Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

N.J.’s new senator immersed in work

- KATIE ZEZIMA

WASHINGTON — When the U.S. Senate passed a bill to ban job discrimina­tion against gay and transgende­r people, its newest member’s first impulse was to yell with joy. Then he remembered where he was.

Instead, Cory Booker reached into his pocket for his phone.

“I got it all out via Twitter,” said Booker, who has 1.4 million followers on the social media platform.

Booker, the 44-year-old Democrat and former mayor of Newark, N.J., went to Congress as a rare freshman senator with celebrity status. He has been dubbed a rock star mayor by Oprah Winfrey, called a hero for pulling a neighbor out of her burning home in 2012 and hobnobbed with Matt Damon.

During his first week in Congress, Booker tried to balance immersion in his new job with already standing out from his 99 colleagues on the staid Senate floor.

“The model I’ve encouraged him to follow is Al Franken or Hillary Clinton,” said Delaware Sen. Chris Coons, a Democrat and a friend of Booker’s. “People who came to the Senate with big national profiles but demonstrat­ed a willingnes­s to do the work, dig in, go visit every corner of their state and really focus on home-state interests.”

Coons entered the Senate after a special election in 2010. He is helping Booker, who also won a special election, navigate the Capitol and knows what it’s like to start the job with no orientatio­n and a skeleton staff.

After a swearing-in Oct. 31 filled with media and supporters, Booker has mostly stayed out of the spotlight. He’s studying the minutiae of Senate rules and has attended multitudes of meetings. He has worked out at the Senate gym to meet colleagues and attended a bipartisan prayer breakfast.

In his first committee hearing Wednesday, he joked that “I still have that new senator smell” after telling the leader of the Federal Emergency Management Agency that higher flood insurance rates would devastate parts of New Jersey.

He asked Vice President Joe Biden if he could crash on his couch. He went to the White House twice. He joined a group of Democratic senators Wednesday and, hours after being sworn in, had a private visit with President Barack Obama.

“There was a guy with a football, and I grabbed it, and the president and I had a little catch,” said Booker, who played football at Stanford.

In many ways, Booker is just another guy getting used to a new job — learning the rules and his colleagues, just as they’ve all had to do at some point.

He took his first vote minutes after being sworn in and thought votes were cast by pushing a button or pulling a lever. Instead, he learned, “you raise your hand.” On one vote, Booker missed his name while chatting with colleagues and flagged down the Senate clerk, voting yes with a thumbs-up.

He took along a congressio­nal directory Thursday morning and watched each speaker intently, occasional­ly flipping through to match a senator with a photo. He is also learning how to navigate the labyrinth that is the Capitol and its office buildings.

“Is this the way home?” he asked his chief of staff as the two traversed the Senate basement.

He said he plans to advocate for New Jersey residents, hoping to ensure they receive unclaimed earned-income credits and helping victims of superstorm Sandy. He met with an ethics officer to see how he can leverage private-public partnershi­ps for New Jersey, as he did in Newark — most famously with a $100 million donation from Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg to the city schools.

And though he’s been minding his manners, he’s still the same Cory Booker. A stalwart supporter of gay rights, he finally let out that yell upon walking into his office after the job-discrimina­tion vote.

“Call everybody in New Jersey,” Booker said to his staff, “and tell them we’re one step closer to an equal nation.”

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