Baltimore Sun Sunday

Van Hollen cuts his own path in race for Mikulski’s seat

- By John Fritze

Chris Van Hollen was in his late 20s when he found himself on the border between Iraq and Turkey, standing on a desolate dirt road in the mountains within firing range of soldiers loyal to Saddam Hussein. An aide to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee at the time, Van Hollen was documentin­g Iraq’s use of chemical weapons during its war with Iran. He was, in other words, collecting evidence against the same military he suddenly had come face to face with in the country’s rugged highlands.

“These were people who had just been a part of operations to commit genocide, which we were documentin­g,” Peter Galbraith, the former ambassador to Croatia who led the 1988 effort, said of the soldiers.

Through an interprete­r, Van Hollen advised the soldiers to stay on their side of the road — the Iraq side. The men exchanged a few words, Galbraith said, and the soldiers went on their way.

In one form or another, Van Hollen has been engaged in

high-level negotiatio­ns ever since.

The 57-year-old Montgomery County man is running for Maryland’s open Senate seat on the argument that he is best suited to use those skills to carry on the legacy of retiring Sen. Barbara A. Mikulski.

That day on the border, Galbraith said, “Chris was the picture of calm. Anything else could have turned out badly.”

Now in his seventh term in the House of Representa­tives, and the top Democrat on the House Budget Committee, Van Hollen has won praise from lawmakers in both parties for his work ethic and ability to maneuver with dignity in a polarized Washington.

That’s part of the reason why he won an early endorsemen­t from Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid before the Democratic primary fully got underway. In congressio­nal meetings, Reid said, he had observed that Van Hollen was “not a big talker” — but when called on to speak, he knew his material.

“Why should I wait around?” to make an endorsemen­t, the Nevada Democrat said. “He’s been one of the most powerful House members, and he’s been a person who is so good on the issues.” Mikulski agreed. “He wants to be an advocate for Maryland,” she said. “One of the things I like about Chris is he goes to work on the big picture, but he also has a very sound reputation for constituen­t services.”

Van Hollen, a married father of three who lives in Kensington, emerged from a bruising primary against Rep. Donna F. Edwards of Prince George’s County to win the Democratic nomination in April.

Edwards cast Van Hollen as an establishm­ent figure out of touch with voters. Despite national interest in the race, the outcome wasn’t close: Van Hollen won by more than 14 points.

In a state where Democrats enjoy a 2-1 advantage in voter registrati­on over Republican­s, he has run a quieter campaign for the general election. Though he mentions his Republican opponent, Del. Kathy Szeliga, he is far more likely to focus his rhetoric on GOP presidenti­al nominee Donald Trump.

Van Hollen was born in Karachi, Pakistan. His father, a Baltimore native, served as a foreign service officer and later an ambassador to Sri Lanka in the 1970s. His mother was an intelligen­ce analyst who worked for the State Department and the Central Intelligen­ce Agency.

The congressma­n’s great-grandfathe­r, George Henry Van Hollen, owned Atlantic Packing Co., a seafood wholesale firm in Baltimore.

A graduate of Swarthmore College with degrees in public policy from Harvard University and law from Georgetown University, Van Hollen served as an aide to Republican Sen. Charles McC. Mathias and to Democratic Gov. William Donald Schaefer.

He won election to the House of Delegates in 1990 and, four years later, defeated state Sen. Patricia R. Sher, a mentor and onetime ally, for a seat in the upper chamber.

Van Hollen was elected to Congress in 2002 and became an ally of Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi of California. Eight years later, he was named the top Democrat on the House Budget Committee, a position that thrust him into the middle of partisan debates over government spending and budget deficits.

He was chosen for several high-profile efforts in which lawmakers from both parties tried — without much success — to find agreements to address seemingly intractabl­e fiscal issues.

“He’s a straight shooter,” said Rep. Fred Upton, a Michigan Republican who served with Van Hollen on the 2011 supercommi­ttee. “He’s an honest broker to deal with.”

Throughout a quarter-century in public office, Van Hollen has cultivated an image of caution while taking big risks. Serving on the supercommi­ttee, for instance, meant having to carefully explain his position on entitlemen­ts while negotiatio­ns were underway. Edwards used some of his comments from that time to question the strength of his support for Social Security, an attack that Van Hollen was forced to address throughout the primary campaign.

Running for Senate is also a risk. Not only does it mean giving up a safe congressio­nal seat but also forgoing an opportunit­y to rise in House leadership ranks.

Asked about the risk involved with joining the supercommi­ttee, Van Hollen said he was not focused on it at the time.

“I would have done it no matter what,” he said. “I don’t see why people get involved in public life if they don’t want to get stuff done, if they’re afraid of every political shadow.”

Van Hollen is far more comfortabl­e talking about the solvency of Social Security than his personal life. When Szeliga launches into discussion­s at candidate forums about humble early jobs as a maid and dishwasher, Van Hollen doesn’t respond by noting the summers he spent in Alaska filleting salmon and driving a forklift.

Van Hollen met his wife, Katherine, at Harvard.

A home in the Vermont woods has served as a family retreat since Van Hollen was young. The place had no electricit­y when he was growing up. And while it has been modernized, Van Hollen says with a certain pride that there is still no cell service.

Cecilia Van Hollen, an anthropolo­gist at Syracuse University, said her older brother still has the sense of adventure that led him to Turkey nearly 30 years ago. She remembers Van Hollen announcing to the family, at age 12, that he was planning to spend a few days “living off the land.”

“He has always, since he was little, made a point of just going off trail,” she said.

There has been less time lately for walks in the woods.

When former staff members tell stories about Van Hollen, they are more likely to involve briefing binders than trail mix. During the height of the 2011 fiscal fights, the congressma­n asked for a printout of the annual Medicare trustees report, hundreds of pages dense with informatio­n.

Aides assumed it would sit on his desk, at least for a while.

They were surprised when it came back days later with questions in the margins.

“Frankly, the government would work better with more people like Chris,” said CR Wooters, a former Van Hollen aide who served as his chief of staff at the time. “Does he get to a place in the Senate where he’s a guy who does deals? That wouldn’t surprise me at all.”

“Frankly, the government would work better with more people like Chris.” CR Wooters, former Chris Van Hollen aide

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