“TRIBUTE TO BOB CORKER” published by Congressional Record on Dec. 6, 2018

“TRIBUTE TO BOB CORKER” published by Congressional Record on Dec. 6, 2018

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Volume 164, No. 193 covering the 2nd Session of the 115th Congress (2017 - 2018) was published by the Congressional Record.

The Congressional Record is a unique source of public documentation. It started in 1873, documenting nearly all the major and minor policies being discussed and debated.

“TRIBUTE TO BOB CORKER” mentioning the U.S. Dept of State was published in the Senate section on pages S7324-S7325 on Dec. 6, 2018.

The State Department is responsibly for international relations with a budget of more than $50 billion. Tenure at the State Dept. is increasingly tenuous and it's seen as an extension of the President's will, ambitions and flaws.

The publication is reproduced in full below:

TRIBUTE TO BOB CORKER

Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, this is that time at the end of a Congress when inevitably some of our Members go on to something else and leave this body. I want to take this opportunity this morning to pay tribute to another distinguished Member of the Senate who is leaving us at the end of this year.

Senator Bob Corker is one of the most hard-working and, frankly, relentless Members of this body. He is a builder by trade and a fixer by nature. Senator Corker is always a man on a mission. Our distinguished colleague hails from a State with a long history of impressive Senators. Tennesseans such as Howard Baker, Al Gore, Bill Frist, and, of course, our colleague Lamar Alexander all developed national reputations as leaders. But after 12 years of working with Bob, I could not feel more comfortable saying that he himself will now become a part of that great Tennessee legacy. He has met that high bar, and he set it high himself.

No sooner could any Senator turn his or her attention to some important but stalled initiative--some dead-end negotiation, some thorny national problem--then you would see Bob Corker diving into the fray and attacking the problem with everything he had.

The limitless work ethic, the entrepreneurial drive--these things have defined Bob Corker since long before he was sworn in as a Senator. He started working odd jobs at age 13. At 25, he had saved up enough money to cofound his own construction company--25 years old--and strike out for himself. That firm grew from an $8,000 lark into a major operation that spanned more than a dozen States.

Bob was a natural. He was constantly sniffing out opportunities and tackling them with vigor. Along the way, he picked up what some close to him now joke is an addiction to the feeling of a closing handshake--

that sign that needs were met, a deal was done, and both parties would walk away happy.

The term ``workaholic'' might be putting it mildly. I am told that after one particularly hairy negotiation ended in success, Bob exclaimed, ``I'd sell it back to him--if I could turn around and buy it again!''

Unlike many of his colleagues, Bob did not necessarily always aspire to public service.

In fact, it took a direct appeal to his builder's instincts to set this political career in motion.

Bob saw a message in a church bulletin. They needed volunteers with construction experience to help a mission in Haiti. Bob went along, along with his father, and he came back with the drive to keep doing real good for real people.

That conviction eventually took him to city hall in Chattanooga, where people still talk about the transformative wave of education reform, economic development, and public improvements that was unleashed during his time as mayor.

Tennesseans liked what they saw. They decided the next chapters of Bob Corker's serial success story should be written right here on their behalf in the U.S. Senate.

So if I even tried to relate a comprehensive catalog of everything Bob Corker has gotten accomplished in the Senate, this speech would be our last act of business before New Year's, but a few highlights stand out especially.

It was early in Senator Corker's first term when the financial crisis threw our economy into chaos, but this fired-up freshman immediately started working with committee chairs and new friends across the aisle. He became a pivotal player, putting his private sector acumen to great use in helping craft policies to begin restoring stability.

He has been a leading voice on housing reform, of course, and the combination of his background with his post on the Foreign Relations Committee has led to some unique Bob Corker accomplishments. Just this year, he has been hard at work on the BUILD Act to overhaul how America makes loans to new projects in the developing world.

He was also a key champion of the electrify Africa bill that became law in 2016, laying groundwork for a more stable power grid across that continent.

There are also other subtler ways he has remained the consummate businessman. Tennesseans know that many of the good things their junior Senator has achieved for his home State didn't even involve legislation. Every bit the former mayor, Bob has continued to hustle to convince every new job and new investment in sight why his home State is the place for them--phone call by phone call, meeting by meeting.

So the Senate is preparing to say goodbye to one of our most energetic and accomplished Members. We will miss his enthusiasm and his expertise, but we will also miss his famous generosity and the great kindness everyone close to Bob jumps at the chance to describe.

He is thoughtful to those he knows well and to those he has just met. I have it on good authority that on at least one occasion, Bob met a promising young man working in a checkout line and signed him up right there on the spot for a job interview with his chief of staff.

Most recently, we know Bob Corker as the brilliant chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee. He has traveled constantly. He has engaged issues around the world with an enormous degree of skill and capacity. He is a powerful voice for American interests and those of our allies and a forceful, influential thorn in the side of those who might wish us harm.

He has also used that position to champion vulnerable people around the world. His spearheading of the End Modern Slavery Initiative Act, focusing resources and attention on a humanitarian crisis affecting literally millions, will be a core piece of that legacy.

I know Bob prides himself on bringing more regular order back to the committee and getting it back to basics--legislation, treaties. Under his leadership, the committee passed the first authorization bill for the State Department--listen to this--in 14 years.

Predictably, that Bob Corker work ethic is on full display when he is traveling the world on our Nation's behalf. I hear that when Bob was leading a trip to Israel and Palestine a few years ago, he heard about smuggling tunnels between Egypt and Gaza and decided to go see them himself.

So the way I heard it, he arranged for ground transportation to Gaza, examined the system, and was back in Tel Aviv later that day to discuss the situation with Prime Minister Netanyahu.

I will admit, though, that I am plenty excited to see what this hugely accomplished individual will get into next, and there is plenty of talk about what mission is next in the queue.

I have heard his name is in the hat for an opportunity envied by many in this Chamber, and that is the chance to spend a lot more time with family. I am sure Elizabeth and the family will oblige with a smooth confirmation process.

I have to admit, whatever comes next, I really doubt we will be able to call it a retirement in any ordinary sense of the word. You see, I have heard what happens when Bob Corker tries to relax.

Apparently, there was one summer when he endeavored to take up waterskiing. You know--nice, lazy days; soak in the sunshine. Well, that didn't last very long. Bob went all in. He practiced and practiced and kept at it all summer, and soon he was a masterful but somewhat exhausted and burned-out water-skier. Once the challenge was gone, on to the next thing, on to the next deal, on to the next construction project.

So, Bob, we will miss you a lot. The Senate and the great State of Tennessee will miss your service, but we just simply can't wait to see what you build next.

The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator from Tennessee.

Mr. ALEXANDER. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to speak as if in morning business.

The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so ordered.

____________________

SOURCE: Congressional Record Vol. 164, No. 193

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