[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 99 (Tuesday, June 29, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Page S5511]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REMEMBERING SENATOR ROBERT C. BYRD
Mr. ISAKSON. Mr. President, I come to my seat today on the floor of
the Senate to take a few minutes to share my thoughts on the late
Senator Robert Byrd and his tragic death a few days ago. I come with a
perspective different than those who served with him for decades
because this is my first term in the Senate. I was elected in 2004.
In our caucus, which then was in the majority, we were asked to take
responsibility for presiding, just as the current Presiding Officer is
doing today. The day I picked was Friday mornings, not knowing we would
not be here on a lot of Friday mornings except for a normal business
session. But I did it on every Friday morning. For 2 years I presided
over the Senate from about 10 in the morning until about 12:30 in the
afternoon.
Friday morning is the day Robert Byrd would come to the floor of the
Senate and share and reshare some of his great speeches. I was here to
listen to the entire speech on the tribute to mothers on Mother's Day.
I heard him, oftentimes, talk so wonderfully about his lovely wife. I
heard him talk about the Roman Empire, its rise and its fall. I heard
him make speeches on the rules of the Senate, the details that no one
in this room could ever come close to.
But, for me, the most important contribution of the Senator from West
Virginia was the fact it didn't matter how experienced you were or what
your party was, if you had a question on the rules of the Senate, you
could go to the seat of Senator Byrd and you could get an answer that
you could put in the bank. He loved sharing his knowledge. He loved the
institution of the Senate. He never saw it from a partisan standpoint,
he always saw it from a traditional and an institutional standpoint.
There will be a lot of great tributes paid to Senator Byrd over the
next few days and they will all be well deserved. I certainly share in
the sympathy that all extend to his extended family for this tragic
loss. But many in this Senate today and many who served in the years
since he was first elected have benefited from the wisdom and
``gentleman-ness'' that Robert Byrd represented. He is a tradition in
the Senate. He is a tradition in the State of West Virginia. He will be
missed, but I will be forever thankful to Robert Byrd for what he took
the time to share with me, to help me understand the ways of the
Senate. He truly was a Senator's Senator and I extend my sympathy to
his family and the people of West Virginia on the tragic loss of this
great Senator.
I yield the floor.
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