The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Longest serving New Mexico senator leaves bipartisan legacy

- By Russell Contreras and Morgan Lee

ALBUQUERQU­E, N.M. » Pete V. Domenici, the son of Italian immigrants who rose to become a power broker in the U.S. Senate, died Wednesday in New Mexico. The Republican was known for reaching across the partisan divide and his work on the federal budget and energy policy over a career that spanned more than 30 years.

Domenici was surrounded by family when he died at an Albuquerqu­e hospital after suffering a setback following a recent surgery, his family said. He was 85.

The Albuquerqu­e-born Domenici 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.

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.”

New Mexico’s longestser­ving U.S. senator, Domenici was remembered most for his ability to reach across the aisle and for his unflagging support of the state’s military installati­ons and national laboratori­es.

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

“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 the state’s three congressme­n give up their seats to run for the Senate. His successor was Democratic Rep. Tom Udall, the son of Stewart Udall, a former Arizona congressma­n and Interior secretary in the Kennedy and Johnson administra­tions.

“While we sat on different sides of the political aisle, I admired Pete’s dedication to the well-being of all of New Mexico,” Sen. Udall said in a statement.

As chairman of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, Domenici oversaw 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.

Following a moment of

silence Wednesday at the State Capitol in Santa Fe, Republican­s and Democrats — from Gov. Susana Martinez to legislativ­e leaders — all said that Domenici was someone who put politics aside for the benefit of the people.

“He really forever changed the landscape of New Mexico economical­ly, politicall­y, on so many levels,” said GOP Rep. Sarah Maestas Barnes of Albuquerqu­e. “In today’s somewhat hyperparti­san world, we can really learn a lesson.”

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 again in 2013 when he acknowledg­ed that he had a son out of wedlock in the 1970s. The saga shocked New Mexicans who viewed him as a man of honesty and integrity during his six terms and 36 years in the Senate. That son went on to build an impressive resume himself — Adam Laxalt is now the Nevada attorney general.

In 2004, Domenici cowrote a book, “A Brighter Tomorrow: Fulfilling the Promise of Nuclear Energy,” on the benefits of a nuclearpow­ered 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.

He also was dedicated to reining in the federal budget.

His knowledge on the subject made him popular with the national press after Democrat Bill Clinton was elected partly on a platform of trimming the bulging deficit.

His independen­ce on budget matters also cost him conservati­ve support. He warned as early as 1983 that the Republican economic recovery would be in jeopardy without effective action against huge budget deficits.

When Reagan summoned him to put off for one more day a budget process that had been delayed for two months, Domenici refused. Saying no to the president, he recalled afterward, was the toughest thing he’d ever done.

Domenici also campaigned for free trade with Mexico and scoffed at misgivings about its impact on U.S. employment.

“Can you imagine an economic superpower afraid to go into free trade with our own neighbor?” he said.

In one of his last speeches as a senator, Domenici acknowledg­ed during a debate over a failed immigratio­n bill that his mother had entered the country illegally as a child.

She eventually became a U.S. citizen.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? 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 Bailey Hutchison, R-Texas., right, and Sen....
SUSAN WALSH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE 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 Bailey Hutchison, R-Texas., right, and Sen....

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