[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 163 (Tuesday, December 18, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S8109-S8111]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REMEMBERING DANIEL K. INOUYE
Mrs. HUTCHISON. Mr. President, I rise this sad day to comment on the
passing of a great patriot, Senator Daniel Inouye. He fought for his
country as part of the Greatest Generation and served his State with
distinction for more than 50 years.
We were all honored to know him and blessed by his sacrifice in
defense of American freedom. We served together on the Armed Services
Committee and later on the Appropriations Committee as well. Danny's
insight was invaluable to our Nation's defense and military policy. He
did make America stronger.
I had the pleasure of working with him when we traveled together to
Bosnia to visit our troops in the very early stages of that conflict.
We later went to the Middle East on a CODEL with Senator Stevens as
well. One of the pictures in my office is of Senator Stevens, Senator
Inouye, Senator Snowe, and myself in our helmets and flak jackets the
first time we flew into Sarajevo in the early 1990s, when the Serbs had
still been shooting from the hills into the airport.
In 1995, on the 50th anniversary of the end of World War II, Senator
Inouye and a number of other World War II veterans gathered at the
Smithsonian to reminisce about their time in battle.
Senator Inouye recalled the morning of December 7 at Pearl Harbor,
when he recognized that the men in the Japanese planes looked like him,
and he said he knew then his life would never be the same.
As soon as the Army permitted Japanese Americans to volunteer, he
signed up and ventured to the mainland of the United States for the
first time in his life. He and his fellow Hawaiians of Japanese descent
worried about how they would be treated in the United States but, as he
recalled it, they encountered kindness and respect at every stop their
train made.
[[Page S8110]]
By the time he finished his training and prepared to depart for
Europe, he said he had learned this was truly a country worth dying for
and certainly one worth sacrificing an arm in order to preserve our
freedom and our way of life. He did lose his arm, and it was during
this time that he also distinguished himself to earn the Congressional
Medal of Honor, the highest military award in our country for valor.
There is often talk of partisan acrimony in Washington, but we know
strong friendships can form across party lines. Senator Inouye and
Senator Ted Stevens had such a friendship. They were both war heroes
from the last two States to join the Union, and they both recognized
and guarded the congressional prerogatives under our Constitution to
play the primary role in determining appropriations to fund the
government.
When they were the two senior Senators on the Appropriations
Committee and on the Commerce Committee, they considered themselves as
cochairs and officially designated each other as that. When control of
the Senate changed hands, it was not unusual for one to retain key
members of the other's staff.
So today, I add mine to the many voices mourning his passing and say
to his family: You are in our thoughts and prayers.
Danny Inouye was someone in our Senate whom I think we should all
strive to be; that is, he was a warrior, but he was a gentleman. He was
a man who was loyal to the core for not only his beliefs but also his
friends, and if he gave his word, his word was good. He is someone whom
every one of us who knew him cared for and regarded as a giant among
us. In fact, I would say the Senate has lost a gentle giant.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Maryland.
Mr. CARDIN. Mr. President, I join with Senator Hutchison in paying
tribute to Senator Daniel K. Inouye.
I rise to pay tribute to our dear colleague. Senator Inouye was not
one of the tallest Senators; in fact, he had a slight build and a quiet
demeanor. But he was a giant. He will be missed by all in the Senate.
The people of his beloved Hawaii will miss him. All Americans will miss
him.
In the immediate aftermath of the attack on Pearl Harbor, Senator
Inouye was declared an enemy alien because of his Japanese ancestry.
But in 1943, when the U.S. Army dropped its enlistment ban on Japanese
Americans, he enlisted in the Army and volunteered to be part of the
442nd Regimental Combat Team.
The 442nd became the most highly decorated infantry regiment in the
history of the U.S. Army. The 442nd, known by its motto, ``Go for
Broke,'' was awarded eight Presidential Unit Citations and 21 of its
members, including Senator Inouye, were awarded the Medal of Honor for
their heroism during World War II.
Following World War II, Senator Inouye finished his undergraduate
studies at the University of Hawaii and then earned a law degree from
George Washington University. In 1953, he was elected to the Hawaii
Territorial House of Representatives and was immediately elected
majority leader. He served two terms there and was elected to the
Hawaii Territorial Senate in 1957. Midway through his first term in the
Territorial Senate, Hawaii achieved statehood. He won a seat in the
House of Representatives as Hawaii's first full Member and took office
on August 21, 1959, the same date Hawaii became a State, and he was
reelected in 1960.
Then, in 1962, he was elected to the Senate and was reelected eight
times, only once with less than 69 percent of the vote. Senator Inouye
had been in the Congress since Hawaii became a State. He was the second
longest serving Senator in our Nation's history, and he served with
distinction, just as he served with distinction in the U.S. Army.
Others on this floor have already detailed his bravery in battle, his
service on the Watergate and Iran-Contra Committees and his
accomplishments as the first chairman of the Senate Select Committee on
Intelligence and as chairman of the Commerce and Appropriations
Committees. I would like to highlight his work on behalf of the victims
of racial and economic and social inequality and his commitment to
making the Senate operate as the Founding Fathers envisioned.
A statement on Senator Inouye's Web site says: ``Dan Inouye was
always among the first to speak out against injustice whether interned
Japanese Americans, Filipino World War II veterans, Native Americans
and Native Hawaiians.'' How true.
A few hundred yards from this Chamber is the Smithsonian's
magnificent National Museum of the American Indian. Senator Inouye
introduced the legislation to create that museum and fought for Native
American and Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander recognition and
rights and restitution as chairman of the Senate Committee on Indian
Affairs.
In the Senate, Senator Inouye treated all his colleagues with respect
and courtesy and always reached across the aisle to forge bipartisan
solutions to our Nation's biggest challenges. His friendship with
former Republican leader Bob Dole, whom he met while the two of them
were recuperating from grievous combat injuries--along with, I might
say, another wounded veteran who became a giant in the Senate, Senator
Philip Hart of Michigan--serves as an example we should strive to
emulate. He was a member of the so-called Gang of 14, again reaching
across the aisle at a time when partisan tempers were particularly
high.
There are few--if any--Americans who have been more heroic in battle,
more accomplished as a public servant, more dedicated to family and
country and humanity than Daniel K. Inouye. Yet he was also one of the
most humble and self-effacing people. What a tremendous example of a
life well lived he has left for all of us as we mourn his death,
celebrate his life, and give thanks for his service to the people of
Hawaii, the Senate, and the United States of America.
To Senator Inouye we say aloha.
With that, I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The 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. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. HARKIN. Mr. President, the Senate--both as a legislative body and
as a family--is in mourning today after the passing of its most senior
and revered Member, Senator Daniel Inouye of Hawaii.
In his final days, Senator Inouye was asked how he wanted to be
remembered. He replied, with characteristic modesty:
I represented the people of Hawaii and this nation honestly
and to the best of my ability. I think I did OK.
With similar understatement, speaking about the extraordinary act of
heroism in combat for which he was awarded the Congressional Medal of
Honor, he explained that it was ``a case of temporary insanity.''
Modesty and reserve were trademark qualities of our beloved Danny
Inouye. But we can speak more forthrightly about this very
extraordinary person.
Yes, Senator Inouye represented the people of Hawaii and this Nation
honestly and to best of his ability. But he did not do just ``OK.''
Daniel Inouye was a truly great American, a public servant of
extraordinary accomplishment. His qualities of character and conscience
and steadfastness have set the standard in the Senate for over five
decades.
Think about this. In 1973 and 1974, as a Senate Select Committee
investigated the crimes of Watergate, which Senator did we count on to
take charge with tough but fair questioning of those involved?
In 1976, after revelations of abuse of power by the CIA and the FBI,
which Senator did we count on to oversee reforms as first chairman of
the Select Committee on Intelligence? Of course, we counted on Senator
Inouye.
In 1987, as the Iran-Contra scandal rocked the Reagan administration,
which Senator did we count on to lead a tough but fair inquiry as
chairman of the select committee appointed to investigate the affair?
Of course, we counted on Senator Inouye.
Time and again, over seven decades, the United States of America has
counted on Daniel Inouye, and he always delivered. He always responded
to
[[Page S8111]]
the call of duty with courage, selflessness, and excellence.
As we all know, during the Second World War, Dan served in the famed,
all-Nisei 442nd Regimental Combat Team. After losing his right arm and
sustaining other grave injuries in combat, he spent 2 years in Army
hospitals. At one of those hospitals he met two other wounded veterans:
a soldier from Kansas named Bob Dole and a Michigan boy named Philip
Hart. All three would go on to become giants of Senate history.
It is difficult to imagine, but after returning from the war, LT
Daniel Inouye was wearing an empty right sleeve pinned to his Army
uniform and was denied service at a San Francisco barbershop. The
barber dismissed him with the words, ``We don't serve Japs here.'' One
of Daniel Inouye's great legacies in his successful fight to defeat
that brand of racism and discrimination was his successful fight
against any form of discrimination against anyone, especially people
with disabilities. Throughout his political career, he fought for civil
rights and social justice not only for Japanese Americans but for all
Americans.
Mr. President, I have lost not only a friend of nearly four decades
but also my chairman on the Committee on Appropriations and its
Subcommittee on Defense. Senator Inouye was well known as a stalwart
advocate for national defense and for veterans. He also fought very
passionately to advance education, the National Institutes of Health,
and other programs in the jurisdiction of my Appropriations
Subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education.
I will never forget what Senator Inouye said one time in a meeting in
which my bill on labor, health and human services, education, NIH, the
Centers for Disease Control--all of the things that are in that bill
came forward. Remember, Senator Inouye was at that time the chairman of
the Defense Appropriations Subcommittee, and he said something I will
never forget.
He said:
I chair the Defense Appropriations Subcommittee. That is
the subcommittee that defends America.
He said:
Senator Harkin chairs the Subcommittee on Labor, Health and
Human Services, and Education. That is the subcommittee that
defines America.
So Senator Inouye was not a one-dimensional person. He was not just
someone who fought for our veterans and fought for the strong defense
of our country. I also remember him saying one time--repeating the
famous words of President Truman--that the strength of America comes
not just from the number of tanks, guns, and war planes we have but
from the health, welfare, and education of our people.
In tributes on the floor yesterday and today, colleagues are
remembering Dan Inouye as one of the greatest Senators of our time, and
indeed he was. But knowing Dan and the values he held dear, he would
want no greater tribute than to be remembered as a loyal friend, a man
of honor, decency, and humility. Senator Inouye was that and much more.
Senator Inouye was the finest of men. For half a century, the Senate
has been graced by his dignified and noble presence. It will not be the
same without him. We will miss our friend Daniel Inouye very, very
much.
Mr. President, I yield the floor, and I suggest the absence of a
quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The 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. Without objection, it is so ordered.
____________________