[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 155 (2009), Part 13]
[Senate]
[Pages 17180-17182]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                        COMMENDING NORM COLEMAN

  Mr. THUNE. Madam President, I would like to join some of my 
colleagues today who have spoken previously in reflecting upon the 
service of our colleague, Norm Coleman. As we all know, the election 
process in Minnesota has come to a conclusion. We have welcomed his 
successor to the U.S. Senate. But I also want to just make some remarks 
about Senator Coleman's service in the Senate and sort of my 
recollections of that.
  Obviously, all of us come here motivated to do different things. We 
all have reasons we want to be in public service, things we want to 
accomplish. Senator Coleman, obviously, came from the State of 
Minnesota, having been in an executive position where he served as 
mayor of St. Paul. He accomplished some wonderful things for the State, 
not the least of which was bringing hockey to Minnesota. That is 
something that any of us from that region of the country know was 
greatly appreciated by the citizens of his city and his State.
  Norm and I came to the Senate under different circumstances. I recall 
having traveled around the country with Senator Coleman as we were 
campaigning together in 2002 trying to come to the Senate and having 
that opportunity to get to know him. When you travel with somebody on 
an ongoing basis, you get to know them not on a superficial basis--the 
way many of us here get to know people, sort of on a thin level--but 
you get a chance to really get a glimpse into the soul of people when 
you are in certain circumstances, when you are in tough campaigns. 
Certainly, Norm was no stranger to tough campaigns.
  As it turned out, that 2002 election Norm was elected to the Senate. 
I lost my election in 2002 and didn't come here until a couple of years 
later. But during the course of the campaigns, and then having served 
with Norm Coleman--representing a neighbor State in South Dakota--we 
shared a lot of common interests. Whether it was agriculture or 
renewable energy or the economy in our States and trying to create jobs 
in the upper Midwest of this country, Norm Coleman was somebody who, 
more than anything else, cared about results.
  There are so many instances here where we get drawn into debates in 
the Senate and the partisan lines get drawn and a lot of ideology comes 
into play. Obviously, that is part of the process as well. But the 
bottom line was that Norm Coleman cared about getting things done for 
the people of Minnesota. I think that was the kind of can-do attitude 
he brought to his job as mayor and to all the other areas of public 
service in which he was engaged during the course of his career in 
public life.
  But coming to the Senate, I am sure, had to have been frustrating 
because this is a place where sometimes it is very difficult to see the 
result and the outcome of your efforts. Norm was someone who was 
focused. He was intent upon getting things done, getting things 
accomplished, and I think during his service here he did some great 
things for the people of Minnesota and for the people of this country.
  If he were here, I think he would tell you that in coming to the 
Senate--and I would tell you the same thing--he can now look back on 
some of the things he was involved in getting done, such as being 
involved in the big debates over the confirmation of Chief Justice John 
Roberts or Justice Sam Alito--these were big debates in which we were 
all involved in seeing good people put on the Supreme Court of this 
country. We worked in areas that were specific to our States--again, 
agriculture, renewable energy, putting energy policies in place that I 
think will drive America's future in terms of trying to lessen our 
dependence upon foreign sources of energy and, obviously, trying to 
bring more economic opportunity to this country by promoting the energy 
sources we have right here, particularly in places such as the Midwest 
where we can produce biofuels and wind and all those sorts of things.
  Those are the kinds of issues Norm Coleman was committed to because 
he understood the profound impact they had on the citizens of his State 
of Minnesota. I also think sometimes around here people tend to--as we 
all do because we all are elected to represent constituencies--
sometimes feel pressured to make votes that might be more political. 
But I have seen Norm

[[Page 17181]]

Coleman time and again come in here and make votes--sometimes tough 
votes--that he thought were the right ones for the future of this 
country. That, too, is a quality that sometimes is lacking and can be 
rare in public life.
  So I just wanted to express my appreciation for having had the 
opportunity to serve with Norm Coleman in the Senate. He is someone who 
I think was a tremendous reflection upon the State of Minnesota, the 
people of his State; someone who was intent upon doing the right thing 
for the future of this country; and, frankly, someone who, in my view, 
brought an authenticity and a genuineness to this body and to this 
world of politics in Washington, DC, which sometimes is lacking in 
those qualities. He was sincere, he was genuine, and you knew exactly 
where he was coming from. With Norm Coleman, what you saw was what you 
got.
  I was pleased to have had the opportunity not only to serve with him 
in the Senate and to call him a colleague, but more importantly than 
that to call he and Laurie and their family friends because that is 
something that is also rare in Washington, DC. Sometimes the Senate can 
be a lonely place, and when you develop a friendship of the type and 
depth that I have with Norm Coleman, I find that to be very rare around 
here and something I will treasure and remember for some time to come.
  I also know Norm Coleman will continue in whatever he chooses to do 
next to serve the people of Minnesota and the people of his country 
because for him it wasn't about the position or the title, it was about 
the difference he made, and he is making, and I know he will continue 
to do great things for this country. Whatever he chooses to do next, it 
will be with an eye toward how he can make a difference and contribute 
in a positive way to furthering and improving the quality of life for 
the people of the State and the people of this country.
  If he were here today, Madam President, I think he would probably 
also enter into some of the great debates that we are having. Norm 
Coleman was someone who cared about fiscal responsibility, he cared 
about future generations, and he cared about making sure we secured a 
better and brighter future for those who will come after us. I think he 
would be very troubled by many of the things we see happening in the 
country, and certainly things we see happening with legislation that is 
moving in the Senate.
  As we look at the big debates, whether it is dealing with the issue 
of the reform of health care in this country--which is one-sixth of the 
American economy--or whether it deals with the new national energy tax, 
recently passed in the House of Representatives--which is going to 
impose a crushing burden on all families across this country and 
families in Minnesota and families in South Dakota--those are issues 
where I think we need to be careful. We need to be thoughtful and we 
need to scrutinize them as they come through the Congress.
  We saw the House move very quickly the week before last on a 1,200-
page bill that imposes a brandnew national energy tax on the American 
people. We can all debate about how much that tax is going to be, but 
one thing we know is that everybody in this country is going to pay 
higher energy taxes. Whether that is electricity, whether that is 
fuels, whether it is natural gas, or whether that is home heating oil, 
every American consumer--every American family, every American small 
business--is going to see their energy costs go up because of the 
legislation that was passed in the House last week, and if it is 
successful in passing in the Senate.
  It is my hope we can put the brakes on that because it is not fair to 
the American people. At a time when many of them are losing their jobs, 
at a time when many of them are struggling to make ends meet, we should 
not be imposing a brandnew, top-down, bureaucratic, heavy-handed 
mandate that will have a crushing effect and crushing impact on the 
economy of this country and increase the bills and the taxes that 
American consumers are going to pay.
  So I hope we will bring some reason to this debate; that the Senate 
will not act in the hasty way the House of Representatives did in 
throwing a 1,200-page bill on the floor, and then adopting a 309-page 
amendment in a minimum amount of time. We all know people didn't have 
an opportunity to read that bill. This is something that is a major 
consequence to this country and to our economy and we ought to do it 
with great regard for the American people and we should make sure they 
are engaged.
  In travelling around my own State last week, I can tell you that at 
all the public events I attended it was loud and clear, people were 
unanimously opposed to this cap-and-trade--national energy tax--bill 
that is currently moving through the Congress.
  I have described that and other things that are happening here. 
Whether it is the government ownership of the automobile industry or 
the financial system--banks--or insurance companies, that is a trend we 
don't want to see continued on a long-term basis. That is why I have 
introduced legislation called the Government Ownership Exit Plan, which 
would require the government to divest itself and to wind down its 
interest in these private companies in the next year. It gives an 
additional year, if necessary, if the Treasury determines that it is in 
the best interest of the taxpayers to do that. But we should put an end 
date out there so we don't continue with this indefinite, long-term 
permanent ownership of the American economy by the Federal Government.
  That, Madam President, is not consistent with the American way of 
doing things. It is not consistent with free enterprise and free 
markets and the freedoms we enjoy in this country and which have served 
as the foundation and made this American economy the strongest in the 
world. We need to get the Federal Government out of that type of 
ownership so it is not controlling the day-to-day decisions made by 
these businesses and creating all the inherent conflicts of interest 
that come with government ownership of a private economy.
  So I hope we will move away from that ownership and that we will not 
use that as the precursor to a takeover of one-sixth of the American 
economy by having the government take over the American health care 
system. We all know we have issues with our health care system in this 
country--that we need to get costs under control, that we need to 
reform our system and make it more affordable to more people in this 
country. But the one thing we don't need is to have the government take 
over the American health care system--one-sixth of our entire economy. 
The cost for that, Madam President, we know, will be at least--at a 
minimum--$1 trillion. Some of the estimates go up to $2.5 trillion as 
the cost to have the government take over the American health care 
system.
  These are the big debates that are before the Senate, Madam 
President, whether it is the cap-and-trade energy tax, whether it is 
the government takeover of our health care system, whether it is 
government ownership of auto manufacturers and insurance companies and 
banks, these are things I think make most Americans very uncomfortable. 
I believe it is the role of the Senate to put the brakes on things and 
make sure we are looking long and hard at what we are doing.
  Frankly, my view is this is the wrong direction, the wrong path to 
pursue for this country. But at a minimum, we need to make sure as this 
legislation moves through here it is not hastily done, that it is not 
hurried, that it isn't rushed or jammed through here because somebody 
has a political agenda they want to get accomplished, and they want to 
do it without allowing the American people to hear about it or have the 
opportunity to read the fine print.
  I think when the American people start reading the fine print, as 
they have with the cap-and-trade legislation, they will act in a very 
vigorous way and resist the notion of having the government take over 
one-sixth of the American economy by taking over the American health 
care system.
  So, yes, we can do things better. We can all improve upon the health 
care

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system we have today in terms of affordability. But the one thing I 
don't think the American people want to see is the Federal Government 
imposing itself in the middle of decisions that ought to be made by 
doctors and patients, by physicians and hospitals and consumers of 
health care--not by the Federal Government or that which is being 
talked about in the Congress and in the Senate.
  I hope we will be able to put the brakes on, to slow this process 
down so the American people can engage in this debate in a way that 
will allow their voices to be heard and make sure that politicians in 
Washington aren't going down a pathway that could lead toward rationed 
care, that could lead to fewer choices, that could lead to bigger bills 
for the American taxpayers, and that could lead to more borrowing for 
future generations and depriving them and robbing them of a better and 
brighter future because we have handed them a crushing burden of debt.
  When you look at trillion-dollar deficits as far as the eye can see 
and the notion of the government taking over health care and the notion 
of a new energy tax that will drive up the costs of energy for every 
American, I think these are policies that put the future of the 
American people in great peril. They need to be engaged in it, and we 
need to make sure we are not rushing these things through the Senate.
  I am going to do everything I can to make sure there is a full and 
fair debate and that we don't go down the path that allows the 
government to take over one-sixth of the American economy and allows 
the government to make decisions that ought to rightfully be made by 
doctors and patients and we don't allow a new national energy tax to be 
imposed on the American people. These things are all going to cost 
average Americans and families enormous amounts of money at a time when 
they are trying to keep their jobs and trying to make ends meet and 
trying to balance their own budgets at home.
  The American government--their government--ought to be doing what it 
can to balance its own budget and not spending like drunken sailors and 
borrowing from future generations in a way that will put the future of 
many Americans--many American families--at risk.
  Madam President, I yield the floor and the remainder of my time.
  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator from Washington is 
recognized.
  Mrs. MURRAY. Madam President, I will yield back the remaining time on 
the Democratic side.

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