[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 172 (Thursday, December 1, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6631-S6632]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO BARBARA MIKULSKI
Mr. REID. Mr. President, at times it seems that Democrats and
Republicans in the Senate don't agree on very much, but the one thing
we all agree on without any exception is this: Our colleague Barbara
Mikulski of Maryland can turn a phrase better than anyone else. It is
one of her many gifts. Just listen to some of the memorable lines we
have heard her utter.
Running for her first term in the Senate, Barbara said:
I might be short, but I won't be overlooked.
Just prior to the 2013 government shutdown, she told Senate
Republicans:
You can huff and puff for 21 hours, but you can't be the
magic dragon that blows the Affordable Care Act away.
Earlier this year, she spoke of the Zika virus as follows:
The mosquitoes are coming. The mosquitoes are already here.
You can't build a fence to keep them out, and the mosquitoes
won't pay for it. The mosquitoes are here--this is not an
Obama fantasy.
My personal favorite was something she said at a welcome reception
for the 1986 class. We gathered in the Russell Building, and it was a
festive occasion for Democrats. We had many new Democrats. It was a
huge class--Daschle, Shelby, Breaux, Graham, Conrad, and Fowler. There
were many Democratic Senators, but the day was stolen by Barbara
Mikulski. We were all asked to say a word. About her opponent, she
stood and said: ``I may be short, but it sure wasn't hard for me to
slam dunk Linda Chavez,'' her opponent.
It is safe to say that with that quip, Barbara immediately hit it off
with all the Members of the Senate class.
From the moment she first set foot in the Senate, Senator Mikulski
was determined to be herself--honest, disciplined, principled,
undaunted, with an incredible wit and a fierce love of Maryland.
You will not find a Member of this body more devoted to her
circumstances--and we will talk about those in a little bit--devoted to
her constituents and her State than Senator Barbara Mikulski. She
served the State of Maryland for more than 50 years. A graduate of
Mount Saint Agnes College and the University of Maryland, she made her
name as a social worker and a political activist.
Her grandparents are well known, especially her grandmother. They ran
a bakery. I have heard her talk about that bakery so many times, how
the people in the neighborhood would come and wait for that bakery to
open. Her grandparents went there very early, as bakers do. She speaks
with nostalgia, warmth, and love of her grandparents.
Her own parents ran a little grocery store next to a steel mill. They
would get there early in the morning, and the steelworkers would come
and get their lunches and sometimes their breakfasts in that grocery
store. Her parents were part of her life, as were her grandparents. She
is so proud of them.
In 1966 the Baltimore City Council proposed building a large highway
through the center of the city of Baltimore. There was a downside to
the plan: It would have razed entire neighborhoods, African-American
neighborhoods and especially immigrant neighborhoods. They would have
to leave their homes.
The city's leaders, political bosses, and, of course, the wealthy
real estate interests and many others--the power brokers of the State
of Maryland, the city of Baltimore--knew this was a done deal, but the
power brokers didn't count on a young social worker named Mikulski to
fight for these families. It was her first political activism, and
activism it was. It was her alone. Because of her magnetism, her
warmth, and her ability to organize, she organized an effort to stop
the highway. Everyone said it couldn't be done, but no one bothered to
tell Barbara. She rallied the citizens of Baltimore in opposing the
highway, and what a rally it was--not one rally, not two, but many of
them until it was determined that she had won and the power brokers had
lost. These people got to keep their homes, and today there is no
superhighway towering over the center of Baltimore. People remember
Barbara Mikulski for that.
Barbara's fight against the highway made her a hero in Baltimore and
propelled her to the city council in 1971. In 1976 Barbara Mikulski
fought her way to the Congress of the United States as a Member of the
House of Representatives. After five terms in the House, Barbara
Mikulski ran for a seat in the Senate, in the one I just told you
about. She slam-dunked her opponent,
[[Page S6632]]
making her the first Democratic woman in history to win seats in both
the House of Representatives and the Senate of the United States. Today
Senator Mikulski is the longest serving woman to serve in the U.S.
Congress. For more than 40 years she has served the people of Maryland.
She is the first woman and first Marylander to chair the prestigious
Senate Appropriations Committee. Her legislative record reflects her
hard work for women and for equality. She worked with then-Senator Joe
Biden to pass the first Violence Against Women Act in 1994. She was the
architect of the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act. She was repeatedly in
the forefront to fight for paycheck fairness, which determined that men
and women who do the same work should be paid the same money.
When so many of us were duped by misinformation about the Iraq war,
Barbara Mikulski was not duped. She voted against the war.
Barbara's career in the Senate has been historic, but I would be
remiss if I failed to note her impact on my life and my career. As I
said, we came to the Senate together. We served together. We got the
same committees. We, of course, served together in the House, but that
is a huge body--435 Members. Frankly, I served there two terms. I know
the Presiding Officer served in the House. It is a huge body. When I
left there after 4 years, I can remember a vote taking place. Where did
these people come from? It is hard to get to know 435 people, but I
knew Barbara. Everybody knew Barbara. But in the Senate we came
together, served on the same committees, and we got to know each other
very well early on. Barbara Mikulski has always protected me, looked
out for me.
One of my first memories took place right here in the well. I was
new, she was new, and it was a very close vote. It was an issue that
was her issue, and I couldn't vote her way. That happens here. It was a
close vote. People were nudging me: You have to change. You are going
to upset everybody. You are a Democrat; you can't do that.
In walked Barbara Mikulski into this crowd. I was there. I was really
kind of afraid, but she wasn't. She walked in. People moved away. She
said: ``Leave him alone. It is a matter of principle.'' People left me
alone. That is who she is. Was she disappointed? I know she would have
been disappointed had I not done what I believed in.
I served for 10 years with John Ensign, the Senator from Nevada. John
and I had a unique relationship. In 1998 I won an election for the
Senate between Ensign and Reid by 428 votes. That was a close election.
But as fate would have it, 2 years later he came to the Senate. Senator
Bryan retired, and he came to the Senate.
Well, John had some personal issues. He hadn't been here very long at
all and had some personal issues. I called him at home, and he said:
Yes, I have some problems here. I thought how I could help him. Here in
the Senate we have the right to do what is called pair. Senator Ensign
and I rarely voted alike anyway. So I said: Well, John, what I will do,
so it won't affect your voting record, is that I will just pair with
you and that way it won't show you have missed votes. So I agreed to do
that, and for 2 weeks I told him I would do that.
Well, it worked out fine because we voted differently on everything,
except there came an issue that affected Senator Mikulski. She came to
me and said: Why are you voting that way? I told her: Senator Ensign
has a personal issue, and I told him I would pair with him. She said:
If you had done anything else--and I won't use her exact language--you
would have been a fool. I wasn't a fool in her mind. Even though it was
not good for her, she was supportive of me. She would not have been
satisfied that I had done something that was wrong in her mind, and she
accepted my explanation and that I had to do what I did. We have always
had a lot of respect for each other.
Senator David Pryor of Arkansas had a heart attack and became very,
very ill. He was a wonderful Senator. Everyone liked him. But he
announced he couldn't serve as secretary of the Democratic caucus, and
that was something that I was interested in. But I also heard Barbara
Mikulski was interested in it. She had been so good to me so often that
I immediately went to Barbara, and with the two of us together, I said:
Barbara, do you want this secretary's job? She said: Yes. I said: You
have it. That was the end of that. Nobody opposed her.
Well, surprisingly, a few years later, out of nowhere, Wendell Ford,
who was the whip, decided he wasn't going to run for reelection. It was
a surprise to everyone. He was assistant Democratic leader, and that
was something I was interested in, but again there was Mikulski. I
didn't say a word. The word was out there that I was interested in it.
So as fate would have it, I was walking from my office in the Hart
Building over toward the Russell Building, and she was coming in the
other direction. Those of us who know Barbara know that a lot of times
she is a person of few words. She is not a gadfly. Sometimes she talks
a lot, but sometimes she doesn't want to talk. We were passing each
other in the hall, and she said: I want to talk to you for a minute.
She said: You took care of me in the Senate; the whip's job is yours.
That ended it. It was all over. When that was done, I had a clear route
to be the whip of the Senate--the Democratic Senate.
That is the relationship I have with Barbara Mikulski. So she is as
responsible as anyone for my years in Democratic leadership. Without
her friendship and her loyalty my last 20 years in the Senate would
have been much, much different. Working with Barbara Mikulski is one of
the highlights of my congressional career. Just hearing her speak is a
privilege.
I have seen and listened to good orators. When I was in the House--
and my friend, the Democratic whip is here--we heard Jim Wright. Jim
Wright was a great orator. He was the majority leader and the Speaker
of the House. He was really good. Tom Lantos, an immigrant from
Hungary, could speak. He was so dynamic, so good. Claude Pepper had a
different style but was someone you listened to. Here in the Senate I
have listened to some great orators. Back there was Dale Bumpers. I can
still see him. He had a long cord here. He had an extra-long one, and
he would walk up and down these aisles speaking. He was a great orator.
I listened to him. George Mitchell, one of my predecessors, was so
good, so articulate--and Dick Durbin, from Illinois. They are all
terrific orators.
But in my estimation, there is no better orator who I have come
across in my congressional service than Barbara Mikulski. We have
talked about her one-liners, but I would like, just for a minute, to
talk about a trip I took with a congressional delegation led by the
very famous John Glenn--war hero, astronaut, and gentleman. We went to
places in Europe. The Iron Curtain was down. We went to Poland. Barbara
Mikulski's heritage is Polish. They called in John Glenn to give a
speech. Ted Stevens from Alaska was also on that trip. I said: We have
someone here who is of Polish heritage. Let's listen to her. Oh, what a
speech--I mean it was spellbinding. She talked about how she felt about
who she was and about her grandparents and her parents.
So I know there is no better orator than Barbara Mikulski. That is
because she speaks from the heart. She is honest and so genuine. As the
Baltimore Sun wrote: ``People know authenticity when they see it, and
there's nothing fake about Barbara Mikulski, most especially her love
of her job.'' That is pretty good, coming from the biggest newspaper in
the State.
Barbara has loved her job in the Senate, and the people of Maryland
and the United States have loved having her as their advocate and
defender. She leaves the Senate as she entered it, as a political
activist and a fighter.
So, Barbara, thank you very much for your guidance, your mentoring,
your friendship. It has been an honor to work by your side. We are
forever friends. Godspeed, Barbara Mikulski.
I yield the floor.
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