[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 171 (Tuesday, October 24, 2017)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6774-S6775]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REMEMBERING PAUL WELLSTONE
Mr. FRANKEN. Mr. President, I rise today to remember and celebrate
the life of my friend, Senator Paul Wellstone.
Paul led a lot of fights in the Senate on behalf of working families
and those without a voice. He didn't back down even when a fight seemed
unwinnable. He told voters exactly what he believed even when it wasn't
popular. It was by taking such positions that Minnesotans, whether they
agreed with him or not, always knew where he stood.
In the final days of the 2002 campaign, he told Minnesotans:
I don't represent the big oil companies, I don't represent
the big pharmaceutical companies . . . they already have
great representation in Washington. It's the rest of the
people that need it. I represent the people of Minnesota.
But Paul also knew full well that standing up to powerful interests
could have steep political costs. His career in the Senate was
bookended by votes on going to war in Iraq. Both of his votes were
unpopular, but Paul stood on principle, not on politics. His maiden
speech, the first speech he gave as a Senator, was in opposition to the
first Gulf war, and one of the last Senate votes he cast was against
the second war in Iraq.
He was facing a tough reelection challenge at the time of his vote,
and he knew it might cost him his seat, and he told friends so. But to
have voted otherwise, he said, would have violated the principles that
guided his career. So he voted his conscience and put political
considerations aside, just as he did throughout his time in public
office.
Then, just 11 days before election day, his plane went down, taking
not only Paul and Sheila, his wife, but their daughter Marcia, campaign
staffers Tom Lapic, Mary McEvoy, and Will McLaughlin, as well as pilots
Richard Conry and Michael Guess.
Since coming to the Senate, I have learned how well regarded Paul was
around the Capitol, not only by Senators from both sides of the aisle
but also by Capitol police officers, whom he knew by name, and the
elevator operators, for whom he always made time.
Paul's legislative work continues to make a profound difference in
the lives of millions of Americans. Among his accomplishments are his
pioneering efforts, along with Republican Senator Pete Domenici of New
Mexico, on mental health parity, which ensures that copays and
deductibles for addiction and mental health services are on par with
payments for other medical services. The law was jointly named for Paul
and Senator Domenici, and it passed in late 2008, 6 years after Paul's
death.
After I was seated in 2009, one of the first things I did was to work
with Paul's son David on getting the final rules written to implement
Wellstone-Domenici. That work inspired me to later push for investments
in school mental health services, to help students and their families
who need those services.
Paul also led the David-and-Goliath effort to stop bankruptcy
legislation that favored big banks and credit card companies over
working families. Despite going up against a wide range of special
interests with huge lobbying power and lots of money, he successfully
held off passage of the bill during his lifetime.
He also took on special interests when he stood against oil drilling
in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. He believed, like I do, that
the long-term consequences of endangering the home of indigenous people
and a pristine habitat for wildlife far outweighed ``a short-term
speculative supply of oil that will not . . . help consumers.'' Because
of Paul and others in the Senate, the Wildlife Refuge, at least for
now, remains pristine.
Paul also had an amazing and special relationship with Sheila, who
became an important partner in his Senate work. She became a leading
advocate for survivors of domestic violence, spending years raising
awareness about the issue and the need to address its causes. Former
Senator and Vice President Joe Biden said Sheila deserves as much
credit as any lawmaker for passage of the landmark Violence Against
Women Act. Since the law's enactment, incidents of domestic violence
have been reduced significantly. It was a landmark achievement.
My constituents remember Paul fondly. They leave notes and mementos
for him at the quiet memorial site honoring him just off of Highway 53,
near Eveleth, MN. They leave them for his wife Sheila, too, and for the
others who died with them exactly 15 years ago tomorrow, when their
plane tragically crashed just miles from the Eveleth-Virginia Municipal
Airport.
I have been to the memorial site, and I have seen how deeply and
personally Paul touched people in Minnesota and across the country. He
inspired them not only as a U.S. Senator for 12 years but also as a
Carleton College professor who encouraged a generation of students to
take action in their communities. He did so as a fiery organizer who
stood up for Minnesota farmers and for working families and insisted on
giving them a voice and a seat at the table. He never lost the
tenacious spirit that led him to be a collegiate wrestling champion--he
is in the college wrestling hall of fame--and he brought that same
approach to standing up for Minnesotans. He stood strong against
injustice, even when it
[[Page S6775]]
twice meant being arrested. It wasn't because he wanted to break the
law, but because he thought it was necessary to bring about change for
the better.
He also had a special way of connecting with people. Former Senator
Tom Harkin said at a memorial service for Paul that he ``made a miner
up in the Iron Range know he was as important . . . as the president of
the United States.'' That is how Paul voted in the Senate, too, putting
ordinary Minnesotans ahead of politics, money, and influence.
The last time I saw Paul was at a 2002 campaign event in St. Paul,
just weeks before he died. He was locked in a bitter struggle for
reelection. Despite being in a grueling fight for his political life,
the first thing he said to me was, ``How's your mom?'' That was Paul.
I had just come from my mom's nursing home in Minneapolis, where she
had a picture of Paul on her wall that said: ``Phoebe, keep fighting.''
She wasn't doing very well. I told Paul that she had dementia--some
sporadic dementia--and that day I couldn't have a conversation with
her. He put his hand on my shoulder and said: ``Touch means so much.
Touch means so much.''
The next day, I went to the nursing home, and I took my mom out into
the garden, in a wheelchair. She was having a bad day again, but I put
my arm around her as we sat. It was a beautiful day. I don't know if it
meant anything to her, but it sure meant everything to me.
Paul's life and his work meant a lot to me too. His examples as a
tireless, passionate champion for working families, for veterans, for
farmers, and for those who simply needed a voice have inspired my own
time in the Senate. I keep Paul's picture and his Senate name plate in
my office behind me as a reminder at my desk every day. Every day I
serve, I think back to Paul's words. This is what Paul said:
Politics is not about power. Politics is not about money.
Politics is not about winning for the sake of winning.
Politics is about the improvement of people's lives.
While Paul isn't here with us today, his legacy lives on in so many
ways. It lives on in the generations of students and activists he
trained and inspired in Minnesota. It lives on in the policies he
fought for here in the Senate, for access to mental health care, for a
clean environment, and for making sure that working families get a fair
shot. It lives on in the countless lives that he touched, like mine and
my mom's.
Paul made us all better, and I hope his legacy will continue to
inspire us well into the future.
____________________