[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 155 (2009), Part 1]
[Senate]
[Pages 1184-1185]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                     AMERICA: A REMARKABLE COUNTRY

  Mr. ALEXANDER. Mr. President, in August 1963, I was a law student and 
a summer intern in the U.S. Department of Justice here in Washington. I 
was standing at the back of a huge crowd on a hot day when Dr. King 
spoke of his dream that one day his children would be judged not ``by 
the color of their skin, but by the content of their character.''
  The inauguration of our former colleague, Barack Obama, the day after 
Dr. King's birthday, symbolizes both remarkable progress on America's 
most intractable problem--race--and a reaffirmation of our country's 
most unique characteristic--a fervent belief that anything is possible.
  I thought about this in the same way 4 years ago at almost this time. 
I formed a speech in my head that I wanted to make, but I did not make 
it. Senators are rarely guilty of unexpressed thoughts. I have said 
many things I wish I had not said, but this is one time I wish I had 
said, 4 years ago, what I was thinking. So I wish to say it today, 
right after President Obama's inauguration. And I am especially 
delighted Senator Martinez happens to be here too.
  What I was thinking 4 years ago as the new Senators were sworn in was 
that here were three Members of the new class who had especially unique 
characteristics, and they had special people in the gallery that day.
  I, with Senator Carper and some others, had been asked by the leaders 
to work on the orientation for the new Senators. So we had gotten to 
know the new Senators, including Salazar and Obama and Martinez, during 
that period of time.
  So here is what I was thinking that day--and let's take them one by 
one. Here was Senator Salazar from Colorado with a Spanish surname, but 
he will be quick to tell you that his family has been here for 14 
generations and helped to found Santa Fe. He has had a distinguished 
career here now. On that day 4 years ago, his mother was in the 
gallery.
  Senator Martinez was sworn in 4 years ago as a new Member of the 
Senate, in this case from Florida. His story, which he has just 
published in a remarkably good book which I have given to many of my 
friends, is the story of a young boy growing up very happily in Cuba 
whose parents took him to the airport one day, after having bought him 
a new suit, when he was 14 years of age, and put him on an airplane to 
Miami, not knowing if they would ever see him again. He was in a foster 
home there, then moved to Orlando. The story is all in the book. He 
went to Florida State, met his wife Kitty, became the mayor of Orlando, 
then became a member of President Bush's Cabinet, then a Member of the 
U.S. Senate. A very remarkable story. His mother, who put him on the 
airplane in Cuba, was here that day.
  These same 4 years ago when we swore in these new Members of the 
Senate, we also had the Senator from Illinois. We all now know his 
story very well: a father from Kenya, a mother from Kansas. I don't 
need to repeat that extraordinary story, about which he has written so 
well in his autobiography. But what struck me was that his grandmother 
was in the gallery that day. It was either his

[[Page 1185]]

grandmother or his grandfather, but I believe it was his grandmother. 
His father's parent was in the gallery that day on the first trip, I 
believe, from Africa to this country to see the son of an immigrant 
sworn into the U.S. Senate.
  So I thought 4 years ago, and I think again today on this day on 
which we swear in Barack Obama as President, what a remarkable country 
this is. Here in this Senate 4 years ago, the 14th-generation American 
Ken Salazar is now going into President Obama's Cabinet as Secretary of 
the Interior. Mel Martinez, having had a long career in public life as 
mayor in Orlando, as Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, as 
U.S. Senator, is going on to other things in his life. Former Senator 
Obama, of course, is now the President of the United States. But what 
was remarkable to me was 4 years ago they came to this Senate, and in 
that gallery were their parents--and in one case a grandparent--
reaffirming what I think Barack Obama's inauguration represents for us 
today. It was historic in the sense that it helped us symbolize the 
overcoming of one of our most intractable problems, the problem of 
race. But just as important, it symbolized once again the 
characteristic that makes this country more remarkable than any other 
country, the idea that anything is possible.
  People in other parts of the world look at the United States, and 
they don't always approve of us, but they know one thing is different 
about us: that we are not a country based on blood or race or the color 
of our skin or where our grandparents came from; that we are based upon 
our common belief in a few ideas, most of which are incorporated in two 
founding documents, the Declaration of Independence and the 
Constitution. But one of those ideas is just in our character, and that 
is this irrational, fervent belief that in this country, anything is 
possible. Senator Martinez, Senator Salazar, and former Senator Barack 
Obama all represent that beautifully, and that makes this a very 
special day.
  I thank the President, I yield the floor.

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