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Franken Focused on Policy, Not Celebrity

A self-professed lover of policy, Franken relishes opportunity to get to work in the Senate

Al Franken has immersed himself in the health care debate. He's had a chance to question Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor. He's signed on as a co-sponsor of a half dozen bills.

Sen. Al Franken, D-Minn., works in his office on Capitol Hill in Washington, Friday, July 31, 2009.... Expand
(AP)

Weeks into his late-starting Senate career, the former comedian and self-professed lover of policy is focusing on a few issues and the daily details of his new profession. Forget the old celebrity stuff.

There was nothing flashy about the Minnesota Democrat's first victory. The Service Dog Veterans Act, which Franken introduced with Sen. Johnny Isakson, R-Ga., will set up a pilot program with Department of Veterans Affairs to pair service dogs with wounded veterans.

"He sought me out and I was happy to work with him," Isakson said. "He'd done his homework. He was very informed. It was obvious he was trying to hit the ground running."

Isakson said he came away impressed.

"All of us know in the Senate your reputation is the sum of all the days you serve, not just one event, but he appears to be trying very hard."

Franken's swearing-in July 7 marked the end of an eight-month political and legal struggle since the November race against GOP incumbent Norm Coleman. After a protracted recount, the Minnesota Supreme Court ruled in favor of the former "Saturday Night Live" performer, giving Senate Democrats enough votes to thwart possible Republican filibusters.

He is serving on the Senate Judiciary Committee and Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, throwing him right into the middle of the Sotomayor nomination and the health care overhaul.

During the Sotomayor hearings, Franken said he was able to get Alabama Sen. Jeff Sessions, the committee's top Republican, to acknowledge there are conservative "activist judges" as well as liberal ones.

"I thought that was a victory," Franken said in an interview with The Associated Press. "Every conservative would say I want someone who's not a judicial activist and won't make law from the bench but that's exactly what Justice Thomas is doing. So I was proud of that."

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