Congress Impresses Even Senator's
Son
By Leticia Linn
Capital News
Service
Friday, Nov. 17,
2006
WASHINGTON - Although John Sarbanes knew the surroundings -- he is,
after all, the son of retiring Sen. Paul Sarbanes -- everything
about the Capitol this week took on a new perspective now that
he is a member of Congress.
From choosing an office to voting for the new majority
leader, it was all different being a participant, and not just
an observer.
As the only Maryland freshman in the House of the
Representatives this coming term, Sarbanes spent the past week
with about 50 new members, learning how to put his office
together, balance his personal time with public duties and find
his way to the restroom.
"There is an extra element of excitement because I've been
around for so many years, but not being directly part of it.
I've certainly been familiar with the awesome responsibilities
that are involved, but never directly connected to those," he
said. "To have the opportunity to be a direct participant is
certainly a whole new dimension."
Sarbanes was elected to represent Maryland's 3rd
Congressional District on Nov. 7, beating John White with 64
percent of the vote to replace Ben Cardin, who is the state's
new U.S. senator.
Voting for Rep. Steny Hoyer, D-Mechanicsville, as new
majority leader, capped the orientation week.
"It was certainly the high point of the week of activities
for the freshmen representatives to be part of the leadership
election and decision," he said.
Sarbanes also participated in the "big roar of acclamation"
Democrat Joe Courtney received at a freshmen's reception.
Courtney was attending orientation without knowing if he had won
his race in Connecticut, and he became the center of every joke
in the class when he won by about 200 votes.
As a new congressman, Sarbanes also checked out the office he
would like to use, but the one he got was decided in a lottery
where freshmen "won" the offices remaining after current members
claimed theirs.
"Nobody has high expectations, because we are obviously the
bottom of the pecking order," he said.
Knowing that he needs to learn more about his new work --
"this is the real deal now," he said, Sarbanes took a notebook
and a pen, and drove from Baltimore City to Capitol Hill every
day to attend classes.
"You get to be together with other folks that are doing this
for the first time and don't know where the men's or ladies'
rooms are yet," he said.
Current congressmen lectured about being a committee member
and about "quality of life, meaning the trickiness of balancing
personal time and your public duties and commitments, and make
sure you balance that in a healthy way," Sarbanes said.
Experienced representatives gave Sarbanes what he considers
the best advice.
"The message I am taking from all of them is how critical it
is to come into this with a sense of humility, and have a sense
of humility when you interact with your colleagues and certainly
have it when you interact with your voters and constituencies,"
he said. "And if you ever lose that, you risk becoming
disconnected from the voters and disconnected from the issues
that matter to them."
Classes helped unite the group, as the freshmen spent time
together not only in class and receptions, but also at a common
service center in the Cannon Building.
"There is a sort of an organic feel of the class in the sense
of people who just step forward because they have the
opportunity and they were fed up with the direction things were
going in, and they thought 'Maybe I can be the one that can make
a difference,' " he said. "I'm excited about what this class can
contribute."
Some classes were held for Democrats and Republicans
together, which gave Sarbanes a sense of what their relationship
might be since next January.
"There is a real readiness to reach across the aisle on the
part of the people in my class," he said. "You hear it in the
comments from my classmates. They are ready to get things done."
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