[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 162 (Thursday, December 9, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S8669-S8671]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                         FAREWELL TO THE SENATE

  Mr. BENNETT. Madam President, there used to be a very strong 
tradition in the Senate that every new Senator gave a maiden speech, 
and in that tradition some Senators waited as long as a year before 
they gave the speech. Then, when the time came, the more senior 
Senators would gather and take notes and then critique the newcomer on 
how well he did.
  Life has changed a good deal. I never gave a maiden speech. I plunged 
right into the debate when I got here. Now the tradition seems to be to 
give a farewell speech. So I am grateful to my colleagues who will 
gather for this occasion as I contemplate saying farewell to the 
Senate. But I will warn them, this is probably not my last speech. I 
intend to be heavily involved in the debate over whether we pass a 
continuing resolution or an omnibus bill.
  I have a history with the Senate, and it began when I was a teenager 
as a summer intern. I remember sitting in the gallery and watching Bob 
Taft prowl across the back of the Senate, watching to make sure things 
were going according to his desire. He had been the majority leader. He 
had stepped down from that position because of the cancer he had 
contracted, but he was still paying attention to this body where he 
served with such distinction.

  Lyndon Johnson was sprawled out with his lanky frame at the 
Democratic leader's desk, and I was watching from the gallery, thinking 
what an extraordinary place this was.
  Ten years later, I came back as a staffer, and I served here. I was 
sitting in my cubicle in the Dirksen Building when word came that John 
F. Kennedy had been shot in Dallas. We didn't know whether he was dead. 
We all rushed over to the Senate, where there was a ticker tape back in 
the back lobby, to see what was happening. I rushed in with the others 
to see what was there and then looked to see whom I had jostled aside 
in order to get to see the ticker tape. It was Mike Mansfield. I 
quietly withdrew, realizing I had done something that was not 
appropriate on that occasion.

[[Page S8670]]

  But I was here in Washington when Martin Luther King gave his ``I 
Have a Dream'' speech. I was here as a staffer when the historic civil 
rights bill of 1964 was passed and was involved in the drafting of that 
bill at a very low kind of level and the conflict that occurred on that 
occasion.
  Then I came back into government as the head of the congressional 
relations function for a Cabinet-level department and worked with 
Senator Dirksen in trying to pursue the Nixon administration's goals 
forward and ran into a bright young Senator from Kansas with a sharp 
wit named Bob Dole and had the opportunity of working with Dirksen and 
Dole and the others in that situation.
  Watergate came along. I was given the dubious honor of being called 
to testify by a young Senator from Tennessee named Howard Baker. He 
assigned me to his staffer, who grilled me for 3 hours under oath--a 
fellow by the name of Fred Thompson.
  There are great kinds of memories there. I did not realize I would 
come back to the Senate myself, and as a political junky, what could be 
better? I was involved in the debate, I had access to all of the 
activity, and they even gave me a vote. It was a great time, a great 
opportunity, and I have enjoyed it immensely and say farewell to it 
with kind of mixed feelings.
  What have I learned out of all of this, both that past history and my 
own history in the Senate? I will not bore you with all of the things I 
have learned, but I have picked out several I want to highlight here 
today.
  The first thing I have learned is that this is, indeed, an 
extraordinary place filled with extraordinary people. And the 
caricature we get from the press and the movies and other places that 
this is filled with people who have self-serving agendas and very low 
standards of ethics is simply not true. The Senate is filled with 
people with the highest standard of ethics--we have a few clunkers, I 
will admit that, but overall the highest standard of ethics the 
American people could want.
  If I may dip back into my history to give you this example of how 
much better the present Senate is than some of the older ones, I 
remember that when I was prowling the halls in the circumstances I have 
described, I ran into a friend who was distraught.
  I said to him: What is the problem?
  He said: I am taking a group of schoolchildren through the Capitol, 
and I sent a note in to a Senator to ask him if he would come out and 
speak to them. And he did, and he is drunk. I can't get him to stop and 
get the schoolchildren back to the tour, and I don't know what to do.
  You don't see that kind of behavior in today's Senate.
  You don't see the kind of casualness toward personal campaign 
contributions that existed. Why do you think, when they built the 
Dirksen Building, they put a safe in every Senator's office? It was to 
hold the cash that would be brought into the office and handed to the 
Senator. And that was a routine kind of circumstance.
  One of the things I enjoyed about the renovation of the Dirksen 
Building was being able to say to the Architect of the Capitol: Take 
the safe out because we don't need it anymore. I notice now that I 
started a trend. If I leave no legacy other than this, it will be that 
the safes are all coming out of the Dirksen Office Building, and I was 
the first one to do that.
  This is an extraordinary place filled with extraordinary people who 
take their jobs very seriously and deserve the kind of respect that too 
often they do not get. Everybody says, when they leave this place, they 
will miss the people. I certainly will. The friendships that have been 
made here, the lessons I have been taught, and the mentors I have had 
have all been a major part of it. I will not name names because once I 
get started in that, I will not be able to quit. But I do recognize the 
mentors I have had in the leaders, in my senior colleague, Senator 
Hatch--and I will tell a story about him--and the staff. These are also 
extraordinary people who go to extraordinary lengths to serve the 
country. We should acknowledge that and give them the credit they 
deserve.
  Senator Hatch gave me this piece of advice. We were talking one night 
about an issue, and we were on opposite sides. That didn't happen very 
often. Senator Hatch and I don't confer in advance of a vote very 
often. We come to our own conclusions, but, both being conservative 
Republicans, we usually end up in the same place. On this occasion, we 
were different. Orrin was giving me his full court press. You have all 
been exposed to Orrin's full court press on an issue.
  Finally, he said to me: Bob, apply the driving home test.
  I said: All right, what is the driving home test?
  He said: After this is all over and the lights go out and you go get 
in your car and you are driving home, thinking back on the day and the 
votes you cast, the driving home test is, how will you feel driving 
home if you cast that particular vote?
  I said: Orrin, that is some of the best advice I ever got.
  I voted against him, and I felt great while I was driving home.
  That is one of the first things I have learned. This is an 
extraordinary place filled with extraordinary people who are dedicated 
to the country, dedicated to doing the right thing, and who uphold the 
highest ethical standards.
  The next thing I have learned is that there are two parties and that 
there is a difference between the two parties. There are those who say: 
Oh, there is not a dime's worth of difference between the Republicans 
and the Democrats; they are the same people who say we are all corrupt. 
There is a significant difference. The Democrats are the party of 
government. Going back to their roots with Franklin Roosevelt, they 
come to the conclusion that if there is a problem, government should 
solve that problem. The Republicans are the party of free markets, and 
they come to the conclusion that if there is a problem, it should be 
left to the markets to solve it. And they are both right. That is the 
thing I have come to understand here. There are some problems where 
government is the solution--but not always. There are some problems 
where free markets do provide the solution--but not always.
  The tension between those two has run throughout the history of the 
Republic. You can go all the way back to Thomas Jefferson and Alexander 
Hamilton and the arguments they had as to what the proper role of 
government should be, whether it should be big government or little 
government, whether you should have this or that kind of power. It ran 
through the Constitutional Convention and arguments that occurred 
there.
  It is appropriate that those who believe in government should have 
strong advocates on their side. Those who believe in free markets 
should have equally strong advocates on their side. And because I 
believe in free markets, I am a Republican, and I have been happy to be 
a Republican. I have been careful to stand up for those things I 
believe, and I have compiled a record that many of my friends on the 
Democratic side would consider fairly miserable in terms of wisdom on 
voting. But let us understand in the debate, as we go back and forth 
between these two concepts, that we do not question the motives or the 
patriotism of anyone on the other side--or within our own caucuses.

  I remember an event where someone on the Republican side voted with 
the Democrats in a way that some on this side felt was betrayal, and 
there was a sense of, let's punish him, let's do this, that, and the 
other. Trent Lott taught me this lesson. He said: No, the most 
important vote is the next one. We are going to need his vote the next 
time. And if we punish him for this last vote, we won't get it.
  Yes, there is a difference between the two parties. Yes, we disagree. 
But if we can disagree in an effort to solve the problems of the 
country and be willing on occasion to say maybe the other side is 
right, we will move forward.
  Let me go back to the Civil Rights Act and that debate. Barry 
Goldwater was the Republican standard-bearer in the year that was 
passed. Barry Goldwater and many of his colleagues on the Republican 
side believed that the Civil Rights Act was an unwarranted intrusion on 
personal liberty, that you were entitled to pick your own associations. 
And the Democrats--some of them--believed the civil rights bill had to 
be passed to keep faith with the 14th amendment and government's role 
in securing liberty.
  Everett Dirksen stood in the middle of that fight. The civil rights 
bill was

[[Page S8671]]

written in Dirksen's office. Lyndon Johnson gets historic credit for 
it, as he deserves, but within this body where the cloture vote 
determined whether it would pass, the key figure was Everett Dirksen.
  My father, with me as his chief of staff, was caught in that pressure 
with the conservatives saying one thing, the liberals saying another, 
and dad trying to decide which way he would go. I remember a comment he 
made as he made his decision--and he made his decision to go with 
Dirksen, vote for the bill, vote for cloture. Being a businessman, he 
had thought it through. He believed in free markets as well as I do. 
But he made this comment which I have always held on to as an example 
of the way you deal with this challenge. He said: You know, I thought 
about it, and many of these companies that refuse to serve Black people 
are public companies with their stock available on the stock exchange. 
So what we are saying is, it is all right for the Black person to own 
the company but it is not all right for him to patronize it. That is 
unsustainable.
  So on this occasion, he sided with the people who believed in 
government to solve the problem. He voted for the Civil Rights Act, and 
he got a challenger for his next nomination and the toughest primary he 
ever had within the party. He overcame that challenger, and he got his 
fourth term.
  I made the decision to act in concert with George Bush and my leader, 
Mitch McConnell, and the Democratic leader, Harry Reid, and the 
Republican standard-bearer, John McCain, to vote in favor of an act of 
government as opposed to free markets when I supported TARP. And I got 
a challenger as I sought a fourth term, and I was not as successful as 
my father, so my career was ended. My father never regretted his civil 
rights vote. I don't regret my TARP vote because it was the right thing 
to do.
  For those who say: Oh, what a terrible thing it is that your career 
has ended, I go back again to the old Senate and a Senator named Norris 
Cotton, from New Hampshire. Norris Cotton was a Republican. He used to 
tell this story.
  Three fellows were sitting on a bench in New Hampshire in their 
rocking chairs contemplating what would happen after they had died. The 
first one said: You know, after I die, I want to be buried next to 
George Washington, the Father of our country. I think it will be a 
great honor to be buried next to Washington.
  The second one said: Well, that is fine, but I am more loyal to our 
State. I want to be buried next to Daniel Webster.
  OK. They rocked for a while, and they turned to the third fellow and 
they said: What about you?
  He said: I want to be buried next to Elizabeth Taylor.
  They said: But, Joe, Elizabeth Taylor is not dead yet.
  He said: Neither am I.
  I appreciate the opportunity to give this farewell speech and your 
willingness to come listen to it. But I am not dead yet. The 
demographers are saying, within the next three or four decades, the 
number of Americans over the age of 100 will be in the millions. I 
intend to be one of that number. I have loved being in the Senate. I 
have loved the association. I have enjoyed hearing about the issues and 
being in the arena to try to solve them.
  I do not intend to leave the arena of public debate and public 
affairs. I simply have changed venues. I am grateful to the Senate and 
to all my friends for all the things you have taught me. I view the 
Senate not as the end of my career but as the education and preparation 
for the next stage.
  My father lived until he was 95, my mother 96. I only have to beat 
the demographic laws by a very small percentage to beat my goal. I 
appreciate the opportunity of being here and your courtesy in listening 
to me here today.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Missouri.
  Mr. BOND. Madam President, I am humbled to follow my great, good 
friend, the eloquent orator, the wonderful Senator from Utah, Mr. Bob 
Bennett, a man who has been a giant in this Senate, not only terms of 
height but of intellect. We have followed his lead on many issues. I 
know the Senate will miss him.

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