[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 25 (Monday, February 13, 2017)]
[House]
[Page H1114]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THANKING JOYCE MEYER
(Mr. RYAN of Wisconsin asked and was given permission to address the
House for 1 minute.)
Mr. RYAN of Wisconsin. Mr. Speaker, all of us have people in our
lives, in these vocations, without whom none of this would be possible.
Today, I want to say good luck and good-bye to one of those people.
Joyce Meyer, whom many of you know on my staff, is heading to the
White House after being with me in this office for 18 years--and, yes,
there are some gray hairs here. She and I go back even further than
that.
Joyce and I started off as staffers together in the United States
Senate. In many ways, we grew up together. We were just kids then,
fresh out of college. She went by Joyce Yamat in those days. She was a
good friend, but she was an equally good staffer, which is why she was,
at that time, one of the first people I asked to come work with me when
I, at 28 years old, got elected to the House of Representatives.
She has been at the heart of our team ever since--through every up
and down, every adventure, every budget, every run for office. So much
of what we have accomplished has been because of her--because of her
leadership, because of her planning, because of her caring nature,
because of her deep understanding of how this place works. She really
is a person of the House.
Above all, she never, ever forgot and never let me forget whom I was
working for: the people of the First District of Wisconsin. She is from
Wisconsin. She is from Franklin, Wisconsin, which is a small town in
southern Wisconsin, near Milwaukee. She is a Badger. Wisconsin is so
much at the heart of who she is. She knows when the deer rut is. She
knows that, on Sundays, there are only two things you do: Mass and
Packers games in the fall. For all of her years here, she never forgot
where she came from.
The truth is we have been through it all together. In fact, she has
not just been a confidant or a friend--she is family. I often refer to
her as my sister; and, to Joyce, family is at the center of everything.
She treated all of our staff like family. She hosted wedding showers
and baby showers. She made sure that everyone on our team put their own
loved ones first. It is her own family that, through all of these
years, has really been her source of inspiration: her parents; her
sisters; her husband, Don, who, himself, was part of our team; and, of
course, their beautiful and sweet daughter, Eva.
I know it is for a better life for Eva and her generation that Joyce
has made serving government her life's work. She could have gone on and
done something so much more rewarding to the pocketbook, but she is
doing this because she believes in our country.
I will cut this short because, for anyone who knows Joyce, she does
not like attention; she does not like the fuss. She is here to serve.
She is the best of what we aspire to in public service. This woman has
done so much to make us successful, has done so much to make me
successful. I just want to thank, from the bottom of my heart, a person
who has done so much to make this House successful, and she is Joyce
Meyer.
Joyce, I wish you and your family the best of luck. Thank you for
serving us so much. Joyce, you are always going to be considered a
person of the House of Representatives. Thank you so much, Joyce.
And there is her mom.
Mr. Speaker, I yield to the gentleman from Maryland (Mr. Hoyer).
Mr. HOYER. Mr. Speaker, I thank Speaker Ryan for yielding. He
admonished us to be brief. So, Joyce, I will be brief.
Often I rise on this floor when we have extraordinary staffers retire
on either side of the aisle, Republican or Democrat, and observe what
an extraordinary difference they make to the comity that does, in fact,
exist but is rarely seen by the public.
Joyce Meyer has been an extraordinary member of our family. Speaker
Ryan says family is important to her. Family is important to all of us,
and this is a family. It is sometimes a contentious family, but it is a
family.
Frankly, the peacemakers in the family are largely the members of the
staff, particularly the highest ranking staffers, and particularly
those staffers who have been with each of us and many of us for a
significant period of time. They understand the tensions that can be
created, but they also understand that there is a responsibility to the
American people. Every time I went across the aisle and talked to Joyce
Meyer, I knew that she understood that and that she wanted to be a
positive force in making this institution work better.
Let me say that Joyce Meyer now has an even bigger responsibility
because she is going to the White House. May we all wish her the best
in making that institution work better.
Joyce, God bless you and Godspeed.
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