[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 103 (Tuesday, July 13, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5778-S5779]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REMEMBERING SENATOR ROBERT C. BYRD
Ms. SNOWE. Mr. President, I join with my colleagues today to express
my profound and heartfelt sadness on the passing of Senator Robert C.
Byrd, as the U.S. Senate, the people of West Virginia, and our entire
Nation mourn the loss of a giant of public service--a distinguished,
iconic legislator whose life and legacy will forever be synonymous with
the greatest deliberative body the world has ever known.
Senator Byrd's counsel, wisdom, and knowledge of the Senate was
unmatched and awe-inspiring. As the longest-serving Member of Congress
and a former majority and minority leader of the Senate, Senator Byrd
was time and again the conscience and champion of Congress and a
vigorous and stalwart sentinel of the first branch of our government.
Protector, steward, advocate, and guardian these descriptions only
begin to convey Senator Byrd's lifelong commitment to the Senate in
which he served for a record 51 years and an unprecedented nine terms.
No one fought more to ensure the preservation of the U.S. Senate and
its constitutional prerogatives than Senator Byrd. No one was more
masterful in comprehending and harnessing the powers of parliamentary
procedure in the upper Chamber. No one was fiercer in battling against
any encroachments that would dilute or diminish the role of Congress as
a coequal branch of government. And no one possessed greater command of
Senate history and used it to better effect than Senator Byrd, who
himself authored a four-volume history of the Senate.
The same zeal with which Senator Byrd demonstrated his allegiance to
the legislative branch was every bit as evident in his unshakable
dedication to the U.S. Constitution itself--a pocket-sized copy of
which he carried at all times. In fact, like many of my colleagues, I
will never forget as a member of the ``Gang of 14,'' which was forged
at a time when the very institution of the Senate was caught in the
crosshairs of a struggle over judicial nominations, how each of us
received a copy of the Constitution from Senator Byrd. With one
symbolic gesture as only he could, Senator Byrd spoke volumes about the
historic imperative that was ours to seize if we were to jettison the
partisanship that threatened our Chamber.
Senator Byrd's reverence for history stemmed of course from the
premium he placed on education, and as much as anyone who ever occupied
a seat in the Senate, Senator Byrd exemplified the American story of
the self-made individual. During his remarkable trajectory from humble
beginnings in the southern coalfields of West Virginia, Senator Byrd
was an ardent believer in learning not only as the great equalizer in
American life, but as a catalyst for personal and professional success.
A self-educated man, Senator Byrd's knowledge of Shakespeare, the Holy
Bible, and the pillars of thought from Ancient Greece and Rome formed
the basis of an eloquence and service that will reverberate not only in
the hallowed Halls of Congress, but also throughout his beloved home
State--which he served so passionately--for generations to come.
Indeed, his roots in West Virginia were ever-present and the
indispensable lifeblood that spurred him to political and legislative
heights that were the capstone of his landmark tenure in public
service. Indisputably, he never forgot where he came from, and in fact,
always remembered he stood on the shoulders of every West Virginian who
sent him back to the U.S. Senate term after term. And as much as
Senator Byrd revered Congress, the Constitution, and his fellow West
Virginians, nowhere was his devotion greater than with his beloved
Erma, his wife of nearly 69 years, and they now are finally together in
their eternal resting place.
As a Senator from Maine, it is only fitting that I pay tribute to
Senator Byrd by citing the opening lines by the immortal American poet
and Son of Maine, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, that I so often heard him
quote from memory on the Senate floor . . . ``Thou, too, sail on, O
Ship of State!/ Sail on, O Union, strong and great!/Humanity with all
its fears, /With all the hopes of future years . . .'' Our Ship of
State sails better for Senator Byrd's having lived, served, and led.
But today, our Ship of State sails at a slower pace as we pause to pay
our respects and mourn the loss of a man whose like we will never see
again. The Senate will not be the same without the Senator from West
Virginia, Robert C. Byrd.
Ms. MURKOWSKI. Mr. President, I rise today to pay tribute to my
friend and dear colleague, Senator Robert C. Byrd, who left us on
Monday, June 28, 2010 at the age of 92. Senator Byrd was the longest
serving member of the Senate. It is noteworthy that he was sworn in as
a U.S. Senator on January 3, 1959, the same day Alaska was admitted as
the 49th State.
How does one do justice to a life as full, as human, as authentic, as
uniquely American as that of Senator Byrd's in just a few minutes? Born
in poverty, a self-described foster son of an impoverished coal miner,
a product of a two-room schoolhouse, he went on to walk with kings, to
meet with prime ministers, and to debate with Presidents. Only in
America could one come so far from so little. His is a textbook case of
American exceptionalism.
Robert C. Byrd was a man of principle who was unwavering in his
priorities. The Lord came first, his family second, and then the
business of West Virginia and Nation. Senator Byrd was remarkable in
that he could juggle all of these obligations with apparent ease.
He was a man who carried the Constitution in his breast pocket,
closest to his heart. A fierce protector of the prerogatives of the
Senate, he frequently recalled that the Congress is mentioned in the
Constitution before the Executive. He once remarked, ``I am not the
President's man. I am a Senate man.''
So many of our colleagues take delight in this quote from The Almanac
of American Politics and it bears repeating. The Almanac described
Senator Byrd as the one among us who ``may come closest to the kind of
senator the Founding Fathers had in mind than any other.''
On the occasion of his 90th birthday, Senator Ted Stevens referred to
Senator Byrd as a ``symbol of the Senate,'' adding that, ``No man has
taught the Senate more than Robert C. Byrd.''
Senator Byrd made it his personal responsibility to educate new
Senators in the history and traditions of the Senate and to mentor us
along. He made a real difference in my orientation to the Senate. His
statesmanship was an inspiration to me. It was an inspiration to all of
us.
As contentious as our debates may seem, as partisan as we often seem
to the American public, the Senate prefers to regard itself as a
family. Yes, a family that fights, but a family nonetheless.
Senator Stevens once observed, ``As part of the Senate family,
Senator Byrd is not only a gentleman, he has been a person who has
reached out to us in personal times as well.''
I came to know that well after I injured my leg in a skiing accident
last year. For a period of time I had to navigate the Senate floor in a
wheelchair. The Senate floor is not exactly wheelchair friendly, but
Senator Byrd had adapted to the challenge. One day, as we were going to
the floor to vote, our wheelchairs met and we reached
[[Page S5779]]
out to hold hands as we wheeled our chairs to the well of the Senate.
Like Ted, I loved Robert C. Byrd. Yet I regret that I never had the
opportunity to enjoy the close friendship that my colleague Ted Stevens
did.
Yes, they had their spats, but Senator Stevens and Senator Byrd
regarded each other as family. Senator Stevens' daughter Lily referred
to Senator Byrd as an uncle. Senator Byrd published in the
Congressional Record excerpts from Lily's senior thesis from Stanford,
``The Message of the Dome: The United States Capitol in the Popular
Media.''
Senator Stevens began working with Senator Byrd in 1968. In 1972,
they joined each other on the Senate Appropriations Committee. Both
served as President pro tempore of the Senate, a position reserved for
the most senior Member of the Senate in the majority party. Yet as
Senator Byrd liked to note, Ted was a relative youngster.
Working together on a bipartisan basis, Ted Stevens helped Robert
Byrd lift West Virginia out of poverty. And Senator Byrd demonstrated
great empathy for Senator Stevens' crusade to end the third-world
conditions that plague Alaska's Native people in the more than more
than 230 traditional villages of rural Alaska. Like the West Virginia
of Robert Byrd's childhood, rural Alaska lacked the sorts of
infrastructure that the rest of America takes for granted--lack of road
infrastructure, a lack of basic sanitation facilities, unreliable
electricity, and unemployment.
This may explain why Senator Byrd was greatly sympathetic to Senator
Stevens' crusade to bring indoor plumbing to rural Alaska, to eliminate
the honeybucket. Alaska's Denali Commission was modeled closely after
the Appalachian Regional Commission, which Senator Byrd championed for
decades.
Ted Stevens and Robert Byrd worked together to make things better for
the people of rural Alaska. Our Native people deeply appreciate the
Alaska legacy of Robert C. Byrd.
On the occasion of Senator Stevens' farewell from the Senate in 2008,
a tearful Robert C. Byrd came to the Senate floor and said this
``Politics is a rough business, with lots of highs and lots of lows.
After a long time in politics, I come to understand that the point of
it all is helping people. Thank God we will be judged in the next world
by the good we do in this world.''
On Monday, our dear friend, Senator Byrd, joined his beloved wife
Erma in Heaven, where he will be judged by all of the good he has done
for his Lord, his family, the people of West Virginia, and the Nation.
I will miss him greatly.
On behalf of Alaska's people, I extend my condolences to Senator
Byrd's daughters Mona and Marjorie, his five grandchildren and seven
great-grandchildren, to the people of West Virginia, and to all who
knew and loved this great American.
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