[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 98 (Monday, June 28, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5467-S5469]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REMEMBERING SENATOR ROBERT C. BYRD
Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, I too wish to say a few words about our
departed colleague. The first thing to say is that we are sorry, first
and foremost, to the family and also to the staff of Senator Byrd for
their loss. The next thing to say is that it is a sad day for the
Senate. Everybody who has been here for a while has a few Robert Byrd
stories. A couple come to mind I thought I would share.
Along with Senator Reid and Senator Dodd, who were here on the floor
earlier, Senator Byrd, in the early part of the decade, responded to my
request to come down to the University of Louisville, my alma mater, to
speak to the students and to a broader audience. At his age and
particularly given the fact that I was a member of the opposition
party, there was, frankly, no particular reason for him to do that. But
he did and made an extraordinary impression on the students and
inconvenienced himself on my behalf, which I always appreciated.
My second--and really my favorite--recollection of Senator Byrd, I
found myself a few years ago in a curious position, at variance with
virtually everybody on my side of the aisle. I had reflexively, as I
think many Members had, responded negatively to a decision of the U.S.
Supreme Court in the late 1980s essentially holding that flag burning
was a permissible first amendment expression of political speech. The
first time that amendment came before the Senate, I voted for it. Then
I began to have some pangs of discomfort about my position. Having
spent a good portion of my political career focusing on political
speech and the first amendment, I, frankly, decided I was wrong and in
subsequent votes have opposed it.
A few years ago, it became clear it was going to be defeated in the
Senate by the narrowest of margins. I remembered that Senator Byrd was
always carrying around a Constitution in his pocket and had a feeling
that upon reflection, he might reach the same conclusion I did. So I
lobbied Senator Byrd. I thought initially it would be a futile act, but
he reexamined his position. As a result, he too changed his position,
and as it turns out, there was not a vote to spare the last time the
Senate considered whether it would be appropriate to amend the first
amendment for the first time in the history of the country to kind of
carve a niche out of it to make it possible to punish an act we all
find despicable. But, nevertheless, the most unfortunate of speech is
probably what the first amendment was all about initially. So Senator
Byrd did change his position. There was not a vote to spare, and the
amendment was defeated. And from my point of view, the first amendment
was saved on that important occasion.
We will all remember Senator Byrd for a variety of different things.
As the majority leader pointed out, he was a unique individual in so
many different ways. Those are two of my favorite stories about Robert
Byrd.
More than anyone else in any of our lifetimes, Robert Byrd embodied
the Senate. He not only wrote the book on it, he was a living
repository of its rules, its customs, and its prerogatives. So it would
be a mistake to think that Senator Byrd became synonymous with the
Senate simply because he served in it longer than anybody else. Rather,
it was a fitting coincidence that a man who cherished and knew this
place so well would become its longest serving Member.
Yet it is probably true that he will be remembered above all for his
longevity.
Everyone seems to have a different way of communicating just how long
a time he spent here. For me, it is enough to note that Robert Byrd had
already spent nearly 20 years serving in elected office in West
Virginia and in the House of Representatives before he was elected to
the U.S. Senate during the Eisenhower administration.
And over the years, he would walk the floor with 4 future Presidents,
4 of the 12 he would serve alongside in a 57-year career in Congress. I
won't enumerate all the legislative records Senator Byrd held, but I
would venture to say that the figure that probably made him proudest of
all was the nearly 70 years of marriage he spent with a coal miner's
daughter named Erma.
If he was synonymous with the Senate, he was no less synonymous with
West Virginia. Here is how popular Robert Byrd was in his home State:
In the year Robert Byrd was first elected to the U.S. Senate, 1958, he
won with 59 percent of the vote, a margin that most people around here
would consider a landslide. In a record 9 Senate elections, it was the
smallest margin of victory he would ever get.
Members will offer tributes of their own in the coming days.
I will close with this. Last year, in becoming the longest serving
Member of Congress in history, Senator Byrd surpassed another legendary
figure, Carl Hayden of Arizona. Hayden was known to many as the
``silent Senator,'' a phrase few would use to describe Senator Byrd.
But what the two men shared was a devotion to the United States and,
in particular, to the legislative branch of our Government, which the
founders envisioned and established as coequal with the other two.
A few years ago, Senator Byrd's official portrait was unveiled at an
event in the Old Senate Chamber. And I think that portrait pretty well
sums up the image Senator Byrd wanted to leave of himself. It is the
image of a dignified man, in the classical mold, supported by three
things: the Bible, the U.S. Constitution, and his wife. A lot of people
looked at Senator Byrd's record-long tenure in Congress, his immense
knowledge of poetry, history, and the Senate, and wondered where he got
the strength. With this painting, he gave us the answer. He showed us
the anchors.
As I noted at that ceremony, Senator Byrd once wrote that if the
question was whether to be loved or respected, he always chose to be
respected. Yet his real accomplishment is that, in the end, he managed
to be both.
So I join my colleagues, my fellow Americans, the people of West
Virginia, and the Byrd family today in remembering our colleague. We
will surely miss him.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from West Virginia.
Mr. ROCKEFELLER. Mr. President, on this day, West Virginia has lost
probably its most prominent son and the Senate has lost probably its
most able statesman. For myself, I have lost an admired colleague and a
treasured friend. More than nine decades of a remarkable life and five
decades as an accomplished public servant in the Senate only serve as
one form of proof that Robert C. Byrd was and always will be an icon,
particularly in his own State. A man of great character, faith,
intellect, who rose to the heights of power, yet never forgot where he
came from, his story holds such a profoundly significant place in both
West Virginia and American history. But it was in the coalfields of
southern West Virginia where a young Robert C. Byrd first gained the
skills, the moral character, the toughness, and the shrewdness that
would make him a truly great man.
After his mother passed away, he was raised by his aunt and uncle, a
coalminer, he movingly called ``the most remarkable man I have ever
been privileged to know.'' From them Senator Byrd learned early in life
what it meant to be loyal, to have a ferocious work ethic, really
almost beyond imagination, and possess a deep faith in God. And it was
these values--these innately West Virginia values, I argue--that guided
his every action and made him such a unique and strong fighter for our
State and who got such joy in doing that fight.
He was proud of West Virginia. He was proud of his ideals. He was
proud of the service he could render to the people from whom he came.
He believed with all of his heart that our breathtaking mountains, our
rivers, and our deep valleys, and especially our well-rooted people,
who face adversity always and face it with strength and courage, make
our State a place like quite none other in the world.
[[Page S5468]]
He loved the music of the mountains and played his fiddle, in fact,
very brilliantly. He was a master violin player. He loved to quote the
ancients, lending depth to his analysis and observations, with
knowledge of history and philosophy to rival any professor. Just as
easily as he could quote Cicero from memory, he could sing every verse
of ``Amazing Grace'' from memory, too, and often did.
Everything about Senator Byrd was a testament to his faith in God.
This man, who wrote and debated countless laws, lived with 10 clear
Commandments in his heart. His aunt and uncle kept the King James Bible
in their home and instilled in him an enduring reverence for God. He
always remembered that as important as the Senate and our
constitutional government might be, there was always a higher law that
took precedence.
He started his career humbly by any definition--as a butcher, as a
welder, other things too--and then campaigned by playing his foot-
stomping music, the fiddle, to get elected to the West Virginia
Legislature--that is how he did it--the very same body that decades
later would deem him the ``West Virginian of the 20th Century.''
It was at Mark Twain High School where a lifetime of love first began
for Robert C. Byrd and his future wife, Erma Ora James. Calling her the
``wind beneath this Byrd's wings,'' as he put it, Senator Byrd was
never shy to tell you that Erma--a beloved coal miner's daughter
herself--was the reason he reached all of his goals. He believed that
with all of his heart. So from the fiddle-playing young man to a
history-making American icon, she loved and supported him every step of
the way until her passing in 2006.
I know and I observed maybe earlier than some that Senator Byrd lost
just a bit when Erma died. Watching him hurting was painful. His wife
died from the same disease my mother died from; that is, Alzheimer's,
and we talked about it, especially a few years ago when he was talking
more frequently. I always felt bad that I could not give him comfort
and that I could not say something to him that would relinquish his
pain, which was evident and obvious--very obvious in privacy. But I
could not do that because you cannot do that for diseases like that
one. There were not words to describe the difficulty such a devastating
loss can bring, and I commend my friend for continuing on so strongly--
as he did--for so long.
Erma was his soulmate, his best friend and trusted counselor. Their
marriage was something to behold. My wife Sharon and I loved watching
them together. He became a different person. They radiated an
extraordinary faith in God, in each other, and in the beautiful family
they built together, which in the end was what he loved the most.
Indeed, it was the time Robert C. Byrd spent with Erma; their
daughters, Mona and Marjorie, their husbands, and their grandchildren
and their great-grandchildren that brought sheer joy--pure,
unadulterated--to his life. So with sadness in my heart, I also have
joy at the thought of my friend united with his precious Erma, with his
dear grandson he lost at a young age. And we all know, those of us who
have been here for several years, the agony he went through at the
death of that young man, setting up a shrine in his office. It affected
him deeply. It was interesting that a man who could be so oriented
toward policy, and sometimes almost remote from personal matters, as a
professional self-definition, could be so utterly moved by sadness in
his own life and I think in the lives of others.
It was in the Halls of the U.S. Senate where Robert C. Byrd became
known as the ``Soul of the Senate,'' a fierce defender of the
Constitution, a respected historian, and an absolutely fearless
legislator. He held, as has been said many times before, more
leadership posts than any other Senator, cast more votes than any other
Senator, and served longer than any other Senator. And one could go on
in many ways in that theme. He literally wrote the authoritative book
on the rules and procedures of the Senate. He taught all of us who were
freshmen in this body about that in classes which he would conduct
standing in the well of the Senate. He loved and he revered this
institution. Everybody says that. It is true.
Some people pass through this institution. They experience this
institution. He lived this institution. Yet, still, his entire career
was fundamentally an act of commitment to the State of West Virginia
and its people--a day-in and day-out effort to do the best he possibly
could for the people of the Mountain State; always put upon, often
looked down upon, even disdained by others who did not understand where
they came from, what their lives were like, and, for example, what it
was like to be a coal miner. People do not understand West Virginia
well. Most people do not go there. Senator Byrd sprung from West
Virginia and, yes, was an intensely devoted statesman.
He put himself through law school while also serving in Congress. I
know a few others have done that, but I just sort of deny that. I think
it is amazing that Senator Byrd did that; therefore, any others who did
it do not get my attention.
He understood that people with the fortitude to ask questions and to
debate and to dissent one from another makes America stronger. He had
that courage himself, standing up time and time again to defend the
ideals upon which our Nation was founded. And often those ideas were
very different from those of others. No matter with Senator Byrd; he
always spoke for what he felt was correct.
As the minority leader has pointed out, the Senator always had the
Constitution in his pocket, close to his heart. And he outlasted
Presidents and Supreme Court Justices. He served with an absolute
insistence on the equality of the three branches of government as
envisioned by our Founding Fathers, and he, therefore, helped us as a
body be more than our separate parts. He spread the words of our
Constitution to young children and his colleagues alike. His patriotism
was strong and confident, infusing his every action with deep devotion
for our Nation and its people.
A Senator from a State that has sent legions of sons and daughters to
war--out of courage, out of love of country, sometimes just out of a
need to get work--he supported our troops whether he agreed with their
cause or not, fought for our veterans, and worked hard to make sure
those who served our country got the respect, the support, the supplies
they needed and they deserved.
He also earned the loyalty of West Virginians with a record of
support for education and economic opportunity that few Senators, at
any time, in any State, in my judgment, could ever match. To him, every
school building or education grant was a chance for a better life for
some West Virginia child or maybe quite a lot of children. He cared
about that, and he helped that become true.
Every overpass, every road represented an opportunity for a more
dynamic economy for our cities and towns, which might be taken casually
in some places but not in West Virginia because only 4 percent of our
land is flat, and unless there is a road or a bridge, you cannot build
anything anywhere or virtually do anything anywhere. Every business
park or government office meant the possibility of a better job for
West Virginians trying to raise their families--people he fought for
all his life.
Senator Byrd also believed health care is one of the most important
ways to strengthen a community, and his support for medical research
resulted in breakthrough medical opportunities. He spread this research
all across West Virginia, to West Virginia University, to Marshall
University, to institutions of all kinds. He believed in medical
research and did more than most of our colleagues even know.
So in a State with rugged terrain, full of people like the family who
raised him, doing their best for their family, for their country, for
their God, Robert C. Byrd decided that somebody needed to do the best
for them, and he did so each and every day of his life.
To me, he was a perfect colleague and a reliable friend, a walking
example of the kind of America I believe in, and a living testament to
the values that made West Virginia my own home forever. It has been my
greatest privilege to serve with Robert C. Byrd in the U.S. Senate. I
respected him and I fought side-by-side with him for causes we both
believed in, and obviously I am profoundly saddened that he is gone.
So in closing, Mr. President, I think he leaves a void that probably
cannot
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be filled. But I am lifted by the knowledge of his deep and abiding
faith and that he is in the hands of the One who inspired these words
in ``Amazing Grace:
Yea, when this flesh and heart shall fail,
And mortal life shall cease,
I shall possess within the veil,
A life of joy and peace.
I think that gives all of us some comfort. It certainly does me.
So peace and Godspeed, Senator Byrd, and peace to your family, your
loyal staff, and to the loving people of West Virginia, who held you
high for so long and will continue to do so.
I thank the Chair and yield my time.
____________________