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Seventh District Congressman Dave Obey (D-WI)
released the following statement
today:
In December I will have
been in public service for 48 years – over 6
years in the Wisconsin State Legislature and
almost 42 years in the U.S. Congress. I have
served in the House longer than anyone in
Wisconsin history. God and my constituents have
been incredibly good to me.
When I was a kid
growing up in Wausau I never dreamed that I
would have even one-tenth of the opportunities
that have come my way. I hope that I have used
those opportunities to do the most that could
be done for the causes I believe in: fairer
taxes; greater economic opportunity; better
schools; affordable health care; expanded
education and health care benefits for
veterans; research that will help us fight
diseases like cancer, diabetes and Parkinson’s;
better health, safety, and economic security
for workers; cleaner air; and water and
preservation of National Parks and public
places.
The people of Northern Wisconsin
have given me the honor and the privilege of
representing them on the great issues of our
times, ranging from Vietnam to Watergate, the
Iranian hostage crisis, the Reagan deficits,
Iran-Contra, the collapse of communism, two
Gulf Wars, the economic and budget reforms of
the early 1990s, the government shut down,
9/11, and the economic meltdown of the past
decade.
For a decade, as Chairman of the
Foreign Operations Subcommittee, I had the
privilege of helping lead the effort to meet
our responsibilities to our fellow human beings
around the globe who share this planet with us,
but do not share our same good fortune. During
that time, we consistently moved foreign aid
money away from support of military dictators
to the expansion of long-term development
activities and through programs like UNICEF
contributed to saving millions of children’s
lives.
I’m especially proud of the role I
paid in resisting American colonialism in
Central America, working with people like James
Baker, Dave Bonior, Jim Wright, Lee Hamilton,
Matt McHugh, Joe Moakley, and Tom Foley to end
the Contra War in Nicaragua. Probably, the most
important historic role the committee played
was the bipartisan work we did with the George
H. Bush Administration and officials like
Secretary Lawrence Eagleburger in helping
Eastern European countries to transition from
communist authoritarianism to Western
capitalist democracies after the fall of the
Berlin wall and the collapse of the Soviet
Union.
Although it happened a long time ago,
I am especially proud of the losing fight that
I helped wage with Congressmen Henry Reuss and
Mo Udall to prevent the passage of the fiscally
irresponsible Reagan budgets, which at a time
of devastating inflation cut taxes at the same
time the defense budget was being doubled, all
paid for with borrowed money, more than
tripling the long-term budget deficit picture.
The Obey-Udall-Reuss alternative budget was a
progressive alternative to the budgets of both
parties, which spent less, borrowed less, and
produced smaller deficits than either the
Democratic or Republican base bills, and won
the support of a majority of Democrats. At the
time our actions were hugely unpopular. About
70% of the voters in my district supported
Reagan’s budget, but time has proven us
right.
Today, I am similarly proud that I
was the principle author of the much maligned
but absolutely essential Economic Recovery Act
of 2009, which in the midst of the deepest and
most dangerous economic catastrophe in 70
years, has pumped desperately needed purchasing
power into the economy to cushion the fall and
reduced the number of families whose
breadwinners were thrown out of work. When it
was passed last year, the American economy was
losing 750,000 jobs per month. Last month, by
contrast, the economy added 162,000 jobs, the
largest increase in three years. That corner
could not have been turned without the Recovery
Act. My only apology is that it should have
been larger, but it was the most that the
system would bear at the time.
I am
especially pleased to have had the privilege of
presiding over the House when it passed the
historic health insurance reform legislation
three weeks ago. I have been waiting for that
moment for 41 years and its arrival – finally –
made all the frustrations of public life worth
it.
During my Congressional service, I have
also tried to do what I could to keep us out of
misguided wars and I have fought to reform the
political institutions – especially, the
Congress – to improve the quality of their work
and to strengthen public confidence in them.
And despite the misguided and disastrously
destructive decisions of the U.S. Supreme Court
that have put the system of American elections
on the auction block, I have worked to limit
the influence of private money in elections
that by definition should be public
events.
I think that along the way I have
made a difference for the district and state
that I represent and for the country.
But
there is a time to stay and a time to go. And
this is my time to go. I hate to do it. There
is so much that needs to be done. But, frankly,
I am bone tired. When I first put my name on
the ballot for the State Assembly in 1962, I
was 23 years old. Now, 48 years later, I will
soon be 72. When I went to Congress in 1969, I
was the youngest member of the House of
Representatives. I’m not anymore. Since that
first day in 1962, I have gone through 25
elections and engaged in countless
battles.
I’m ready to turn the page, and I
think, frankly, that my district is ready for
someone new to make a fresh start. Not someone
who poses as a fresh face, but would in reality
take us back to the “good old days” of Bush tax
cuts for the rich and a misguided Iraq war. Not
someone whose idea of a fresh idea is to say:
“Let the market do it,” which translated means:
“Let the corporate elites, big banks, and Wall
Street big shots and insurance company CEO’s do
anything they want with no regulation to
protect investors and consumers.” There is
nothing fresh about that. No, what the 7th
district deserves and what the country deserves
is for someone to step up who can be counted on
to put working people first, someone who will
bring fresh eyes and fresh energy to the
battle, someone who won’t use slick words and
an actor’s ability to hide the fact that he is
willing to gut and privatize Social Security
and Medicare and abandon working people to the
arbitrary power of America’s corporate and
economic elite.
When I first ran for
Congress I wanted to do three things:
1) The
first was to help make our economic system more
fair for the poor and for middle class working
families. Unfortunately, powerful economic and
political forces have largely frustrated that
effort. Over the last 30 years we have seen the
largest transfer of income up the income scale
in history. In fact, for six straight years
under George W. Bush, over 90% of all the
income growth in the country went into the
pockets of the wealthiest 10%. The other 90% of
the population – the regular people of the
country – got table scraps. I regret not being
able to do more to turn that around. That, and
the inability of the political system to
achieve the public financing of political
campaigns, represent the biggest
disappointments of my public life.
2) My
second goal was to expand federal support for
education in order to expand opportunity for
every American. That has been a hard slog, but,
especially in the last three years, we have
been able to move a large amount of federal
resources to do just that. Just this last year,
we were able to greatly enhance federal support
for student aid. It is not enough, but it makes
a difference.
3) My third goal was to help
move this country into the ranks of civilized
nations by making it possible for almost every
American to receive quality health care without
begging. For years I despaired of ever getting
that done. But last month, I had the great
privilege of presiding over the House of
Representatives as it finally completed action
on historic health insurance reform
legislation.
Over the past few years,
whenever a member of the press asked if I was
contemplating retirement, I would respond by
saying that I did not want to leave Congress
until we had passed health care reform. Well,
now it has. And I can leave with the knowledge
that thanks to Speaker Pelosi and President
Obama and so many others, we got the job done.
I haven’t done all the big things that I wanted
to do when I started out, but I’ve done all the
big things I’m likely to do.
Frankly, I had
considered retiring after the 2000 election,
but I became so angered by the policies of the
Bush administration that I decided to stick
around as long as he was here. In 2002, after a
year-long reapportionment struggle, which
devoured my time and the time of my colleague
Jim Sensenbrenner, I publicly stated I would
not be around for another one. That is exactly
what I would face if I returned to Congress
next year. I simply don’t want to do
it.
Many years ago, in an interview with
Richard Cohen, I told him that the way I looked
at public service, I believe the job of a good
politician was to be used up fighting on behalf
of causes you believed in, and when you are
used up, to step aside and let someone else
carry on the battle. Well, today I feel used
up.
In the last months, two colleagues,
Charlie Wilson and Jack Murtha, have died. Both
were 76. For me, that is only four years away.
At the end of this term I will have served in
the House longer than all but 18 of the 10,637
men and women who have ever served there. The
wear and tear is beginning to take its toll.
Given that fact, I have to ask myself how I
want to spend the time I have left. Frankly, I
do not know what I will do next. All I do know
is that there has to be more to life than
explaining the ridiculous, accountability
destroying rules of the Senate to confused,
angry, and frustrated constituents.
I
absolutely believe that, after the economy
returns to a decent level of growth, we must
attack our long-term budget deficit. But,
perhaps I expect too much because, in addition
to an attack on the federal budget deficit, I
also want to see an equal determination to
attack the family security deficit, the family
income deficit, and the opportunity deficit
which also plague the American people.
I am,
frankly, weary of having to beg on a daily
basis that both parties recognize that we do no
favor for the country if we neglect to make the
long-term investments in education, science,
health, and energy that are necessary to
modernize our economy and decline to raise the
revenue needed to pay for those crucial
investments. I do not want to be in a position
as Chairman of the Appropriations Committee of
producing and defending lowest common
denominator legislation that is inadequate to
that task and, given the mood of the country,
that is what I would have to do if I
stayed.
I am also increasingly weary of
having to deal with a press which has become
increasingly focused on trivia, driven at least
in part by the financial collapse of the news
industry and the need, with the 24-hour news
cycle, to fill the air waves with hot air. I
say that regretfully because I regard what is
happening to the news profession as nothing
short of a national catastrophe which I know
pains many quality journalists as much as it
pains me. Both our professions have been
coarsened in recent years and the nation is the
loser for it.
Let me close by thanking some
people.
First, let me thank my wife, Joan,
who has put up with so much and endured so much
so that I might follow my dream of public
service. When she agreed to marry me, she
thought she was getting a college teacher.
Instead, she got stuck with the “charms” of
political life. Whatever good I’ve done, I
could not have done without her.
Let me also
thank my two sons, Craig and Douglas, who have
also shared in the burden of public service.
Craig has spent his adult life trying to bring
health care to people who needed it, trying to
protect workers in the work place, and trying
to protect our precious public lands from abuse
by special interests and their mouthpieces in
government. Doug has spent his life as a
working journalist, first covering Capitol
Hill, and then informing his readers about the
realities of the politics of environmental
protection and the interaction between science
and politics on the profoundly important issue
of global climate change.
Let me thank all
those who have worked with me as staff through
the years – those who have worked in my
district offices in Wisconsin, in my personal
office in Washington, my Joint Economic
Committee staff, and my Appropriations
Committee staff. Your ability, your decency,
and your fierce loyalty to me are gratefully
appreciated. You have been not just my
counselors, but my protectors, and my
understanding friends.
Let me thank those
special friends who have helped me get through
25 elections and everything that has happened
in between. You know who you are. By giving me
your political and emotional support, you have
sustained me through the pressures and the ups
and downs of political and public life. I will
not forget. I hope you feel that your support
helped to make possible whatever good I have
done through the years.
Let me thank Bob
Huber, Frank Nikolay, Dick Bolling, and Gaylord
Nelson for teaching me how to be a legislator –
in Madison and in Wisconsin. And let me express
a special thanks to Speaker Nancy Pelosi whose
heart, guts, and soul have provided the steel
necessary to accomplish some extraordinary
things.
Let me also thank so many of my
Congressional colleagues, past and present, who
have worked shoulder to shoulder with me in
pursuit of so many causes – some won, some
lost, and who have on occasion forgiven me for
my excessive passion. It has been said that in
life our strength can also be our weakness as I
have demonstrated on more than one
occasion.
And let me profoundly thank
everyone who has ever cast a vote for me for
the privilege of representing you in Madison
and Washington all these years.
I hope that
in whatever years I may have remaining, I will
still find occasion to help move the needle
forward. But for now, after 48 years, it is
time to pass the torch.
Last Updated (2010-05-06 22:55:33)