[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 163 (Tuesday, December 18, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S8104-S8105]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REMEMBERING DANIEL K. INOUYE
Mr. HATCH. Mr. President, I want to take a moment to pay tribute to a
person I loved, appreciated, and worked with for all these years--all
of my 36 years in the Senate--and to bid a fond farewell to our dearly
departed friend, the senior Senator from Hawaii, Dan Inouye.
In addition to being a distinguished United States Senator, Senator
Inouye was many things: a Pearl Harbor survivor, a Medal of Honor
recipient, a father, a grandfather, and a loving husband to his wife
Irene.
As a volunteer with the Red Cross, young Daniel Inouye tended to the
wounded in the aftermath of the attack on Pearl Harbor.
During World War II, when the Federal Government was placing
thousands of his fellow Japanese Americans in internment camps, Senator
Inouye was one of many Asian Americans who petitioned the government
for the right to serve their country in the military. His petition was
successful, and he served heroically. In fact, the story of Senator
Inouye's military service has become the stuff of legend here in the
Senate and throughout the country.
In 2000, Senator Inouye, along with 21 of his fellow Japanese-
American World War II veterans, was awarded the Medal of Honor, our
Nation's highest honor for valor.
In 1959, when Hawaii achieved statehood, he was elected the State's
first full member of the House of Representatives. Three years later,
in 1962, he was elected to the U.S. Senate, where he would serve for
five decades, the second longest tenure in this Chamber's history. I am
honored to have served with Senator Inouye throughout my entire Senate
service.
While he and I often found ourselves on different sides when it came
to
[[Page S8105]]
issues, I always knew him to be a man of principle and decency, and I
never doubted his commitment to the people of his State and to doing
what he believed was right.
One of the few times we found ourselves on the same side came when
our mutual friend, the late Senator Ted Stevens, asked us both for help
when his character was called into question. Politically speaking,
participating in Senator Stevens' trial held no benefit for Senator
Inouye. It would have been easy for Senator Inouye to deny his friend's
request, and few would have blamed him for it. But that wasn't how
Senator Inouye operated. Rather than letting a friend fend for himself,
Senator Inouye showed great loyalty and characteristic integrity in his
willingness to testify to his friend's good character, and put his own
reputation on the line in service of a friend. And I had a similar
privilege.
Both Senator Inouye and I were mystified by what happened in that
trial, and we were justified in our mystification when, finally, they
had to admit it was a trial that should never have been brought. All I
can say is I remember him testifying and I testified after he did, and
I would mention that Colin Powell also testified as to Ted Stevens'
character. All three of us felt this was a besmirchment of a truly
honorable and decent man.
Once again, I am proud to have been Senator Inouye's colleague, but I
am more proud and more pleased to have been his friend over all these
years. He actually showed me a great deal of concern, showed me a great
deal of friendship, and spent time with me when I needed particular
help, and was there in many ways for not just me but for others as
well, one of the kindest, most decent, and honorable people I have ever
met. I express my deepest sympathies to his wife and family and their
many, many friends.
Daniel Inouye left an indelible mark on the Nation he loved so much
and he will surely be missed. Aloha, my friend.
____________________