[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 94 (Thursday, June 27, 2013)]
[House]
[Pages H4135-H4136]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HONORING JOHN DINGELL
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of
January 3, 2013, the gentleman from Maryland (Mr. Hoyer) is recognized
for 60 minutes as the designee of the minority leader.
General Leave
Mr. HOYER. Mr. Speaker, I ask unanimous consent that all Members may
have 5 legislative days in which to revise and extend their remarks and
include extraneous material on the subject of my Special Order.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Is there objection to the request of the
gentleman from Maryland?
There was no objection.
{time} 1910
Mr. HOYER. Mr. Speaker, I am very pleased and honored to rise tonight
to lead a Special Order which honors a great American, a great
colleague, and a great legislator whose service to this country and to
this institution have been unmatched. It is appropriate that we rise
tonight--appropriate particularly in light of the action that was taken
and has been discussed today on the Voting Rights Act.
Mr. Speaker, let me observe tangentially that the gentleman from
Texas said something about cramming something down somebody's throat--
the Voting Rights Act. I will remind my colleagues that it was passed
388-23 in this House and 98-0 in the Senate in 2006.
Let me say we honor a man tonight who not only voted for the Voting
Rights Act in 1965, but has voted for every reauthorization of that act
since that time. John Dingell came to Congress as a Member in 1955,
winning a special election to fill the seat held by his father, John
Dingell, Sr., who himself served from 1933-1955. John Dingell and his
father have represented the people of southeastern Michigan in this
House for eight decades. What an extraordinary testimony to the faith
of their voters and the constancy and loyalty of their representation.
But very frankly, ladies and gentlemen, John's story in Congress
actually began earlier than 1955. It really began in 1938, which is to
say John Dingell, a year before I was born, and I'm one of the older
Members. He came here as a young House page. We don't have the pages
anymore, but nearly all of us remember seeing the pages, wide-eyed,
sitting along the desk up front, sitting in the back, listening to
speeches and watching floor proceedings as they waited to carry
messages. That was John Dingell three-quarters of a century ago. The
House of Representatives has been part of his life, and he has been
part of it, for 75 years.
On December 8, 1941, a day that will live in infamy, 15-year-old John
Dingell was in this Chamber as President Franklin Delano Roosevelt
stood at the rostrum and asked Congress to declare war against Japan,
whose forces had just attacked Pearl Harbor on that day to which he
referred as a ``day that will live in infamy.'' President Roosevelt
spoke these words:
With the unbounded determination of our people, we will
gain the inevitable triumph.
Throughout his time in this House, as a page, as the son of a
Congressman, as a Member himself, as a committee chairman, and as a
leader on issues of national importance, John Dingell has taught us,
who have served with him, that America's triumph is only inevitable if
we bring to bear the unbounded determination of which President
Roosevelt spoke.
In John Dingell's record 57 years and 188 days as a Member of
Congress, he has approached our greatest challenges with his own
unrivaled determination. In every Congress, for half a century, he
continued his father's work of introducing legislation to expand health
care coverage to all Americans, even in the many years when no one
thought it possible to do so. But John Dingell stuck with it.
He stuck with it and eventually had the opportunity to help shape and
vote for the Affordable Care Act, which will extend to millions and
millions of Americans access to affordable, quality health care.
Millions of Americans owe John Dingell a debt of gratitude for his
faithfulness and the advocacy of their best interest.
John, in fact, was presiding over this House when it enacted Medicare
in 1965. I told you he voted for the Voting Rights Act in 1965, but he
presided over the adoption of Medicare. And he helped write the
Endangered Species Act, the Safe Drinking Water Act, and the 1990 Clean
Air Act, among many historic pieces of legislation that he has
authored, fought for, and seen adopted.
But John has done more in this Chamber than shepherd key legislation
to passage. He has been an unwavering voice for the working families
and small business owners not just of southeastern Michigan, but of all
America. He has been a giant in promoting and preserving the great
American automobile industry and the millions of jobs that rely on it.
He has been a mentor and a friend to me and so many current and former
Members of the House.
My colleagues, John Dingell is a living link to an era when
bipartisan compromise was a practiced reality, not just a slogan, not
just something we say we're going to do, but something that was
actually done. Members looked to John Dingell for his quick wit, his
tenacious spirit, his extraordinary knowledge of legislation, and of
the history of this House, and, yes, his warm heart.
John loves this House and has always worked to preserve its
collegiality and its good order. His unrivaled skill as a legislator is
matched by his sense of decency, his integrity, and his devotion to
country. And he has never lost that determination that was sparked as
FDR called our Nation to arms and to service. John Dingell took up
arms. He served in the United States Army from 1944-1946 as a second
lieutenant
[[Page H4136]]
who prepared to take part in the first wave of a planned invasion of
Japan. Fortunately, that invasion did not occur; but John Dingell, as
always, was ready, willing, and able.
John Dingell, my colleagues, as all of you know, has served America
and its people for most of his life. But it is not the length of his
service that we honor alone. It is even more importantly the quality of
his service, the depth of his commitment, and the strength of his
character that we honor tonight, and John Dingell who we honor always.
We are all better Representatives because of his example. I
congratulate my friend on 75 years--75 years--in the House of
Representatives, 57 of them as a Member. John Dingell has, with
diligence, faithfulness, extraordinary skill and judgment, courage and
fidelity to God and country, lived up to President Roosevelt's words.
He has served with unbounded determination, and he has led a triumphant
life. What an example for us all.
A triumphant life not because he won every fight, but because he
never gave up. He never was unfaithful to his oath of office. He was
never unfaithful to his pledge to support working men and women and,
yes, everybody in this country.
My colleagues, John Dingell today is much like Tennyson's Ulysses who
said:
We are not now that strength which in old days moved heaven
and Earth. That which we are, we are; on equal temper of
heroic hearts, made weak by time and fate, but strong in will
to strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.
John Dingell, he pledged to his people when first elected to strive,
to seek, to find, and not to yield.
{time} 1920
And he has, indeed, done all of those. He has kept the faith, and we
expect him to be keeping the faith for years to come, for that is the
spirit of my friend, my colleague, a great legislator, a great
American, John Dingell of Michigan.
At this time, Mr. Speaker, I yield back so Mr. Barrow can have the
remaining balance of my time.
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