[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 82 (Tuesday, June 11, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4208-S4209]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO SUSAN SULLAM
Mr. CARDIN. Madam President; I rise today for a moment of bittersweet
reflection and the celebration of a dedicated public servant who has
contributed greatly to the State of Maryland and our entire Nation.
June 21st marks the final day that Susan Sullam will be working in my
office as my communications director. We've traversed a 27-year journey
together that started when I was first running for the House of
Representatives. Over the years, with a combination of her quick
writing and single-minded determination, she has helped me find my
voice and articulate my positions during the very best and the very
worst of times for me and our country. She has been a friend, trusted
counselor, and a part of my extended family.
As a former editor at Knight-Ridder with an interest in politics,
Susan became one of my first and few campaign workers. She was
instrumental in helping me win my first election to the U.S. House of
Representatives. And when I took office, she became my first press
secretary. Somehow, Susan managed to give 110 percent of herself to her
family and to her job.
Throughout our time working together, I have had the privilege of
watching Susan's daughters, Jennifer and Karen, grow into remarkable,
professionally accomplished young women. She instilled in her girls the
understanding that you really could raise a family and have a career
without shortchanging either one. I am forever grateful to them and
Susan's husband Brian for sharing her time with me and the people of
Maryland. I know Susan's family is looking forward to their first
dinner without her Blackberry
I have always thought that Susan was born to be a journalist. Her
mother, Mary Jane Fisher, was an admired and respected journalist and
publicist who worked for 25 years as the Washington correspondent for
the National Underwriter, a publisher of insurance and financial
services trade publications. She was a well-known figure on Capitol
Hill, and she frequented hearings of the Ways and Means Committee,
where I served.
During one particularly memorable Medicare hearing, I watched from
the dais as three generations of this wonderful family all worked the
room. Mary Jane was reporting for her publication; Susan was covering
the hearing as my press secretary; and Susan's daughter Jennifer was
serving as an intern in the Ways and Means press office that summer,
reporting to her boss, now-Representative Dan Maffei of New York.
Susan has been witness to the good and bad of politics over the
course of nearly three decades. We started together at a time of great
optimism that Congress could make decisions and enact meaningful
legislation. Susan worked tirelessly during the many iterations of
health care reform; she was constantly and meticulous pulling together
materials that would help explain how real families would benefit from
the passage of the legislation. This was as true in the 1990s with
Hillary Clinton, as it was just a few years ago when we finally passed
the Affordable Care Act. Her congressional career also encompassed my
time as a member of the House Ethics Committee. During this period,
Susan was witness to the various undertakings of the committee as it
carried out it is authorization to investigate violations of the House
of Code of Official Conduct by Members and staff, investigations that
included the ``House Bank'' and the Speaker of the House.
But Susan's career was so much more. As I pushed to reshape our
retirement system, Susan was there every step of the way with an
article, interview, or a cable show designed specifically to get out
the word to people who could benefit from the proposed legislative
changes.
Some moments we have shared together tested our Nation, as well as
our professional relationship. We came together as a family during 9/
11, watching our Nation as it was grievously wounded. I voted against
giving President George W. Bush the power to send
[[Page S4209]]
our troops into Iraq. While I knew it was the right decision, it was
certainly not an easy one at the time. She pushed hard and urged me to
take the strongest possible position against the war. She was my voice
and my megaphone.
What makes all of Susan's accomplishments so much greater is the fact
that she did much of this split between Washington and Baltimore. She
was born and raised a Washingtonian but made Baltimore her home and the
place she raised her family. She was as comfortable talking about
restaurants on Federal Hill as Adams Morgan. When I was elected to the
U.S. Senate, Susan was with me as I traveled throughout the State. She
welcomed the opportunity to expand our representation to all of
Maryland. Together we held press conferences on the Eastern Shore,
visited editorial boards in western Maryland, and attended ribbon
cuttings from Aberdeen to Fort Meade. Susan made herself familiar with
nearly every Maryland smalltown newspaper and most of their publishers
and could tell you about their editors without missing a beat.
After 27 years, I take as much pride as Susan in the fact that she
really has had more opportunities than anyone else to share my voice
and my positions on issues of importance with the people of Maryland
and the Nation. I have enjoyed working side-by-side with her and having
her as an anchor of Team Cardin. I have learned from her, and I thank
her for her time. Her quick words, honesty, and dedication to public
service will be missed by me, Myrna, and my entire staff. It is with
heartfelt gratitude that I wish her well in this next stage of her
life.
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