[Congressional Record Volume 166, Number 203 (Wednesday, December 2, 2020)]
[Senate]
[Pages S7148-S7154]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
Tribute to Lamar Alexander
Mrs. BLACKBURN. Mr. President, it is such an honor to be here and to
join my colleagues in paying tribute to Senator Alexander today. As you
can see, there are many who want to speak and have a few words to say.
Now, I think all of us wish that we could do this to a background of
music with Lamar playing the piano. That would definitely be the proper
setting. But I am so pleased to stand and to honor the three terms of
service that he has had here in this body and the way he has touched
the lives not only of individuals in this body but millions of
Tennesseans.
We know that he has--and he has talked about it in his remarks--
worked with educators; he has worked with innovators; he has worked
with the healthcare community; and he has worked, yes, with
entertainers, many of whom hold him so dear and who call Tennessee
home. In fact, when I was serving in the House and representing
Tennessee's 7th Congressional District, so many times I would look over
here and I would think ``What is Lamar not working on today?'' because
he always had such a broad portfolio of issues that were demanding his
attention. And what we know is he accepted that work to address that
broad portfolio of issues.
His commitment for caring for the needs of all Tennesseans has really
manifested itself in what Tennesseans like to see as a lifelong legacy
that has really changed lives. As Governor, he worked to streamline our
State's government, was very successful in those efforts, and he
brought that desire to streamline government with him when he came to
the Senate. Indeed, this is work that has benefited all Tennesseans and
all Americans.
As Governor of Tennessee, he was very successful in working to
persuade Nissan automotive to come into our State. This started a new
impact on our State with the auto industry. Then, as the auto industry
needed suppliers, he turned his attention to infrastructure to make
certain that the roads, the highways, the access that were necessary
were there to encourage this business.
As the former Secretary of Education under President George H. W.
Bush, he couldn't not put his personal touch on education policy,
working tirelessly, as he said, to fix No Child Left Behind. This
earned him the first-ever James Madison Award.
He has a reputation for, indeed, being a go-to lawmaker, and as
chairman of HELP here in the Senate, he put a spotlight on the issues
that affect the most sensitive aspects of Tennesseans' lives, again
benefiting all Americans.
I like the fact that he talked about bipartisanship and productivity.
Between 2015 and 2019, during his term of service at HELP, he has
reported 45 bills out of his committee that have become law--45 bills.
As he mentioned, one of those was 21st Century Cures. As a Member in
the House and working on originating this bill, we had said: We are
going to make this bipartisan. And, indeed, we did, and we moved it
from the House to the Senate. And yes, indeed, there were some days we
thought: This is never going to happen. But, indeed, Senator Alexander
insisted, and, yes, it did happen.
He mentioned the Music Modernization Act, and I will tell you, this
is vitally important to Tennesseans. As we worked this through the
House and then it hit some bumps in the road, Senator Alexander and
Senator Hatch did such a great job of pushing this forward here in the
Senate.
Then, last September, the Nashville Songwriters Association
International awarded him the White Hat Award, which is what they give
to legislators who have made a significant impact on the entertainment
and music community.
Well, the highlight reel would be too long to cover in one speech.
There are many who are waiting to express their thanks.
So, with that, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Sasse). The Senator from California is
recognized.
Mrs. FEINSTEIN. Mr. President, I rise today to honor Senator Lamar
Alexander, a friend and a colleague who has served in this body for
some 18 years now. I have had the pleasure of serving with this Senator
on both the Rules Committee and the Appropriations Committee, and we
sat next to each other as chairman or ranking member on two
Appropriations subcommittees--first Interior and then Energy and Water.
We have done that since 2009. It has been through these experiences
that I truly have come to appreciate Senator Alexander's fairness, his
interest in solving problems, and his bipartisanship.
Most of all, I so appreciate your friendship and the time we have had
to talk together.
I do believe that the Senate is going to be diminished by the absence
of this Senator.
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Working closely as chair and ranking member of the Energy and Water
Development Subcommittee, we have always been able to find agreement on
the annual appropriations bill. That is because we shared a willingness
to find common ground. And that is no small thing. We have consistently
held comprehensive subcommittee hearings on a wide range of issues,
from nuclear power and nuclear waste to dam safety, to devastating
droughts in the West and the future of renewable energy.
We were also often among the first, if not the first subcommittee to
negotiate our bill, draft it, and get it marked up by the full
committee, and that includes 4 years of record-level funding for clean
energy, the National Laboratories, supercomputing, and water projects.
The focus has always been on a fair, open process that seeks
compromise. And that track record speaks to the value we place on the
process.
But more than anything, Senator Alexander will be remembered as
someone who dedicated his life to serving the people of Tennessee.
Between his 8 years as Governor and 16 years as a Senator, he served
longer than any Tennessean who has held both jobs. That doesn't include
the 2 years he served as President George H.W. Bush's Secretary of
Education.
His priorities have always been of great importance to Tennessee,
whether Army Corps of Engineers funding for inland waters, particularly
his favorite, Chickamauga--this is the first time I ever heard the word
pronounced--Chickamauga Lock, which he often talks about in our
hearings, or updating the way musicians are paid for their work.
He also led efforts to pass the Every Student Succeeds Act in 2015,
which President Obama called a ``Christmas miracle.''
As we hear promising news about coronavirus vaccines, we are reminded
of the 21st Century Cures Act. That is Senator Alexander's landmark
2016 bill that streamlined the drug and device approval process to
bring treatments to market faster. He has a long record of work he can
be proud of.
Lamar, you have been a great colleague and a dear friend all these
years in the Senate. I am proud of what we have achieved together. I
will miss our dinners together and sitting next to you on the dais. I
hope you enjoy a well-earned retirement with Honey and your beautiful
family. Thank you so much for your service
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Maine.
Ms. COLLINS. Mr. President, I first met Lamar Alexander when he was a
candidate for President 25 years ago. He was campaigning in the State
of Maine, and after giving an articulate speech outlining his
priorities and his policies, he proceeded to charm everyone by playing
the piano. Little did I know then that we would one day serve as
colleagues and friends in the U.S. Senate.
Lamar, as you heard already today, is an extraordinary legislator. He
has the ability to bring people together even on very contentious
issues and hammer out a compromise. He is extremely effective because
he is always well informed, focuses on the issue at hand, never gives
up, and is willing to work across the aisle. He gets things done that
matter not only to his constituents and his beloved Tennessee but also
to citizens across this great country.
He has been an extraordinary leader on important issues that many of
us care deeply about, such as biomedical research, education, and
combating the opioid crisis. He is that rare individual who is far less
interested in who gets the credit than in getting the job done. But, in
fact, each of us who has had the privilege of working with Lamar knows
that he is the one who deserves the credit.
I have served for years with Lamar on the Health, Education, Labor,
and Pensions Committee, which he chairs. On one challenging issue after
another, when others would throw up their hands and say ``This is
impossible; it simply cannot be done,'' Lamar never gives up the search
for a solution and for common ground.
Lamar has been so prolific as a legislator that it is difficult to
single out one accomplishment among so many, but if forced to do so, I
would say that the 21st Century Cures Act is his signature achievement.
As the name implies, this law is a lasting legacy for him, and it is
already providing lasting benefits for our country. Whether it is the
BRAIN Initiative that will finally help us to make progress on diseases
like Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, and other neurological illnesses, or the
Cancer Moonshot that was done in honor of Beau Biden, or the funding
that was included to look at the impact of lifestyles on our health,
all of the provisions of this landmark law will improve the health of
the American people far into the future, and it will be Lamar Alexander
who deserves the credit.
As a close second, I would cite the educational reforms he drafted to
replace and improve No Child Left Behind to give more autonomy back to
the States and local school districts. That law--Every Student Succeeds
Act--was a momentous bipartisan achievement, and Lamar has already
explained what it took to get the job done. It is not surprising that
in 2016, the Nation's Governors named Lamar the first recipient of the
James Madison Award to recognize Members of Congress who support
Federalism. As we have heard today, the Wall Street Journal called ESSA
the ``largest devolution of federal control to the states in a quarter-
century.''
In addition to being a skillful legislator, Lamar is also a
wonderfully talented musician, as both a pianist and a singer. His
hilarious performance at the annual Alfalfa Club dinner back in 2011 is
legendary, and thanks to YouTube, it is also immortal.
Lamar was a great friend, as he mentioned today, of the writer Alex
Haley, the author of ``Roots.'' Mr. Haley's personal motto was ``Find
the good and praise it.'' Lamar quotes that often, and he lives by it.
Optimism and gratitude, effectiveness and skill are his defining
characteristics. To Lamar, ``the good'' isn't simply what is pleasant;
it is what is worthwhile, what makes us better people, better citizens,
a better nation. If we follow the advice he gave us today, we will be a
better Senate.
Not long ago, I was interviewed by a journalist for a retrospective
on Lamar's service in the Senate. She said that she happened to be in
the Senate Dining Room on December 17, 2018--the day that Lamar
announced his intention to retire--and that a room usually alive with
chatter was unusually quiet and tinged with sadness. That somber
atmosphere was genuine and bipartisan.
Lamar, I can't tell you how much personally I will miss serving with
you. You are not only a great Senator and extraordinary legislator but
a wonderful friend. Thank you so much for your many years of public
service. I feel very honored to have served with you, to have learned
from you, and I wish you and Honey all the best.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The assistant Democratic leader.
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, his name was the answer to a frequently
asked question. It is a question that used to come up in almost every
Democratic meeting when we talked about legislative ideas and we talked
about making progress on the floor of the Senate. And the question was
this: Who can we call on the other side of the aisle? And the answer
was almost always Lamar Alexander. We knew that if we presented an idea
to him, he would not only be receptive and respectful, we knew that if
he came on board, it would lend credibility to our effort, maybe even
get a bill passed around here. But it would always have to wear a red
tartan badge with it because there was an idea that he wanted to bring
to the party, but it was worth it. It was worth it not only for the
progress that you can make in terms of legislation, but it was worth it
because it was part of developing a friendship.
Harry Truman used to recommend famously, ``If you want a friend in
Washington, get a dog.'' I thought of that. I told you about it a few
months ago when you were on one of those Sunday morning talk shows. You
were broadcasting, I think, from your living room or family room at
your home in Tennessee, and I couldn't get over that stuffed animal
that was on the coffee table behind you. It just seemed like it was
such an odd little piece of maybe personal pride to have that stuffed
animal with you. It turned out it wasn't stuffed at all. It was Rufus,
your dog, who slept through your entire performance, wasn't a bit moved
by the fact
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that you were on some Sunday morning talk show.
I want to thank you for many things, and I will mention a few of them
in terms of legislation, but I especially want to thank you for--I
brought a group of friends of mine down to Nashville, TN, and you made
a recommendation list of places to stop, including the Bluebird, and
then came by and joined us for lunch. You couldn't have been more
gracious, and I thank you for that.
That is a trademark of Lamar Alexander's life and service to this
country.
I could talk about many things, but I want to reflect on one that I
think is timely and significant and is a reason a lot of us are wearing
these masks. We are facing a pandemic with the COVID-19 virus. It has
claimed 273,000 American lives, and I am afraid many more will follow.
Millions--almost 13 million or more--have been infected by it. We want
it to end, and we want it to end as quickly as possible.
The really shining ray of hope here is the possibility that a vaccine
will be available soon. I pray it will be. I like to think that some of
the things that we did together, with others, created an opportunity
for that vaccine to be discovered.
It was 5 or 6 years ago that I approached you and I approached
Senator Patty Murray and Roy Blunt with the idea that we ought to make
a concerted, consistent effort to increase the NIH's budget by at least
5 percent per year.
Senator Blunt, whom I see on the floor here today, I want to thank
you. You took that cause to heart, along with Senator Alexander.
We had the right appropriator and the right authorizer, and Patty
Murray served in both capacities so effectively.
We dramatically increased the NIH budget over the last 7, 8 years. I
am hopeful, and I would like to think that some of those researchers
and the work that they did was laying the groundwork for the discovery
of these vaccines quickly in the United States and around the world.
That is a legacy you won't soon forget.
Do you remember when we first got wind of this COVID-19 and I walked
across the Chamber here and I said to you: I am worried about this
protective equipment issue and how much we are reliant on going
overseas for sourcing; would you join me at least in an effort to find
out whether we are dependent on foreign sources at a time when we might
desperately need this protective equipment for our own?
You said, sure, and we did it together and the investigation is
underway. It may not serve us in this particular crisis, but it will
serve in many generations to come to make sure we have reliable
domestic sources in the United States.
I am not going to catalog all of the items that were mentioned
earlier by our colleagues Senator Blackburn and Senator Collins and
Senator Feinstein--the list goes on and on--but that increase by 38
percent of the National Institutes of Health was something our little
quartet did together, and I am particularly proud to be part of it.
It wasn't, by far, the only thing that you have done. You championed
an increase in the Department of Energy's Office of Science as chair of
the Energy and Water Appropriations Committee, which Senator Feinstein
noted. Under your leadership with her, that office budget has increased
by 38 percent since 2015.
You worked with the National Labs, like Oak Ridge, Argonne, Fermilab.
Those are near and dear to me as well. And your support for research
infrastructure provided essential help to this Lab and Labs across
America.
I want to just close by saying this. Most of us were moved by your
speech. I am sure it was a perfect illustration of your view of this
Chamber and the good memories you have and a challenge to all of us to
do better. I think the honest answer is it is not the rules of the
Senate that make the difference; it is the Senators who make a
difference. If we come to the chore of legislating with the inspiration
of Lamar Alexander, we are going to get a lot done for America.
Thank you for your great service to our country.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Republican whip.
Mr. THUNE. Mr. President, the Senate is going to miss Lamar
Alexander.
Listening to his farewell address right now made the fact that he is
leaving all too real. I don't like to think of a U.S. Senate without
Lamar. He is a Senate institution and a Senate leader, and his leaving
is a loss for this body and for the American people.
Any tribute to Lamar has to mention his incredible career, which a
lot has been alluded to already: his walk across the State of
Tennessee, his 8 years as Tennessee Governor, his time as Secretary of
Education under President George H.W. Bush, his stint as president of
the University of Tennessee system, and his time as a professor at
Harvard.
Then, of course, are his 18 years in the U.S. Senate, marked by
significant legislative accomplishments on everything from education to
opioids.
All that, and he makes a plaid shirt look good, although these days
he has switched to a plaid face mask.
I first met Lamar, like our colleague from Maine, Senator Collins,
mentioned, when he attended a Lincoln Day Dinner in South Dakota in
1995, when he was running for President. I really started to get to
know him a little bit when I came to the Senate in 2005.
Lamar had already been here for a couple of years by that time. Of
course, he already had an extraordinary career behind him. I know I was
not the only young Senator who regarded him as something of a mentor
and a role model.
I share a couple of things with Lamar; one is the fact that we were
both Senate staffers long before we came to the Senate as elected
officials. We weren't here at the same time. He was a little ahead of
me. I came to the Senate the year Howard Baker left, but, like Lamar, I
have great appreciation for the contributions staffers make to the work
that we do around here. I know many of Lamar's staffers are in the
Gallery today. As he leaves, also we lose a tremendous amount of brain
power and talent that has contributed so significantly to the successes
and accomplishments that he has had as a U.S. Senator.
The other is that he and I both have served as chairman of the Senate
Republican conference, which is the messaging and communications office
for Republicans in the Senate. I succeeded Lamar as chairman of the
Senate Republican conference in 2012. I will tell you, he is a very
tough act to follow but an inspiring one because he did such a
tremendous job in leading our messaging in the conference.
Lamar has an ability to break down complex subjects and communicate
them clearly. He can sum up an issue in one succinct phrase. He
mentioned earlier, in his remarks, the idea that there ought to be one
column, one idea; one speech, one idea. He really did master that.
I can recall his summary when we were talking a lot about the energy
issue: We need to ``find more and use less.'' That is about as clear a
summary of our energy priorities as you can get
Many of us used a phrase he popularized around here, too, in
describing policies of the other side that we thought would be harmful
to the economy as casting a big wet blanket over the economy. I don't
know how many times you heard that coming out of our mouths, but it all
originated with Lamar Alexander.
I think that ability to really break down complex issues and clearly
explain them is one of the reasons he was such a good conference
chairman and one of the reasons he has been so successful
legislatively.
And he has been successful legislatively. You already heard a number
of my colleagues talk about his many successes. Yet he has managed to
get things passed around here that I don't think anyone thought could
get passed, particularly in the polarized political environment that we
have been in.
But Lamar has an ability to bring people together from across the
aisle. You heard our colleagues on both sides speak to that. He is very
practical about the business of legislating. He focuses on what is
actually possible to do and he finds the common ground and he gets
things done.
You have heard of the America COMPETES Act, the Every Student
Succeeds Act, the 21st Centuries Cures
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Act, the Opioids Crisis Response Act, the Copyright Act, the Great
American Outdoors Act. I could go on and on. Those, ladies and
gentlemen, are major, major pieces of legislation, tremendous
accomplishments of the Congress by the U.S. Senate, signed into law by
the President, all of which couldn't have happened without the
leadership of Lamar Alexander.
He has held multiple leadership positions in the Senate: chairman of
the Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee and, as I said,
Senate Republican conference chairman, but he has always been a leader,
whether or not in an official leadership position or simply by virtue
of who he is.
As I said before, Lamar has been a mentor and role model to me and I
know to many others here in the Senate.
But I also have to mention his personal warmth and hospitality to me
and my wife when our daughter was studying at Belmont University in
Nashville, TN. He and his wife Honey opened their home to us in
Nashville. They hosted us. I am fortunate to be among those he
mentioned were at their place in the Smokies, which was a fabulous
experience. They took us to a Tennessee Titans game. They went above
and beyond. And to this day, we are grateful for their warmth and
generosity and for a chance to see Lamar in his element in his beloved
Tennessee.
Lamar has dedicated much of his life to his State, his country, and
nobody could be more deserving of retirement.
I will be surprised if he ever fully retires. I am pretty sure, even
while sitting on his porch, he is still going to be dreaming up ways to
make our country better.
Lamar, thank you for your leadership and for your mentorship. Thank
you for being a role model to so many of us. May God bless you in your
retirement. I will miss you.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Colorado.
Mr. BENNET. Mr. President, I was not planning on speaking today, but
I was so inspired by what Senator Alexander had to say about his career
and about the Senate that I wanted to share a word or two of reflection
on what he said.
Anybody who has spent any time around Washington, DC, or even around
this Capitol knows there are statues built all over this town of people
nobody remembers. When I go by one of those statues in Washington--
whether it is in a circle somewhere in a traffic stop or in the hallway
in the Capitol--I think about the importance of dying at the right
time. You want to die at a moment when statues are in vogue if you are
going to have a statue.
But there is no--none of these people are ever going to be remembered
in the long view of history. The stoic philosophers on whom we base so
much, or at least attempt to base so much of what we do here, had a
solution to that. Their solution was--whether it was the Greek or Roman
philosophers--their solution was: Do your best. Show up and make a
contribution. Do your best. Don't worry about how people are going to
remember you. Don't worry about your own mortality.
So few of us follow that advice. I think Lamar Alexander embodies
that. As President of the University of Tennessee, as Governor, as the
Secretary of Education, as a Senator, in every one of those jobs, it
has always been about doing his best.
In a Chamber filled with people who think they have a monopoly on
wisdom, Lamar has never stopped learning. He has always been curious.
Up to this day--I will bet today, he probably got up and asked somebody
on his staff or one of his colleagues to tell him about something he
wants to learn more about so he can be more effective and make a
greater difference so he can do his best.
The Senate is going to be diminished by Lamar's absence. It is hard
to believe we can be any more diminished than we are, but we are going
to be diminished by Lamar leaving.
Susan and I were lucky enough to be invited to his home, spend a
weekend there. I am going to say something now I never said to Lamar
Alexander. He gave us the great privilege of standing in the family
cemetery in Eastern Tennessee, in his beloved Smoky Mountains, where he
will forever keep the windmills out. As I stood there a little
awkwardly in the cemetery--because that is not usually part of a tour--
all I could think about was how lucky Lamar and Honey were to know that
would be the place where they would be and that long after they were
remembered by anybody, they would know that they had done their best;
that they had always done their best.
What I would say to my colleagues today is, we have an opportunity to
follow Lamar's example and take him up on what he said. We are not
memorializing Lamar today. He is going to have a lot more years left to
contribute to his State, his community, and to the country, but he
won't be in the Senate, and we are in the Senate.
We could work in the Senate that works 5 days a week or even 6 days a
week. Sign me up for that Senate. We could work in a Senate that has 25
amendments in a bill instead of 25 amendments in a year, as we did last
year, because there is no other body in America or in this democracy,
as Lamar said, that is set up to decide the hardest questions that our
country is facing and to make those decisions stick. That is what Lamar
Alexander said to us today.
He has left us with a challenge, and I hope we will take him up on it
because there is no excuse for the way this place has worked, and the
American people are tired of hearing that it has been the other side's
fault. There are 100 people who can fix this place, and I hope we will.
I can't think of a greater legacy for Lamar to leave than that of a
Senate that actually works. That is what the country deserves, and that
is the inspiration that Lamar Alexander has set for me.
I thank the Presiding Officer.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Texas.
Mr. CORNYN. Mr. President, we all know that Lamar Alexander is a
person of tremendous character and judgment, and it is not just because
he asked that young woman in the red shorts that he met at that
softball game so many years ago to marry him, who happens to be from
Victoria, TX, which demonstrates his enormous good judgment. Certainly,
we wish him and Honey the best in this next chapter of their lives.
When I think about Lamar Alexander, I think about all of the Lamar-
isms, and we have heard some of them here today: ``Find the good and
praise it''--quotes his friend Alex Haley, which I think kind of speaks
to the optimistic, positive view of life that we could use more of.
Then I remember other words. He said: If you want to get a standing
ovation before any group of individuals, you need to say, ``It is time
to put the teaching of American history and civics back into its
rightful place in our schools so our children can grow up learning what
it means to be an American.'' He has talked about Alex Haley, his
friend, who told him how to give a speech by telling a story.
Aristotle also had an idea about how to give a great speech. He
basically broke it down to three components. One is the logical
argument, another is the emotional argument, but then another is about
establishing your authority. It is about the character of the speaker.
When I think about Lamar, as he has demonstrated again here today, the
thing I appreciate about him the most is not just what he has
accomplished here but his incredible character and positive impact on
our Senate and on our country. It has been because people know that his
heart is in the right place. It is his doing it for all the right
reasons that we admire him so much.
I would just point out, as I told Lamar previously, that I admired
Lamar Alexander long before I met him--when I voted for him in the 1996
Republican primary for President. Unfortunately, he dropped out of that
race shortly thereafter, so I told him I wasted my vote, but I have
been an admirer for a long time.
(Laughter.)
Lamar and I also share something else in common. It is about his
predecessor as well as mine. He is a person by the name of Sam Houston.
I occupy the Senate seat first held by Sam Houston when Texas became a
State. Of course, he originally came from Tennessee. He had happened to
be a Governor of Tennessee before he had left and gone to Texas. Later,
he became the Governor of Texas and basically stepped down because he
was a
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Union man, recruited by Andrew Jackson. He loved the Union. He did not
agree with secession, but, of course, he went to Texas and became a
victorious general of the decisive Battle of San Jacinto. He became the
President of the Republic of Texas for the same reason. The reason the
Texas flag and the American flag fly at the same height is that we were
an independent nation before we became part of the United States. I
have heard it said that you could never write a novel based on the life
of Sam Houston because nobody would believe it. I have read plenty
about him, and I still find that to be true.
Yet, as I indicated, as proud as Texans are of Sam Houston's
contribution to our history and our State, we know we can't claim him
entirely because he grew up in Maryville, TN--the same town that Lamar
Alexander did--and went on to become Governor, as I mentioned a moment
ago.
Sam Houston's portrait hangs above my desk in the Hart Office
Building because it helps to remind me of my responsibilities and of
the incredible history and contribution that he made and that,
hopefully, each of us can make.
While you find Sam Houston's picture above my desk, you will find his
walking stick in Lamar Alexander's office, which is just down the hall.
The many Tennesseans who have visited Lamar during his time in the
Chamber have seen the words ``Sam Houston,'' ``Texas,'' and ``Lone
Star'' engraved on its gold cap, and according to Lamar, several Texans
have tried to run off with it. Fortunately, they haven't been
successful
The truth is, you can't get through a Texas history class--or at
least you shouldn't--without hearing about the pivotal role of the
Volunteer State within the history of my State. I always kid Lamar. I
say: The Tennesseans who went to Texas who fought at the Alamo and in
the Battle of San Jacinto were just one step ahead of a creditor or of
an aggrieved spouse. This was a rough-and-tumble group that came from
Tennessee to found Texas.
There are other Tennesseans, people like Davy Crockett and others,
who went to Texas and created our State. The State of Texas has many
reasons to be grateful to the contributions of the sons and daughters
of Tennessee, and one of those great sons is Lamar. He has dedicated
his life to public service. As we know, it has led him through an
incredible number of important offices.
Yet I think, to me, the thing that has even more led to his
legislative accomplishments and that has made Lamar so effective is
that we know we can trust him. We know his character. We know that when
he says something, it is true, and we have seen it time and again, when
Lamar has used that character and that trust to pass historic
legislation in this Chamber. As we have all come to know, when you are
working side by side with Lamar on legislation, you are bound to get
things done because he has cracked the code. He knows how to do it.
I have been proud to work with Lamar on legislation to address the
opioid epidemic, to support our servicemembers and veterans, to protect
health coverage, and to ensure that folks across the country have the
opportunity to take advantage of the American dream. His presence has
been constant throughout our time. We came to the Senate at the same
time, and, of course, his retirement makes that all bittersweet.
So I thank our colleague from Tennessee for his friendship over many
years and, as we have heard from Senator Thune and others, for the
example he has shown to the rest of us as to how to be an effective
Member of the U.S. Senate. I also thank him for his decades of service
to the country. I don't expect Lamar to follow in the footsteps of Sam
Houston and run for Governor of Texas, but I know he has many more
contributions to make to our great country, and I wish him and Honey
all the best during this next chapter of their lives. I am sure he is
looking forward to spending a little more time in their beloved Smoky
Mountains.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Washington.
Mrs. MURRAY. Mr. President, I have learned in my time in the Senate
that if you want to get something done across the aisle, you really
need the following: You need someone on the other side who is just as
committed to working together as you are, and that Member needs to have
the trust of Members on your side of the aisle and on his own, and you
both need to be willing to set aside egos and listen and get a
realistic understanding of whether the person on the other side of the
negotiating table can reach an agreement with you that upholds your
principles without compromising his own.
Now, what I have laid out might not sound that unusual or rare, but
it is actually pretty tough to find these days. I have been very lucky
that the Senator whom we honor today on the floor--my colleague and
friend, Chairman Lamar Alexander, of Tennessee--is someone who has
managed it time and again.
I don't think anyone, least of all Senator Alexander himself, would
be surprised to hear me say that we are as likely to disagree as to
agree on many matters. I bring my Washington State values to the table,
and he brings his Tennessee values, so you can imagine how that has
gone from time to time. Yet, despite our different perspectives and our
different approaches we take to policymaking, we have also been able to
see where our values and the interests of our States and our country
converge.
We both understood that the broken No Child Left Behind law needed to
be fixed. Lamar listened to me, which I so appreciated, when I told him
we should write a bill together rather than to amend the Republican
bill that he had begun working on. With our HELP Committee members, we
were able to write and pass a new K-12 public education bill that fixed
the most broken parts of No Child Left Behind. It included Federal
guardrails so we could understand how all of our students perform. It
dedicated resources to improving the schools that needed it the most.
It also allowed for historic steps forward on early education.
We laid the groundwork together for new investments in lifesaving
biomedical innovation and research through the 21st Century Cures Act,
including the Beau Biden Cancer Moonshot.
We worked together to pass landmark legislation to boost our response
to the opioid epidemic, to strengthen our public health preparedness
programs, and to permanently fund historically Black colleges and
universities and minority-serving institutions. We not only passed each
of these bills, but we did so time and again with huge majorities from
this Senate. Now, even still, Chairman Alexander and I, along with our
colleagues in the House, are working to get legislation across the
finish line to finally ban surprise medical bills.
What I have just laid out is by no means a full list at all of
Senator Alexander's accomplishments as chairman. It doesn't even
include quite a few things he is still trying to get done as we speak.
Senator Alexander's focus on working together has helped countless
families in his home State of Tennessee, in my home State of
Washington, and nationwide.
My Democratic colleagues and I thank Chairman Alexander for the tone
and manner with which he has led the HELP Committee over the past 6
years--some of them, admittedly, rockier than others but, throughout,
guided by his steady leadership and commitment to working together.
For myself, as someone who shares the drive to not only fight for
what you believe in but also to look for common ground, I thank my
colleague from Tennessee for the many opportunities to dig in and get
to work that he has provided, for being willing to hear me and my
colleagues out again and again when necessary, and for looking so often
for common ground, for another problem we could solve, and for being
willing not just to keep talking but to keep listening as well.
Finally, I know none of this would have been possible without the
support and strength Senator Alexander has received from Honey, his
wife, and I acknowledge and thank her for her contribution as well.
Lamar, you will be thrilled to be back full time in the State you
love so much--I know that--but I and members of the HELP Committee want
you to know we are going to miss you terribly here in the Senate. Thank
you so much for all you have done.
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The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Mississippi.
Mr. WICKER. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that Senators
Cantwell, Blunt, Romney, Schumer, and I be able to complete our remarks
before the next vote.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. WICKER. Mr. President, I don't want to prolong this discussion
except to make one additional point about the unselfishness and
humility of this hero of the Senate, whose remarks we will long
remember today.
There is a framed piece of legislation that hangs on the wall in my
conference room in the Dirksen Building. It is, in fact, a piece of
legislation that Senator Alexander chose to mention as one of his
signature accomplishments, and that is the American History and Civics
Education Act, which was signed into law by President George W. Bush.
There is a story about how I came to have that piece of legislation,
which Senator Alexander worked so hard on, on the wall in my conference
room.
I live in North Mississippi, and, as such, I listen to Memphis
television a lot. During Lamar Alexander's first race for Senator, on
came a commercial, and, basically, it said just what our friend from
Texas just quoted--that this candidate for Senator, former Governor
Lamar Alexander, wanted to pass an American civics education bill to
teach our children what it means to be an American. I stopped at that
moment, and I pointed to that television screen, and I said: If that
man gets elected, I want to be part of that bill because that is
exactly what we need.
So Senator Alexander introduced the bill here in the Senate. I
introduced it in the House of Representatives. We made public
appearances together, one in Memphis, TN, that I will always remember.
Eventually, the bill gained a lot of support over here, and Senator
Kennedy, as has been mentioned, was someone at the forefront of that
effort.
We were able to pass it in the House. It went to conference to iron
out the details, and a decision had to be made as to which one would
actually be enacted by both Houses and go to the President for his
signature.
Lamar Alexander allowed the piece of legislation introduced by a
relatively junior Member of the House named Roger Wicker to be that
piece of legislation that went on to the White House, to the Oval
Office, to be signed by the President of the United States.
So that is how that piece of legislation hangs on my wall as a bill
authored by Representative Roger Wicker but passed very much with the
efforts of Senator Alexander also.
I just wanted to mention that, not to prolong this discussion but to
mention that act of selflessness and humility as another attribute of
this great Senator to whom we say farewell today.
I think the remarks we heard from Senator Alexander will be taught at
civics classes and college-level government classes for decades and
decades to come. It was so profound, and it is a real honor that a
piece of legislation that he and I worked on together will always be a
part of what I consider to be those immortal remarks.
So I thank you very much.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Washington.
Ms. CANTWELL. Mr. President, I come to the floor, too, to thank the
Senator from Tennessee for his service to our Nation and for his work
here in the U.S. Senate.
Some of my colleagues have already mentioned the brevity of words
with which Senator Alexander can deliver a message. I, too, remember
his comments as a Rules Committee member, on the inaugural address, and
really capturing the moment of why a transition of power is so
important to our Nation. And it struck me that we really had a poet or
a writer among us, someone who could sense and feel the moment of what
we were going through and express it in words. So I have no doubt that
some writing is in Lamar's future here, and I look forward to seeing
that.
But I wanted to rise today to thank him for his service and what it
has meant to my State and to our Nation. My colleague from Washington
talked about their work together on the Health, Education, Labor, and
Pensions Committee. I, too, want to thank you for the CARES Act, and I
remember your recognition on FOX News about stem cell research and the
great work that that has led to.
So we are appreciative of those research dollars, but I want to focus
on a role that maybe has not gotten as much attention--the historic
role you have played on our energy budget and our National Laboratory
budget.
I so appreciate the background of your State and the background of
focus on energy funding, from the National Laboratory perspective,
which has had to have a constant flow and constantly it has been
challenged. Yet it has put every step forward because of the level of
investment in helping us make our Nation more secure, create more
innovation, and create more jobs. So thank you for holding steadfast on
the National Laboratory budget.
I also want to thank you for your work on the Manhattan Project
National Historical Park, which we worked together on, which, both,
commemorated the history of our Nation and our Manhattan Project at,
both, Oak Ridge and at Richland, WA, and Hanford, and to just thank you
for the constant focus on the cleanup budget that we have had to have
in the Energy Department, as it related to Hanford.
There was a time when we had many cleanup projects around the Nation,
and it was very easy to come together and say that we had to get
Savannah River, we had to get Oak Ridge, we had to get Colorado, we had
to get Idaho, and we had to get Hanford. But as those projects made
progress, a lot of people forgot about what it took to clean up
Hanford. So I appreciate your constant focus on helping us to get the
dollars necessary for cleanup at Hanford.
I also appreciate, recently, your help on making sure that people
didn't overstep on the National Nuclear Security Administration and
turn that over to a Defense oversight of people but kept it within the
Department of Energy. I so appreciate that.
But I will be forever grateful for your focus on public lands. We
have a saying in my State: Environmentalists make great ancestors. So I
don't know if you want that environmentalist term associated with your
name, but I am pretty sure you do want the stewardship.
And the man from the Great Smoky Mountains helped us deliver a
monumental piece of legislation by convincing the President of the
United States to support the budgetary impact of combining both the
national parks enhancement program, which is basically taking care of
the national parks backlog, which was in the billions of dollars, and
also fully funding the Land and Water Conservation Fund, a battle that
had been going on for more than a decade.
So I want to thank you for that, Lamar. I want to thank you on behalf
of the Washingtonians who will go to so many special places, who will
get to visit and commune with their families, who will be able to have
outdoor experiences, who will be able to really understand the grandeur
of Mother Earth. So thank you for pulling off what seemed to be like an
impossible effort to convince people to make that level of investment.
We are going to miss the harmony of your voice and the harmony of
your legislative skills, but we are not going to say permanently good-
bye to you because we hope that you will be sending us messages just
like the one you sent today and reminding us that we can do better.
So thank you, Lamar, for your contribution, in a lot of your life, to
these very important issues that affect so many of us. Thank you
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Utah.
Mr. ROMNEY. Mr. President, I first met Lamar Alexander in 1995, when
he spoke at Boston's Lincoln Day Dinner. Like today, he was folksy,
good humored, thoughtful, and impressive.
I remarked to Ann that he was surely going to go places. Of course,
he had already gone places by then, but he ran for President the next
year. One thing Lamar and I agree on is that the best candidate for
President does not always win. I think he may well have been just that.
[[Page S7154]]
You all know that he served as president of a university, Governor,
Senator, and Secretary of Education. I have watched firsthand as he has
led the Senate's Committee on Health and Education. I don't know any
person who has worked longer, harder, and more effectively for the
well-being of America's children than Lamar Alexander.
His service extends, of course, beyond the children. As we have
endured the COVID-19 pandemic, he has led the Senate as we have helped
to guide and fund our national response. His healthcare expertise and
his determination to keep each of us informed and involved has been
invaluable.
While America's response to the pandemic may not have been exemplary,
Lamar Alexander's leadership of the Senate's role has been superb. The
speed at which we will have a vaccine is, in no small measure, a
testament to his determination and vision.
But Lamar is much more than a Senator. I have seen the devotion he
has for his wife and family. I have watched him entertain rooms full of
celebrating Republicans with his piano and singing. And I have
experienced very personally the kindness and graciousness that have
long characterized this man. He was the first Senator to come to meet
me when I joined this body.
His impact on the Senate, on the State of Tennessee, and on the
Nation extends well beyond his legislative accomplishments and
leadership. His greatest impact has been that of his personal
character. He is a man without guile. He is true to his conscience. He
speaks and acts with truth and honesty. He cares about people and
endeavors to help others. He is a genuine friend, as is evidenced by
the many members of his team wearing plaid masks around this room.
He has used his talent and energy not to aggrandize himself but to
serve. It could be said of Lamar Alexander that he is a great American
of exemplary character. We are a better people because of Lamar
Alexander.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Missouri.
Mr. BLUNT. Mr. President, I think Mark Twain said, among many other
things, that there is nothing more troubling than a great example. And,
as we have had all of these speeches today, I felt less and less
adequate as the speakers talked about the great things that Lamar has
done, the great things he stands for, the incredible character that
defines his life and his work. It has been wonderful to be here and to
see the appreciation that Senators have for somebody who is proud to be
a Senator.
Not that often do you get to start a last speech in the Senate
referring to somebody else's maiden speech over almost 50 years ago.
But that kind of sense of the Senate, that sense of community, that
split screen that Lamar talked about with educators, where you do have
the one screen where it appears that nobody can get along and get
anything done--and, particularly in the Senate, you have this
relatively small community of people, all of whom got here by figuring
out, normally, how to get along with other people, as one of their
attributes of getting to the Senate. And then you have rules in the
Senate that require you to get along to get anything done. So you have
that other screen that doesn't get nearly the attention. But when you
do look at the accomplishments, even at a time of great frustration,
those accomplishments have been significant, and so many of them have
included Lamar.
I knew Lamar before I came to the Senate, but, particularly, the last
10 years of working with Lamar in the Senate have been great for me,
and the time that Abby and I have been able to spend with him and Honey
have been great.
He says things in passing that really define the opportunity to be
here in such a significant way. We have heard many of them today. There
are others I think of often--one Lamar told me not too long ago, when I
was talking about how well our staffs work together. He said: Well, it
always seemed to me that when the Senators obviously got along, the
staff figures that out and they understand they are supposed to get
along too.
Lamar is blessed with a great staff. It will be interesting to see
the new standard of having that other speech that so significantly
talks about the staff and what the staff means. I have a great staff--
many of us do--but when those staffs work together, as opposed to
looking for reasons they shouldn't work together, things happen.
I remember Lamar told me one day: They always remember the last thing
you do.
And if that turns out to be the case, at least the last Senate year
of Senator Alexander has been extraordinary, as others have been.
But this year I had a chance, as the appropriating chairman of the
committee that Lamar is the authorizing chairman for--and, by the way,
he also sits right beside me on the Appropriations Committee in most of
our hearings when Senator Shelby isn't able to be there, the chairman
of our full committee. But in this last year, particularly from March
on, we have done so many things together.
In March, April, May, June, there was almost never a day when we
didn't have at least one call with somebody who is running a laboratory
or someone at the FDA or someone who understood this investment arm we
had, BARDA, that had been designed about 10 years earlier but never
used as we have used it to bring the private sector and public sector
together in partnership in a way that advances both tests and vaccines.
We would spend sometimes hours a day in a series of 30-minute phone
calls, trying to put the pieces of this puzzle together. I remember one
day we were talking to someone at the White House, and the comment from
his part of the conversation was knowing how many other conversations
we had had that day.
If people had any idea how much the Senate and the two of you--he was
saying at that moment--are committed to get things done, they would be
surprised because that is a story that never gets told.
So much of the story of Lamar--his work here and the good spirit he
brings to that work--isn't told, but it is so very obvious, certainly
for me.
One of the great gifts of my working life has been for Lamar
Alexander to be such an important part of it for the last 10 years. I
am grateful for it; I am grateful for him. I look forward to his
continued friendship and advice.
I think Senator Alexander, like many of us, is more of a next-chapter
guy than a last-chapter guy. He is neither shy nor retiring. I expect
him to continue to have great impact in his State and in our country.
And, in my case, I hope he continues to have great impact in my life.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Ms. Ernst). The Democratic leader.
Mr. SCHUMER. Madam President, first, I spoke earlier about Senator
Alexander, but I would like to compliment my colleagues on both sides
of the aisle. This is a fine and rare moment of bipartisanship and
support of somebody we all admire and respect.