All About Change - Congressman Jim Langevin: "Disability Has The Power To Unite Us"
Episode Date: February 15, 2021In 1980, a tragic gun accident forever changed Jim Langevin's life, leaving him paralyzed from the neck down. Forty years later, as the first quadriplegic to serve in the U.S. House of Representatives..., Jim uses the uniting power of disability to bridge over the deep divides between Democrats & Republicans in Congress. Enjoying the podcast? Please rate and leave us a review on Apple Podcasts - We appreciate your support.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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I believe that where there's a will, there's a way that even if you maybe philosophical differences about, you know, the size of government or whether or not government should be active or passive.
There's always a way to find common ground on something.
We just have to have that primary focus of wanting to compromise, wanting to find that common ground and we can do it. All Inclusive, a podcast on inclusion, innovation, and social justice with Jay Ruderman.
Hi, I'm Jay Ruderman, and this is All Inclusive, a podcast focused on inclusion, innovation, and social justice.
innovation, and social justice. Today on the podcast, I have the privilege and honor to speak with Congressman Jim Langevin, who's been serving as the United States representative for Rhode
Island's 2nd Congressional District for 20 years, since 2001. Jim has been very active in many
different areas, for example, cybersecurity readiness and matters relating to our armed services.
But in this conversation, we'll be focusing on his work on the laws and reforms regarding people with disabilities.
This is a topic dear to Jim's heart, as he is also the first quadriplegic to serve in the U.S. House of Representatives.
Hi, Jim. Happy to have you here here and welcome to my podcast. So I would like to talk to you a little bit about what happened at the beginning of 2021.
But before I get to that, I want to bring you back to a particularly sensitive time in your life, back to 1980 and a day that changed your life forever.
Can you tell me a little bit about what happened to you at that time?
Sure.
Well, early on in my life, my early teenage years,
I got involved in a police cadet program in my local community,
Warwick, Rhode Island, and really fell in love with law enforcement.
From January to June, we would take classes about different aspects of police work.
And then in June, we'd take a test in the top ten high scores,
got a summer job for the summer.
And I'd been involved with the program for about four years.
Again, I thought my career path in life would be becoming a police officer.
And I'd hope perhaps maybe someday to go on to become an FBI agent.
But as life often happens, there's other plans for you.
And that certainly was the case in my circumstance.
I was getting ready to go on my shift one afternoon.
It was a Friday afternoon in August 1980.
And walked into the police locker room.
I was getting ready to go on my shift.
And my fellow cadet and I were talking to two police officers.
One of them had just purchased a new weapon.
The other officer asked to look at it.
And not realizing it was loaded, the officer pulled the trigger.
And there was a bullet already in the pipe of the gun.
And the gun went off, blown off, and ricocheted off a locker,
went through my neck, and unfortunately it severed my spinal cord.
And I've been paralyzed ever since.
I can't even imagine what you went through on a personal level.
I can't even imagine what you went through on a personal level.
Can you tell us how you went from that incident, which obviously changed your life, to your involvement in politics?
Well, I was very fortunate to have an incredible community that rallied behind my family and I at a time when I, well, we needed it the most.
And it made a profound difference.
No doubt I recovered because of my family, my faith, and my community.
And those three things coming together provided an incredible support system that gave me the confidence and the really desire to want to recover and do something positive
with my life.
I saw how a community could make a difference in someone's life when you had a group of
people coming together with a single-minded determination to make a difference in someone's
life and how it could affect change.
As I said, I wanted to give back if I ever could.
Someone had suggested that I might think about getting involved in public service
in government or politics at some point.
And someone suggested I run, and I thought about it, and I did.
In the course of doing that, I found that not only did I feel like I was giving back,
but I also found something that I really enjoyed and started
developing a new passion for. I served as both delegate and secretary of the Constitutional
Convention. Then a couple of years later, the opportunity came about for me to run for state
representative for a state rep that was retiring in my neighborhood. I ran and was elected,
and I served in the General Assembly as a state rep for six years,
and then was on the ballot statewide to run for Secretary of State and was elected there
and served there as Secretary of State for the next six years before running for Congress.
So, Jim, let's talk about politics, because you've been involved in politics for a long time,
and you've been in Congress for a long time.
Tell us how Congress has changed,
particularly the interaction between the parties and how it was when you first got into Congress
and how it is in today's Congress. Yeah, so Congress certainly has changed a lot. It's
become more partisan, unfortunately. I thought it could be pretty
contentious when I first arrived. And that was the year that, of course, Al Gore was defeated
for president by George W. Bush. And that was certainly a big disappointment because after the
eight years of President Clinton and seeing a balanced
budget and budget surplus as far as the eye could see, saw great prospects for things
that could be done for the country with many of those policies continuing.
Unfortunately that didn't happen.
It was George Bush that was elected president, but he was president.
I went to the inauguration.
I was honored to be there and I said, well, it's a new day and we're going to make the most of it.
And I pride myself on solving problems, wanting to solve problems anyway,
and finding common sense solutions to issues that are affecting families or my community.
The process was more partisan than I had expected. To be honest with you now, looking back 20 years ago, those are the good old days
comparison to how partisan it's become now, unfortunately.
I know you're a very well-respected member of Congress and especially liked by members of your party.
Do you have interactions with Republicans on a day-to-day basis on Capitol Hill?
I do, and I pride myself on being one of the most bipartisan members of Congress,
at least I would like to think I am.
Although I have differences with many of my Republican colleagues,
on every major issue that I'm working on,
I can point to a Republican that I'm working with.
Things like cybersecurity, which I spend a lot of time on that issue, on
career and technical education, and on things like disabilities issues.
I've got someone like Don Young or Kathy McMorris-Rogers that I work with on issues,
or Susan Collins across the aisle on the Senate side.
She and I recently worked on a lifespan and respite care bill together.
So a lot of the bipartisanship doesn't get covered in the press. Unfortunately, I guess it's those really old saying, if it doesn't bleed, it doesn't lead. It's not controversial.
We have members of Congress working together. It seems unfortunate that doesn't get
adequate coverage, but it does happen. And I'm not the only one, right? There are other
members of Congress that we've worked together. and even the CARES Act funding and other
bills that many of them were bipartisan. So I do have, I want to get into some issues
of disability. But before I do that, just to, because I'm personally very interested in politics
and follow it very closely.
Obviously, you're a member of the Democratic Party, which now controls both houses of Congress and the presidency.
How do you view, as someone who's on the inside, what is happening in the Republican Party? You mentioned Leader McCarthy,
who is today meeting with former President Trump.
It seems like there's a tension within that party
about which direction it's going to go in.
What are your insights into that?
Yeah, no doubt there is a tension in the Republican Party
and almost the divisions on either side.
You have the traditional Republicans, the Ronald Reagan Republicans,
that believe in smaller government, lower taxes.
And then you've got the Trump Republicans that, in many ways,
just want to, you know, they don't respect the norms of politics and process.
And in many ways, they've tried to break those old norms and would rather
break the system rather than fix the system or work within it. And it's caused a real damage to
the core foundations of our democracy. It really came to a head on January 6th when
there was this angry mob that stormed at the Capitol and tried to overthrow the government.
So I want to talk a little bit about that on January 6th during the insurrection.
Were you inside the Capitol building?
And what was it like for you while it was unfolding?
I was not in the Capitol, thankfully.
I was actually in my office watching the proceedings on television from my office.
And there were only 44 members of the House and the Senate allowed on the floor at any one time.
And that was because of coronavirus.
So we were going to rotate us in throughout the day.
And I hadn't gotten the go-ahead to head over yet.
Around 2 o'clock or so, the house went into recess a couple of times it
was a little odd I didn't realize they did it was expecting them to go into
resource but this was to keep going right straight through but what wonder
happening is that they adjourned a recess a couple of times and then we
started getting alerts from the Capitol Police both by email and text that the
Capitol had been breached lock Lock your doors, shelter in place until the situation gets resolved.
Then we turned over to MSNBC and you could see what was happening.
The angry mob, the crowds streaming into the Capitol.
We saw one woman being brought out on a stretcher.
Clearly some type of wound.
We assumed it to be a gunshot, the amount of blood that we could see, and the bandaging on the wound.
It was really just horrific and just so sad to see that this was actually happening live as we were there watching it.
But I wasn't per se worried.
I had to believe that the Capitol Police would eventually get control of the situation,
whether it's with just the Capitol Police or D.C. Metro Police being called in
or the National Guard, that eventually this insurrection would be squashed
and property authorities would take control of the situation.
But it was unnerving, there's no doubt to be watching this. And it made me both sad and angry at the same time. And because the further
away I get from it, the more angry I get that we could have had a president of the White House that
was basically inciting what I see, this angry mob, this insurrection.
Do you hold former President Trump responsible for what happened?
I do, and I think Mitch McConnell summed it up the best.
The president assembled the mob, and he, through his words, incited the rioters,
and the angry mob is what we all witnessed.
Words matter.
President Trump has a very loyal, hardcore following and they took him at his word when
he said, you fight like hell, you're never going to take back your government through
weakness.
March down to the Capitol, I'll be with you. You know, it was just so irresponsible and it just did great damage to our country.
And I also don't think it's over, unfortunately.
You may have heard just last night, the Department of Homeland Security has issued a nationwide
bulletin, an alert warning of possible anti-government activity that the riot on the 6th actually
molded people that are anti-government.
And so it does trouble me.
So I want to move into the Lifespan Respite Care Act, which you authored in 2002, and it was signed into law in 2006.
For the benefit of the listeners, this act authorizes budgets for community-based services
for family caregivers of children or adults of all ages with disabilities. As the act's name
implies, it eases the burden on family members who take care of their loved ones.
applies, it eases the burden on family members who take care of their loved ones.
How do you feel the act fosters independence and inclusion in society?
So the Lifespan Restorative Care Act, which I'm very proud to be involved with and have my name associated with that act, it goes to directly supporting the caregivers. I know how important the people are that take care of me and help me to live an independent life.
My CNAs are just invaluable people.
And there are many caregivers throughout the country that do this kind of work for a family member, whether it's an elderly parent or a sick child.
But they may not have much help.
And they can easily get overwhelmed
and burnt out. You think of it as a sole caregiver in a household. Imagine this, you know, it's a
single parent who is perhaps trying to work, you know, keep a roof over their head and food on the
table, but at the same time having to care for the elderly parent or the sick child? And do they ever get a break?
And who helps them?
So the Lifespan and Respite Care Act promotes independence by helping individuals receive the care and supports they need at home.
And if we had to put a dollar figure to this uncompensated care, it would probably be around,
last estimate was around $470 billion in uncompensated care each
year. For many of these caregivers, access to respite remains elusive. So by promoting access
to respite services, we ensure that family caregivers are able to take care of their own
needs while continuing the rewarding but often challenging work of assisting their loved one.
while continuing the rewarding but often challenging work of assisting their loved one.
So on a personal level, how did your disability impact your family in the beginning?
So it definitely was life-altering for my entire family.
My parents initially became caregivers themselves, even my brothers at the time.
I had a young sister who came along,
believe it or not, just three months before my accident. So here's my parents dealing with my situation and also having to take care of an infant. And so it just changed the family dynamic.
Certainly, it puts added pressures on areas you didn't think financially and in other ways
eventually you know my mom was really insistent on this she realized that if i was going to
lead any kind of an independent life that i was going to have to have help from the outside to
to assist me to with my just you know basic daily living needs uh you know getting up in the morning
and you know showering and uh getting dressed and you know getting out the, you know, getting up in the morning and, you know, showering and getting
dressed and, you know, getting out the door and, you know, having a driver so that I could
get around to get to places where I need to be.
And so that definitely, you know, changed our family dynamic.
My family was there for me when I needed it the most, both emotionally, but also physically.
both emotionally but also physically.
So I'd like to talk about when the law first came into existence and you first worked on it, you were a fairly new member of Congress.
Can you talk about that experience of legislating this act
when you're fairly new?
Yeah.
So the original Vice President of the Care Act was a priority
for members of the health and disability community around the time that I came to Congress.
And it also happened to be an issue that then Senator Hillary Clinton was interested in addressing.
So certainly not only could I relate to the inherent challenges of family caregiving from the experiences of my own family after
my accident.
But I had constituents who were facing similar challenges balancing the responsibilities
of caring for a loved one with a chronic condition and taking care of themselves, and they needed
help.
And we were looking for ways of supporting these unsung heroes because in most cases the alternative was more costly institutional care.
So it seemed like a win-win to give families the tools to stay together and reduce the cost on the system, but we'd also reduce the pressure on the caregiver themselves.
So Hillary led the Senate version of the bill, and I partnered with my House
colleagues to lead the House version. It wasn't without its challenges, these programs, because
existed in some states but not for others. It was kind of a patchwork approach. They
were often specific to certain populations. And we were attempting to reproduce the program that worked and expand eligibility to all families and do it in the most efficient and cost-of-way
possible. And that required, of course, educating our colleagues and fighting for programs that
may not have been well-known at the time.
So I want to jump forward to 2019 when you and several other members of Congress wanted to introduce the Lifespan Respite Care Reauthorization Act.
Yeah.
And I'm just, I'd like to get back to the issue of how you work with members of the other party, of the Republican Party, in order to move something like this forward.
Yeah. So initially when we first introduced it,
I had introduced the bill with my name in the lead
and that Congressman Mike Ferguson from New Jersey
was the Republican lead,
but they were in the majority.
And so after a couple of years of doing this,
it became obvious that the Republicans
weren't going to allow the bill to pass with the Democrats' name in the lead.
So Mike and I spoke.
We agreed to swap order and that his name would be first and I would be second.
And lo and behold, we wound up getting the bill passed.
So for me, it was about getting the issue passed and acting to law and helping people, and that's what we did.
Fast forward now to 2019, worked with colleagues again to get this bill passed, and then Senator Susan Collins was the lead Republican on the Senate side.
So basically, we needed to increase the funding levels, the authorized
funding levels. I had wanted to do $200 million authorization over five years. We were not able
to get that, but Senator Collins' version had a $50 million authorization, and we did that.
And basically, the bill ensures that the
Elisabeth Respiratory Care Program continues to be able to expand and enhance
respite services across states. It works to improve coordination and
dissemination of respite services, streamline access to programs, fill gaps
in service where necessary, and also improve the overall quality of the
respite services currently available and can be authorized $10 million a year in funding through 2024.
So the bill had passed the House, passed the Senate.
We had to come up with a compromised version.
And I spoke with Senator Collins, and I told her about my history with the bill.
And I asked her if she would be okay if my name were
in the in the lead this time since we were both care passionately about the bill and and she was
gracious incredibly gracious and she said absolutely that meant a lot to me personally
she didn't have to do that and but she's a very gracious woman. And so as a team, we wound up passing this bill together,
and I'm very much grateful and appreciative for her,
both her leadership on this, but also working with me so closely
to get it across the finish line.
So, Jim, in an interview on CNN in 2018,
you said that disabilities have a unique power to unite us.
Why do you feel that disabilities have a unique power to unite us. Why do you feel that way?
Yeah, because I think every family or every member of Congress is directly impacted somehow or another. Either they directly have someone in their family, whether it's a child or
a relative that is dealing with some form of disability, or they certainly have close friends and maybe children of close friends
that are dealing with a disability.
And they understand in some way,
the aspect of the challenge and challenges that are involved.
And so if we pass laws that help to bring down
those barriers and improve people's lives,
we really have an obligation to do it. And that's what was
so meaningful about the passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act, that that passed because
in a bipartisan way, members of Congress came together and said, you know, people with
disabilities have the right to live active, independent lives in their communities.
Accommodations, reasonable accommodations shouldn't be just a courtesy, but it should,
in fact, be a civil right. And the Americans with Disabilities Act was the civil rights
law of our time. But I know what a profound impact it has had in my own life. I was injured
about a full 10 years before the ADA was passed. So I remember what the world was like before ADA
and what it's been like after ADA. And it's made a
profound impact on my life. And without it, as I told President Herbert Walker Bush, when I met
with him and Judge W. Bush in the Oval Office for the signing of the Americans with the ADA
Amendments Act, I thanked him for his leadership for passing and signing the ADA into law,
because without it, I probably most
likely would not be in Congress today. So you've said that individuals with
disabilities remain one of our nation's greatest untapped resources. And certainly politically,
with 20% of our population in the United States or the world's population, you would think that
the disability community would be one of the greatest political forces, but it's not quite there yet.
Do you have any feelings on that? Yeah. And the tens of millions of people with disabilities
that are out there that can be registered voters, are registered voters, I think could and should have a much bigger impact on the
political process than what we're having right now. So we've got to continue to advocate for
people with disabilities to get registered to vote, become and be politically active,
run for office, be involved in campaigns. But you think of all the talent that the world is denied
when there are barriers that exist that prevent people with disabilities from fully participating in society or fully participating in the job market.
COVID virus situation we've been combating is that we've had to change the way we work and telework is now becomes the new norm.
And I hope many of the things that companies have experienced and have had to adapt because
of the current circumstances we're in, that many of those lessons will be retained and
those practices will be retained.
Maybe that's going to be a catalyst to allow more doors and opportunity to be open to people
with disabilities.
So, Jim, in the past, some of our leaders have gone to great lengths to hide their physical
disabilities.
I'm thinking of President Franklin Roosevelt, who did not allow himself to be
photographed in a wheelchair or with braces on his legs. But I think that the situation
has changed today for people such as yourself. And I'm thinking of other members of Congress,
some of whom are on the other side of the aisle
who you probably don't agree with at all,
but I'm seeing more people with disabilities
being elected to Congress.
Why do you think that change came about
even though it took such a long time for it to happen?
Yeah, I think eventually when barriers are brought down
and opportunities are presented to people and they want to take advantage of all that life has to offer, yeah, people are going to put themselves out there as candidates.
I know that's happened on different levels, and we need to see more people with disabilities putting themselves out there as candidates, working on campaigns as well, because I want Congress to look like society, just as we want diversity.
I think we're stronger when we have diversity as part of the equation, whether it's in the
workforce or in politics and in government, in the halls of Congress.
And so we're seeing more and more diversity, and more women are running for office, more
people of color are running for office.
I want to also see more people with disabilities running for office so that Congress looks like the society we live in.
So you're in a new Congress right now in the House with 435 members.
Are you meeting some of these new members of Congress with disabilities or have you not yet had the chance?
No, I have. And we have several different colleagues who have run for office. I think
one of my colleagues from Florida who served in combat as a double amputee. There's also
a new member of Congress who is a paraplegic, and I just met him the other day.
And so, yeah, there are more people that are running, but again, it's only a start, and I'd like to see more.
So is it safe to say that you're able to find some common ground, at least on a personal level, even though politically you probably disagree with almost everything that they stand for.
I absolutely, I pride myself, as I said, of being one of the most bipartisan members of
Congress.
I believe that where there's a will, there's a way that even if you, maybe philosophical
differences about the size of government or whether or not a government should be active
or passive.
There's always a way to find common ground on something.
As I've talked about, some of my colleagues I've done that with on cybersecurity
or career or technical education or disabilities issues.
We can always find common ground.
We just have to have that primary focus
of wanting to compromise,
wanting to find that common ground and we can do it.
I'd like to end with a quote,
which I think was pretty profound, but maybe you can just talk about it a little bit that
you said as a young adult trying to find his way in life that each lost opportunity was a reminder
that I'm not like everyone else. And tell us what that means for you. But I think that that
quote, many young people can adopt that quote and really, you know, gain strength from it.
You know, there are things clearly that I'm not going to be able to do. And I realize that
there's an aspect of that I can't control. And certainly that can be somewhat of a source of frustration.
But also every lost opportunity,
if I don't go through those doors and at least try,
I realize that kind of shame on me
for at least not trying to make a difference.
And so although I'm mindful of a lot of times
things I can't do, the limitations I have, I also don't want to pass up incredible opportunities to make a difference.
And I have the ability to make a difference for I'm in. And I want to make sure that
they have the opportunities to see it in every way possible.
Jim, I really want to thank you for your service. You've been such an impactful member of Congress,
and I think will continue to be an impactful member of Congress. And we haven't even talked about your role in cybersecurity and so many other security
issues for the United States.
But I know that regarding disabilities, that your work has really led to a change for life
in the lives of people with disabilities.
As you know, our foundation is approaching our advocacy from a completely different industry and working with the entertainment industry to show disability more authentically portrayed.
And I think that will have ramifications and how the stigma towards people with disabilities.
So I'm happy that, you know, we work on different fronts, but all for the same purpose.
We work on different fronts, but all for the same purpose.
Well, I really thank you and the Ruderman Family Foundation for the work you are doing to change the world for the better for people with disabilities.
And you're in your own way, and your organization is bringing down barriers and opening up those doors that encourage inclusion. And I want all people to have the benefits of fully participating in their community and realizing their full potential and going after their dreams
and achieving those goals in the same way that I have. Well, Jim, listen, it's been a pleasure
speaking to you. You're a good friend. And more than that, I'm honored to know you and to know someone who's making such a difference in the world, in the lives of so many Americans.
Thank you, Jerry.
All Inclusive is a production of the Ruderman Family Foundation.
Our key mission is the full inclusion of people with disabilities in all aspects of society. Thank you. inclusive. Have an idea for a podcast? Be sure to tweet at Jay Ruderman.