[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 145 (1999), Part 6] [Senate] [Pages 8868-8872] [From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]TRIBUTE TO SENATOR JOSEPH R. BIDEN ON HIS 10,000th VOTE Mr. HATCH. Mr. President, I rise today to recognize a very dear friend of mine in the Senate and his historic 10,000th vote. His name is Senator Joseph Biden of Delaware, a friend and colleague whose distinguished career has elevated both the quality and stature of the Senate. The number 10,000 is an important landmark in a career that has many milestones, but I believe Senator Biden will be best remembered for the significance of his varied votes. I have seen many of those notable votes cast. In every one of those votes he was careful, deliberate, and respectful of his duty to the people of Delaware. Joe and I have served in the Senate for roughly the same amount of time. He has been here a couple of years longer than I. We have worked closely together in the Senate Judiciary Committee, which he chaired and which I now chair. On occasion we have agreed to disagree. In fact, I wish he had cast more of those 10,000 votes with me. In [[Page 8869]] all seriousness, however, Joe and I have found many areas where we strongly have agreed. Joe has long been a leader on the issue of youth violence, an issue which has affected countless lives in Delaware, Utah, and the rest of the Nation. In 1974, he was the lead sponsor of the Juvenile Justice Prevention Act. In 1992, he sponsored the Juvenile Justice Prevention Act Amendments, which provided States with Federal grants for a complete and comprehensive approach to improve the juvenile justice system and controlling juvenile crime. He has long advocated a tough stand against illegal drugs. He authored the law creating the Nation's drug czar, and in 1986, he was the guiding force for the enactment of groundbreaking drug legislation. He has probably done as much if not more than anybody in the Senate with regard to the antidrug stances that we all should support and that we all appreciate today. With regard to juvenile justice, next week we bring up a juvenile justice bill. Senator Biden has been a mainstay in helping to resolve conflicts that we have in that bill and hopefully helping it to become a bipartisan bill that all of us can support. What I admire most about Joe is the fact that he is the staunchest defender of his party's beliefs, yet he does not hesitate to cross party lines to forge a consensus position when he believes it is the right thing to do. Nowhere is that more evident than with the issue of juvenile crime. Joe has a history of standing up for what is right when it comes to juvenile crime, and I believe he will continue to do so. We look forward to working with him next week. While chairman of the Judiciary Committee, he authored the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act, which was signed into law in 1994. While I differed with much that was contained and dropped from the bill, this legislation contained the Biden-Hatch Violence Against Women Act, the first comprehensive law to address gender-based offenses. Senator Biden's leadership on this issue changed how many Americans view the issue of violence against women. He even changed how we refer to domestic abuse in the Senate by continually asking, ``What's domestic about beating your wife?'' Joe is widely regarded as a foreign policy expert. Many remember his leadership on NATO expansion in 1998. He stood out as a strong advocate for the inclusion of several Eastern European nations into the alliance. NATO is now engaged in its greatest test, and I am convinced that Joe's leadership was integral in strengthening the alliance. In 1997, Senator Biden showed these same leadership skills when he led the successful effort in the Senate to ratify the Chemical Weapons Convention. Joe Biden has truly had a distinguished career in the Senate. All that said and done, I could go on and on about his distinguished career, but it is his personal qualities that have impressed his friends, his family, and his colleagues, including, of course, myself as a friend and as a colleague. Many may not know that Senator Biden overcame two operations for a near-fatal brain aneurysm in 1988 and returned to the Senate in 1989. I remember those days and I remember how catastrophic they were for him, his family, and for those of us who prayed for him. He showed great courage and persistence in overcoming that adversity. Nobody was more thankful than his wife and three children, to whom he is a loving husband and father. Indeed, he is renowned for putting his family first, as demonstrated by his daily commute to and from Delaware. The fact that he takes a 2-hour train ride to get here every day makes the accomplishment of reaching 10,000 votes all the more astounding. So it is with great honor that I ask my colleagues to join me and others in congratulating Senator Joseph R. Biden on his 10,000th vote. His many contributions to this body are appreciated and recognized. I am sure that I speak for all of my colleagues when I say we will enjoy keeping a close eye on the many votes yet to come. Just as a gift this evening, this is the last CD that we have done. It is, frankly, Santita Jackson, Jesse Jackson's daughter, singing with a wonderful young African American from Nashville, who is as good a singer as anybody in the world, named Chris Willis. This CD is entitled ``Put Your Arms Around the World.'' I think it kind of applies to Joe Biden. When he listens to the song written by Peter McCann and me-- Peter McCann wrote ``It's the Right Time of the Night'' and ``Want to Make Love''--called ``Take Good Care of My Heart,'' that particular song, I think, really applies to Senator Biden because, in his own way, with his tremendous interest in foreign policy, tremendous interest in the law, his tremendous interest in overcoming injustice in our society not only here but throughout the world, I think this song will mean something to him. It certainly does to me. Santita Jackson and Chris Willis are two of the rising young stars in America. I would like to give this CD to Senator Biden at this time and say that I look forward to serving with him for a long time to come. So hang in there. Thank you, Mr. President. I yield the floor. Mr. SARBANES. Mr. President, I join with my colleagues in paying this tribute to Joe Biden on the occasion of him casting his 10,000th vote in the Senate. The casting of that vote is an occasion to pay tribute not for voting but for a real career of service and of great distinction. It has been one of the pleasures of my service in this body to have served with Joe Biden, and one of my pleasures that we represent adjoining States. Therefore, we interact on a number of issues that otherwise would not be the case amongst Members of the Senate. He has had an extraordinary career here. He is now in his fifth term. He got elected before he was old enough, actually, under the Constitution, before he was old enough under the Constitution to be a Member of the Senate. He was elected at the age of 29, and he has just had a terrific career of accomplishment. Those who have worked with him derive great pleasure from it. We have marveled at his legislative skill. I want to talk about two or three of the things in which he has been very much involved. We have served together on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee all of these years. And he has exercised extraordinary leadership of the Senate Judiciary Committee at various points during his career. We are making a lot of the fact now in America that crime rates are going down all across the country. So everyone is sort of looking to see what is the cause of that, or who ought to get the praise for it. I have to tell you that Joe Biden ought to get a lot of the praise for the fact that crime has gone down across this land. He has authored every significant anticrime initiative in the Congress over a period of time that he has been here--the Juvenile Justice Prevention Act, the Victims of Crime Act, the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act, and on and on and on. Senator Biden has been a great champion of law enforcement and of those who work in law enforcement. He has been sensitive on the important civil liberties and civil rights cases, which a democracy ought to be sensitive to. He has understood how you can balance those and put it together. There are thousands and thousands of cops on the street today giving us safer neighborhoods and more secure cities and communities all across America because of Joe Biden's initiatives. Senator Biden was the first to include the provisions with respect to violence against women and really raise to a very high level the whole issue of gender-based crimes. He has consistently focused our attention onto that area. He has dealt in a very effective way with the gun issue, which is not easy to deal with in this body, and certainly not an easy issue to deal with effectively. I have to tell you that I think throughout all of this period Senator Biden had a clear perception and focus on how to do something about the crime issue. He did not demagog it. He did not seek to emotionalize it. He worked hard to develop the real programs that would make a difference in [[Page 8870]] our communities all across the country. I am extremely grateful to him for that. On the Foreign Relations Committee, he has consistently been an advocate of an international stance by the United States--actually, the expansion of NATO was in large part a consequence of his very effective advocacy and leadership. He has been sensitive to the importance of human rights and democratic values in American foreign policy. I have been very privileged to serve with him on the Foreign Relations Committee and to see his effective leadership in that arena. Finally, let me just say he is a terrific friend. I can't tell you how much I value and treasure his friendship, how much it has meant, how much I enjoy his sense of humor, and even how much I like to listen to his speeches--which occasionally go on for a while. But this institution has been honored by having him as a Member. It is extraordinary that at what is really, for the Senate, still a very young age, he has achieved his 10,000th vote. I wish him many, many, many thousands more. I thank him for his extraordinary service to the country and for his deep friendship to all of us. I yield the floor. Mr. HAGEL. Mr. President, I join my colleagues in recognizing Senator Biden for his 10,000th vote in the United States Senate. I am proud to serve with Senator Biden on the Foreign Relations Committee, where he is the ranking Democrat Member. Senator Biden has set many records in the Senate. I would like to squelch the rumor, however, that he sets a record every time he speaks. I am just in my third year as a United States Senator. Senator Biden is in his 27th year in the Senate. But in the time Senator Biden and I have served together on the Foreign Relations Committee, I have gained great respect for his wisdom and deep understanding of international issues. Senator Biden understands that there is no such thing as a Republican foreign policy or a Democrat foreign policy. There is only an American foreign policy. He has worked closely with Presidents in both parties. And he reaches out across the aisle to work as well with our Chairman, Senator Helms, as he does with his junior colleagues. Last year, Senator Biden was a leader in the historic expansion of NATO to include three former Warsaw Pact nations. This Congress he joined with Senator McCain in sponsoring a resolution authorizing the use of all necessary force to win the war in Kosovo. Through his leadership, Senator Biden displays the kind of courage that earns him respect from all of his colleagues, even when they disagree. I am proud to call Joe Biden my friend and colleague. America is proud to call him a United States Senator. Mr. REID. Mr. President, two American soldiers have died in Kosovo, the first American casualties of a war to stop a genocide. The contrast between what is unfolding in the Balkans, and what is happening here in Congress, could not be more clear. A dictatorship, like the government of Slobodan Milosevic, imposes its will through force. A democracy expresses its will through the act of voting. Every vote that we cast in this body is an affirmation of the power of a democracy to solve its problems peacefully. Today, my colleague and good friend Joe Biden cast his 10,000th vote in this body. That number reflects a record of public service matched by very few even in an institution like this one, through which so many great men and women have passed. As Senators, we are all Members of a very exclusive club. We have been sent here on behalf of the good people of our respective States, to do their business. With his 10,000th vote, Joe Biden has joined an even more exclusive club. Over the history of this republic, thousands of men and women have served as Senators. But only a very few can say that they did such a good job--and kept doing a good job over such a long period of time-- that they lasted long enough to vote as many times, on as many different issues, as Joe Biden. But the thing that impresses me the most about Joe Biden's 27 years in the Senate isn't what he has done on the floor, or the number of votes he has cast--although his leadership, courage and dedication are well-known to those of us who are privileged to serve with him every day. Instead, what impresses me most is his role as a husband to his wife Jill, and father to his sons Beau and Hunter and his daughter Ashley. Joe Biden still lives in Delaware with his family and commutes every day between Delaware and Washington on the train. Those 10,000 votes represent thousands of hours spent alone on the train to Delaware so that Joe Biden could spend a few precious hours with his family each night before returning to Washington on the train the next morning. I also want to talk about the courage that my friend Joe Biden has shown during his long tenure as a Senator. I want to do this so that people know just what that number--10,000 votes--really means. Only one month after first being elected to the Senate in 1972, Joe's first wife Neilia died tragically in an automobile accident along with his one-year-old daughter. In 1988, Joe was almost killed by a brain aneurysm. He under went two risky operations and returned to the Senate after only a few months. Mr. President, I speak of these tragedies today because I know that it has not been easy for Joe. But he has never complained--just done his work. Senator Biden is a great orator, but an even better father, husband and friend. When you see what he has had to overcome, that gives a whole new meaning to that number 10,000. Those of us who work with Joe Biden have long known of his dedication to the ideals of this body, and his devotion to his family. With the attention that his 10,000th vote should bring, I hope that more people are able to see the qualities that we are privileged to see every day. Mr. ENZI. Mr. President, I, too, add my congratulations to the Senator for his 10,000th vote. At this point in my Senate career, that is really an incredible number. I have known Senator Biden for a long time. I was the State Jaycee President when the U.S. Jaycees recognized him as one of the 10 outstanding young men of this country in Mobil, AL. I can't tell you how incredible it was to get to meet him at that point and how even more incredible it was when I got to join this body and meet him here after he must have done 9,000 votes. I read about him in the newspaper and have gotten to work with him, and I have enjoyed that experience. Mr. BIDEN. Mr. President, if it is appropriate, may I respond briefly? The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Delaware is recognized. Mr. BIDEN. Mr. President, I am truly appreciative of the comments my friends have made--my old-new friends, my old-old friends, and my close buddies from across the State line. I began to wonder about casting my 10,000th vote on the occasion of the majority leader indicating there would be no more votes for 4 days and the last planes heading west were leaving. I thank my colleagues who put in the Record their comments. I will withhold specific comment until I read them, because God only knows what they said. But let me say that I find it no particular feat to have cast 10,000 votes. If you are around here long enough and still standing, that happens. I hope I have cast some votes that have made this country a little bit better. I am confident there is none that I have cast that have enhanced the standing of America, or the condition of the American people, that weren't bipartisan. I can't think of any that were done that weren't done in a bipartisan manner in the end. I look at Orrin Hatch. Orrin Hatch came here, and is still one of the leading conservative lights on the American political scene, and yet we have worked together for years and years and years. I cannot think that we have ever had a cross word to one another in 25 years. We have had very different views. [[Page 8871]] Paul Sarbanes, who is literally one of the brightest people I have served with--just raw, pure, gray matter, raw horsepower--to have him say the things that he said about me in reference to our personal friendship is meaningful, particularly since my wife, who works as a professor in Delaware and seldom is in Washington, is sitting in the galleries listening to this, and my No. 2 son, who is now living in Washington, heard it as well. I am sure they know better. But my mother probably believes everything Paul said, because I met Paul's mother as well. I think, if I can make one, in a sense, political observation, the first vote I cast in January of 1972 was a vote I was told--I didn't remember this--on an Assistant Secretary, I believe, the No. 2 person at State. I am not positive of that. I remember the day, although I was obviously very junior, when I was sworn in by the Secretary of the Senate, Mr. Valeo, who actually came to me in Wilmington to swear me in, because of unusual circumstances. After he gave me the little certificate that we get when we are sworn in, he said, ``You have arrived to the Senate, to the best of my knowledge, the least senior than any man in history,'' because seniority is based on the previous offices that you have held. It keeps narrowing down to State, size, population, and age ultimately. But when I got here, there were a number of giants in the Senate. We often hear it said today that there are no giants left in the Senate. In truth there are. There are women and men who serve in this body today who are equal to and in some ways surpass the capacity of some of the great people I have had the honor of serving with over the past almost 27 years. So the caliber has not changed. What has changed a little bit--and I am referencing this tonight, because of my colleagues who are here on the floor--what has changed since then is the impression that we don't like each other very much, that we don't get along with one another very well, that we are nakedly partisan in all of our undertakings. I wish the public could see that there is still a degree of camaraderie here, a degree of mutual respect that crosses that sometimes ``chasm'' called the ``center aisle,'' what makes this body more unique than any other legislative body at least in modern history. I will not challenge Senator Byrd about whether it equals or surpasses the Roman Senate, but I am confident that it does surpass any other legislative body in modern history. I would just conclude by saying the lubricant that allows that to happen is genuine and personal respect that most of us have for one another. I think it is the defining feature of this institution. I remember now meeting Senator Enzi back in 1972--or 1973, I guess it was--when I received that award. But I have not gotten--because we don't serve on committees together--to know him personally as well as I know my two colleagues who remain. Notwithstanding the wonderful words they have both uttered relating to me, the genuine testimony I take from what they have done is that they are here. It is 9 o'clock at night. There are no votes. The Senator from Maryland has a long drive home, because, he, like me, commutes every day to Baltimore, MD. And he drives. My friend from Utah probably missed a plane to go back to Utah this weekend. I truly, truly appreciate it. Let me yield the floor by saying, Mr. President, that I am asked sometimes what is the best, the most significant perk that exists being a Senator. I always answer that there are two things. Before I became a Senator, as a young man campaigning in the midst of the Vietnam war, and the civil rights crisis, and the assassination of men who I had an incredible regard for in 1968--both Martin Luther King and Robert Kennedy--I came here thinking that all that had to happen was that we elected women and men who had a greater degree of intellectual capacity, had a better education and were smarter. I got here and I was truly dumbfounded--truly dumbfounded--by how many people who serve in this body who are so incredibly bright, who are so significantly schooled in the areas in which they speak. I arrived and I found out that Jack Javits could tell you as much about modern art as he could about foreign policy. There was Mike Mansfield, who could tell you as much about Chinese history as he could about the politics in Montana. Paul Sarbanes can tell you as much about the international monetary system, about the history of the Balkans, about the banking system, as he can tell you about his hometown baseball team and the local politics of Baltimore. Orrin Hatch is a man who used to be a card-carrying union guy from Pittsburgh, who goes out as a boxer, goes out to his now home State of Utah, and gets elected after having a career as an incredible trial lawyer. I mean it is amazing--the diversity here. I will not mention the judge's name. But I was having lunch with a Justice once in my capacity as chairman of the Judiciary Committee. The issue was about pay raises for judges. This particular Justice said publicly--this Justice accidentally said it. He didn't intend to be quoted--that he could understand why the public wouldn't want Congresspersons and Senators to get a raise but judges were different, they were academically qualified. I know the Senator from Utah knows who I am talking about. To this particular, very competent Justice--I was in his office--I said, ``May I close your door, Mr. Justice?'' I said, ``Mr. Justice, I have sat in the Judiciary Committee for years. I have had the opportunity as either ranking member or chairman for, I think, a 14- year period to look at the background of every single person who has come on the bench.'' At that time it was 10 or 12 years. I said, ``I am willing to make you a bet. I will take the intellectual potential of the Senate''--in the House I didn't know as well--``and match it against the entire judiciary.'' They are bright, they are competent. If I am not mistaken in time, we had, like Senator Sarbanes, seven Rhodes scholars in the Senate. We had a half a dozen Marshall scholars--not me. I don't qualify on that account. We have men and women in here whose academic distinction exceeds that of 99 percent of the people-- all the jobs anywhere in America, corporate, labor, business, academia. The greatest perk I have had as a Senator was access to people with serious, serious minds and a serious sense of purpose, and who cared about something. If I dropped dead tomorrow, I would be thankful to the people of Delaware, for the individuals they have allowed me to be exposed to, to argue with, to fight with, to debate with, to agree with Members. I will be thankful to them for the gift they gave me in having that access. I don't believe there is any other place in the Nation I could have gotten that kind of exposure. The second thing I found that has been the greatest gift in those 10,000 votes during that period is that this is the ultimate graduate education. If you take this job serious, as all my colleagues do on this floor, you learn one thing: You don't get a driver, you don't get a house, you don't get a bodyguard, nor should we, but what you do get is the ability to pick up the phone and call anybody in the world and they will take your call. You can call Nobel laureates, you can call experts in any field, and if you want to learn, this is the ultimate seminar if you take it seriously. There is no other place I can think of that a person can do that. Mr. President, I have a lot more to learn. And of those 10,000 votes, I am sure there are many that were not as enlightened as I thought they were at the time I cast them. Hopefully, I have learned. Hopefully, I will get a chance to learn more than I know now. If you want to do it, and if you take it seriously and if you reach out across that chasm, you reach out across that aisle, believe it or not, there is somebody on the other side willing to talk to you, willing to exchange ideas with you. If you work hard enough, you actually may do a little bit-- just a little bit--to change the state of affairs in this great country. That is all we can do here. [[Page 8872]] I have no illusions about the significance of the Senate in terms of determining national policy, but within the context and the role the Senate plays, we get to play little parts. The only time it works is when we cross that chasm. That is the only time it works. I thank my colleagues. They are honorable men. They are men of achievement. I think the public gets a pretty good buy for their investment in the men that are sitting here on the floor today and the women and men who cast all the votes today; they are competent. It has been a pleasure working with them. I hope I get to cast a few more votes. I hope I get to convince Orrin Hatch and Senator Enzi to cast more votes my way. The truth of the matter is, as I said, nothing gets done unless you reach across that aisle. I appreciate the fact there has always been somebody on this side to talk to me. I thank all my colleagues. For those who made other statements, I will respond in the Record and not take the time of my colleagues. The Baltimore-Washington tunnel is probably clear by now. We can both head north. I yield the floor. ____________________