[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 172 (Thursday, December 1, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6630-S6631]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO DAVID VITTER
Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, after two terms in the Senate and more
than two decades of public service, our friend and colleague Senator
David Vitter will be leaving us at the end of his term. I would like to
say a few words before he does.
Our friend from Louisiana is the first Republican Senator popularly
elected from his home State. It is an impressive achievement that
history will long record. But Senator Vitter had little opportunity to
celebrate at the time. Hurricane Katrina hit just a few months after he
took office. It was a catastrophic natural disaster that presented
massive and immediate challenges for Louisiana.
Our colleague did not miss a beat. Back home, he and his team worked
tirelessly to set up mobile offices. Here in the Senate he fought hard
to bring aid to those in need. It underlined something we have all come
to know about Senator Vitter: He is passionate about his home State.
That has been a constant throughout his career. He simply loves
Louisiana. He loves the richness of its history, loves the richness of
its culture, loves the richness of its food, too--crawfish pie etouffee
and several other things I can't pronounce. Senator Vitter loves it
all.
He flies home just about every chance he gets. When he was younger,
he turned down offers from Harvard and Yale to study law in the Pelican
State. This is after he spent some time in Cambridge, MA, and Oxford,
as a Rhodes Scholar, by the way--pretty impressive--so perhaps it was
born of a simple lesson: You're just not going to find alligator sauce
piquante anywhere else.
Nor are you likely to find many Saints fans, certainly none as
enthusiastic as our colleague. You will find Senator Vitter glued to a
TV every football Sunday. If the Senate is in session, he will watch
between votes in the cloakroom behind me. He has been a diehard fan of
the Black and Gold for as long as he can remember. It was not as though
he had much choice, of course, growing up in the Big Easy, but he has
stuck by his team through thick and thin--often thin. It is what made
the Saints eventual Super Bowl win in 2010 that much sweeter. He called
it a dream come true.
This tenacity and determination carries over to his political career
as well. Whatever the issue, Senator Vitter's staff says he is always
looking for solutions that can improve the lives of Louisianans. They
say he is always ready to roll up his sleeves and stay the course on
legislation that will do just that.
Senator Vitter has worked hard to protect his constituents from the
effects of hurricanes and floods before they occur and to rebuild when
they do. He has taken the lead on important initiatives to reform the
Army Corps of Engineers and improve our Nation's waterways.
Most recently, he helped to pass the first significant reform of the
Toxic Substances Control Act in nearly four decades. Senator Vitter was
a critical player throughout, working across the aisle with our late
colleague Senator Lautenberg and then Senator Udall to steer this much
needed legislation to passage and eventually law.
Senator Vitter says he believes his most important job is to keep an
open-door policy for constituents who need help. I know he would tell
you that, although it may not be the most publicized part of the job,
he considers it the most fulfilling.
He still remembers the woman in desperate need of a liver transplant.
With the help of his office, she got it. He still remembers the veteran
who needed an operation to save his leg and his life. With the help of
Team Vitter, he received that too.
Senator Vitter will never forget the countless families in need of
assistance following Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, the oil spill, and
recent flooding. He has seen firsthand the life-changing, even
lifesaving impacts constituent casework can have. It is what inspired
him to compile these powerful stories and best practices into a
constituent service guidebook that will help guide his successor from
day one.
Of course, none of this would have been possible without a great
staff, and Senator Vitter has built a strong team that is as committed
to the people of Louisiana as he is. It is tight-knit. It is loyal. It
is a group of men and women who know they have a boss who takes genuine
interest in their success, who trusts their judgment, and who is always
eager for their input.
Senator Vitter awards a Reform Trophy each week to the staffer with
the best new policy idea. He truly believes in a heavy dose of
competition. That includes when his son Jack is in town. Staffers can
expect to be enlisted in an entirely different competition then; it is
called Office Olympics. Team Vitter knows to bring their A game when
Jack is around. They also know to bring their sense of humor. It turns
out Jack is a bit of a prankster. I hear you don't want Jack laying
hands on a Post-it note or a roll of aluminum foil when he is in the
office, but lifelong memories are often made when he does just that.
It is these relationships and it is this capacity to make a
difference for the people of Louisiana through constituent service and
the legislative process that I am sure our colleague will miss most
when he leaves the Senate.
[[Page S6631]]
Senator Vitter may be retiring from his post in this Chamber, but we
know he will continue to look for ways to serve the State he loves so
much. Today we join with his team and his family in recognizing his
many years of service. I know each of us is looking forward to seeing
what else our colleague is able to achieve on behalf of Louisiana in
the years to come.
Mr. VITTER. Mr. President, if the majority leader will yield for one
moment, I want to thank the majority leader for his very kind words.
Serving in the Senate for two terms has been the highest honor of my
professional career. I have enjoyed it so much and have been honored by
the relationship with all of my colleagues, certainly including the
majority leader. I will have a few more reflections next Monday, but I
sincerely thank him and also congratulate him for getting the Senate,
particularly in the past 2 years, back to working order and some of its
best practices. Not as a Member but as a cheerleader on the outside, I
will be very much looking forward to even greater successes this coming
Congress.
Mr. McCONNELL. I thank my colleague.
I have one more statement, and then I will be through.
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