[Congressional Record Volume 167, Number 10 (Tuesday, January 19, 2021)]
[Senate]
[Pages S51-S53]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
FAREWELL TO THE SENATE
Mrs. LOEFFLER. Mr. President, it has been the honor of my lifetime to
serve Georgia in the U.S. Senate. There has never been a day that I
don't walk through the hallways of the Capitol when I am not awestruck
by the magnitude of this job and of this place and of my duty.
I want to thank my colleagues, especially those who welcomed me from
the start, who worked with me, and who even across the aisle worked
with me to get things done for our country in such a consequential
year.
I want to thank the people of Georgia who showed me the very best of
our great State. My goal as Senator was clear: to work every single day
to make Georgians' lives better and to make ours the very best State to
work, to live, to worship, and to raise a family.
I never stopped working to meet that goal and was energized and
humbled every single day by the opportunity to serve. In between weeks
spent in Washington, I crisscrossed our great State nonstop, going from
southeast coastal Georgia in Camden County to northwest mountain
Georgia in Catoosa County. Time with Georgians are my fondest memories.
One of my earliest visits was in Homerville, GA, population 2,400. I
carried the people of Homerville with me every day as I approached my
work. Having grown up on our family farm, where the nearest small town
had a population of 600, my calling to public service was, in large
part, to be a voice--an outsized voice--for those who feel they didn't
have a voice in Washington.
Many Georgians inspired me each day to bring results to every corner
of
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our State. In that spirit, I want to thank Governor Kemp for appointing
me and entrusting me with the important work of being a voice for our
State and a servant to our citizens.
I was proud to serve alongside my friend and colleague Senator David
Perdue.
I want to recognize Senator Johnny Isakson and Senator Saxby
Chambliss for their shining example of what it meant to be a Senator,
and, most importantly, a public servant. I also want to recognize and
thank my incredible husband, Jeff, whose love and support encouraged me
every single day. And I want to thank my family for instilling the
values of faith, family, and hard work. You all have my deepest love
and gratitude.
As importantly, I want to recognize my very talented and hard-working
staff, many of whom are with me today. Together, our work here and in
Georgia has made a tremendous difference in our State.
Let me tell you about just some of that work, because in one
significant year in the Senate, I am so proud of all we have
accomplished together. We delivered more than $47 billion in relief to
Georgia during the pandemic--to farmers, to family, to small
businesses, hospitals, and schools. And, as a freshman Senator, I
introduced and passed six pieces of legislation. We secured funding for
rural hospitals. We increased telehealth access, and we sped the
delivery of PPE to the frontlines.
I championed and we passed legislation that increased funding to help
homeless veterans get back on their feet, and I was proud to champion
agriculture, our State's leading industry, as well as our military, law
enforcement, small businesses, and school choice.
I stood up for innocent life, the Second Amendment, and all of our
constitutional rights.
I was able to use my business experience to develop four wide-ranging
plans to drive economic security, keep our Nation safe, modernize our
healthcare system, and increase opportunities in minority communities.
In 2020 alone, our office helped over 5,200 Georgians with casework,
including nearly 1,000 Georgia veterans and Active-Duty service men and
women navigate their VA benefits in VA medical centers.
I am incredibly proud of all the work we accomplished together for
our State and for our country. There is much more work to do. I had
hoped to pass a piece of my legislation to bring back to the United
States from China the manufacturing of our critical medical supplies,
including prescription drugs, over-the-counter medicine, and medical
equipment.
I want to wish my successor well in his work serving Georgia.
Now, most farewell speeches urge colleagues to put country before
party or to fix what is broken here in the Senate. My message is
slightly different. In all of the events of recent weeks, I want to
urge my colleagues to remember why we are here, whom you serve, and to
recall the greatness of the American experiment, as well as the fragile
nature of our freedoms.
I spent 30 years in the private sector chasing the American dream. I
worked on our family's farm. I waitressed. I lived paycheck to
paycheck. I moved around the country and worked hard to overcome
setbacks and to build a respected career in business. I came to Georgia
two decades ago as a job seeker, and I became a job creator, helping to
grow a small startup company into a Fortune 500 company.
And, like many Georgians, part of that work is giving back in our
communities and supporting others in achieving their dreams. I have
done that now in business, in philanthropy, in sports, and now in
public service. That is the American dream. It gives everyone,
regardless of their background, the freedom to make the most of their
life, chase their passions, build their family and their career, and
thrive in the greatest country in the world. Protecting that dream for
all Americans should be our common cause, regardless of political
party.
As I served over the last year, it has become clear that we need more
outsiders, more business people, and fewer--with all due respect--fewer
politicians.
Americans have high expectations for us. They are looking for
leadership. They want results, and, right now, they want their lives
back. They are looking for us to restore America and protect their
dreams, not to take advantage of a crisis and expand the government.
They certainly don't want their way of life overwhelmed by radical
change and costly policies that will push them out of their job, limit
their children's educational opportunities, and threaten their right to
worship and speak freely.
At the same time, while those on the left feign a desire for unity,
they say they cannot tolerate it without accountability. In essence,
there can be no unity without conforming to their views. Disagree, and
you will be canceled, and not just your social media account but your
job, your family, your educational opportunities, and even your God-
given rights. Only those who meet the ideological purity test can claim
moral superiority and maintain their voice.
Over the last year, I experienced this firsthand many times. Yes, I
have been a proud champion of conservative values, but I always put
Georgia first ahead of politics. As the pandemic began to unfold, I
worked around the clock to deliver relief across Georgia, yet the
mainstream media, including my own hometown newspaper, flooded its
pages not with serious coverage of my relief efforts but with
completely false stories about stock trades fabricated by a leftwing
blog.
When this political attack was thoroughly debunked, that fact was
largely omitted from subsequent coverage to fit their narrative. The
truth is, the mainstream media and Big Tech increasingly care only
about advancing their political ideology and protecting only the speech
that fits into their specific narrative. The double standards, disdain,
and contempt that elites and institutions of influence have for
conservatives is increasingly being revealed. For the sake of our
discourse, this cannot continue.
As a starting point, we must hold accountable those who limit our
free speech and the loss of our civil discourse in this country. The
American people are alarmed by the effort to censor conservative
voices. We are witnessing a constitutional crisis that threatens to
erode the First Amendment and silence people across our country. As a
Republican and a conservative American who still believes in the
Constitution and the core principles on which our country was founded,
I refuse to be intimidated by the cancel culture and its dangerous
narratives.
However, not every American feels free to speak up. Their voices are
being lost.
This is why this Senate is so important. For 230 years, the U.S.
Senate has been the central venue for voicing dissenting views, and it
has celebrated the deliberation of issues confronting our Nation.
You must be the voice for those who can't use theirs. Now is the
time. The urgency weighs on our country. If we are serious about
uniting, it must be out of respect for diversity, not despite it.
Diversity of belief is not monolithic.
In 1964, a future President Ronald Reagan spoke to his fellow
Americans saying:
You and I have a rendezvous with destiny. We will preserve
for our children this, the last best hope of man on earth, or
we will sentence them to take the first step into a thousand
years of darkness.
These sage words echo today. These words are timeless.
To my colleagues in the Senate, I urge you to address the dire
threats to our First Amendment rights in order to restore every
American's faith in our democracy and to help restore our trust in each
other. It is the only way to ensure that America, the world's shining
city on the hill, a republic admired for centuries, can endure for
future generations.
I encourage each of you to uphold our uniquely American values and
preserve the American dream, and I will continue to champion our
party's values from whatever position I occupy. America depends on it.
Americans are counting on us to be their voice.
For a shy farm girl who was the first in her family to graduate from
college, who could never have imagined that one day I would serve as
the U.S. Senator from the great State of Georgia, thank you all. It has
been my deepest honor.
May God bless you, and may God bless the United States of America.
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I yield the floor.
(Applause.)
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Democratic whip.
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