[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 165 (Thursday, December 20, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S8297-S8298]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO MICHAEL ALEXANDER
Mr. LIEBERMAN. Mr. President, I rise today to honor the nearly
quarter of a century of public service of my friend and the staff
director of the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee,
Michael L. Alexander.
Mike will be leaving his position when this Congress adjourns. And he
will leave quite a legacy.
Thomas Jefferson once asked the question: ``What duty does a citizen
owe to the government that secures the society in which he lives?''
Answering his own question, Jefferson said: ``A nation that rests on
the will of the people must also depend on individuals to support its
institutions if it is to flourish. Persons qualified for public service
should feel an obligation to make that contribution.''
Mike answered that call in a way that would have made Jefferson
proud.
Mike joined what was then the Governmental Affairs Committee as a
staff member for the minority side in April 2001 and was a leader in
negotiating and drafting the legislation that created the Department of
Homeland Security and later the Intelligence Reform and Terrorism
Prevention Act.
In recognition of his hard work and proven leadership abilities, I
promoted Mike to the position of staff director in May 2006. Under his
direction, the committee, through legislation and investigation, took
on some of the great challenges of our time.
After Hurricane Katrina ravaged the Gulf Coast in August 2005,
claiming more than 1,800 lives, the committee launched a major
investigation into how American government at all levels failed so
dramatically to safeguard its citizens from a predicted storm. Over the
course of the investigation, the committee held 22 hearings,
interviewed, 345 witnesses, and reviewed over 800,000 documents. The,
``Hurricane Katrina: A Nation Still Unprepared,'' was the most
comprehensive evaluation of the Katrina catastrophe.
In 2007, the committee began a series of 14 hearings examining the
root causes of violent domestic radicalization, the tactics and
measures used by U.S. law enforcement at every level to prevent and
deter homegrown terrorism, the role of the Internet in self
radicalization, and the threat of homegrown terrorism to military
personnel.
In May 2008, the committee issued a bipartisan staff report detailing
the results of its investigation entitled, ``Violent Islamist
Extremism, The Internet, and the Homegrown Terrorist Threat.'' The
report concluded that: ``No longer is the threat just from abroad, as
was the case with the attacks of September 11, 2001; the threat is now
increasingly from within, from homegrown terrorists who are inspired by
violent Islamist ideology to plan and execute attacks where they live.
One of the primary drivers of this new threat is the use of the
Internet to enlist individuals or groups of individuals to join the
cause without ever affiliating with a terrorist organization.''
Following the murders at Fort Hood on Nov. 5, 2009, when Maj. Nidal
Hasan--a psychiatrist trained by the U.S. Army at taxpayer expense
entered the Soldier Readiness Processing Center with two loaded pistols
and opened fire, killing 13 and wounding 32, the committee launched a
14-month investigation into what happened and why.
The report that followed the investigation--``A Ticking Time Bomb:
Counterterrorism Lessons from the U.S. Government's Failure to Prevent
the Fort Hood Attack''--detailed flawed practices and communications,
both within and between the FBI and Department of Defense, that allowed
Hasan to remain in the military--and even be promoted--despite many
warning signs that he was becoming dangerous.
Besides the investigations, here are just a few of the successful
pieces of legislation that were passed out of the committee and enacted
into law on Mike's watch: The ``Post-Katrina Emergency Management
Reform Act of 2006,'' which remade and strengthened the Federal
Emergency Management Agency after the failures in responding to
Hurricane Katrina; the ``Honest Leadership and Open Government Act of
2007,'' which made sweeping ethics and lobbying reforms; the
``Implementing the Recommendations of the 9/11 Commission Act of
2007,'' which strengthened the Nation's security against terrorism by
providing first responders with the resources they need to protect
their communities from disaster, promoting interoperable emergency
communications, requiring screening of cargo placed on passenger
aircraft, securing mass transit, rail and buses; and improving the
security of maritime cargo; ``The Inspector General Reform Act,''
passed in 2008, which sought to improve government accountability by
guaranteeing that qualified individuals are appointed as IGs and that
IGs remain independent; ``The Presidential Appointment Efficiency and
Streamlining Act of 2011'' that addresses the increasingly slow and
burdensome appointments process by, among other things, removing about
170 non-policymaking positions from the list of Presidential
appointments requiring Senate confirmation, thereby allowing the Senate
to focus on the most important positions; and the Stop Trading on
Congressional Knowledge, STOCK Act, that ensures that Members of
Congress are subject to the same insider information prohibitions as
other Americans.
It is quite a record of accomplishment. And he did it all with a
wonderful sense of humor, patience and civility.
Mr. President, I want to return to Thomas Jefferson for a moment,
because he had another thought on public service that sums up one of
Mike's greatest assets--spotting talent in young people and convincing
them to use those talents in public service.
Jefferson once wrote to a friend: ``It will remain . . . to those now
coming on the stage of public affairs to perfect what has been so well
begun by those going off it.''
Mike may be leaving the Senate, but he leaves behind a cadre of
talented and diverse individuals he recruited to join the committee and
then gave increased responsibilities as their talents began to flower.
Many of these people who started out as interns or junior support
staffers, have moved up the committee ranks, working on important
legislation and investigations, while others have gone
[[Page S8298]]
on to other Congressional or executive branch offices thanks to the
skills Mike helped them develop.
Prior to joining the committee, Mike served as an Executive Assistant
to former Agriculture Secretary Mike Espy and had also been Espy's
Legislative Director when Espy was a Congressman.
One of the joys of my Senate career was the chance to work with
talented and dedicated public servants like Michael Alexander and I
want to thank him for all his hard work and wish him the best of luck
in whatever his next endeavor may be.
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