November 7, 2008
Byrd steps down as Appropriations Committee chairman
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- U.S. Sen. Robert C. Byrd announced today that he will step down as chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee as of Jan. 6.

First elected to the Senate in 1958, Byrd is the longest-serving senator in American history. He chaired the powerful Appropriations Committee, which doles out projects across the country, for 10 years.

In a news release, Byrd said he decided to step down "only after much personal soul searching, and after being sure of the substantial Democratic pickup of seats in the Senate.

"I am now confident that stepping aside as chairman will not adversely impact my home state of West Virginia," he said.

Over the years, Byrd played a critical role in sending money back to the Mountain State -- more than $1 billion since 1995. That money funded university medical centers, paved highways, expanded airports and built dams to control floods. Dozens of projects around the state bear his name because of the money he helped get to build them.

Last week, the Washington Web site Politico.com reported that Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid was looking to move Byrd, 90, out of the Appropriations Committee chairmanship.

Byrd reacted angrily, as he had with similar reports previously. "I am disappointed that, according to press accounts, the Majority Leader is talking to others about the chairmanship of the Senate Appropriations Committee,'' he said in a statement released by his office. "This is the sort of Washington back-room gossip which ill serves the Democratic Party in a year when Democratic unity should be paramount.''

On Friday, Byrd said he hopes to continue serving on the Appropriations Committee and chairing its Homeland Security Subcommittee.

"I have been blessed to have had the honor to represent the people of West Virginia in the United States Senate for 50 years. I have been honored to lead the Senate as its majority leader for 12 years," he said.

"To be serving in the Senate at such a momentous time in our history fills me with enormous pride," Byrd said. "I endorsed President-elect Obama because I believed that we had taken the wrong course both at home and abroad. I am delighted with his victory."

Sen. Daniel Inouye, D-Hawaii, will replace Byrd as Appropriations Committee chairman.

Inouye, Byrd said, "has stood in line for many years and now his time has come. He is my friend. He is a genuine American hero. He will be a skillful and fair chairman of the Appropriations Committee because he is a man of outstanding character and great wisdom.

"To everything there is a season and a time for every purpose under heaven," Byrd said, quoting Ecclesiastes. "I thank the people of West Virginia for continuing to put their faith in me. I thank God for the long life He has granted me and for the opportunity He has given me to assist this great country through long service in this magnificent institution, the United States Senate."

Read more in Saturday's Gazette-Mail.

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Posted By: Earned_My_Degree (8:57pm 11-10-2008)
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Senator Byrd didn't get fired, what's the matter with some of the folks here. He's 91 years old and not quite as quick on his feet as he used to be, running a committee is hard work and takes long hours. If he can shepherd his budget requests and leave the committee work to someone else, why not do it. One thing's for certain, he's done for more for this State than your hero, McCain would have done as President.

Posted By: True WV (8:10am 11-10-2008)
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Byrd did not step down. Read his comments in last weeks articles. He was booted out and it was not because of his age. Check the age of Mr. Inouye. This is the beginning of the 'change' some of you voted for.

Posted By: Fred Brown (5:43am 11-10-2008)
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Wow, two of my comments already gone on this subject.

Anyway Byrd got fired. But lets support the dems and the libs since they will save the nation now. LOLOL

Posted By: No Way Joe (1:35pm 11-09-2008)
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Thank God - can we start renaming everything with Byrd's name on it now? It is embarassing to travel the State and see his name on everything. Robert Byrd hasn't been in this for WV - it is all about BYRD.

Don't you find it revealing that he chooses to NOT be buried in West Virginia?

Thankfully the Byrd regime is finally coming to a close. But God forbid it beings a Manchin or Tomblin or Caperton regime...

Manchin will become Senator, Shelley will become Governor... and the Gazette will soon have a whole new leadership at the top. Change we can all believe in!

REMEMBER - the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and over again, each time expecting a different result. In another 20 years or so, the only viable choice we'll have after years of ocrruption and cultural damage will be to merge WV back into a "New Virginia" and put this whole, sorry history behind us for good.

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