[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 156 (2010), Part 13]
[Senate]
[Pages 18629-18630]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




               TRIBUTE TO CONGRESSMAN LINCOLN DIAZ-BALART

  Mr. LeMIEUX. Mr. President, I come to the floor, as many of us have 
done in recent weeks, to pay tribute to a Member of Congress who is 
retiring--to a great Floridian and a great American, a man I am proud 
to call a colleague and a friend, Congressman Lincoln Diaz-Balart. 
Congressman Lincoln Diaz-Balart is retiring after 18 years of service 
in the U.S. House of Representatives.
  Born in Havana, Cuba, Lincoln came to the United States in 1959, at 
the age of 4 years old. His father, Rafael Lincoln Diaz-Balart, had 
just been elected a senator in Cuba, but he could not take office or 
remain in Cuba because of the rise of the dictator Fidel Castro.
  Lincoln Diaz-Balart rose in the House of Representatives to become a 
senior member of the Rules Committee, the ranking member of the 
Subcommittee on Legislative and Budget Process, and is now the 
cochairman of our congressional delegation. He is also the chairman of 
the Congressional Hispanic Leadership Institute.
  Lincoln grew up in south Florida. He attended public schools there 
and high school, but he also attended school in Madrid, Spain. He 
received a degree in international relations from New College in 
Sarasota and obtained a diploma in British politics in Cambridge, 
England. He received his law degree from Case Western Reserve 
University in Cleveland.
  Lincoln started the practice of law in Miami. He worked for Legal 
Services of Greater Miami, providing free legal services to the poor. 
He was subsequently an assistant state's attorney, prosecuting those 
who committed crimes, and a partner in the prestigious Fowler, White 
law firm.
  Lincoln was first elected into politics in the Florida Legislature 
back in 1986, but quickly--just 3 years later--ran for the U.S. 
Congress. In 1992, he served his first term as a Representative of 
Florida's 21st Congressional District and served as a member of the 
House Foreign Affairs Committee.
  In 1994, Lincoln became the first Hispanic in history to be named to 
the powerful Rules Committee. In 1996, he drafted much of the 
legislation that strengthened the embargo against Cuba and its 
dictatorship.
  In 1997, he showed his penchant for helping those in need by 
successfully carrying out efforts to restore the supplemental security 
income and food assistance to legal immigrants who were denied aid by 
the welfare reform law of the previous year.
  As a member of the House Rules Committee, on September 14, 2001, 
Congressman Diaz-Balart took to the floor of the House the joint 
resolution authorizing the use of force in Afghanistan after the 
September 11 attacks.
  Congressman Diaz-Balart lives in Miami with his wife Cristina and 
their two sons Lincoln and Daniel. When he retires, Florida will lose 
one of its strongest voices, as will this country and all those who 
care about freedom around the world.
  He has fought for Florida's families with integrity and 
effectiveness. From his time in the State senate to his service in 
Congress, he has served with passion, drive, and a steadfast 
determination to do what is right. Most of all, and what I appreciate 
him most for, he has been a champion of freedom and democracy, not only 
in Cuba but throughout Latin America and the world.
  No one in Congress is more passionate about ending the oppression 
that Cubans suffer under the current regime. His efforts are known not 
only here but throughout the world. He is a voice of change, and he is 
a passionate believer in the rights of people everywhere to be free. He 
speaks for political prisoners held in the regime's prisons, he speaks 
for those who suffer beatings for speaking out against their captors, 
and he speaks for everyday Cubans who hunger for the freedom they have 
never felt.
  I have heard Lincoln speak many times about the plight of the Cuban 
people. I have seen his desire to see the people of Cuba enjoy the 
prize of liberty that has been denied them for more than 50 years. When 
he speaks about these issues, you feel his passion. His voice has been 
a great voice for a life of liberty throughout Florida, this country, 
and the world.
  To know Lincoln is to know one of his heroes--his father Rafael Diaz-
Balart, a well-respected public servant. When he had to leave Cuba in 
1959, he arrived in the United States and established the White Rose, 
the first anti-Castro civic organization. When Lincoln returns to 
Florida, he will lead a nonprofit inspired by the White Rose. I know 
his father is looking down from Heaven and will continue to be proud of 
his son.
  The House of Representatives will not be the same without his 
talents, but Florida will continue to benefit by having him back at 
home full time. As an article in his hometown paper--the Miami Herald--
noted, even though Lincoln has announced his retirement, the pulpit 
will change but the passion will not. To me, Lincoln will always be a 
steadfast ally in the cause for freedom 90 miles away from our shores 
in Florida. He knows that freedom is not negotiable, and its cause is 
the most noble cause in the world. Our country and our world is better 
off because of my friend Lincoln Diaz-Balart.
  I will always be grateful to him because when I came here to the 
Senate with him and his brother Mario Diaz-Balart, another great 
champion for freedom, I was mentored in the issues that affect my State 
and so many of the people in my State who come from Cuba and other 
countries in Latin America. Through their mentoring and through their 
passion and through the education they provided to me, I was better 
able to understand his plight, a plight that I don't think most of my 
colleagues can know as well as we can in Florida--that just 90 miles 
from our shore is an evil dictator who oppresses his people.
  When I am in Florida talking with folks, oftentimes I will make the 
remark, if I am, say, in Orlando, FL: Can they imagine that just 90 
miles away, say, in West Palm Beach, FL, that it would be illegal to 
speak out against the government, illegal to practice your religion, 
illegal to gather together in association to express your political 
views--all of the freedoms we sometimes take for granted? Just 90 miles 
from our shore, people are jailed, are killed for trying to exercise 
those freedoms.
  It was brought home to me most when I was visited recently by a man 
by the name of Ariel Sigler. Ariel was a political prisoner in Cuba for 
7 years. He has recently been released, and he was in Miami receiving 
medical care. Ariel is a man who was a professional boxer, a large, 
strapping man. But he didn't just fight with his hands; he also raised 
his voice for freedom in his native Cuba. When he did so, he was thrown 
in jail, and now he is a man who is about 100 pounds less in weight, 
whose once towering frame is relegated to a wheelchair because for 7 
years he was imprisoned just for wanting to criticize his government. 
He was put in a small cell with several other prisoners. He was fed 
maggot-infested food, and he had to wash in a pipe and drink from a 
pipe sitting outside his cell, as did all the other prisoners. It made 
him sick, desperately sick. This happens just 90 miles from the shore 
of this country. It is intolerable.
  But I know of this, and my heart bleeds for the Cuban people because 
of the great work of Congressman Lincoln Diaz-Balart. So we will miss 
him. His voice has fought for freedom in this body, in the U.S. 
Congress, for 18 years. But as the Miami Herald said:

[[Page 18630]]

The pulpit will change but the passion will not.
  We know he will continue to hold that lamp of freedom and be an 
advocate for free people and people who yearn to be free throughout the 
world.
  I yield the floor.

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