[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 156 (2010), Part 15]
[Senate]
[Pages 23551-23553]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                          HONORING LULA DAVIS

  Mr. BAYH. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the Senate 
proceed to the immediate consideration of S. Res. 707, submitted 
earlier today.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report the resolution by title.
  The assistant legislative clerk read as follows:

       A resolution (S. Res. 707) honoring Lula Davis.

  There being no objection, the Senate proceeded to consider the 
resolution.
  Mr. REID. Madam President, every working body needs a strong heart to 
function. This legislative body, the Senate, is no different. For many 
years--as long as I have been in the Senate, and that is a while--Lula 
Davis has been the heart of the Senate.
  In 1997, when we elected her as assistant Democratic secretary, she 
was the first woman to hold that position. Before the 111th Congress, 
we elected her to be the secretary of the majority--the first African 
American in that role. Over the last 2 years, she has expertly tackled 
one of the toughest jobs anywhere in politics.
  More importantly, the last 2 years have also seen the debate and 
passage of some of the most historic legislation in the entire history 
of the country--laws to protect Americans from health insurance 
companies, from Wall Street banks, from credit card companies, from 
tobacco companies, from mortgage fraudsters, from unsafe food, from 
discrimination, from inequality, and so, so much more.
  Any one of these bills by itself would define a session of Congress. 
We did all of them in just the last 2 years, and we could not have done 
any of it without Lula Davis's leadership.
  Lula has come a long way since her days as a teacher and guidance 
counselor, and even further from her time in rural Louisiana. She 
started her Senate career as a legislative aide to

[[Page 23552]]

her home State Senator, the legendary Russell Long, and went on to 
serve in almost every position on the floor staff: office assistant, 
floor assistant, chief floor assistant, assistant secretary, and 
secretary.
  Anyone who has watched the Senate knows it is not always an easy 
place to understand, and I am an expert on how hard it is to understand 
it. Anyone who has studied this institution, its idiosyncrasies and 
intricacies knows it can be extremely baffling. But Lula knows this 
place inside and out like no one else. She is fluent in the rhythms of 
the Senate. She knows and respects its complex rules, both formal and 
informal. Her counsel, as a result, has always been thoughtful and 
reliable to every one of us.
  She is loyal to the Senate and to its Senators, and she respects the 
traditions that make this body great--which is why, in return, this 
body has great respect for her and her hard work.
  Lula has spent her Senate career behind the scenes not just helping 
Senators do our jobs but also quietly helping young people, the hungry, 
and those in need. As tough and hard as Lula must be here on the Senate 
floor, she has a heart of gold.
  She founded and runs a nonprofit called Leadership Cares, which each 
year helps children in our community provide quality meals to more than 
650 families. She has encouraged many of her fellow Senate staffers to 
join her family and friends and volunteer to help. She has never asked 
for any recognition for this work or any of her work because that is 
the kind of person she is. But Lula deserves our praise and thanks for 
so much more.
  Senator Landrieu of Louisiana likes to tell a story about how much a 
part of the Senate Lula really is, how great an institution our 
outgoing secretary of the majority is. Senator Landrieu once asked a 
group of Senate pages if they had had a chance to meet the Senate 
leaders. They said: Yes. They had met Lula.
  Lula Davis has been the heart of the Senate, and our appreciation for 
her is heartfelt. I speak for each Senator, Democrats and Republicans.
  For me, personally, Lula has been strong, resolute, and very wise. 
Words cannot describe how I will miss Lula Davis. She has been 
indispensable and she is irreplaceable.
  On behalf of every Senator, I thank Lula for her years of service to 
our caucus and for her more than 25 years of service to the Senate and 
the United States of America.
  Mr. McCONNELL. Madam President, I rise this evening to acknowledge 
the retirement of Lula Davis, in appreciation of her dedication to the 
Senate and her many years of service to this institution. Lula has been 
a force in every legislative effort we have engaged in since my tenure 
as Republican leader began, and long before that. I have come to 
respect her deep knowledge of the Senate rules and the important role 
she has played in advising Democratic Senators over the past 2 years. 
She is a constant presence on the floor and an important part of Senate 
life. We congratulate her on her professional success, from her days as 
a school teacher to her work on the floor of the U.S. Senate, and we 
wish her every happiness in the years ahead.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Illinois is recognized.
  Mr. DURBIN. Madam President, before I make a statement on another 
issue, I join the majority leader in his comments about the retirement 
of Lula Johnson Davis from the Senate.
  Before I came to the Senate, I was a Member of the House of 
Representatives for 14 years, and I greatly enjoyed that experience. It 
was certainly an amazing change to come from the House to the Senate, 
to move from one congressional district to representing the entire 
State, to move from a 2-year term to a 6-year term, to move from 434 
colleagues to 99 fellow colleagues. All of these things took some 
getting used to, plus the fact that, in the House, you were constricted 
on the use of time for speeches on the floor, and in the Senate, there 
is almost no limit. If you want to speak forever, I think the Senate 
rules will accommodate you.
  Those changes all pale in comparison to the single biggest change I 
ran into here, and that was facing the secretary to the majority, Lula 
Johnson Davis. I knew that people throughout Capitol Hill on both the 
House and Senate sides at the staff level were extremely courteous, 
kind, and helpful. I found that throughout my career in the House, and 
I certainly found it in the Senate. But the good thing about Lula Davis 
was that she was respectful of Senators, but not deferential. She would 
be happy to tell you when she thought you had stepped out of line in 
what you were wearing, and what you were chewing, and what you might be 
using your microphone for, your conversations on the floor, and on and 
on. She did this in a way that first startled me, because I wasn't used 
to it in the House. There was nobody like Lula in the House of 
Representatives to keep you in line. She did it, and I came to not only 
like it but respect it so much, because I knew she was doing it not in 
any personal way but because of her love for the Senate.
  They do a Roll Call survey about the most powerful staffers on 
Capitol Hill, and they rate them in four ways: know-how, muscle, spin 
control, and access. Lula always received the highest check marks in 
every category but one--spin control. That is about right. Lula Davis 
was never one to mince words in her role as secretary to the majority 
of the Senate. Tough, fair, insisting on the strict observance of 
Senate rules and protocols, she reflected love for this institution in 
all that she did for us.
  The National Journal described her as ``an internally legendary 
staffer.'' That is true. In the 221-year history of the Senate, Lula 
Davis is only the second woman--and the first African American--ever to 
hold the position of secretary to the majority.
  Her loyalty and devotion to this Senate are unmatched. She was the 
first one here in the morning and the last one to leave at night.
  I know I speak for all Senators from the Democratic side and the 
Republican side, as well, in saying she is going to be missed. Unlike 
many, Lula Davis did not move to Washington to get involved in 
politics. She started her career as a high school teacher and guidance 
counselor. A friend told Lula about an opening in the office of her 
home State Senator, Russell Long, of Louisiana. She started her Hill 
career at the bottom, as a legislative correspondent, answering mail.
  When Senator Long retired in 1989, Lula moved to the Democratic floor 
staff and worked her way up from the lowliest assistant position to 
become secretary to the majority.
  As many hours as Lula devoted to the Senate, it is hard to believe 
that she had time for anything else. But she founded an organization 
called LeadershipCares, which tries to guide young people into 
successful lives by helping others who are less fortunate. Almost every 
class of pages on the Democratic side would tell a story about Lula, 
because she became not only their boss but their friend. She taught 
them a lot about life in their life experience here in the Senate.
  I join my colleagues in wishing Lula the very best of luck as she 
begins the next chapter in life.
  Mr. HARKIN. Madam President, although I don't have anything written, 
I was listening to the leader speak and the whip talk about Lula Davis 
and all she has done here in the Senate. I, too, wish to pay my 
respects and give my thanks and my best wishes to Lula Davis as she 
leaves the Senate.
  For 30 years, she has been a loyal, hard-working, passionate advocate 
for the people of this country in an unelected role--a role that 
required her to make sure the business of the Senate was conducted. I 
know of no one who knows the rules and how things work and how things 
should go better than Lula Davis. At times, she knew everything, it 
seemed to me. Many times, we would go to her because we would have a 
bill on the floor and we would have something that would get tied up. I 
would be managing a bill, and things would get into a big ball of wax 
sometimes or seem like a big ball of string and you had to figure out 
how to unwind it. I would always go to Lula

[[Page 23553]]

Davis and say: OK, how do we get out of this mess? We have an amendment 
on an amendment and a motion to recommit and all these things piled up. 
And she always knew how to do it. She always knew how to make sure the 
place would run.
  If you ever needed advice on how to do something or accomplish 
something, you could go to her. Of course, sometimes she would give you 
advice you didn't want to hear. Sometimes you wanted to do something, 
and she had to be the person to say: Well, the rules just won't allow 
you to do that. So there were times I would get frustrated, and I would 
say: But I want to do this; this is for the good of the country. And 
Lula Davis would say: Well, Senator, you are just going to have to find 
some other way to do it.
  So that is just my way to pay respect to a person who devoted so much 
of her life to this Senate. A lot of times, we find ourselves here late 
at night, and once in a while, I would think I was the last person to 
leave, but Lula was always the last person to leave and always the 
person--if you came in early in the day, she was the first person here. 
So she has really been such an integral part of the Senate, the Senate 
floor is going to have a vacancy without her in the future.
  So to Lula Davis, I say: Thank you for so many years of friendship 
and loyalty and hard work in helping to make the Senate a more 
efficient, compatible working environment.
  I thank Lula Davis, and I wish her the best in her retirement. I hope 
she doesn't get too far away from the Senate and that she comes back to 
see us once in a while to help us untangle that ball of string, as I am 
sure it is bound to become tangled again sometime.
  Mr. BAYH. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the 
resolution be agreed to, the preamble be agreed to, the motions to 
reconsider be laid upon the table with no intervening action or debate, 
and that any statements relating to the resolution be printed in the 
Record.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The resolution (S. Res. 707) was agreed to.
  The preamble was agreed to.
  The resolution, with its preamble, reads as follows:

                              S. Res. 707

       Whereas Lula Davis, the Secretary for the Majority, will be 
     retiring at the end of the 111th Congress, after a long and 
     distinguished career;
       Whereas Lula Davis was first elected as Assistant 
     Democratic Secretary in 1997, and she was the first woman 
     ever to hold that position;
       Whereas Lula Davis was elected to be the Secretary for the 
     Majority at the beginning of the 111th Congress, the first 
     African American to serve in this position, and during the 
     111th Congress she has expertly tackled one of the toughest 
     jobs in politics;
       Whereas throughout her time in the Senate, Lula Davis has 
     played a major role in managing the debate and passage of 
     many significant pieces of legislation;
       Whereas many legislative accomplishments over the years 
     would not have happened without the leadership of Lula Davis;
       Whereas Lula Davis lived in rural Louisiana, and worked as 
     a teacher and guidance counselor;
       Whereas Lula Davis remains committed to children in our 
     community, founding and continuing to run a nonprofit 
     mentoring and charitable organization called ``Leadership 
     Cares,'' which provides holiday meals to more than 650 
     families annually;
       Whereas Lula Davis has encouraged many of her fellow Senate 
     staff to volunteer alongside her family and friends to make a 
     difference for those in need;
       Whereas Lula Davis started her Senate career as a 
     legislative aide to her home-state Senator, Russell Long, and 
     went on to serve in almost every position on the floor staff, 
     including office assistant, floor assistant, chief floor 
     assistant, Assistant Secretary, and Secretary;
       Whereas Lula Davis is a master of the complex formal and 
     informal rules under which the Senate operates;
       Whereas Lula Davis has consistently provided thoughtful and 
     reliable advice to both Democratic and Republican leadership 
     and all members of the Senate;
       Whereas Lula Davis is loyal to the Senate and to Senators, 
     and respects the traditions that make this body great;
       Whereas the Senate has tremendous respect for Lula Davis 
     and her hard work, and deeply appreciates her enormous 
     contributions to the Senate and to the United States: Now, 
     therefore, be it
       Resolved, That the Senate expresses its deepest thanks to 
     Lula Davis for her many years of outstanding service to the 
     United States Senate and to the United States of America.

                          ____________________