[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 177 (Thursday, December 8, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6873-S6874]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO HARRY REID
Mr. LEAHY. Mr. President, earlier today we heard a moving speech by
the Democratic leader and my longtime friend, Harry Reid. He spoke of
his life and his time here.
An amateur boxer turned police officer, turned lawyer, turned
majority leader, that is the supercondensed outline of the life of
Harry Reid. When the book closes on this 114th Congress, so too will it
close on the congressional career of Senator Reid. He is a fighter and
a champion. That is an understatement.
He is a fellow country boy, but he had a much tougher upbringing in
the isolated hamlet of Searchlight, NV. You can read about that in his
book. That upbringing has bred traits that I have admired since he
arrived in the Senate in 1987. His humble upbringing, raised in a shack
with no indoor bathroom or hot water, sowed the seeds of a life in
public service and of the perspective that has infused and driven his
public service. He first came to Capitol Hill as a police officer,
working nights to pay his way through George Washington University Law
School. Little did he know he would end up being one of the longest
serving majority leaders in the history of the U.S. Senate.
He can point to so many of the things he has done, including steering
the Affordable Care Act to Senate passage. But I want to thank Senator
Reid for his strong support of justice bills that I have championed. An
original cosponsor of the Violence Against Women Act Reauthorization
that I introduced in recent years--to strengthen and renew the
transformative and lifesaving work that is made possible under VAWA--he
has always worked to combat the scourge of domestic violence, helping
to shepherd the reauthorization of this vital legislation across the
finish line. He has also supported vital grant programs to put more
cops on the street in communities small and large and to keep them
safe. His commitment to advancing our comprehensive immigration reform
bill, we got it through the Senate by a large bipartisan majority. When
the history books are written, one of the huge mistakes made was when
that the House of Representatives did not take up that bill, even
though they had the votes to pass it. These are all examples of how
true
[[Page S6874]]
leadership takes action--not merely talking points--no matter how
difficult, to make a difference.
Harry Reid was at the Edmund Pettus Bridge in 2015, commemorating the
50th anniversary of Bloody Sunday. I looked at him there with
Congressman John Lewis and President Barack Obama--the first African
American elected as President--as one of the towering figures in
America. But the true measure of a man is revealed not when he pauses
to remember past injustices, he works to prevent them from happening.
From pay equity to restoring the Voting Rights Act, from the repeal of
don't ask, don't tell, to the enactment of the Matthew Shepard Hate
Crimes Prevention Act, there can be no doubt that Senator Reid fights
for every American, every day.
And yet, no matter how large a national leader Senator Reid has
become, he has never forgotten the people of Nevada. In him they have a
tireless and effective champion of the highest caliber. Senator Reid's
work on behalf of Nevada has been relentless.
He has been our fighter. He has been our champion. And he has been a
friend. He has faced and risen above personal adversity. He is a truly
American story. And his presence here in the Senate will be missed next
year. When Marcelle and I leave Washington for the last time, we will
think of the special friends we have had. Harry Reid, Landra Reid--we
will think of them. We wish them all the best as they begin their next
chapter together.
____________________