[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 49 (Wednesday, April 6, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H2404-H2406]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HONORING FORMER CONGRESSMAN JOHN ADLER
The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Reed). Under the Speaker's announced
policy of January 5, 2011, the gentleman from New Jersey (Mr. Lance) is
recognized for 17 minutes.
Mr. LANCE. Mr. Speaker, I rise this evening in a very sad moment for
the people of the State of New Jersey. I want to thank Congressman
Pallone for joining with me this evening, as well as other Members of
the House, as we pay tribute to our colleague, John Adler, who served
in this House in the last Congress, an extremely close personal friend
of mine, he and I having served 17 years together in the New Jersey
legislature.
Mr. Speaker, before I deliver my remarks, we are honored this evening
to be joined by the minority whip, the former majority leader, who
certainly knew Congressman Adler well.
I yield to the distinguished minority whip, the gentleman from
Maryland (Mr. Hoyer).
Mr. HOYER. I thank my friend for yielding.
I did not know that he was taking a Special Order, but I was here on
the floor, went over to say hello to my dear friend and he indicated
this Special Order was being taken for John Adler.
John Adler died too young. John Adler contributed extraordinarily to
his family, to his community, to his State and to his Nation.
He served here too short a time. He was full of energy and of ideas,
of intellect, of integrity; and he became a good friend in a short
period of time. And I counted him as one of the assets of this
Congress, not a Democratic asset or a Republican asset, but someone who
cared about his country and who wanted to see it adopt policies that
were productive for its people.
It is appropriate that we remember this too short a life that,
notwithstanding its brevity, was filled with great productivity,
service and commitment. I appreciate the fact that the members of the
New Jersey delegation have allowed me to join them, Mr. Speaker, in
paying tribute to this great American.
I want to say to his family, I called Shelley the other day and
didn't get her but left a message, four children are missing their
father tonight, a loving wife, whom I got to know as well, missing her
husband. While our loss is certainly not as personal or as keen as
their loss, we share that loss in a very real sense.
Not only have we lost an American public servant; we have lost a
friend and a colleague. For that we will say a prayer for his family,
and we will be there for his family whenever they need us.
So I thank the gentleman from New Jersey, my friend Mr. Lance, for
giving me this time to join him and Mr. Pallone and Mr. Holt in paying
tribute to this wonderful human being whom we had the privilege of
serving with, for too brief a time.
Mr. LANCE. Thank you very much, Mr. Hoyer.
Mr. Speaker, I have known John Adler for 20 years.
{time} 2130
He entered the New Jersey State Senate in January 1992, having been
the only Democratic candidate to win an open seat that year, defeating
an incumbent in what was not a strong year for the Democratic Party,
his party. It was a strong year for my party, the Republican Party. And
so he came to Trenton as a phenomenon.
[[Page H2405]]
He was a very young man. He was born in 1959, so he would have been
32 years old when he became a member of the State Senate. I had been
elected to an unexpired term in the General Assembly the year before,
and I served in the 1990s in the General Assembly, the lower house of
our legislature, and he served continually in our upper house, in our
State Senate, having first been elected in 1991 and then reelected in
1993, 1997, 2001, 2003 and 2007.
He rose to a position of prominence in the New Jersey Senate. He
eventually chaired the State Senate Judiciary Committee, which is an
extremely important responsibility in the structure of our government
in New Jersey. And he was always interested in public policy. The year
before he was elected to the State Senate, he had run as an underdog in
a congressional race. And although he did not win that race, I think
that many took note of his candidacy, and I think that propelled him
into our State Senate.
I moved from the lower house of the New Jersey legislature to the
State Senate in the election of 2001 when we became direct colleagues,
and we worked together on many different issues. And he always worked
in a collegial and extremely competent fashion.
Indeed, we sat next to each other for a period of time of our service
in the State Senate, divided only by the center aisle. To those who
know our State Capitol in Trenton, the State Senate chamber is a very
small room. It was designed originally for 21 members, one State
Senator from each of our 21 counties, and when the State Senate was
increased in population in the 1960s, based upon the principle of one
person one vote, to 40 members, it became a place where it's really
quite overcrowded. And so we really sat extremely close to each other
in this small chamber of the State Senate.
John Adler's career in the legislature was one of distinction--for
example, prohibiting smoking in indoor public places and workplaces. He
also sponsored an act promoting lower vehicle emissions and an
antipredatory lending act to protect consumers from unfair credit
practices. And based on that and many other accomplishments when he
came here, he was appointed to the Financial Services Committee, the
committee to which I was appointed, as well, and so we became
colleagues not only here in this Chamber, the House of Representatives,
the people's House across the United States, but we became colleagues
on the Financial Services Committee.
John was not raised in circumstances of affluence. He lost his father
when he was a young man, and for him and his mother, it was a struggle.
And yet despite that, he went to Harvard. He was graduated from Harvard
College in 1981, and from Harvard Law School in 1984. He was an
excellent student. And at Harvard, he met the person who became his
wife, Shelley, someone whom I know and who is known by my wife, Heidi,
and we consider ourselves to be friends with the entire Adler family.
And together, John and Shelley brought into this world four wonderful
sons, Jeff, Alex, Andrew and Oliver, all of whom I know. Jeff is at
Harvard at the moment, Alex is at Cornell, and they have two younger
brothers. And tonight on this sad day, the day when John's funeral took
place at Temple Emanuel in Cherry Hill, we remember prayerfully his
wife, Shelley, and their beautiful sons, Jeff, Alex, Andrew and Oliver.
In 2008, there were two open seats in the House of Representatives in
New Jersey due to retirements: Jim Saxton in District 3 and Mike
Ferguson in District 7. And John succeeded Jim Saxton, as I had the
honor of succeeding Mike Ferguson. So we were the only freshmen in the
class of 2008 from New Jersey. And I think that we shared that bond as,
of course, every member of a freshman class shares a particular and
special bond.
Certainly, it is exciting for someone to move from a State
legislative chamber here to the House of Representatives, and I think
we shared that excitement, for example, when we went together to the
Harvard seminar that took place for new members, and of course the
orientation that takes place here and when we would bump into each
other in the Hall here during orientation sometimes we thought, what
were we doing here? It was an exciting time for both of us.
John Adler was a person of enormous wit, a very dry, subtle, and
sophisticated wit. And it really pierced the veil of much of what
occurs in public life and in political life where in so many instances
we take ourselves too seriously. That was not Congressman Adler.
He had been involved over the course of his life in many different
charitable activities. He served on the Cherry Hill Township Council
before he went to the State legislature, the boards of the Camden
County Chapter of the American Red Cross, the Food Bank of South
Jersey, the Virtua West Jersey Health and Hospital Foundation, and the
Camden County Advisory Board on Children. And certainly his respect for
the political process is something that we should all recall,
especially those of us who had the honor of serving with him in Trenton
and in Washington.
I believe that those who serve in public life do so out of a sense of
responsibility. John Adler could have made a great fortune in the
practice of law given his native intelligence, given his academic
training and given his ability as a speaker. He chose to be involved in
public life in Cherry Hill, a great suburban community in Camden County
in southern New Jersey, in the State legislature, where he was very
much involved in making sure that the judges who were appointed to
office in New Jersey were men and women of ability. We have a system in
New Jersey, Mr. Speaker, where our judges are appointed, not elected;
appointed by the Governor and confirmed by the State Senate. And as
chairman of the State Senate Judiciary Committee, John was intimately
involved in that.
The district he served was an interesting district. The only Camden
County community in the district is his hometown of Cherry Hill, and he
served vast portions of neighboring counties, Burlington County and
Ocean County. And to those who are not familiar with the geography of
the State of New Jersey, places in Ocean County are among the most
beautiful beaches anywhere, not only in this country but in the entire
world. And I know that he had a commitment to protecting our
environment.
John Adler's life was ended by a bacterial infection in his heart at
age 51. His father had died in his late 40s also based upon a heart
condition. So perhaps John Adler had a weakened heart. But he had a
very strong heart in his views on public policy, in his views on
helping the people whom he represented, first in a municipal governing
body for many distinguished years in our State senate, and in the 111th
Congress, where he was my colleague and my friend. And where we, too,
alone, were the freshmen from the State of New Jersey.
I'm pleased to yield to Congressman Holt.
{time} 2140
Mr. HOLT. Mr. Speaker, I thank the gentleman from New Jersey (Mr.
Lance) and my other colleague from New Jersey (Mr. Pallone) for setting
aside this time.
Too young, too soon, not fair, not explicable in a larger sense. It
is with great sadness that we come to the floor tonight to honor the
life of a fine colleague and a friend, a dedicated public servant to
the State of New Jersey, John Adler.
John was dedicated to the service of the people of New Jersey. His
devotion to New Jersey led him to run for and win a congressional seat
in 2008, as you heard from our colleague, Mr. Lance. While John
ultimately was not returned to this body for this session of Congress,
his legacy of public service will indeed live on. No doubt he would
have continued to find ways to improve the lives of New Jerseyans.
Sharing not only a State but also a hallway in the Longworth Office
Building with John, I had an opportunity to get to know him fairly
well. He was a wonderful colleague. I will miss, as we all will, his
cheerful demeanor and wonderful sense of humor that he brought to all
of his work. A sense of humor, a good spirit in good times and in bad.
And I will miss his wisdom and his sharp political insight and his
policy knowledge.
Today, during a memorial at his funeral in New Jersey, there were
several comments made, and I would like to read a few. His law school
roommate
[[Page H2406]]
and best man commented that John Adler really did believe that worrying
was just a waste of time. He believed that any setback was an
opportunity for something good to happen.
Friends remembered that after he had been defeated but Congress was
still in session for another 2 months, he continued diligently to work
here in Congress. As they said, he wanted to make sure that he made it
to all of the caucus meetings on time. He wanted to continue to make
the right votes for the people of New Jersey.
His brother-in-law commented that playing knowledge games against
John was like playing against Google. He recalled John's near-brush
with ``Jeopardy'' fame that fizzled after the former Congressman paid,
out of his own pocket, to fly for a taping to the television program.
He made it to the makeup room, and one of the functionaries asked in a
formal sense whether John knew anyone who worked for ABC. And John
said, Well, yes, he thought one of his law school classmates had taken
a job with a station. And the producers said that was it; he couldn't
participate.
Said his brother-in-law: You mean you flew all the way out to
California on your own dime? Why on Earth would you tell them that? And
John replied, because I didn't want to lie.
Shelley, John's wife, is an accomplished, lovely person. And there is
every indication that their sons are as bright and public spirited as
their parents. This is a real loss for many of us, as well as for the
people of New Jersey.
I ask that the Members of the House join me in extending our sympathy
and condolences to John's family and friends and his many admirers.
____________________