[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 44 (Wednesday, March 30, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H2041-H2042]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HONORING DANIEL P. MULHOLLAN
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
North Carolina (Mr. Price) for 5 minutes.
Mr. PRICE of North Carolina. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to honor the
distinguished career of a man who has been an institution within an
institution: Daniel P. Mulhollan, the director of our Congressional
Research Service, who will retire next month after more than 17 years
at the helm of CRS and nearly 42 years of service to the Congress
overall.
To say that Dan is an institution around here is really an
understatement. In many ways, he has personified the growth of CRS from
a relatively small division of the Library of Congress into the world-
class source of objective and authoritative research and analysis that
it is today.
Dan first joined what was then the Legislative Reference Service as
an analyst in American national government in September of 1969, fresh
out of his doctoral training at Georgetown. At the time, just two of
the 435 Members currently serving in this House had been elected to
Congress--and a fair number serving here hadn't even been born yet!
For the next 25 years, Dan steadily acquired seniority and respect
within the Government Division of CRS, excelling as both an analyst and
a division chief. When the Librarian of Congress, Dr. James Billington,
conducted a strategic review of the Library's priorities in the early
1990s, Dan was tapped to help ensure that the Library's services were
as relevant as possible to the Members, committees, and staff that it
exists to serve. This assignment led him to assume the role of Acting
Deputy Librarian of Congress, and when CRS found itself in search of a
new director a few years later, Dan was a natural fit.
As director, Dan has continued to exemplify both the analytical depth
that is at the core of his organization's mission and the strategic
vision needed to bring CRS into the 21st century. He expanded the
service's ability to bring interdisciplinary scholarship to bear on
complex issues of policy, recruiting scientists and engineers to work
alongside policy analysts and attorneys. He developed a personnel
succession plan to ensure that CRS will continue to be able to recruit
topnotch talent as older analysts retire.
Mr. DREIER. Will the gentleman yield?
Mr. PRICE of North Carolina. I would be happy to yield to my friend
from California, who I know has made a special effort, given his
leadership duties, to join us on the floor.
Mr. DREIER. I would like to join the gentleman from North Carolina in
extending our hearty congratulations to Dan Mulhollan for his
extraordinary service to this institution and, in particular, for the
work that he has done to ensure that the House Democracy Partnership
has been able to succeed.
I want to thank my friend for taking out this very important time,
and I thank him for yielding.
Mr. PRICE of North Carolina. I thank my friend and colleague Mr.
Dreier, the chairman of the House Democracy Partnership, which I had
the privilege to chair for the past four years.
Dan Mulhollan and the Congressional Research Service have indeed been
critical partners in our efforts around the world in developing
democracies to increase the capacity of their parliaments.
Mr. DREIER. We should say we have four of them here, in fact, this
week.
Mr. PRICE of North Carolina. We have delegations from four
parliaments in town this week for workshops on committee operations.
They're from Pakistan, Indonesia, some members from Iraq----
Mr. DREIER. Lebanon.
Mr. PRICE of North Carolina. And from Lebanon. That's right.
There are four groups of parliamentarians here this week, and the
CRS, as usual, is a full partner in putting on workshops for these
members, workshops that will help them strengthen their operations back
home. These exchanges are very useful to us as well.
As my colleague has stressed, the main reason for the two of us being
here to offer this tribute today is because of the support Dan
Mulhollan has offered over the years: first to the Frost-Solomon Task
Force, the precursor of our present commission,
[[Page H2042]]
which in the early 1990s worked in Central and Eastern Europe, offering
technical assistance to the parliaments emerging from communist rule;
and then for the last 6 years to the House Democracy Partnership.
So we are happy to join today in thanking Dan Mulhollan for all these
years of work on behalf of the Congress and particularly for the kind
of support that he has offered our international partnerships.
Dan knows a lot about Congress and has a profound respect for the
institution. He has brought a particular sense of mission to the work
of our commissions. As a political scientist, he recognizes how
critical legislative research is to the growth of democracy, first in
post-Communist Europe and now to all kinds of emerging democracies
around the world.
I had the privilege of traveling last year with Dan to Warsaw to
observe the 20th anniversary of that earlier task force's work. I can
assure my colleagues he received a hero's welcome. His work has not
gone unnoticed, and it is not going to go unnoticed by us either.
We want to salute Dan Mulhollan for his many, many years of
distinguished service. We want to thank him for all that he has done,
and we want to wish him well in his retirement and offer him our
sincere gratitude and praise for a job well done.
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