[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 91 (Thursday, May 25, 2017)]
[Senate]
[Pages S3184-S3185]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO WILLIAM DAUSTER
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. Mr. President, the Senate is an institution that
remembers its giants, its lions--the Senators who have served with
distinction, who negotiated critical legislative deals, who fought for
their States and their constituents, and who have participated in
historic debates on this Senate floor. They have statues and libraries
to remember them and portraits in these halls.
The Senate has been home to many extraordinary individuals but less
frequently acknowledged is the truth that no Senator operates alone. We
rely on the counsel and good service of dedicated staff in both our
committees and personal offices. Among those staff, there is perhaps no
greater giant of the Senate than Bill Dauster, who retires this week
after more than three decades of service.
With a clear-eyed understanding of the Senate, with all its features
and its flaws, a dedication to progressive values and collegiality that
has endeared him to Senator and staffer alike, Bill has been an asset
to this institution and to all who have served with him. I am very
pleased he is with us on the floor today.
Senator Harry Reid called Bill his ``utility player'' for his ability
to step into any issue or complicated matter and find a solution.
I am privileged that Bill Dauster joined my staff early this year to
help me set up my office and get it off to a good start in the U.S.
Senate. I could not have asked for a better and more knowledgeable guy
as I began my service here.
There are few major legislative battles that Bill Dauster has not
joined in the past 30 years, including the Children's Health Insurance
Program, the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act, and the Affordable Care
Act. He worked for Senator Feingold when he stood against the so-called
PATRIOT Act because of its invasion of privacy, and he helped shepherd
Democratic priorities, ranging from the minimum wage to important
infrastructure investments.
He has written a book on Senate procedure--and I mean literally--and
he has been as much a scholar of the Senate as a participant in its
daily life.
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Bill is a leader of what the Washington Post once called ``the whisper
brigade,'' the people, the staff who stand with their Senators, from
committee hearings to floor speeches, to answer questions and offer
suggestions and help make us better and more prepared.
In that capacity, Bill Dauster has mentored countless staff and
always stayed accessible to answer the most basic questions. With a
quote or a quip, he has brought levity to serious policy discussions.
He has built a reputation as an honest broker, a brilliant dealmaker,
and an incredibly generous soul.
Bill's character is shaped by his Jewish faith, which he has studied
and sought to illuminate to others. He has devoted free time to
analysis of the Torah on Wikipedia and many other places, crafting
interpretations that are as detailed, carefully explained, and
straightforward as the analysis he has provided on countless Senate
bills.
Bill Dauster is a devoted family man with his equally accomplished
and brilliant wife Ellen and his three children who are his pride and
joy. I am very pleased that his wife Ellen and daughter Emma are with
us today.
He is a science fiction fan, particularly of Star Trek, perhaps
seeking stories that are more believable than modern politics.
I wish Bill a restful retirement, but given his active mind, I
suspect he would sympathize with Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes' maxim
that leisure is ``a chance to do other jobs that demand attention.''
Instead, I will thank him for his service to the Senate and his
country and wish him a joyful and fulfilling next frontier. I ask my
colleagues to join me in saying: Farewell, but don't wander far.
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