[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 1 (Wednesday, January 5, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S18-S19]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
COMMENDING SENATOR MIKULSKI
Mr. HARKIN. Mr. President, I wish to make some remarks regarding my
dear friend and seatmate on the Appropriations Committee and a member
of my Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee.
I join with the entire Senate family in saluting my good friend, the
distinguished senior Senator from Maryland, on becoming the longest
serving woman in the history of the Senate. This is truly a remarkable
milestone.
I note that Cal Ripken, the former star of Senator Mikulski's
hometown Baltimore Orioles, became known as the ``Iron Man'' for going
16 consecutive years without missing a game. Now perhaps Senator
Mikulski has earned the title of ``Iron Woman'' for going 24
consecutive years in this body without ever deviating from her role as
a fierce advocate for Marylanders and for working people across our
country.
I hasten to add that the measure of a Senator is not how many years
he or she serves in the body but what he or she accomplishes during
those years. That is where Senator Mikulski has truly distinguished
herself over the last quarter of a century.
I especially salute her activism and leadership on the Committee on
Health, Education, Labor and Pensions, formerly chaired, of course, by
Senator Kennedy and which I am now privileged to chair. She has been a
leading champion of Pell grants and for expanding access to higher
education for students of modest means. Of course, as has been stated,
she has been the Senate's leading voice on women's health issues,
fighting to ensure women are included in clinical trials and medical
research at the National Institutes of Health, and securing access to
breast and cervical cancer screenings for women without health
insurance.
Senator Mikulski took the lead in writing the sections of the new
health reform law that focus on improving the quality of care. At every
turn in the drafting of that historic legislation, she fought to ensure
that the unique health needs of women were fully recognized and
accommodated.
As chair of the Subcommittee on Retirement and Aging, Senator
Mikulski has been an outspoken advocate for seniors, focusing
especially on combating elder abuse and neglect. I know she is
especially proud of authoring the Spousal Anti-Impoverishment Act,
which keeps seniors from going bankrupt while paying for a spouse's
nursing home care. I might also add, no one has been a more fierce
supporter and defender of the right for people to have an attorney
through the legal aid system in America. She has fought very hard to
make sure we strengthened the National Legal Services Corporation and
to make sure it receives adequate funding so people who have no money
aren't barred from the courthouse door.
We admire the work of Barbara Mikulski not as a female Senator per se
but as one of 100 Senators. On this day we also recognize that she was
the first woman elected to the Senate whose husband or father did not
serve in high office. We salute her as the proud dean among Senate
women who has gone to extraordinary lengths for so many years to mentor
and guide newly elected women Senators of both parties.
I join my colleagues in congratulating Senator Mikulski as our
longest serving female Senator and wishing her many more years of
accomplishment and service in the Senate.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Minnesota.
Ms. KLOBUCHAR. Mr. President, I rise today to add my voice to those
of my colleagues as we commemorate an extraordinary milestone for a
remarkable woman. Today, Senator Barbara Mikulski becomes the longest
serving woman Senator.
For anyone who has had the privilege of working with or for Senator
Mikulski, this milestone comes as no surprise. She is a devoted public
servant and a dogged advocate for her constituents. She has spent the
vast majority of her life in public service as a social worker, as a
member of the Baltimore City Council, then as a Member of the House of
Representatives, and finally as a Senator. With each step, her
constituency got larger and she worked even harder to fight for the
people of Maryland.
Senator Mikulski is no stranger to celebrating firsts or milestones.
She was the first Democratic woman to be elected to the Senate in her
own right without succeeding a spouse or a father. She was also the
first woman to serve on the Senate Appropriations Committee.
It is also worth reflecting on how far we have come in the 24 years
since Senator Mikulski was first elected. She was one of only two women
in the Senate in 1987. In the next Senate, as in the last Senate, we
are now up to 17 female Senators, meaning that they can no longer call
us ``Sweet 16.''
As the dean of women Senators, Senator Mikulski has always been ready
to help women who are thinking about running for the Senate and then
help newly arrived women Senators when they get here. Her wise counsel
is absolutely invaluable. Senator Mikulski has always reached across
the aisle to bring women Senators together. As she puts it: ``Women in
the Senate understand issues not just on the macro level, but on the
macaroni and cheese level.''
Two years ago around this time, I went to the Senate floor with
several of my women colleagues to speak about the importance of passing
the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act. Senator Mikulski had championed the
bill for years. I remember Senator Mikulski bringing us all together
and I will always remember her words. She would say:
To the women of America: Suit up, square your shoulders,
put your lipstick on. We're ready for a revolution.
Senator Mikulski has always been a master of words and quips. She did
it again, and we passed that bill.
On that issue, as on so many others, the cause that Senator Mikulski
championed was victorious due in large part to her tremendous work
ethic and her devoted advocacy.
Senator Mikulski, today we salute you for suiting up and squaring
your shoulders for 24 years and counting, and we look forward to so
many more.
[[Page S19]]
I see my great colleague Senator Stabenow from the State of Michigan
is here.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Michigan.
Ms. STABENOW. Mr. President, I am so pleased to be here today. I
appreciate the words of the great Senator from Minnesota. I am very
pleased to rise with colleagues on both sides of the aisle to pay
tribute to somebody who is much more than a colleague--someone who is
also a mentor and a great friend, the Senator from Maryland, Barbara
Mikulski.
Today, as we all know, she became the longest serving woman Member of
the Senate in the history of our Nation. I have a 3-year-old
granddaughter Lilly who will be able to read now in the history books
about not only her grandmother but the woman who holds this record,
Senator Barbara Mikulski, and all she has done and all she means to
each of us, particularly as a role model for my granddaughter and other
young children, other young women who will be coming after all of us.
She is here today because she is bold and fearless and determined, as
we all know. In 1986, when she first ran for the Senate, she looked for
inspiration from her own great-grandmother who came to the United
States from Poland with no money and no job. But her great-grandmother
knew the importance of hard work and she built a life for her family
here, a new beginning, and in so doing opened the door for future
generations. I know today she is looking down from a special place with
tremendous pride.
When Senator Mikulski won that election, becoming the first
Democratic woman to win a Senate seat in her own right, she carried on
her great-grandmother's legacy--opening doors for future generations of
women to follow in her footsteps. Thanks to that, there are more women
serving in the Senate today than have ever served in the entire history
of our great country. When Senator Mikulski was elected in 1986, from
the moment she arrived in this august body, she has been a tireless
champion of working families in Maryland and across the country. I am
proud to have partnered with her on so many important efforts to make
sure we are building things in America again and supporting the people
who have built the great middle class of this country by their hard
work.
She grew up working in her parents' grocery store and understands the
struggles of working families who want nothing more than to create a
better life for their children and their grandchildren.
She got her start in politics fighting to save the Fells Point
neighborhood in Baltimore, stopping a proposed highway that would have
divided a neighborhood and destroyed that community. Today, because of
Senator Mikulski, Fells Point is a thriving residential and commercial
community. She has continued from that day, every day, fighting for
neighborhoods and families and standing for the men and women who work
hard every day to make a better life for themselves and their families.
When Barbara first arrived in the Senate, she was one of only two
women Senators, as we know. Before then, women were appointed to the
worst committees, were locked out of the ``old boys' club'' and didn't
have much of a voice. But she changed all that.
She got appointed to the powerful Appropriations Committee--the first
Democratic woman to do so, giving the women of America a voice, for the
first time, on how we set our priorities for the investments of our
country. More importantly, she learned how to build coalitions, to work
with colleagues on both sides of the aisle, and get things done for the
people who sent her here to work for them.
Today, as dean of the women Senators, Barbara continues that
leadership. Thanks to her, the women of the Senate get together--both
Democrats and Republicans--for fellowship and friendship on a regular
basis. Now, following in her footsteps, there are woman Members on
every single committee in the Senate. That is important to the
operation of our country's business.
Her example shows us all the importance of hard work, determination,
and courage.
I congratulate my friend, Senator Barbara Mikulski, today on her
great accomplishment and, most importantly, on a distinguished record
of public service on behalf of the people of Maryland and our country.
I thank her for all she has done for me personally and for all the
other women in the Senate--the ones who have already followed in her
footsteps and the many who are still to come.
This is an exciting day for the history books--as some of us like to
say, it is another step in ``herstory''--Barbara's story--which is a
special one for our country.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. HARKIN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Manchin). Without objection, it is so
ordered.
Mr. HARKIN. Mr. President, parliamentary inquiry: Under the unanimous
consent agreement, there was a period of 30 minutes for tributes to
Senator Mikulski. Is there any of that time remaining?
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Time has been consumed.
Mr. HARKIN. If I am not mistaken, under the unanimous consent
agreement, I was deemed to have 45 minutes.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. That is correct.
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