[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 5 (Monday, January 12, 2015)]
[House]
[Pages H208-H209]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
COMMEMORATING THE LIFE OF MARIO CUOMO
The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Buck). Under the Speaker's announced
policy of January 6, 2015, the gentleman from New York (Mr. Rangel) is
recognized for 60 minutes as the designee of the minority leader.
[[Page H209]]
Mr. RANGEL. Mr. Speaker, as the senior member of the New York
delegation, it affords me a great honor to come from the Empire State
of New York, where we have so many people we are proud of, but because
Mario Cuomo represented the true nature of the American Dream, we from
the State of New York would just like to laud the contributions that he
has made, not just to Queens, where he was raised, not just to the
great State of New York, but to those democratic principles that all of
us believe in, and no one could articulate it the way our great
Governor has.
So many people have come to this country from faraway places, and
somehow, when they succeed, some change their names, some change their
attitudes, and some just absolutely forget how they got here and how
they were perceived; but Mario Cuomo was different.
Mario was so proud of the fact that his parents were immigrants. He
was proud of the fact that they came here with nothing but a hope and a
dream that their son would succeed. He succeeded in everything that he
touched, from neighborhood arbitration, to secretary of state, to
Lieutenant Governor; and, of course, the Nation remembers him as
Governor and as one who articulated the principles not of the
Democratic Party, but of the entire country at a Democratic Convention.
Of course, he leaves behind a son who, for those of us who attended
his funeral would have to say not only did he talk about his father in
terms that made us all feel proud, but in that voice that he had, if
you closed your eyes for one moment, you would see that Mario Cuomo did
not die. He left his son to continue in describing the great
opportunity that we have in this great country.
I am so glad that so many New Yorkers are here. Because we are here
for such a short period of time--we are in committees and
reorganizing--the delegation has asked me to reduce my remarks to 2
minutes, and I share that concern with the rest of our great
delegation.
It is my great pleasure to yield back the balance of my time so that
the gentleman from New York, Joseph Crowley, may control the remainder
of my time.
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