[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 49 (Monday, March 26, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2028-S2029]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO SENATOR BARBARA MIKULSKI
Mr. HARKIN. Madam President, I join with the entire Senate family in
congratulating my great friend, the distinguished senior Senator from
Maryland, Barbara Mikulski, on becoming the longest serving female
[[Page S2029]]
Member of Congress in our Nation's history. She reached that milestone
recently, having served in Congress for 12,858 days--more than 35
years--surpassing the previous longest serving Member of Congress, the
late Representative Edith Nourse Rogers.
Representative Rogers famously quipped, ``The first 30 years are the
hardest.'' But I dare say that Senator Mikulski has had a somewhat
different experience. As with other pathbreaking women, she has
encountered sexism and discrimination. But from her first day in the
House in 1977 right up to today, in her much respected role as dean of
women Senators, Barbara Mikulski has been a singularly formidable and
forceful public servant. Pity the Representative or Senator who has
made the mistake of in any way underestimating this remarkable person.
For three and a half decades in Congress, Barbara Mikulski has been
an outspoken and proud progressive--a tireless advocate for quality
public education, access to health care, and a strong safety net for
those she calls ``the least of these our sisters and brothers''--
including the elderly, people with disabilities, and the poor. Her
passion for social and economic justice was nurtured by the nuns who
taught her at Catholic school in working-class east Baltimore.
Senator Mikulski's legislative accomplishments are too numerous to
cite here. But I am particularly grateful for the lead role that she
played in early 2009 in passing the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay
Restoration Act--the very first bill signed into law by President
Obama. This law reversed an outrageous Supreme Court decision that
allowed discrimination against women to go unpunished. But, as Senator
Mikulski knows all too well, even the Lilly Ledbetter Act leaves in
place an outrageous status quo where women are paid only 78 cents for
every $1 that their male counterparts are paid. That is why she and I
have continued to work closely together to advance the cause of equal
pay. We are the respective leads on the two Democratic equal pay bills
in the Senate.
As chair of the Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee, I
want to pay special tribute to the extraordinary role she has long
played on our committee.
Senator Mikulski's legislative skills and leadership were critically
important in crafting and passing the Patient Protection and Affordable
Care Act 2 years ago--an achievement that she calls one of the
``greatest social justice initiatives'' of our time. She led the team
that wrote the quality title in the bill, insisting that higher quality
care does not have to be higher cost care. Thanks to Senator Mikulski,
the health care reform law includes a whole range of provisions that
shift the emphasis--rewarding providers not for quantity of service but
for quality of service. I would add that throughout the debate on
health care reform and during the many months the bill was being
written, Senator Mikulski was a fierce advocate for women's health and
for ending the brazen discrimination against women by health insurance
companies.
On the HELP Committee, and also in her role as chair of the
Appropriations subcommittee that funds the Legal Services Corporation,
Senator Mikulski has been a great leader on another issue near and dear
to my heart: legal services for the poor. She has fought hard--and it
has always been an uphill struggle--to provide adequate funding so that
people without resources are not barred from the courthouse door.
Of course, Senator Mikulski has also been one of the Senate's leading
proponents of national and community service. In 2009, she was the
Senate manager for the Edward M. Kennedy Serve America Act, which
retooled our national service programs for the 21st century and
provided expanded opportunities for young people to gain valuable
skills and experience by helping neighbors in need.
Let me share a brief anecdote that illustrates the remarkable role
that Senator Mikulski plays in the body and the respect that she
commands among her colleagues. We all remember the debate, in late
February, on the Blunt amendment, which would have allowed employers to
deny health insurance coverage for contraception. In my role as chair
of the HELP Committee, I was invited to attend a press conference in
the LBJ Room of the Capitol organized by Senator Mikulski to speak out
against the amendment. Let me tell you, this was a remarkable event.
Senator Mikulski spoke first, with tremendous power and passion. One by
one, other Senators spoke--women who, over the decades, have been
counseled and mentored by Senator Mikulski: Senator Patty Murray of
Washington, Senators Barbara Boxer and Dianne Feinstein of California,
and Senator Jeanne Shaheen of New Hampshire. Senator Mikulski's
message, echoed by the other Senators, was characteristically loud and
clear: Decisions about medical care should be made by a woman and her
doctor, not a woman and her boss. Needless to say, Senator Mikulski
carried the day; the amendment was defeated.
Other Senators have noted Senator Mikulski's many firsts, including
the first woman elevated to a leadership position in the Senate. I
would simply add that Barbara Mikulski is also first when it comes to a
Senator being true to her roots, a fierce and effective champion for
her State and passionate fighter for social and economic justice.
Again, I salute the Senator on reaching the historic milestone as the
longest serving female Member of Congress, and I wish her many more
years of distinguished service to our Nation.
____________________