Van Hollen Continues Life on
Fast Track
By Alia Malik
Capital News Service
Friday, Oct. 13, 2006
WASHINGTON - The House of Representatives was in session, and Rep.
Chris Van Hollen's office was bustling on an afternoon in late
September. The congressman from Maryland's 8th District was
rushing to the House floor so he could speak on the
controversial terrorist detainee bill.
"Karen, I'll call you," he said over his shoulder to his
chief of staff. "I'm going to move fast."
By most accounts, Van Hollen, 47, of Kensington, has been
moving fast his entire career.
After just two terms in Congress, he is co-chairman of the
Democratic Party's effort to help its congressional candidates
defeat Republican incumbents. Since he himself defeated popular
Republican Connie Morella in 2002 to represent the western half
of Montgomery County and a slice of Prince George's bordering
Northeast Washington, he has furthered his reputation as a
capable political climber and legislator, friends and colleagues
said.
Christopher Van Hollen Jr.
Age: 47
Party Affiliation: Democrat
Resident: Kensington
Education: B.A., philosophy,
Swarthmore College, 1982; M.A., public policy, Harvard
University John F. Kennedy School of Government, 1985;
J.D., Georgetown University Law Center, 1990.
Experience: Congressman,
2003-present. Served in Maryland Senate, 1994-2002, and
Maryland House of Delegates, 1991-1994. Senior
legislative adviser for federal affairs for Maryland
Gov. William Donald Schaefer, 1989-1991. Professional
staff member, U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee,
1987-1989. Legislative assistant for defense and foreign
policy, Sen. Charles McC. Mathias Jr., R-Md., 1985-1987.
Partner, Arent Fox PLLC, 1999-2002; litigator,
1991-1999.
Family: Wife, Katherine; three
children, Anna, 16, Nicholas, 14, and Alexander, 10.
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"He's been a welcome addition to the Congress," said Rep.
Henry Waxman, D-Calif., who works with Van Hollen as ranking
member of the Committee on Government Reform. "He's very bright,
very able."
Friends say Van Hollen is smart, a good listener and, above
all, a hard worker. Delegate Richard S. Madaleno Jr.,
D-Montgomery, said Van Hollen is the type of guy who takes
junkets to the Middle East, then as a Hill staffer, to visit
Kurdish refugees, instead of the faux "fact-finding missions"
some staffers took to play golf in Scotland.
Van Hollen also took night classes at Georgetown University
Law Center while working on Capitol Hill and was made partner at
a large Washington law firm the same year he was named
vice-chairman of the Budget and Taxation Committee in the
Maryland Senate.
Even his spare time has always been a whirlwind. He and his
wife, Katherine Van Hollen, are raising three children -- Anna,
16, Nicholas, 14, and Alexander, 10. Van Hollen also used to
coach youth soccer, which in Montgomery County "is a really big
deal," said longtime friend David Bushnell, 53, of Silver
Spring.
Van Hollen is now on the board of directors of the Boys and
Girls Club of Greater Washington and a member of the
Congressional Soccer Caucus, which promotes soccer and tries to
involve at-risk youth in the sport.
Born in Pakistan to a father in the U.S. Foreign Service and
a mother in the State Department, Van Hollen lived in Turkey,
Sri Lanka and India until he came to the United States for high
school. Growing up immersed in different cultures and
perspectives sparked his interest in foreign policy, he said.
"It gives you an appreciation for two things: one, America's
role in the world, and secondly, how people view the United
States," he said.
Aside from foreign policy, Van Hollen's legislative record
emphasizes education, something he attributes to having three
children in Montgomery County Public Schools.
"Look, I think that education is critical to the success of
this country," he said. "So look, I think that we need to make
sure that every student gets a good start."
Starting out in his 20s as a legislative assistant to U.S.
Sen. Charles Mathias of Maryland, a moderate Republican, Van
Hollen went on to be a staffer for the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee, an adviser to then-Gov. William Donald Schaefer, a
Maryland delegate and then a state Senator before running for
Congress. He has never lost a political race, and most think he
isn't about to start now.
"His constituents think he is doing a good job," said state
Sen. Brian E. Frosh, D-Montgomery, whose constituents are
represented by Van Hollen at the congressional level. "I'd be
stunned if he weren't re-elected."
"I can't imagine under what scenario he would lose
re-election," said Madaleno, who represents a district mostly
overlapping Van Hollen's.
"Overwhelmingly you hear nothing but great compliments about
Chris. People appreciate how hard-working he is, people
appreciate the record he assembled in Annapolis and what he's
been able to do on Capitol Hill even as a junior member of the
minority party."
Those Capitol Hill accomplishments include leading the
successful effort to close a loophole that let lenders pocket
more than $1 billion designated for college students and passing
an amendment that obstructed a Republican effort to privatize
more government jobs.
Van Hollen's successes are no surprise given his record in
Annapolis, said Madaleno, who was on the staff of the Maryland
House of Delegates Appropriations Committee when Van Hollen
joined it in 1990.
"You want to find someone who can get a bill through, you go
to Chris Van Hollen, because he works it hard, he takes time to
understand it," Madaleno said.
Van Hollen does have critics. When he gave up his state
Senate seat to run for Congress, Kennedy clan primary opponent
Mark K. Shriver and his supporters accused Van Hollen of having
an outsized ego.
And a July 30 letter Van Hollen wrote to Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice urging a cease-fire in the Israel-Hezbollah
conflict angered some members of Montgomery County's large
Jewish community who perceived his position as anti-Israel.
"That has antagonized a great number of Jewish voters who are
taking a look at (Jewish challenger Jeff Stein's) campaign,"
said Montgomery County Republican Party Chairman Tom Reinheimer.
Still, Van Hollen remains popular. When Sen. Paul S. Sarbanes
announced his retirement more than a year ago, Van Hollen
explored the idea of running for his seat, eventually nixing it.
But perhaps not permanently.
"Look," he said, "you never know what's going to happen."
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