[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 151 (Thursday, December 11, 2014)]
[House]
[Pages H10301-H10302]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
FAREWELL ADDRESS
(Mr. KINGSTON asked and was given permission to address the House for
1 minute and to revise and extend his remarks.)
Mr. KINGSTON. Madam Speaker, I have had the privilege of serving in
public office for 30 years, 22 of which have been in the United States
Congress. I have met many wonderful people, cast some tough votes, and
made some difficult decisions. It has been an honor, a challenge, a
great responsibility, and I have enjoyed it immensely.
For this I thank the Lord, my family, my extended family, staff,
supporters, constituents, and friends. I am thankful tonight that some
of them are in the gallery: my wife, Libby; son, Jim; daughter, Ann;
son, John; Betsy and Trey. I also have some staffers who stayed up late
to be here: Chris, Mary, Alexandra, Brianna, and Natalie. I thank them
for hanging in here with me.
Madam Speaker, in the words of the great philosopher Thomas Carlyle,
who in his masterpiece ``Sartor Resartus'' said this:
Sic vos non vobis. Thus we labor, but not for ourselves.
That is what I have tried to do as a Member of Congress, and tried to
make a difference doing it.
I have often wondered what it would be like to cast my last vote.
Today I have done that, and I wonder no longer.
In a minute, I will walk off the floor for the last time as a Member
of Congress. I look forward to the next chapter in my life and the
great things that lie ahead for our beloved country.
Once more, I thank God, my family, my staff, friends, and
constituents. It truly has been an honor of a lifetime.
And now I end with this, that statement that thousands of Members
before me have used:
Madam Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.
Madam Speaker, I have had the privilege of serving in public office
for 30 years, 22 of which have been in the United States Congress. I
have met many wonderful people, cast some tough votes, and made some
difficult decisions. It has been an honor, a challenge, a great
responsibility, and I have enjoyed it immensely. For this I thank the
Lord, my family, extended family, staff, supporters, constituents, and
friends.
The job of serving in Congress is misunderstood, maligned, and widely
criticized but public service is a noble calling if one remembers the
key words ``public'' and ``servant'' he will be appreciated. ``Public''
meaning you are accessible, you are seen, approachable, and available.
``Servant'' meaning you have not forgotten for whom you work and have
not forgotten your job is to help those who you represent. In the words
of the great philosopher Thomas Carlyle stated in his masterpiece
Sartor Resartus, ``sic vos non vobis.'' Thus we labor but not for
ourselves.
Members of Congress have a lifestyle of airports, car rides, motel
rooms, cell phones, laptops, and logistical houses of cards. Separation
from family is routine. One cannot serve without a supportive spouse
and family structure as well as a hardworking and dedicated staff. All
must join together as a team. I have had great family support from
Libby, Betsy and Trey, John, Ann, and Jim. My parents and all our staff
has been there throughout my tenure.
I have often described congressional service as a three part job.
First there is Washington, D.C. work--committee hearings,
legislation, debates, voting, interest groups, constituents, and dozens
of others seeking your ear, favor, vote, attention, and attendance. The
time passes quickly in the frenzy of the U.S. Capitol.
Second there are the home state demands. Primarily casework--fixing
the problems people have with federal agencies. Helping the people who
have been spun off of life's merry-go-round. For them we are their
advocate--sometimes the first choice and sometimes that of last resort.
Here again I have been blessed with a patient and sympathetic staff
team as we work through thousands of VA claims, Social Security issues,
passport emergencies, and all sorts of things from a goat in the post
office to a nuclear bomb off the shores of Tybee Island.
Another part of home state work is plant tours, school visits, civic
club speeches. From the coastal beaches to the Vidalia onion fields,
the military bases to the Okefenokee Swamp, we have enjoyed our visits
to the 41 Southeast Georgia counties that have been a part of Georgia's
First Congressional District during my time in office.
Finally, the third part of serving in Congress is good old American
politics. The campaign trail has elements of the above plus much, much
more. No one is elected accidentally or reluctantly. To earn the right
to represent 710,000 people, one must fully engage, shake all the
hands, eat all the barbecue, and be sure your opponent has not made you
look too bad on TV! It is spirited, emotional, and not for everyone,
yet each year thousands of citizens run for office at the federal,
state, and local level. I salute each of them for stepping forward and
trying to make a difference.
During my time in Congress, I have seen many changes. The rise and
demise of the fax machine, the daily delivery of ice, the arrival of
email and the Internet. When digital photography replaced traditional
film and drastically reduced the cost of photographs, visual recording
of events--both still shots and video--exploded. I was elected when
cell phones were rare. I leave with virtually every staffer having a
smart phone which can do the functions of what rooms full of computers
could not accomplish years ago.
[[Page H10302]]
I have participated in a number of high visibility, tough votes from
impeachment to the use of force in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Contract
with America, Obamacare, censuing, bailouts, and many cliff-hanger
appropriations bills like the one we've debated today.
I served in Congress on September 11, 2001, when the world changed. I
joined the masses as we exited the buildings, not realizing who the
enemy was or the extent of the attacks. In our first chaotic briefing,
we were told that 5 planes were involved and the fifth had crashed in
Kentucky. Later that day when we returned to the Capitol steps to sing
``God Bless America,'' I have never known a more unified moment as an
American citizen.
In the sensitivities that followed, we evacuated two other times for
false alarms and once left our offices for weeks because of an anthrax
attack. Today we are much safer because of the invaluable training that
takes place at the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center in
Brunswick.
We have been able to move legislation of great importance to Georgia
and the nation. From the Savannah Harbor Expansion Project, the pond
building program for our farmers, the Sidney Lanier Bridge, expanding
access to Cumberland Island National Seashore, the fifth runway at
Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta Airport and the Southeast Poultry Lab in
Athens to better training, equipment, and facilities for our troops,
expanding E-Verify, getting planes back in the air after September
11th, welfare reform and making Congress, agriculture, nutrition,
health, education, and labor programs more efficient, we made a
difference across a number of fronts.
At home, we sent the best and brightest to the military academies,
attended rosebud plantings at Fort Stewart for soldiers who paid the
ultimate sacrifice, opened four VA clinics, bolstered the research and
education at colleges and universities all across Georgia, helped
communities adversely impacted by shifts in our military's footprint,
and expedited assistance for areas ravaged by wildfires and floods.
Through it all, we have stuck to the principles on which I launched
my first campaign: limited government, personal responsibility, the
right to life, and an unabiding belief in the American Dream. I
maintained a 100-percent pro-small business and 100-percent pro-life
voting record, an A+ from the NRA, the support of the U.S. Chamber of
Commerce, and a 96-percent lifetime rating with the American
Conservative Union.
To my successor, Buddy Carter, and the 114th Congress, I have lots of
advice but will do my utmost to not give it unless asked! However, I
promise to be around for Mr. Carter the way former First District
Congressmen Lindsay Thomas and Bo Ginn have been there for me.
Until I do retire I do have some unsolicited advice:
1. Remember we are a republic not a democracy. You are not sent to
Washington to be a weather vane of popular opinion. You are expected to
learn all about an issue. You must consider all arguments and
consequences when formulating your decision to support or oppose.
Don't ever confuse your knowledge of an issue as being superior to
your constituents' knowledge of life and experience. You must never
tire of hearing his perspective.
2. Always be accessible for there is truly wisdom on the street
``Pressing the flesh'' is not just being in parades, it's talking and
listening to people. Do not let any well-intended friend, staffer, or
volunteer get between you and a constituent who wants to take you to
task. Hear him out.
3. Engage with Members of Congress from all parties, philosophies,
and geographic regions. Never pass up an opportunity to work with
anyone who wants to make the world and America a better place. I did
not always agree with my Ranking Members but we always had the highest
degree of respect. I thank Jim Moran, Sam Farr, and Rosa DeLauro.
4. Respect the institution. Anyone can go back home, feign
indignation and with a sigh denounce Congress. Yet as a Member, you can
either be part of the problem or part of the solution. Choose wisely.
5. Be active--attend committee meetings, read testimonies and ask
questions. Speak and participate on the House floor. Do one minute
speeches, special orders, and preside in the chair if you're given the
privilege. Run for leadership and caucus positions. Return press calls
and say yes to interviews. If you're a Democrat, go on with Sean
Hannity. If you're a Republican, don't be afraid to spar with Chris
Matthews or Bill Maher. Whoever you are, return Stephen Colbert's call.
These will give you a full experience and make you a stronger Member.
6. It's in America's interest for you to know what is happening in
the world. Visit our troops in the faraway and hostile countries in
which they are preserving our freedom.
7. Control your time and schedule. Your first priority is family.
That includes birthdays, anniversaries, graduations, and much more.
Don't ever let your ambition get in the way of a school play.
8. Keep your mind in order and also your body and spirit. There are
many Bible studies in Washington. Join one even before you get your
committee assignments! Join the gym. The fellowship alone is worth it.
Should you play on one of the sports teams, you can raise thousands
upon thousands for charity. I would not trade my experiences on the
baseball and football teams for anything I've done in Congress.
To sum it up, I will say this: as a teenager, I wanted a motorcycle.
As I was trying to talk my parents into it a man gave me some good
advice. He said motorcycles are all safer when you respect the bike. On
the other hand, if you decide you are better than the bike, that's when
you will have a wreck. To new Members of Congress, I say simply ``those
who fare the worst are those who think they are better than their
constituents.''
Let me conclude by thanking everyone who has been on the team with
me. We had a great run, some wonderful experiences, some fun moments
and helped a lot of people along the way.
Serving in Congress had always been a dream of mine. When I was in
elementary school, my older sister Barbara was in junior high. Junior
high was big time, almost grown up stuff. We were sitting at our
kitchen table one night she pulled about two pieces of paper and said
`let's write down the names of everyone you know. You can't list mom or
dad, Betty or Jean. They can't be family.' She won the contest but it
was a life changing exercise. I became interested in knowing people and
making friends. That along with my mother's activism in the Clarke
County Republican Party started this journey. I first ran for class
president in the 7th grade. I lost to Susan Sims but the hook was set.
I've often wondered what it would be like to cast my last vote. Today
I've done that. I wonder no longer. In a minute, I will walk off the
floor for the last time as a Member of Congress. I look forward to the
next chapter of my life and the great things that lie ahead for our
beloved country. Once more, I thank God, my family, my staff, friends
and constituents. It has been the honor of a lifetime.
So now I end with the statement that thousands of Members before me
have used: Madam Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.
____________________