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Incoming House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of
Calif., left, looks on as incoming House Majority Whip James
Clyburn of S.C., right, speaks during a news conference on
Capitol Hill in Washington Thursday, Nov. 16, 2006, where the
news Democratic House leadership was announced. Incoming.
Incoming House Democratic Caucus Chairman, Rep. Rahm Emanuel
of Ill. is at center. (AP Photo/Dennis Cook) |
|
House majority whip
Clyburn: Winning position part of
dream
By BRUCE SMITH, Associated Press
Writer Friday, November 17, 2006
CHARLESTON -- After being elected House
majority whip on Thursday, Rep. Jim Clyburn recalled how, as a child
growing up in Sumter, he once revealed to a family friend he dreamed
of going into politics.
He was quickly told to keep such
aspirations to himself. As a black in segregated South Carolina in
the 1950s, he was told he had no chance to be elected.
But
Clyburn, 66, also remembered how his mother said to work hard and
hold onto his dream.
"My mother did not live to see this, but
I thought of her today," said the Democratic lawmaker, who now holds
the highest leadership position by a black in Congress. "I have been
able to fulfill my dreams and the dreams my mother had for
me."
Clyburn, a former school teacher and state Department of
Human Affairs commissioner, is also the first black congressman from
South Carolina since Reconstruction. He now has the No. 3 job in the
House.
The 6th District congressman will be concentrate
largely on lining up votes on legislation.
"What I want to do
with this position is demonstrate to South Carolina ... and to
people in this country that skin color ought not matter in trying to
carry out effective policies and programs for our country," Clyburn
told reporters in a conference call from Washington. "I want to do
everything I possibly can to destroy those myths."
Former
Rep. William Gray of Pennsylvania, a black Democrat, also served as
majority whip in the early 1990s.
Clyburn said it will not be
easy trying to line up votes among the Democrats, but he'll also be
seeking votes from across the aisle.
"I think it's important
that we fashion legislation in such a way that we receive bipartisan
support," he said.
Clyburn was chairman of the House
Democratic Caucus when he was elected whip.
Now that he is
the No. 3 leader, does he have higher goals in sight?
"I
don't know that I can see that far," he laughed. "I don't plan to
stay around here as long as Strom Thurmond. If anything else is
coming it better come quickly."
Republican Sen. Thurmond, who
died in 2003 at the age 100, was the oldest and longest-serving
senator ever when he retired in earlier that year.
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