[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 138 (Thursday, November 13, 2014)]
[House]
[Pages H7945-H7946]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HONORING THE SERVICE OF LANE A. EVANS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Illinois (Ms. Schakowsky) for 5 minutes.
Ms. SCHAKOWSKY. Mr. Speaker, in 1982, in the State of Illinois, a 31-
year-old man announced his candidacy for United States Congress from
the 17th Congressional District. His name was Lane Evans. He was a
Marine veteran and a young legal aid attorney helping poor people in
his home community.
It was viewed initially as kind of a suicide mission that he was not
going to be able to win, but some of us decided that we were going to
get involved in that campaign even though we weren't necessarily from
his district and, gathering with people who supported him from his
area, ran a campaign that elected the first Democrat since the Civil
War from that area, a young man who impressed the people of his
district with his incredible modesty, but also clarity.
Lane Evans was so clear that his mission was to represent the
ordinary people of that section of western Illinois, to represent
unions and veterans and poor people, and to be their voice in the
United States Congress. It turned out to be one of the most important
elections in my view, in history, certainly in the history of the State
of Illinois.
Lane served for 25 years in the Congress. Again, this was a district
that was considered kind of a swing district, but year after year,
election after election, Lane Evans would be elected with very wide
margins.
Lane Evans was fearless. He would stand up for what was right even
when some of us would say, ``Lane, are you sure? This may not go over
so great in your district. What do you think?''
He would look at us and say, ``Absolutely. This is the right thing to
do. I don't have any qualms about it.'' He would vote his conscience,
and people respected that, whether they totally agreed with every vote
or not.
Lane Evans was the first member--or maybe Danny Davis--the second--in
our delegation to endorse for Senator a young Barack Obama. Lane
proudly brought him to western Illinois and was always a great
supporter.
When Barack Obama won his election for President in 2008, he sat next
to Lane Evans, who was already somewhat debilitated by Parkinson's
disease, a disease that finally took his life after two decades,
holding his hand and telling him that, if it weren't for Lane Evans,
that Barack Obama wouldn't be President of the United States of
America.
He was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease almost two decades ago.
Lane Evans lived so modestly. I think some people have impressions of
Members of Congress as having drivers and black limousines or
something. Lane Evans lived exactly like the ordinary person in his
district.
As his funeral procession led through the Quad Cities, we went down,
in Rock Island, Lane Evans Way. It was a neighborhood of very modest,
middle class--I would even say working class--homes. That is where Lane
Evans grew up, and that is where his heart and his mind always were.
Lane Evans was honored by the Marines as he was leaving Congress with
the tattoo that they do, an amazing performance and then an honor for
Lane.
Lane, as a Vietnam era veteran, was the first really to talk about
agent orange and the impact that it had on the long-term health of many
of our Vietnam veterans and, finally, to get care for our veterans for
agent orange.
He was one of the early people to understand the unseen injuries of
PTSD and to call attention to that as ranking member on the Veterans'
Affairs Committee.
He was such an inspiring person, such a fearless fighter for the
middle class, for veterans; and it is apt that we now name the VA
clinic in Galesburg, Illinois, in the 17th Congressional District, for
Congressman Lane Evans. It is part of his legacy, but only part of his
legacy.
For many of us, we will always believe that, because of Lane Evans,
it is good politics as well as good policy to stand up for the
principles that you believe in for a just society, for an equal
society. And I am sure Danny Davis will talk about that.
Before I was elected to anything, we went to El Salvador, so Lane
Evans' sense of justice extended beyond the borders of the United
States of America to major conflicts in Central America.
Lane Evans will be sorely missed but ever remembered.
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