[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 152 (2006), Part 8]
[Senate]
[Pages 11106-11108]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                   TRIBUTE TO SENATOR ROBERT C. BYRD

  Mr. DODD. Mr. President, I want to take a minute or 2, if I can, to 
join my other colleagues who over the last several days have paid 
tribute to our colleague from West Virginia, my seatmate, Senator 
Robert Byrd, who, on Monday, celebrated the unique landmark of serving 
longer than any other person in the history of this remarkable 
institution.
  I said to Senator Byrd, my colleague and seatmate, yesterday, his 
longevity is impressive but his record as a U.S. Senator is really what 
excels. While serving for 47 years in this institution is certainly 
remarkable, what he has done during those 47 years is what is truly 
remarkable. His contribution to the public discourse and debate of our 
country throughout that time has been truly exemplary.
  I noted the other day, in fact, that when Senator Byrd was first 
elected to the House, there was a wonderful picture taken that appeared 
with Senator Byrd and several other Members of newly minted Congressmen 
who had been elected in 1952 at the White House with Dwight Eisenhower. 
In that group of pictures was also a newly minted Congressman from 
Connecticut by the name of Thomas Dodd, my father.
  Senator Byrd and my father were elected to the House together in 
1952, and came to this body together in 1958. So during these many 
years of public service, Robert C. Byrd has had to serve with two Dodds 
in the U.S. Congress, my father and myself. I sit next to Senator Byrd 
by choice. I have been his seatmate for almost 15 or 16 years now, and 
do so because I have enjoyed his company, his wisdom, and listening to 
his contributions to the debate and his knowledge of the Senate and its 
procedures.
  I know we have a new group of pages who have arrived to serve in our 
Nation's Capitol here in the U.S. Senate in the last few days. As 
someone who sat on the steps of the Democratic side back in the early 
1960s as a page, I say to the pages, I would strongly urge you to 
listen to Robert C. Byrd. If you want to have truly a great lesson 
during your tenure here as pages, then listen to the remarkable Senator 
from West Virginia, and you will learn more in the short period of time 
you are here than almost anything else I could advise you to do, except 
to read his two-volume history of the U.S. Senate, which you may not 
have time to do during your 2 of 3 weeks here as pages.
  Senator Byrd, of course, has had significant accomplishments. And I 
think of the time when I served as a page, an unpaid page, back many 
years ago, and the giants of the Senate in those days; certainly people 
such as Lyndon Johnson, Mike Mansfield, Richard Russell, Everett 
Dirksen, Margaret Chase Smith, Hubert Humphrey, John Sherman Cooper, 
Stuart Symington--and so many others who served during those years who 
were truly giants in many ways.
  They were Senators in the very fullest sense of the word. They 
represented an institutional spirit that in many ways is lacking today, 
and I regret that deeply. But it was critical to the success of our 
democratic Republic how they related one to the other. It is a spirit 
of independence and understanding that all Senators are equal in this 
body, regardless of the positions they hold in the institution. All 100 
of us are equal Members representing our respective States and 
constituencies. It is a spirit that allows us to debate--sometimes very 
vigorously--our differences, while still obliging us to seek common 
ground for the common good of our country.
  Robert Byrd certainly epitomizes that spirit--a vigorous debater but 
also someone who recognizes it is vitally important to reach common 
goals for the common good. It is a spirit that refuses to submit to the 
encroachments of any other institution or office in the land, including 
that of the Executive.
  I cannot count the times that Robert C. Byrd would correct someone 
who said: I served under a President here. I served under seven 
Presidents. Robert Byrd will quickly tell you: You do not serve under 
any President. You serve with Presidents. You are a Member of a coequal 
branch of the U.S. Government as embodied in the Constitution of the 
United States.
  And how right he is. As Senators understand, Robert Byrd understands

[[Page 11107]]

implicitly that the Senate is a coequal, powerful branch of Government, 
that our Founders wanted it to be of equal weight in the deliberations 
of our country.
  I carry with me a copy of the U.S. Constitution. I have had this for 
many, many years, and it was given to me by my seatmate, Robert C. 
Byrd. It is getting rather worn, but his inscription inside is 
something I will cherish for the rest of my days and life--that I carry 
a copy of the Constitution given to me by this person who cherishes and 
loves the Constitution as much as Robert C. Byrd does. One of the 
reasons I care so deeply about this particular copy is of course it was 
given to me by him and inscribed by him.
  I think it is only fitting that someone who cares so much about that 
document and this institution is now the Senate's longest serving 
Member.
  In his close to five decades of Senate service, Senator Byrd has had 
an enormous impact on his State and on our country. He, more than any 
other Member that I can think of in the last half century, has worked 
to preserve the delicate system of checks and balances conceived by the 
Founders of our great Republic. That work is typified by his opposition 
to the line-item veto and his insistence on preserving the prerogatives 
of this institution in relation to the other branches of Government.
  But more than that, he has also helped to bring good jobs, better 
schools, and decent health care not only to the constituents of West 
Virginia but also to millions of people across this country because of 
his leadership.
  He has never forgotten the good, hard-working people who sent him 
here from his beloved West Virginia or why they did so; that is, to 
make our Nation a stronger, more prosperous, and more hopeful Nation 
for all of its citizens.
  Senator Byrd has had the courage and strength of character to admit 
past errors--something that too few of us do in this Chamber--and to 
seek genuine understanding for the good of our country.
  In his history of the U.S. Senate, Senator Byrd has written that:

       After 200 years, the Senate is still the anchor of the 
     Republic, is still the morning and evening star in the 
     American constitutional constellation.

  More than any other U.S. Senator in this body, I believe Senator Byrd 
has helped to ensure that this U.S. Senate retains that unique 
distinction.
  So I am pleased to join with my other colleagues in wishing him well. 
I know more than anything else he would have loved to have his beloved 
Erma here with him in these days to celebrate this achievement. Of 
course, he lost Erma just a few months ago. But I am certain, as all of 
us are, that she is watching, with a great big smile, as she celebrates 
with all of us the distinction that our colleague from West Virginia 
has achieved this last Monday--47 years in the U.S. Senate.
  Mr. President, I yield the floor.
  Mr. HARKIN. Mr. President, the distinguished senior Senator from West 
Virginia, our friend Robert Byrd, has achieved yet another historic 
milestone. He is now the longest-serving Senator in the history of the 
Senate. But what is most remarkable about Senator Byrd is not his 
longevity, but his unique stature and accomplishment within this body.
  Senator Byrd is renowned for his unmatched knowledge of the Senate's 
history. So he remembers very well that our former colleague, Philip 
Hart of Michigan, was known as the ``conscience of the Senate.'' Well, 
I believe that history will remember the senior Senator from West 
Virginia as the soul of the Senate.
  No individual in my memory has been a more tenacious champion of the 
traditions, prerogatives, and rules of this body. No individual has had 
greater reverence for the Constitution, and for the Founders' vision of 
an assertive, independent, co-equal legislative branch. As the Almanac 
of Americans says in its profile of Senator Byrd, and I quote, he ``may 
come closer to the kind of Senator that the Founding Fathers had in 
mind than any other.'' By the way, if anyone here on the Senate floor 
needs to look something up in the Constitution, we know where to turn; 
Senator Byrd always carries a copy in his left breast pocket, directly 
over his heart.
  I have always had a special affinity for Senator Byrd, because we are 
both the sons of coal miners, both raised in humble circumstances. 
Reading about the Senator's early years, lifting himself out of poverty 
as a welder and meat cutter before running for the West Virginia 
Legislature in 1946, I am reminded of Thomas Edison's remark that 
``opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in 
overalls and looks like work.'' Well, Robert Byrd made his own 
opportunities with relentless work, self-education, and striving. And 
that incredible work ethic continues right up to this day.
  One product of that work ethic, and of Senator Byrd's always 
impressive erudition, is his two-volume history of this body. It is 
recognized as the definitive history of the Senate during its first 200 
years, and widely praised for its graceful writing. On this score, 
Senator Byrd has much in common with Winston Churchill. Both were 
prolific writers. And both were major players in the events that they 
chronicled.
  On a personal note, let me just say that I have always valued Senator 
Byrd's friendship, wisdom, and advice. And I will always appreciate the 
way he tutored me in the ways of the Senate when I first came to this 
body in 1984.
  So I join with my colleagues from both sides of the aisle in saluting 
our friend. Senator Byrd is the longest-serving Member of this body. 
But there are still many chapters yet to be written in the career of 
this great Senator. As the late Senator Paul Wellstone used to say, 
``The future belongs to those with passion.'' By that standard, Senator 
Byrd is very much a man of the future.
  I say to my friend, it has been an honor to serve with him.
  Ms. LANDRIEU. Mr. President, I rise to pay tribute to a man who may 
be the most important friend that the people of West Virginia have ever 
sent to Washington or ever will send to Washington. He is the senior 
Senator of West Virginia, and today he becomes America's senior 
Senator.
  The Senate is housed in this beautiful Chamber of marble columns and 
intricate architecture. But the Senate is not a building; it is not a 
seal or a symbol or an idea. The Senate is a group of 100 men and women 
who are chosen by the people to craft the laws that define and govern 
the American People.
  While the Senate is not a building, it does have individuals who 
serve as pillars upon which the rest of us place our trust and 
reliance. Today, we salute one such pillar. The senior Senator from 
West Virginia enters the record books as the longest serving Senator.
  Note, I say that he enters the record books, not the history books. I 
say that because I expect the senior Senator from West Virginia to be 
making history on this floor for many years to come.
  In an earlier time, we would have called Robert Byrd a renaissance 
man in the mold of such American luminaries as Jefferson or Franklin. 
Consider that he is a poet, an accomplished musician, an author, the 
foremost historian of this Chamber, a parliamentary expert, an 
intensely devout Christian, an unrivaled legislator, a scholar of our 
Constitution, and earned a J.D. while a Member of this Chamber.
  Yet all of these accomplishments as an individual are dwarfed by what 
he has done and will continue to do for the people of West Virginia. He 
has brought mew industries like biotechnology, biometrics and other 
high tech, high skilled work to West Virginia. He has fought for dams, 
roadways, hospitals, and highways. It is hard to imagine that one man 
might have such a transformative impact on a State. Yet friend and foe 
alike would concede this point to Robert Byrd.
  I say today that Senator Byrd becomes America's senior Senator. In 
many ways, he always has been. No man or woman more rigorously defends 
the role of this Chamber in our governmental structure, and no man or

[[Page 11108]]

woman fights more ardently to preserve that beautiful document he 
carries in his breast pocket--the U.S. Constitution. One of the first 
things I did when I was sworn in as a Member of this body was to take 
the whole Landrieu family to see Senator Byrd and have him give us a 
talk on the Constitution and the role of the Senate.
  For the last 6 years, it has been my pleasure to serve under Senator 
Byrd's leadership on the Senate Appropriations Committee. In that 
capacity, he has proven repeatedly that he is a friend to the people of 
Louisiana and understands the tragedy that has befallen them. I thank 
him for that help and friendship.
  Of course, I would be remiss if I didn't mention that today is a 
bittersweet anniversary, for it is also Erma's birthday. A woman whose 
life, and now memory, Senator Byrd so obviously cherished.
  So, Mr. President, I thank America's senior Senator for his service 
to this country and for his friendship.
  I conclude my remarks, as he so often does, with a verse of poetry--
one of the Senator's favorites--the final verse of ``The Building of 
the Ship'' by Longfellow:

     Thou, too, sail on, O Ship of State!
     Sail on, O UNION, strong and great!
     Humanity with all its fears,
     With all the hopes of future years,
     Is hanging breathless on thy fate!
     We know what Master laid thy keel,
     What Workmen wrought thy ribs of steel,
     Who made each mast, and sail, and rope,
     What anvils rang, what hammers beat,
     In what a forge and what a heat
     Were shaped the anchors of thy hope!
     Fear not each sudden sound and shock,
     'Tis of the wave and not the rock;
     'Tis but the flapping of the sail,
     And not a rent made by the gale!
     In spite of rock and tempest's roar,
     In spite of false lights on the shore,
     Sail on, nor fear to breast the sea
     Our hearts, our hopes, are all with thee,
     Our hearts, our hopes, our prayers, our tears,
     Our faith triumphant o'er our fears,
     Are all with thee,--are all with thee!

  The PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator from Hawaii is recognized.
  Mr. AKAKA. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that I have 5 
minutes in morning business.
  The PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so ordered.

                          ____________________