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A peek inside the Senate's secret offices

Luke Skywalker

Super Moderator
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Many U.S. senators use their 'hideaways' for quick meetings and to get away from the hustle of their main offices. The small offices allow the senators to remain near the senate floor for votes.



Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, leaves the Senate chamber after a roll call vote on Nov. 12, 2014.(Photo: J. Scott Applewhite, AP)


WASHINGTON — Welcome to the real "undisclosed locations" of Washington. Behind these doors are coveted, secret offices tucked in the nooks and crannies of the U.S. Capitol.
These "hideaways" are the hottest political real estate in Congress — unmarked offices where lawmakers can sneak away from nosy reporters, insistent aides and pleading lobbyists.
Every member of Congress has a regular office in one of the House or Senate buildings near the Capitol. But the hideaways are a second office — often just steps away from the Senate floor. (A few House members also have hideaways, but mostly they are reserved for members of the upper chamber.)
Some are more luxurious than others. They are doled out according to seniority, with veteran lawmakers snagging plush space with sweeping views of the National Mall and newbies getting windowless basement digs.
"It's all done by secret handshake. All of a sudden you're told you've got a hideaway and here are the keys," says Jim Manley, a former top aide to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev.
Manley said the offices are used for a little bit of everything — a respite from the day's political buzz, a quiet place to dig into a thick briefing book, or a spot to negotiate a tough agreement.
"Not only deal-making is done there, but also probably a cocktail or two as well," Manley said.
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In this May 12, 2014, file photo, Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, speaks to reporters on Capitol Hill in Washington.(Photo: AP)

Sens. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, and Rob Portman, R-Ohio, both have hideaways in the bowels of the Capitol. Portman, who was elected in 2010, has a tiny office with just enough space for a couch, a desk, and a couple of chairs.
"This was probably a large broom closet" at one time, Portman quipped. Still, he keeps some treasured items in the room, including a book about the Golden Lamb, the hotel and restaurant run by his family, as well as a photograph of him with his father in their prized Model-T Ford.
Brown, who won a second term in the Senate in 2012, has a slightly bigger hideaway, where he has covered the walls with political mementos — including a photo of him being sworn into the Senate by then-vice president Dick Cheney and a framed note from a constituent that reads simply: "Thank you for saving my job."
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Then-senator Joe Biden gives an interview in his hideaway office at the Capitol in 2009.(Photo: Suchat Pederson, The News Journal)





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