.
People sat in voting centers sharing food and drink,
celebrating this noteworthy day. We were happy to see that
there was no discrimination between age, ethnicity, religion,
or political parties at the polling stations we visited. In
addition, both the Shia and Sunni sects were encouraged to
vote by their leaders, rather than boycott the election as
they had been instructed to do in previous elections.
Let there be no mistake. Iraq has a long way to go in
developing a Western style democracy where the threat of
death is not associated with active political participation.
And while there was no conclusive outcome on Election Day
with no one party winning more than 40 percent of the vote,
we believe that this election was a big step forward. Nearly
60 percent of registered voters voted in a legitimate,
democratic election. There were, of course, some problems
with this election--just like there are issues with every
other election that takes place in any country on this
planet. For example, we found that there is a need for a
definite voter list. The lack thereof continues to adversely
affect citizens' attitudes toward democracy and their belief
in the legitimacy of the process. Another issue was that the
Council of Representatives did not complete the revisions to
the electoral law until December 6, 2009, barely three months
before election day. However, domestic monitoring
organizations and nearly all Iraqi officials with whom we met
believed the March election was a major improvement on the
2005 election.
We hope this election is another giant step toward that day
when America's incredible military personnel can withdraw
from this troubled land, which likes to think of itself as
the ``Cradle of Civilization'', and leave the people of Iraq
in the hands of a stable democracy. Thank you for giving me
the opportunity to serve on this mission and to report on its
outcome today.
c. House Democracy Partnership project
Mr. Rhodes: For the past year, we have been working in
conjunction with current Members on democracy building and
legislative strengthening projects abroad. Specifically, the
U.S. Association of Former Members of Congress has had the
privilege to support the important work of the House
Democracy Partnership.
HDP is an undertaking by the House of Representatives to
strengthen democratic institutions by assisting parliaments
in emerging democracies. One of the objectives of HDP is to
provide expert advice to members and staff of the parliaments
of partner countries. HDP is chaired by David Price of North
Carolina and David Dreier of California. It is an extension
of the great work begun by Martin Frost and Gerry Solomon as
part of the Frost-Solomon Task Force. We are very pleased to
be able to play an important role in this outstanding
project.
Via a grant by the U.S. Agency for International
Development, bipartisan teams of former Members have
travelled to Kenya, Georgia, and Poland. In addition, we have
assisted with the work of a team of former Congressional
Staff in Haiti. The missions are issue-specific, have an
intense and active program, and give former Members the
opportunity to share some of their experiences with current
legislators in parliaments overseas. The Georgia mission, for
example, had the very specific focus of talking about
effective civilian control of the military and an appropriate
role for Parliament in the setting, funding and oversight of
defense policy. This mission was led by former Member Martin
Lancaster and included former Members Heather Wilson, Joel
Hefley and Pete Geren. The Kenya mission was led by former
Member Martin Frost and included former Members Barbara
Kennelly, Connie Morella and Phil English. The delegation had
meetings with the Ministers of Foreign Affairs, Justice,
Agriculture, and Water; the Speaker of Parliament; the
Parliamentary Reform Caucus; Former Members of Parliament;
and leaders of the major political parties. They discussed
challenges and coalition building with Civil Society leaders,
including Transparency International, the Law Society of
Kenya, SUNY, and Youth movement organizations. The mission to
Poland included former Member Martin Frost and coincided with
the 20th anniversary commemoration of the Frost-Solomon Task
Force working with the Polish legislature. During this
mission, the delegation focused on organizing a training
program for legislative staff. Clearly former Members can
play an important and productive role in this type of
legislative strengthening project. We thank David Price and
David Dreier for including us in their work and we hope that
we will be allowed to contribute further in the future.
In addition to the international work which I just
highlighted, our Association also focuses on creating a
dialogue involving current Members of Congress and their
colleagues in legislatures abroad. Mainly we achieve this
objective via several Congressional Study Groups involving
Germany, Turkey, and Japan. We have arranged over 500 special
events at the U.S. Capitol for international delegations from
over 80 countries and the European Parliament, hosted
meetings for individual legislators and for parliamentary
staff, and organized over 50 foreign policy seminars in about
a dozen countries involving more than 1,500 former and
current legislators. Former Member of Congress Connie Morella
will report on the activities of our Congressional Study
Groups.
d. Congressional Study Groups
Ms. Morella: Thank you, Jay. The U.S. Association of Former
Members of Congress is pleased to oversee and administer the
Congressional Study Groups on Germany, Turkey and Japan,
which create invaluable opportunities for current Members of
Congress to engage with their counterparts in the legislative
branches of those countries.
The Congressional Study Group on Germany is the
Association's flagship international program, and is the
largest and most active parliamentary exchange program
involving the U.S. Congress and the legislature of another
country. Since its inception almost 30 years ago, the Study
Group has offered lawmakers a unique forum to discuss
potential avenues of cooperation on issues ranging from the
current economic global crisis to NATO's role in Afghanistan.
A group of current Members of Congress chair the Study Group
in a bipartisan manner. In the House of Representatives,
Congressman Russ Carnahan of Missouri serves as the Chairman
and Congressman Phil Gingrey of Georgia serves as the Vice
Chairman. In the Senate, Senators Evan Bayh (D-IN) and Jeff
Sessions (R-AL) serve as Co-Chairs.
The Study Group on Germany's programming consists of three
pillars: the Distinguished Visitors Program, which offers
monthly roundtable discussions on Capitol Hill for Members of
Congress featuring visiting dignitaries from Germany; Annual
Seminars which meet in Germany and the United States on a
rotating basis; and a senior Congressional Staff Study Tour
to Germany. Recent Capitol Hill discussion partners include:
the German Federal Minister of Economy and Technology, Rainer
Bruederle; Minister-President of Hessen, Roland Koch; and
Minister-President of Lower Saxony, Christian Wulff.
The highlight of each programming year is the Annual
Congress-Bundestag Seminar, which brings together Members of
the U.S. Congress with their counterparts in the German
Bundestag for in-depth discussions about issues that affect
the transatlantic relationship. In addition to current and
former lawmakers from the United States and Germany,
representatives from the U.S. State Department, the German
Foreign Ministry, and the business and academic community
also participate. Discussion topics are dictated by current
events and issues influencing U.S.-German relations. The 27th
Annual Congress-Bundestag took place the second week of May
in Washington, DC and St. Louis, MO. Seminar sessions
examined prospects for peace in the Middle East, mutual
national security risks as well as outlook on the 2010 Mid-
term elections. The 2010 Senior Congressional Staff Study
Tour to Germany took place at the end of March bringing ten
House Chiefs of Staff to Berlin and Cologne.
Since its creation, the Congressional Study Group on
Germany has received generous grants from the German Marshall
Fund of the United States. The Association would
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like to thank GMF's President, Craig Kennedy, for his support
and trust in the Study Group. Additional funding to assist
with administrative expenses is received from a group of
organizations that make up the Study Group's Business
Advisory Council. This council is chaired by former Member of
Congress Tom Coleman of Missouri, who served as the Chairman
of the Congressional Study Group on Germany in the House in
1989. Current Business Advisory Council Members are: Airbus,
Allianz, BASF, Daimler, Deutsche Telekom, DHL, Eli Lilly,
Fresenius Inc., Lufthansa, RGIT and Volkswagen.
The Congressional Study Group on Turkey was established in
2005, and it has quickly become a major focus for the Former
Members Association. The Study Group offers lawmakers a
unique educational forum to examine issues ranging from the
current economic global crisis to cooperation in the Middle
East peace process. Taking the successful and long-running
Congressional Study Group on Germany as a model, the
Congressional Study Group on Turkey has grown into a highly
relevant and productive program for American and Turkish
legislators. The Study Group is currently active in the House
of Representatives, and is co-chaired by Congressman Steve
Cohen of Tennessee and Congresswoman Virginia Foxx of North
Carolina. Congressman Ed Whitfield of Kentucky remains active
in the Study Group as Immediate Past Chair.
Similar to the Study Group on Germany, the Congressional
Study Group on Turkey hosts roundtable discussions on Capitol
Hill for Members of Congress featuring visiting dignitaries
from Turkey and U.S. Administration officials as part of its
Distinguished Visitors Program. The Study Group has recently
hosted: the Turkish Minister of Foreign Affairs, Ambassador
Ahmet Davutoglu; and Chairman of the Foreign Affairs
Committee of the Turkish Grand National Assembly, MP Murat
Mercan.
The Congressional Study Group on Turkey also conducts an
annual U.S.-Turkey Seminar, which brings together American
and Turkish lawmakers to discuss current issues pertinent to
the bilateral relationship. The 5th Annual U.S.-Turkey
Seminar took place at the end of August 2009 in Ankara and
Istanbul, Turkey, and the 2010 Annual U.S.-Turkey Seminar is
slated to take place this summer in Washington, DC and
Chicago, IL. Discussion topics will examine current issues in
Turkish-American relations, such as the Strategic Cooperation
Framework on Trade, the Middle East peace process and energy
security. The Study Group will also take this opportunity to
inform the visiting parliamentarians about the 2010 mid-term
elections in the United States via meetings with journalists,
think-tank representatives and policy makers. In the past
year, the Congressional Study Group on Turkey continued to
receive a generous funding from the German Marshall Fund of
the United States, and a group of corporate sponsors making
up its Business Advisory Council. The Study Group's current
Business Advisory Council members include Eli Lilly and the
Turkish-American Business Council.
The Association also organizes and administers the
Congressional Study Group on Japan. Founded in 1993 in
cooperation with the East-West Center in Hawaii, the
Congressional Study Group on Japan brings together Members of
the U.S. Congress and Members of the Japanese Diet for a
series of discussions covering issues of mutual concern. A
group of current Members of Congress chair the Study Group in
a bipartisan manner. In the House of Representatives,
Congressman Jim McDermott of Washington and Congresswoman
Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia serve as co-Chairs. In
the Senate, Senators Jim Webb of Virginia and Lisa Murkowski
of Alaska take an active role in Study Group programming. The
Congressional Study Group on Japan is funded by the Japan-
U.S. Friendship Commission.
Last year, the Association launched a new program called
the Trilateral Renewable Energy Roundtable for legislators
from Germany, India and the United States. Together with the
Alliance for U.S. India Business, the Bertelsmann Foundation,
the Robert Bosch Foundation and TERI North America, we
brought together German, Indian and American lawmakers in
Washington, DC for a series of discussions on renewable
energy solutions and ways of cooperation in a trilateral
framework. We aim to replicate this highly successful
dialogue in the near future, possibly involving Japanese
lawmakers in the project.
The Congressional Study Groups on Germany, Turkey and
Japan, as well as the Trilateral Roundtable demonstrate the
significant role that the U.S. Association of Former Members
of Congress plays in assisting current Members in maintaining
a strong dialogue and personal relationships with their
counterparts around the globe. We are very proud of the work
we do to keep these Study Groups as vital programs in the
Association, and I look forward to being an active
participant in Study Group activities for many more years to
come. Thank you.
e. Middle East Fellows Program
Mr. Rhodes: The Study Groups do important work and are
another example of how former Members can assist current
Members in their international outreach.
I wish to highlight one more international project which we
initiated this year and hope to replicate in the future. Just
last month our Association hosted six Legislative Fellows
from the Middle East here in DC. In partnership with an
organization called Legacy International, we implemented a
small grant from the U.S. Department of State. Via this
program we brought a group of young professionals from the
Middle East to Washington for one month. The group came from
Kuwait and Oman and included lawyers, journalists and
government employees. Each fellow--and I should highlight
that there were two female fellows--was paired up with a
former Member of Congress to serve as a mentor. I thank our
six colleagues who went above and beyond in terms of taking
their visitor under their wings. In addition to the time
spent with the former Members, each fellow spent three weeks
on Capitol Hill as a visiting fellow in Congressional
offices. Let me also thank the six current Members of
Congress who participated in this project. We are hoping to
bring a second and larger group of Middle East Fellows to DC
in the fall, and then possibly send a former Members
delegation to the Middle East as a follow up visit. This
program clearly falls within our goal of strengthening ties
via people-to-people interaction and dialogue.
V. Conclusion
a. In Memoriam
It is now my sad duty to inform the House of those former
and current Members who passed away since our last report. We
honored them via a memorial breakfast for which Speaker
Pelosi joined us earlier today. It was a fitting
commemoration of the service these Members gave to our
country. They are:
Ike Andrews of North Carolina
William Avery of Kansas
Henry Bellmon of Oklahoma
James Bromwell of Iowa
Frank Coffin of Maine
Bob Davis of Michigan
Paul Fino of New York
Robert Franks of New Jersey
Thomas Gill of Hawaii
Clifford Hansen of Wyoming
Cecil Heftel of Hawaii
Bill Hefner of North Carolina
Jay Johnson of Wisconsin
Ted Kennedy of Massachusetts
Don Lukens of Ohio
Charles ``Mac'' Mathias of Maryland
John Murtha of Pennsylvania
Stanford Parris of Virginia
John Rarick of Louisiana
David Treen of Louisiana
Stewart Udall of Arizona
Charlie Wilson of Texas
I ask all of you, including the visitors in the gallery, to
rise for a moment of silence as we pay our respects to their
memory.
Before we conclude, let me welcome to Washington several
former Members of the Canadian Parliament who have joined us
as our guests. Leo Duguay is my counterpart in the Canadian
Association of Former Parliamentarians and is leading a
delegation of his colleagues as part of our continued
excellent relations with our neighbors from the north. Also
with us are four former Members of the Ontario legislature,
led by Steven Gilchrist. To you also a warm welcome and our
thanks for joining us again this year. Last, but certainly
not least, we are so pleased that an old friend of this
Association has again made the long trip from the UK to join
us. Richard Balfe serves in the Executive of the European
Union Former Members Association and it is always wonderful
to see you! We are honored that you have joined us for our
annual meeting.
I would be remiss if I did not thank the other members of
our Association's Executive Committee: our Vice President,
Dennis Hertel; our Treasurer, Connie Morella; our Secretary,
Barbara Kennelly, and our Immediate Past President, Jim
Slattery. You all have made this Association a stronger and
better organization than it has ever been and I thank you for
all your time and energy. Your counsel was invaluable to me
during these two years as President.
Former Member Dennis Hertel will succeed me as President
starting July 1st. He will have a great group of former
Members to work with on the Executive Committee level and we
are pleased to announce that former Member of Congress Jim
Kolbe will become a new officer with the Former Members
Association. In addition, I wish to thank our Board of
Directors and our counselors for their commitment to our
Association. Your service is valued and appreciated! As of
July 1st our newest board member will be former Member of
Congress Scott Klug.
To administer all these programs takes a staff of dedicated
and enthusiastic professionals. We have five full-time
employees and we appreciate their hard work. They are:
Esra Alemdar, Program Officer
Bryan Corder, Member Services Manager
Tracy Fine, Democracy Officer
Sudha David-Wilp, International Programs Director
Pete Weichlein, Executive Director
Closing Remarks. That concludes the 40th Report to Congress
by the U.S. Association of Former Members of Congress. We
thank the Congress, Majority Leader Hoyer, and Minority
Leader Boehner for giving us the opportunity to report again
this year on the activities of our organization and we look
forward to another active and productive year. Thank you.
Mr. HERTEL. I thank the gentleman from Arizona and the president of
our association for all his service. I think it could be summarized
best by Speaker Pelosi, coming this morning to our
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memorial service for those Members who have died in this last year in
talking about Jay Rhodes and how much she respected him and how she
hopes he will continue in service of this organization and in service
of our country. Those were the remarks of Speaker Pelosi this morning.
I want to thank Lorraine Miller, the Clerk of the House, for being
with us again and for hosting us and for spending all this time with
us. We are honored to have you here. Thank you very much, Madam Clerk.
I want to thank all of the guests of our whip and Budget chairman, Bill
Gray, who received our Distinguished Service Award. We are very honored
that you all took the time to come. You are just as proud of him as we
are. You know how much time it took from his community but especially
his family.
I want to recognize his wife, Andrea; their three sons, Bill, Justin
and Andrew, up in the gallery; their daughter-in-law, Jennifer; and two
grandchildren, Sabrina and Aidan, here today. Thank you very much for
coming. We are so proud of him and for all the time he gave on behalf
of us taken from you.
Finally, I want to thank Richard Balfe from the European Union
Association of Former Members; Steven Gilchrist who is leading a
delegation of the Ontario legislature; and lastly Leo Duguay, my
counterpart and the president of the Canadian Association of Former
Parliamentarians, and Don Boudria and Francis LeBlanc for taking the
time to join with us. All of the public service that all of you are
accomplishing for us on the international level, we very much
appreciate; and I want to thank all of our Members here for all their
service.
We are adjourned.
Accordingly (at 11 o'clock and 3 minutes a.m.), the House continued
in recess.
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