January 15, 2009
By Bernie Becker
Just days before they move onto new jobs and challenges, Vice President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Secretary of State-designate Hillary Rodham Clinton took to the Senate floor to bid farewell to their colleagues.
And, perhaps not too surprisingly, both displayed well-known personality traits – Mr. Biden’s chattiness, Mrs. Clinton’s attention to detail – in addition to effusively praising their colleagues and the Senate.
In saying her goodbyes, Mrs. Clinton looked back on what her adopted state of New York had accomplished and the challenges it faced during her time as senator, almost a decade after she undertook a listening tour to introduce herself to Empire State residents and sell them on her candidacy.
In a more rollicking speech earlier in the morning, Mr. Biden showed off what Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell called his “not entirely undeserved reputation for loquaciousness” – peppering his speech with asides, calling out to his (for the moment) colleagues by their first name, and dropping the names of long deceased senators, like Hubert Humphrey and John Stennis.
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