[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 84 (Thursday, May 26, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S3276-S3277]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REMEMBERING SUMNER SLICHTER
Mr. REID. Mr. President, I was saddened to learn that Sumner
Slichter, who for three decades was the chief policy adviser to former
Wisconsin and U.S. Senator Russ Feingold, died May 16 in his home in
Alexandria, VA, after a battle with brain cancer. He was 62 years old.
Sumner Pence Slichter was born August 31, 1953, in Urbana, IL, to
Nini Almy and Charles Slichter. He was the oldest of four children and
is remembered as being a kind and loving older brother to his younger
siblings.
As a student attending Dr. Howard Elementary, Edison Junior High
School, and Champaign Central High School, Sumner played viola in the
school orchestra. He left for the University of Wisconsin-Madison in
1970, where he majored in mathematics. Sumner continued to play viola
in student ensembles and the UW orchestra, where he sat first chair.
At the age of 19, Sumner began what would ultimately be a long and
rich career in politics. His first job was on Ed Muskie's 1972
Presidential campaign. Later that year, he worked as an assistant at
the Democratic National Committee convention in Miami Beach. From
there, Sumner worked for campaigns and offices of State representatives
in Illinois, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin.
In 1981, an encounter would forever change Sumner's life. That year
he met a Milwaukee lawyer named Russ Feingold. At that time, Russ
Feingold was working as a Democratic Party counsel on a close recall
election. Sumner helped convince his new friend to challenge an
incumbent for the 27th district State Senate seat. Feingold won the
election in 1982, and Sumner followed him to the State capital. Sumner
and Russ would spend the next three decades working side-by-side in
Madison and Washington, DC.
Working in the Wisconsin State Senate, Sumner helped design
Feingold's trademark progressive initiatives that focused on the aging,
consumer-focused banking policies, budget discipline, and tax policy.
It was during his time in the State capitol that Sumner met Pam
Russell, who was working as a legislative attorney. They were married
in 1990.
While they lived in Madison, Sumner had a thriving social life. He
was a member of a city intramural league softball team, the Soft Balls,
and he and his friends and teammates often took advantage of
Wisconsin's beautiful State parks, going on annual camping trips to
Governor Dodge and Rock Island, among others. Sumner enjoyed hosting
friends at the summer cottage on Lake Mendota built by his grandfather,
and in fact, it was there that Sumner held Russ Feingold's first
fundraiser for the 1982 State senate campaign.
In 1992, after 10 years in the Wisconsin Legislature, Russ ran for
the U.S. Senate. Sumner was there with his boss, playing an important
strategic role on the campaign. Many Wisconsinites still remember the
funny, light-hearted campaign ads that Feingold ran in that campaign.
Sumner was one of the campaign staffers who crafted those unforgettable
ads.
When Russ was elected to the U.S. Senate, Sumner and Pam relocated to
northern Virginia where, on the day after they arrived, their daughter
Sarah was born.
Sumner worked for Russ in the U.S. Capitol for 18 years. He was
Russ's policy director and helped shaped Senator Feingold's progressive
legacy. Think about some of the courageous acts that defined Senator
Feingold's work in the Senate: the McCain-Feingold Bipartisan Campaign
Reform Act, his votes against the Defense of Marriage Act, the Iraq
war, and the sole nay vote against U.S.A. Patriot Act. For each of
those votes and bills, Sumner was right there alongside Russ,
counseling and helping in any way he could. He also helped Feingold
author a resolution to censure President George W. Bush. It is no
wonder that Russ said of his friend, ``Sumner was at my side for every
vote I took in 28 years as a legislator, and I didn't vote until I
sought his wise counsel.''
It is one thing to do good work for your boss, but it is another
thing to treat your peers and colleagues with dignity, respect, and
affection. Sumner was a great mentor and friend to his fellow staffers.
Former Feingold chief of staff Mary Irvine remembers, ``It was quite a
thing really how many issues Sumner worked on . . . A great solo player
and an awesome team player. He must have spent hours and hours on the
Senate floor on any number of issues but was always on duty for the
entire lengthy budget resolution votes. Sumner was an amazing expert on
the Senate budget process and on parliamentary procedure. He was a
great political mind--there was no issue that Sumner couldn't figure
out and explain to the rest of us.''
Outside of the Capitol, Sumner loved to cook for his friends and
family. He was a movie buff who had a penchant for remembering lines,
music, actors, and directors. He never lost his love of music and was
always quick to respond to a danceable song.
From his Madison days, Sumner brought annual Nixon Resignation and
Derby Day parties and camping traditions to his family and friends in
the D.C. Area. He had a deep love of dogs and was very attached to his
pets.
Sumner Slichter's passing is a loss for all of us here in the Senate.
We grew accustomed to seeing his smiling face right at this boss's
side.
[[Page S3277]]
I, along with the entire U.S. Senate, send our condolences to his
family. Sumner is survived by his wife, Pam Russell, of Alexandria, VA;
daughter Sarah of Poughkeepsie, NY; mother Nini Almy of Mitchellville,
MD; father Charles Slichter and stepmother Anne Slichter of Champaign,
IL; brother Bill of Minneapolis and his wife Helen; brother Jacob of
Brooklyn, NY, and his wife Suzanne; sister Ann of Los Angeles; half-
brother Daniel of Boulder, CO, and his wife Yolanda; and half-brother
David of Binghamton, NY.
I say to his family: Thank you for sharing Sumner with us over the
years. Thank you for allowing his bright and radiant personality to
shine on us. He will be greatly missed.
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