Barbara Mikulski

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Barbara Mikulski
Barbara Mikulski official portrait c. 2011.jpg
United States Senator
from Maryland
In office
January 3, 1987 – January 3, 2017
Preceded by Charles Mathias
Succeeded by Chris Van Hollen
Ranking Member of the Senate Appropriations Committee
In office
January 3, 2015 – January 3, 2017
Preceded by Richard Shelby
Succeeded by Patrick Leahy
Chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee
In office
December 17, 2012 – January 3, 2015
Preceded by Dan Inouye
Succeeded by Thad Cochran
Secretary of the Senate Democratic Conference
In office
January 3, 1995 – January 3, 2005
Leader George Mitchell
Tom Daschle
Preceded by David Pryor
Succeeded by Debbie Stabenow
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Maryland's 3rd district
In office
January 3, 1977 – January 3, 1987
Preceded by Paul Sarbanes
Succeeded by Ben Cardin
Personal details
Born Barbara Ann Mikulski
(1936-07-20) July 20, 1936 (age 87)
Baltimore, Maryland, U.S.
Political party Democratic
Education Mount St. Agnes College (BA)
University of Maryland, Baltimore (MSW)
Signature

Barbara Ann Mikulski (born July 20, 1936) is an American politician who served as a United States Senator from Maryland from 1987 to 2017. A member of the Democratic Party, she also served in the United States House of Representatives from 1977 to 1987. She is the longest-serving woman in the history of the United States Congress[1][2] and is the longest-serving senator in Maryland history.[lower-alpha 1]

Raised in the Highlandtown neighborhood of East Baltimore, Mikulski attended Mount Saint Agnes College and the University of Maryland School of Social Work.[3][4] Originally a social worker and community organizer, she was elected to the Baltimore City Council in 1971 after delivering a highly publicized address on the "ethnic movement" in America.[4] She was elected to the federal House of Representatives in 1976, and in 1986 she became the first woman elected to the United States Senate from Maryland.[5]

From the death of Senator Daniel Inouye in December 2012 until 2015, Mikulski chaired the Senate Appropriations Committee, the first woman and first Marylander to hold the position.[6][7] At her retirement, she was the ranking minority member. She also served on the Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee and the Select Committee on Intelligence.

After five terms in the Senate,[8] on March 2, 2015, Mikulski announced that she would retire at the end of the 114th Congress in 2017.[9]

Early life, education, and career

Mikulski was born and raised in the Highlandtown neighborhood of East Baltimore, the eldest of the three daughters of Christine Eleanor (née Kutz) and William Mikulski.[10][11] Her parents were both of Polish descent; her immigrant great-grandparents had owned a bakery in Baltimore. During her high school years at the Institute of Notre Dame,[12] she worked in her parents' grocery store, delivering groceries to elderly neighbors who were unable to leave their homes.

After graduating with a Bachelor of Arts in Sociology from Mount Saint Agnes College (now a part of Loyola University Maryland) in 1958,[12] she obtained her master's degree in social work (MSW) from the University of Maryland School of Social Work in 1965.[13] She worked as a social worker for Catholic charities and Baltimore's Department of Social Services, helping at-risk children and educating seniors about the Medicare program. Mikulski became an activist social worker when she heard about plans to build Interstate 70 through Baltimore's Fells Point and Canton neighborhoods. She helped organize communities on both sides of the city and successfully fought to stop the construction of the road.[citation needed]

Early political career

Mikulski first received national attention in 1970, because of her remarks at a conference at The Catholic University of America regarding “Ethnic Americans”, convened by Msgr. Geno Baroni. Her message became one of the major documents of the “ethnic movement”.

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America is not a melting pot. It is a sizzling cauldron for the ethnic American who feels that he has been politically courted and legally extorted by both government and private enterprise. The ethnic American is sick of being stereotyped as a racist and dullard by phony white liberals, pseudo black militants and patronizing bureaucrats. He pays the bill for every major government program and gets nothing or little in the way of return. Tricked by the political rhetoric of the illusionary funding for black-oriented social programs, he turns his anger to race — when he himself is the victim of class prejudice.

[He] has worked hard all his life to become a 'good American;' he and his sons have fought on every battlefield — then he is made fun of because he likes the flag. The ethnic American is overtaxed and underserved at every level of government. He does not have fancy lawyers or expensive lobbyists getting him tax breaks on his income. Being a home owner, he shoulders the rising property taxes — the major revenue source for the municipalities in which he lives. Yet he enjoys very little from these unfair and burdensome levies.

... [T]he ethnic American also feels unappreciated for the contribution he makes to society. He resents the way the working class is looked down upon. In many instances he is treated like the machine he operates or the pencil he pushes. He is tired of being treated like an object of production. The public and private institutions have made him frustrated by their lack of response to his needs. At present he feels powerless in his daily dealings with and efforts to change them. Unfortunately, because of old prejudices and new fears, anger is generated against other minority groups rather than those who have power. What is needed is an alliance of white and black, white collar, blue collar and no collar based on mutual need, interdependence and respect, an alliance to develop the strategy for new kinds of community organization and political participation.[14]
Mikulski challenged Charles Mathias for his Senate seat in 1974.

Mikulski's activism led to a seat on the Baltimore City Council in 1971. In 1973 incoming Chairman of the Democratic National Committee Robert S. Strauss appointed then Baltimore City Councilman Mikulski to chair the Democratic Party Commission on New Delegate Selection and Party Structure. She was instrumental in solidifying democratizing reforms to the national delegate selection process.[15][16] She then ran for the U.S. Senate in 1974, winning the Democratic nomination to face Republican incumbent Charles Mathias. Although well-known to residents in her city, Mikulski had limited name recognition in the rest of the state.[17]

As an advocate for campaign finance reform, Mathias refused to accept any contribution over $100 to "avoid the curse of big money that has led to so much trouble in the last year".[18] However, he still managed to raise over $250,000, nearly five times Mikulski's total. Ideologically, Mikulski and Mathias agreed on many issues, such as closing tax loopholes and easing taxes on the middle class. On two issues, however, Mathias argued to reform Congress and the U.S. tax system to address inflation and corporate price fixing, contrary to Mikulski.[17] In retrospect, The Washington Post felt the election was "an intelligent discussion of state, national, and foreign affairs by two smart, well-informed people".[19]

With Maryland voters, Mathias benefited from his frequent disagreements with the Nixon administration and his liberal voting record. On November 5, 1974, he was re-elected by a 57% to 43% margin, though he lost badly in Baltimore City and Baltimore County, where Mikulski was popular.[17] It has thus far been the only election that Mikulski ever lost.

In 1976, Paul Sarbanes gave up his seat in Maryland's 3rd congressional district to make a successful run for the Senate. Mikulski won a crowded seven-way Democratic primary—the key election given a heavily Democratic district—and won easily in the November elections. She was reelected four more times, never facing substantive opposition.

U.S. Senate

Elections

Mikulski speaking to a patient at a military hospital, 1980.
Mikulski with Steny Hoyer presenting a photo to Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip in Greenbelt, Maryland
Mikulski at a press conference

Mathias announced his retirement before the 1986 elections. At the time of this announcement, it was expected that then-Governor Harry Hughes would be the favorite to succeed Mathias. However, Hughes became caught up in the aftermath of the Maryland savings and loan crisis. He lost popularity with voters, opening the door for Mikulski's bid for the Senate. The Republican nominee was Linda Chavez, who left her post as Assistant to the President for Public Liaison in an attempt to win the seat. The election was the second time in modern U.S. history that two women faced each other in a statewide general election. The race was covered by national media, with observers noting that Chavez was very unlikely to win.[20]

In the campaign, Chavez attacked Mikulski, a lifelong Baltimore resident, as a "San Francisco-style, George McGovern, liberal Democrat".[21] Chavez was accused of making Mikulski's sexual orientation a central issue of the political campaign.[22] Chavez wrote that the term referred to Jeane Kirkpatrick's 1984 Republican National Convention "Blame America First" speech, in which she coined the phrase "San Francisco Liberal" in reference to the Democratic National Convention in San Francisco.[21] Using political advertisements and press conferences, Chavez attacked Mikulski's former aide Teresa Brennan as "anti-male" and a "radical feminist", implying that Brennan and Mikulski were radical lesbians and that "fascist feminism" was Mikulski's political philosophy.[23][24] Brennan had not been part of Mikulski's staff for five years, but Chavez implied Brennan was still working on Mikulski's campaign.[25] Mikulski did not respond in kind to the attacks. She defeated Chavez with 61% of the vote.[26] She was the first woman who was elected to the Senate who did not have a husband or father who served in high political office.[27] She also served alongside Paul Sarbanes, the man she'd succeeded in the House.

Mikulski, popularly known as "Senator Barb",[28] was re-elected with large majorities in 1992, 1998, 2004, and 2010. Having won re-election in 2010, she has surpassed Margaret Chase Smith as the longest-serving female senator.[29] ABC News named Mikulski its Person of the Week for that milestone.[30] On March 17, 2012, she became the longest-serving female member of Congress in the history of the United States, surpassing the previous record-holder, Rep. Edith Nourse Rogers of Massachusetts, who served from 1925 to 1960.[31]

Senator Mikulski joins Senator Kit Bond and actor David Hyde Pierce in promoting awareness of Alzheimer's disease.
Mikulski speaks at the 2008 Democratic National Convention.

In September 2009, the "tell-all" book The Clinton Tapes revealed that during the 2000 presidential election, President Bill Clinton suggested Mikulski as a running mate for Al Gore, who instead chose her colleague Joe Lieberman.[32] In 2007, Mikulski endorsed her colleague, Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-NY), for President of the United States, praising her as a leader and citing her desire to break the "glass ceiling" by electing the first woman president. Senator Mikulski nominated Hillary Clinton for President of the United States at the Democratic National Convention on July 26, 2016.

From 2007 to 2017, Mikulski served alongside Ben Cardin, who succeeded her in the 3rd District and held it for 20 years until succeeding Sarbanes in the Senate.

Legislation

On June 3, 2013, Mikulski introduced the Child Care and Development Block Grant Act of 2013 (S. 1086; 113th Congress), which passed in the Senate.[33] The bill would reauthorize the Child Care and Development Block Grant Act of 1990 to provide block grants to the states to help low-income parents find child care for their children.[34] In addition to reauthorizing the program, it also makes amendments to the law to try to improve it. Some of those improvements include required background checks on grant recipients and annual inspections.[34] Mikulski argued that "this bill ensures that all children get the care they need and deserve."[34]

On April 1, 2014, Mikulski introduced the Paycheck Fairness Act (S. 2199; 113th Congress),[35] a measure that aims to strengthen the Fair Labor Standards Act's protections against pay inequalities based on gender. It is a bill that "punishes employers for retaliating against workers who share wage information, puts the justification burden on employers as to why someone is paid less and allows workers to sue for punitive damages of wage discrimination".[36] Mikulski said that "it brings tears to my eyes to know women are working so hard and being paid less" and that "it makes me emotional when I hear that... I get angry, I get outraged and I get volcanic".[36]

Committee assignments

In the 114th Congress, Mikulski served on the following Senate committees (standing committees in bold):

Political positions

Mikulski was one of 11 senators to vote against both the 1991 and 2002 resolutions authorizing the use of force in Iraq.[37][38]

Mikulski has opposed predatory lending, and has had been an outspoken opponent of Fairbanks Capital (now Select Portfolio Servicing), alleged to have illegally foreclosed on over 100 homes in Maryland.[39]

Mikulski has been an outspoken advocate for abortion rights, but has stated she does not view the opposition to this issue as misogynistic.[40]

On October 1, 2008, Mikulski voted in favor of HR1424, the Senate version of the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008, which provided a $700 billion bailout to the United States financial market.

In October 2013, Mikulski sponsored a bill honoring naturopathic medicine.[41]

Mikulski has been voted the "meanest senator" in Washingtonian's survey of congressional staffers.[42]

Electoral history

U.S. Senate Democratic Primary election in Maryland, 1986
Party Candidate Votes % +%
Democratic Barbara Mikulski 307,876 50%
Democratic Michael Barnes 195,086 31%
Democratic Harry Hughes 88,908 14%
Democratic Debra Hanania Freeman 9,350 2%
Democratic Edward Olszewski 7,877 1%
Democratic Robert Kaufman 6,505 1%
Democratic Boyd Sweatt 3,580 1%
Democratic Leonard Trout, Jr. 2,742 0%
U.S. Senate Democratic Primary election in Maryland, 1992
Party Candidate Votes % +%
Democratic Barbara Mikulski (inc.) 376,444 77%
Democratic Thomas Wheatley 31,214 6%
Democratic Walter Boyd 26,467 5%
Democratic Don Allensworth 19,731 4%
Democratic Scott David Britt 13,001 3%
Democratic James Leonard White 12,470 3%
Democratic Emerson Sweatt 11,150 2%
U.S. Senate Democratic Primary election in Maryland, 1998
Party Candidate Votes % +%
Democratic Barbara Mikulski (inc.) 349,382 84%
Democratic Ann Mallory 43,120 10%
Democratic Kauko Kokkonen 21,658 5%
U.S. Senate Democratic Primary election in Maryland, 2004
Party Candidate Votes % +%
Democratic Barbara Mikulski (inc.) 408,848 90%
Democratic Robert Kaufman 32,127 7%
Democratic Sid Altman 13,901 3%
U.S. Senate Democratic Primary election in Maryland, 2010
Party Candidate Votes % +%
Democratic Barbara Mikulski (inc.) 396,252 82%
Democratic Christopher Garner 36,194 8%
Democratic Billy Bob Jaworski 15,335 3%
Democratic Blaine Taylor 11,049 2%
Democratic Theresa Scaldaferri 8,092 2%
Democratic Sanquetta Taylor 7,684 2%
Democratic Lih Young 6,911 1%
Year Office Election Subject Party Votes  % Opponent Party Votes  %
1974 MD Senator, Class 3 General Barbara Mikulski Democratic 374,563 42.7% Charles Mathias Republican 503,223 57.3%
1976 Congress, MD 3rd district General Barbara Mikulski Democratic 143,461 74.59% Samuel Culotta Republican 36,447 25.41%
1978 Congress, MD 3rd district General Barbara Mikulski Democratic 91,189 100% Unopposed
1980 Congress, MD 3rd district General Barbara Mikulski Democratic 134,367 76.13% Russell Schaffer Republican 32,074 23.87%
1982 Congress, MD 3rd district General Barbara Mikulski Democratic 110,042 74.2% Robert Scherr Republican 38,259 25.8%
1984 Congress, MD 3rd district General Barbara Mikulski Democratic 133,189 68.21% Ross Pierpont Republican 59,493 30.47%
1986 MD Senator, Class 3 General Barbara Mikulski Democratic 675,225 60.69% Linda Chavez Republican 437,411 39.31% *
1992 MD Senator, Class 3 General Barbara Mikulski Democratic 1,307,610 71% Alan Keyes Republican 533,688 28.98% **
1998 MD Senator, Class 3 General Barbara Mikulski Democratic 1,062,810 70.5% Ross Pierpont Republican 444,637 29.5%
2004 MD Senator, Class 3 General Barbara Mikulski Democratic 1,504,691 64.77% E. J. Pipkin Republican 783,055 33.71% ***
2010 MD Senator, Class 3 General Barbara Mikulski Democratic 1,093,646 61.82% Eric Wargotz Republican 639,155 36.13% ****

*Third party notes: Henry Laque (Other) won 15,330 votes.

**Third party notes: Write-in candidates won a combined 437 votes.

***Third party notes: Maria Allwine (Green) won 24,816 votes and Thomas Trump (Constitution) won 9,009 votes.

****Third party notes: Kenniss Henry (Green) won 20,717 votes and Richard Shawver (Constitution) 14,746 votes. Write-in candidates won a combined 2,792 votes.

Awards and honors

Sen. Mikulski at New Horizons Pluto Flyby, 2015

In 1979, the Supersisters trading card set was produced and distributed; one of the cards featured Mikulski's name and picture.[43]

The NASA-funded Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) in Baltimore named one of the world’s largest astronomy databases after Mikulski (Barbara A. Mikulski Archive for Space Telescopes), as she was a long time champion of the Hubble and James Webb space telescopes.[44]

In 2012, when NASA discovered an exploding star, they named it "Supernova Mikulski" in her honor.[45]

On August 22, 2013 the President of Poland Bronisław Komorowski honored Mikulski with a Commander's Cross with Star of the Order of Polonia Restituta for "outstanding achievements in the development of Polish-American cooperation and activity for Poles living in the United States".[46]

In November 2015, Mikulski was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Barack Obama at a ceremony in the White House.[47][48]

See also

References

  1. Both Mikulski and Sarbanes served five terms (30 years) in the Senate. However, due to a differing amount of leap days over their tenures, Sarbanes finished with 10,957 days of Senate service, to Mikulski's 10,958 days.
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  12. 12.0 12.1 Weiss, Max. "The Baltimore Grill: Barbara Mikulski," Baltimore (magazine), August 2007.
  13. Senator Barbara Ann Mikulski (biography) – Poles in America Foundation, Inc.
  14. O’Rourke, Lawrence “GENO: The Life and Mission of Geno Baroni”, Paulist Press. (1991), p 87.
  15. David S. Broder "The Democrat's Dilemma" March 1974
  16. Change is Not the Same as Progress: The Failures of the McGovern-Fraser Reforms in 1972, Kevin Harris
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  29. Marbella, Jean "Mikulski's milestone: the Senate's longest-serving woman" The Baltimore Sun January 5, 2011
  30. Netter, Sarah, and Jaffe, Matthew, "Person of the Week: Sen. Barbara Mikulski Makes History as Longest-Serving Female Senator". ABC News, January 7, 2011
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  48. Phil Helsel - "Obama honoring Spielberg, Streisand and more with medal of freedom," NBC News, November 24, 2015. Retrieved 2015-11-25

External links

Party political offices
Preceded by Democratic nominee for U.S. Senator from Maryland
(Class 3)

1974
Succeeded by
Edward Conroy
Preceded by
Edward Conroy
Democratic nominee for U.S. Senator from Maryland
(Class 3)

1986, 1992, 1998, 2004, 2010
Succeeded by
Chris Van Hollen
Preceded by Secretary of the Senate Democratic Conference
1995–2005
Succeeded by
Debbie Stabenow
United States House of Representatives
Preceded by Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Maryland's 3rd congressional district

1977–1987
Succeeded by
Ben Cardin
United States Senate
Preceded by U.S. Senator (Class 3) from Maryland
1987–2017
Served alongside: Paul Sarbanes, Ben Cardin
Succeeded by
Chris Van Hollen
Preceded by Chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee
2012–2015
Succeeded by
Thad Cochran
Preceded by Ranking Member of the Senate Appropriations Committee
2015–2017
Succeeded by
Patrick Leahy

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