The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Power broker

Former GOP U.S. senator ‘the consummate legislator’

- BY RUSSELL CONTRERAS AND MORGAN LEE

Former New Mexico Sen. Pete V. Domenici, a Republican who became a power broker in the Senate for his work on the federal budget and energy policy over more than 30 years, died Wednesday.

He was 85. Domenici died Wednesday morning at the University of New Mexico Hospital in Albuquerqu­e, Pete Domenici Jr., said. The senator had undergone abdominal surgery in recent weeks.

Domenici announced in October 2007 that he wouldn’t seek a seventh Senate term because he had been diagnosed with an incurable brain disorder, frontotemp­oral lobar degenerati­on.

The Albuquerqu­e-born son of Italian immigrants carried a consistent message of fiscal restraint from his first term in 1972 until leaving office in 2009 — regardless of which party was in power. He even refused once to buckle to President Ronald Reagan, who wanted him to delay the budget process.

Former Democratic U.S. Sen. Bennett Johnson of Louisiana described Domenici as “the consummate legislator.’’

“He always knows his subject very, very well,’’ Bennett said previously. “He’s strong in his views, but not rigid in his approach to negotiatio­ns. He’s willing to give in when necessary, but he keeps his eye on the ultimate objective.’’

He was the longest-serving senator in New Mexico’s history, and was remembered most for his unflagging support of the state’s national laboratori­es and military installati­ons. “I love the job too much,’’ Domenici said days before leaving the Senate. “I feel like I’d like to have the job tomorrow and the next day.’’

His decision started a scramble that saw all three of the state’s congressme­n give up their House seats to run for Senate. The one elected to succeed him was Democratic Rep. Tom Udall, the son of Stewart Udall, a former Arizona congressma­n and Interior secretary in the Kennedy and Johnson administra­tions.

During his time in the Senate, Domenici was a major player on national energy legislatio­n.

As chairman of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee beginning in 2003, it was his job to oversee part of the debate on a national energy policy, including decisions about oil and gas drilling, nuclear power and renewable energy.

Former U.S. Sen. Jeff Bingaman, a New Mexico Democrat, said Wednesday that he was proud to have served with Domenici at a time when there was more willingnes­s to put partisansh­ip aside.

“Pete served our state very well in the U.S. Senate for nearly four decades and did a great deal to benefit New Mexico and the nation,’’ Bingaman said. “During the 26 years that we served together in the Senate, we disagreed on issues but also found common ground and forged bipartisan solutions to many problems.’’

Late in his career, Domenici was linked to the ouster of U.S. Attorney David Iglesias, one of nine federal prosecutor­s fired in a series of politicall­y tinged dismissals in 2006. The Senate Ethics Committee found Domenici created an appearance of impropriet­y when he called Iglesias to inquire about the timing of corruption indictment­s.

However, no punishment was recommende­d. Domenici made headlines once again in 2013 when he acknowledg­ed that he had a son out of wedlock in the 1970s. The saga shocked New Mexicans who viewed Domenici as a man of honesty and integrity during his six terms and 36 years in the Senate.

While his wife Nancy was raising their eight children, Domenici had an affair and child with Michelle Laxalt, the daughter of one of his Senate colleagues. Laxalt raised the child on her own, became a prominent lobbyist, Republican activist and political commentato­r. Their son went on to build an impressive resume himself — Adam Laxalt, a former Navy JAG, is now the Nevada attorney general.

Domenici’s health became an issue nearly two decades ago. He suffered nerve damage in his right arm while playing touch football with his grandchild­ren in 1999. He also had arthritis in his lower back, and for a time had to use a low-speed scooter between his office and the Capitol.

“I wasn’t sick in the sense of being bedridden. I just hurt, and it had an impact,’’ he said. A new exercise regimen helped him get rid of the scooter. Better health enabled him to focus on one of his priorities _ energy legislatio­n and a plan to open the coastal plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to drilling that had failed twice previously.

He acknowledg­ed feeling “very dejected’’ after three months of negotiatio­ns and deal-making on a massive energy bill he sponsored failed to push it through Congress in 2003. His National Energy Policy Act would have boosted domestic energy production to cut the nation’s dependence on foreign resources. Supporters said it would help national security and create jobs; opponents said it would have devastated natural resources and affected the deficit.

Domenici co-wrote a 2004 book, “A Brighter Tomorrow: Fulfilling the Promise of Nuclear Energy,’’ on the benefits of a nuclear-powered future and how to get there. He long argued that the nation had an irrational fear that held back its ability to benefit from nuclear energy.

An avid duck hunter and outdoorsma­n, he took pride in his record on energy and ecology, although environmen­talists ranked him lower than he believed he deserved. Domenici gained his reputation as a federal budget expert while chairman of the Senate Budget Committee for 12 years and a member of the committee between 1975 and 2002.

He was dedicated to trying to rein in the federal budget. He told the AP in 2005 that after a quarter-century, the budget process was hard to let go of.

“I’ve wound down from ... every year having to spend huge amounts of time, energy and lots of power to get a budget resolution and to get it implemente­d,’’ he said. “At a number of points in my career, I didn’t think I could live without that because it was so much of my life.’’

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTO ?? In this Tuesday, July 29, 2008, file photo,Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee ranking Republican member Sen. Pete Domenici, R-N.M., center, speaks during a news conference on energy, on Capitol Hill in Washington, accompanie­d by Sen. Kay...
ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTO In this Tuesday, July 29, 2008, file photo,Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee ranking Republican member Sen. Pete Domenici, R-N.M., center, speaks during a news conference on energy, on Capitol Hill in Washington, accompanie­d by Sen. Kay...

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