[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 162 (Thursday, December 9, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Page S8680]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTES TO RETIRING SENATORS
Robert Bennett
Mr. REID. Mr. President, I am sorry I was tied up in other matters
today and not able to hear speeches of some of our Senators who are
departing. I will have more to say at a later time. I did want to say
on two of the Senators, I watched some of their remarks.
Senator Bennett from Utah is a very dear friend of mine. We have
traveled around as Members of the Senate, visiting places all over the
world. His wife Joyce is an accomplished artist. She is a flutist. She
is well known here and in Utah. Senator Bennett is a very courageous
man. What a disappointment he was not reelected. I am not usually
giving speeches for my Republican colleagues, but it is a real loss to
the country that Senator Bennett will not return to the Senate. He is a
very courageous man. He represents the ideals of the State of Utah. He
is a very devout member of his church. He is a person who calls his
political issues the way he sees them. His having been criticized for
supporting his President, a Republican President, on the Toxic Asset
Relief Program is unfair. This was one of the most important issues we
faced in ages in this country, and I think the proof is in the pudding.
Of the hundreds of billions of dollars--almost $1 trillion--that were
put out for that fund, all but $25 billion is paid back and most of the
economists say we will get more than that back from some of the things
that were invested in.
I admire the public service of Senator Bennett. It has been
outstanding. It meets the accomplishments of his father who also served
very well in the U.S. Senate. I am going to miss him a great deal. What
a wonderful human being. He is an author. He has in the past been a
very successful businessman, and I think one of the most accomplished
legislators I have had the pleasure to deal with.
Byron Dorgan
Byron Dorgan from North Dakota is such a fine person. He for many
years has had the same job I had under Senator Daschle, the head of the
Democratic Policy Committee, and he rendered valuable service to the
caucus, to the Senate, and the whole country in his capacity there. We
served together in the House of Representatives. We have traveled
together. His wife Kim is such a fine human being. I am going to miss
Byron. He is and has been one of my close advisers, close friends. I
hope I am not being boastful here, but I don't think Tom Daschle had
two better friends in the Senate than Dorgan and Reid. We were very
close to him. We admired our friend Tom Daschle and did everything we
could to make his life here as pleasant as possible.
As far as being a good speaker, he is very good. He has a unique way
of communicating that very few people I have known have had. He is
someone who, as far as the finances of this country and the world, is
without peer as a legislator. He knows it all, and he has a way of
articulating his views that is unique and I think very powerful. So I
am going to miss Byron Dorgan very much. He is a wonderful human being.
I care a great deal about him. I have watched his son and daughter grow
up. They are in college now. I remember them when they were little
kids. In fact, my son Key, who was a fine athlete at the University of
Virginia, when he was playing on those national champion soccer teams
at the University of Virginia, gave Byron's son Brendon a few soccer
lessons. So I am grateful for the friendship of Senator Bennett and
Senator Dorgan.
Jim Bunning
Senator Bunning, I of course admire because of his great athletic
skills. He is a member of the Baseball Hall of Fame. To think I have
had the opportunity to serve in the Senate with one of the great
pitchers of all time. I love talking to Jim Bunning about his baseball
days. Some of the stories he has told I have repeated many times and I
will never forget them. One of the things he said that I have repeated
on a number of occasions--Jim Bunning was a great pitcher, an All-Star
with no-hitters in both leagues. But he has some humility, because he
said there was Sandy Koufax and there was the rest of us. He and I
don't vote often the same way, but he is a man who has a strong
opinion, and I am going to miss Jim Bunning and the ability for me to
talk to him about his athletic feats. I certainly wish him well in
whatever his endeavors may be in the future.
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