WASHINGTON — Describing herself as “thankful and blessed,“ Sen. Olympia Snowe reflected on four decades in elective office and shared her hope that the U.S. Senate will rediscover “the art of legislating” during a farewell address Thursday afternoon from the floor of the chamber where she served for the past 18 years.
Snowe, a Republican, departs after serving in Congress longer than all but two women in U.S. history. She first won the right to represent Maine’s 2nd Congressional District in 1978. She served in the House until 1994, then won election to the Senate, defeating 1st District U.S. Rep. Tom Andrews, a Democrat, for the right to succeed Democrat Sen. George J. Mitchell, who chose not to seek re-election.
Snowe easily won re-election in 2000 and 2006. She became Maine’s senior senator in 1997 and, with fellow Republican Susan Collins, extended Maine’s reputation for moderation and independence in an increasingly partisan Congress.
In February of this year, Snowe sent tremors across Maine’s political landscape by announcing that she would not to seek a fourth term. She cited a toxic, unproductive environment in Congress as the chief reason for her decision not to seek re-election.
During Thursday’s approximately 30-minute speech, Snowe expressed gratitude to staff, colleagues and family for the support they have shown her throughout her political career. Noting that she and her husband, former U.S. representative and Maine Gov. John McKernan, can claim 56 years of combined service in public office, she joked that the couple defined free time as “listening to each other’s speeches.”
“We’ve had a passion for public service … and we’ve never regretted a single moment,” she said.
But it was the people of Maine who merited Snowe’s greatest praise and gratitude.
“I first and foremost want to thank the people of Maine for allowing me to be their voice, their vote, and their champion for 16 years in the U.S. House of Representatives, and for three terms in the U.S. Senate,” she said. “One of the definitions of the word ‘trust’ is ‘a charge or duty imposed in faith or confidence.’ And to have had the trust of Maine people, who have placed their faith and confidence in me, is an honor of indescribable magnitude. Indeed, serving my magnificent state over the past 34 years in the halls of Congress has been the greatest privilege of my life.”
Citing inspiration from Margaret Chase Smith, who also represented Maine in the U.S. House and Senate, Snowe listed a series of legislative accomplishments that she said were achieved by consensus and in an evenhanded manner consistent with Maine values. She reflected on her early membership in a bipartisan caucus on women’s issues.
“We couldn’t draw political lines in the sand,” she said of working with Democrats such as former Rep. Patricia Schroeder, D-Colo., and Sen. Barbara Mikulski, D-Md., who like Snowe advanced from the U.S House to the Senate. “When we spoke on these issues, we spoke as women, not Democrats and Republicans.”
Snowe focused much of her speech on the need for greater coalition building and bipartisanship within the Senate.
“Arriving at compromise wasn’t always easy by any means,” she said. “Because it is only when we minimize the political barriers that we can maximize the Senate — allowing it to become an unparalleled incubator for results that truly matter to the American people.”
She also reiterated her reasons for choosing not to seek re-election.
“Throughout my tenure, I’ve borne witness to government’s incredible potential as an instrument for common good,” she said. “I have also experienced its capacity for serial dysfunction. Indeed, as I stated in announcing I would not seek a fourth term in the U.S. Senate, it is regrettable that excessive political polarization in Washington today is preventing us from tackling our problems at a time of monumental consequence for our nation.”
Voicing her fear that “we are losing the art of legislating,” Snowe urged her colleagues to recommit to following “the Founding Fathers’ blueprint, in order to return the institution to its highest calling of governing through consensus. For it is only then that the U.S. Senate can ascend to fulfill the demands of our times, the promise of our nation and the rightful expectations of the American people.”
Doing so is particularly urgent as the lame-duck Congress in which she serves seeks a way to avoid the so-called “fiscal cliff” of tax increases and automatic federal program cuts that will take effect Jan. 1 and which economists fear will plunge the country back into recession.
“For the sake of the country, we must demonstrate to the American people that we are capable of making the big decisions” to avoid the fiscal cliff before the end of this year,” she said.
Immediately after Snowe’s speech, two Democrats from across the aisle offered praise from the Senate floor. Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-La., described Snowe as “a clarion call for common sense and common ground in a place that’s getting harder to find those things every day” and “a unique talent who has served this country.” Mikulski added that Snowe’s “duty-driven approach” and penchant for “getting the job done in a way that’s inclusive” have benefited the entire country.
Maine Gov. Paul LePage praised Snowe as “a wonderful public servant for the people of Maine and the nation” in a release issued after her speech.
In September, Snowe announced she intends to write a book next year. She also plans to work for greater civility in politics, which she reaffirmed Thursday.
“I’m not leaving the Senate because I’ve ceased believing in its potential, or I no longer love the institution — but precisely because I do,” she said. “I’m simply taking my commitment to the Senate in a different direction. I intend to work from the outside, to help build support for those in this institution who will be working to re-establish the Senate’s roots as a place of refuge from the passions of politics, as a forum where the political fires are tempered, not stoked — as our Founding Fathers intended.”
In addition to her 34 years in Congress, Snowe served in the Maine House of Representatives from 1973 until 1978.
Independent former Gov. Angus King won a five-person race in November to succeed Snowe. He will be sworn in Jan. 3, 2013.



Buh Bye
Thank the Good Lord.
I agree!
Today Olympia Snowe will give her farewell speech to the US Senate. As she does it is important to remember the reason she is giving this speech. The Maine Republican Party has no one to blame for the loss of a Senate seat that would still be firmly in Republican hands except themselves. Senator Snowe never suffered a defeat at the polls. Maine people liked and respected The Senator. It was her own party which has been taken over by the radical right tea party that ended her Senate career. The Tea Party ideology allows for no compromise. Senator Snowe just wasn’t ideologically pure enough for the Tea Party who has taken control of the Maine Republican Party. She didn’t measure up to their ultra conservative never compromise political principles. They called her a RINO and vowed to defeat her in this years primary. They won. And with their victory of unseating this RINO they can now call Angus King Senator. This tea party insanity has to end if the Maine Republican Party ever hopes to win another election in our state.
It won’t end because they’re right (far right); it’s the world that’s wrong. They’ll continue to find a few noisy acolytes among angry people in the corners of darkest Maine. But that’s ok because venting is good; better than apoplexy.
republicans will regain control of Maine! This is just the start of R’s repairing the thirty or more years of decline .
It was yours to lose and you lost it. It should be a lesson learned. it won’t be.
I, for one, hope they don’t.
Agree 100%.. This is a dark day in Maine and given what has gone down, who could blame Senator Snowe for being frustrated..
As opposed to the ultra liberal never compromise political principles?
Extremists need to go. Period.
The ultra liberals weren’t foolish enough to basically give away a guaranteed Senate seat to the opposition were they?
That takes the non-reality, faith based ultra extremists of “no compromise” right wing.
So it goes.
Well they did give away the Governorship..
the dems got in on the back of the gay vote.And with that it was very very close in all races.Two years and Maine will be back to the sanity of republican rule.
Are you really trying to say that Snowe wouldn’t have been re-elected in a cake walk? But I am sure the only reason the Dems won anything was because of the gay vote. Especially since gays make up less then 5% of the population. You really need to take a trip to Florida timly. They have this place there called Disney World which has a much better fantasyland then the one you are living in.
the maine congress changed because of the gay marriage vote.With college students blindly voting dem.
Wow I wasn’t aware Maine had a congress. I learn something new every day.
keep telling yourself that …. King won because R”s chased Snowe out of her seat .
Agreed, pretty. Had Snowe been running, I’d have voted for her.
That’s like having clap and blaming it on the toilet seat!
None of my friends are college students; all whom I’ve discussed it with voted for the right of gays to marry. Gay marriage was accepted because the constitutions include all people, not just those that some of us wish it did.
There is no doubt in my mind that she would have won another election, 4m34mainer….the focus is on the reason she didn’t run.
A 20 point margin in the senate race…is that what you mean by close? Two years and the Blaine House is gone. That ship’s sailed already. The best case scenario is winning back the Senate, but I wouldn’t put any money on it.
20 point margin in the maine congress do explain?
I should have clarified – the US senate race. Though given the article was about Snowe…well never mind.
In any case, as far as Maine legislature is concerned – 5 seats lost in the senate – 19 seats lost in the house. The tea party fad of 2010 ended in November, and the fad isn’t making a comeback – not in Maine.
count.
The Demos got in because the people of this state were fed up with what the Tea Baggers did while they controlled things. Do all the spinning you want. Maine was unimpressed with LePage and his entourage..
The entire country, plus Australia and England, are unimpressed by LePage. Thankfully, the ppl I talk with realize that it’s not Maine is being held up to ridicule, but LePage himself. The question I’m often asked by non-Mainers is, “How did that fidiot get into office?”
Lots of Republicans are gay or woman.
But the GOP platform says what about the rights of those gay people and woman ?
“And with that it was very very close in all races.” . No it wasn’t .
Do you realize that the majority of Maine voters are INDEPENDANT? Didn’t think so.
More like insanity?
Congratulations to Senator Snowe for a long career of public service. I’m sure she has been motivated by the best of intentions.
She came to politics reluctantly, filling the seat held by her husband after his accidental death. I saw her first hand while she served in his place. She was modest in a place full of oversized egos and was eager to learn. In the state senate it was a good thing that her name came late in the alphabet because it was often clear that during roll calls she didn’t decide how to vote until she saw how other Republicans voted ahead of her. Perhaps that’s understandable given the cercumstances.
A few things need to be poited out though.
She supported term limits and once reelected on that platform stayed in Washington for fifteen more years.
She suppoerts compromise but has pretended to want more discussion on bills when through filibusters has voted hundreds of times against allowing bills to even come up for a mojority vote.
She shakes her head in disaproval over big business misbehavior leading to the recession while as a member of the finance committee helping to block bank regulations that would have prevented the recession.
She has loudly protested against compromises arrived at “behind closed doors” while being involved in many discussions herself as a member of the ‘gang of this’ and the ‘gang of that’ behind closed doors.
She won with I and D votes ( and so did Collins) i and she understood that
Olympia Snowe has only Olympia Snowe to blame for giving this speech because the decision was hers. People who continue to blame the Tea Party don’t seem to be the least bit interested in knowing that it is comprised of people like me, who are tired of the assualt on the U.S Constitution, who don’t believe individual liberty and freedom should be subjugated by a government gone awry at the hands of corrupt politicians who seem to think that all money is their money, that it doesn’t belong to the people who actually earned it. The Tea Party isn’t about Democrat vs. Republican and it CERTAINLY is not worthy of the hateful rhetoric spewed at it by people like Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid, neither of whom could articulate the purpose of the original Tea Party. I blame Barack Obama for the poisonous tone which exists in Washington, D.C., not because he is black, white, or whatever color but because he has declared war on a segment of the population that disagrees with his policies. He has debased the office by speaking of “revenge” to be carried out by people who are so intellectually lazy that they don’t see him for the radical he is, despite the evidence to be found in his own words. He won’t invite the Tea Party to sit down with him to engage in civil discourse, choosing instead to call its members insulting names while yucking it up with Bill Mahr and Whoopi Goldberg. No, don’t blame the Tea Party- in fact, don’t assign blame for a political decision made by a politician.
What assault. The Tea Party is delusional. They would defeat the US Constitution if put to a vote. The platitude that the Constitution created a “limited” government is true and meaningless. The Constitution was established to give the Federal Government control of National defense against foreign and domestic enemies and the national economy. Specifically, the power to suppress tax rebellions and slave insurrections and control of the money supply and the framework of markets. Powers stripped from the States which the founders viewed as hopelessly dysfunctional because of corruption and undue influence of “interests and parties” – poor people, debtors. Being angry, racist old White men is not a political position nor a constructive attitude to face America’s future.
Blame Lepage and the teapartiers, if I were her I would disassociate myself too.
The 50 richest members of Congress and U.S. Sen. Olympia Snowe ranked 31st at $9.88 million
and her husbands federal school grant progams netted him 245 millon in 3 years.. How do you think you get a gig like that..
Bye Bye you 1%er You have lived at the public trough to long. Hope you stay in DC where you belong.
Good thinking, it’s always beneficial for a tiny state like Maine to lose a powerful and highly respected Senator with years of service. How many favors could she have collected on in the years ahead that would have benefited our state?
Respect, LOL!!
VA is her home and has been, not Maine. She is not comming back unless its as a tourist.. She should never have been able to run for office in Maine. Mike neither
goodbye snow hello wind.
Senator Snowe has been an excellent Senator representing Maine. She has be a champion of small business, women, the elderly and a voice of reason. We will miss her and her efforts on behalf of Maine and the nation.
Thanks for your service, Senator Snowe. The unborn that were murdered in the womb are eternally grateful for your many years of unfailing support in seeing them denied life. And thanks for that committee vote that’s brought us ObamaCare, and that vote that saw Clinton escape conviction and accountability, and the countless others you cast in the name of your so-called “moderate” stance that sees you ending your time in Washington as the Democrats’ not-so-secret weapon all these many years. RINO indeed. Farewell— may the Georgetown elites forever fete you and celebrate your loyalty.
34 years of service must be some indication to you that you are out of touch with what your neighbors thought of the work she did.
“The unborn that were murdered in the womb are eternally grateful for your many years of unfailing support in seeing them denied life”
I know right? Much more fun to be a tea troll and deny them food, health care and a decent place to live.
In womb: You have to save the babies!
Out of womb: Those filthy parasites!
George Carlin said that Republicans don’t give a damn about people from the time they are born until the time they are old enough to go to war.
Ah, save the babies for future cannon fodder. That makes sense.
Really cute.
After being a big part of the problem.
stateswoman. well said!!
She knows nothing about our Founding Fathers. Her career is evidence of that!
Oh for crying out loud go do some serious research on the “founding fathers” and stop prancing them around the stage as moral upstanding men.
You mean the slave owners?
Sen Snow will be very much missed. She was the voice of reason in the chaos. So sad that the chaos drowned out the reason.
With Senator Snowe’s departure, I’m afraid we are seeing the last of classy and reasonable politicians in Washington.
She didn’t run because she didn’t want to submit her crooked husband to the scrutiny that would have come with running. He’s being investigated by the fed’s for shenanigans having to do with the make believe colleges he’s CEO for.
Sadly too many of these politiicans have no idea what the Founding Fathers wanted or even have a clue what our Constitution is. They either ignore it or circumvent it and use their own interpretation of it. Without massive govt, these thieves wouldn’t know how to work for a living.
Thank you Olympia, thank you for finally going away. Member of the 1%, able to sound moderate while supporting only corporations. I am grateful to her for leaving.