But Byrd was also immensely powerful and used his spot on the Appropriation Committee to flood his state with federal money. He did it, according to The New York Times obit, to battle the state's grinding poverty. While federal money is surely the only way to address the kinds of infrastructure needs the state had and continues to struggle with, it's also true that that money likely won him loyalty from its beneficiaries, explaining his record 51-year career in the Senate.
This is one of the internal contradictions of the Senate: a body of equals meant to give each state equal representation but that so heavily favors seniority, personal power, and charisma. While individuals love when their representatives and senators bring money home to spend on local projects, they also criticize "pork" in the abstract and hate it when others do it. The Senate is also a body in which members continue to work well past the ages that most Americans retire, and one in which the course of the country can hinge almost entirely on the ill health or death of a member. So there are a number of ways in which Byrd, who was a champion of the Senate and its singular role, embodied all of its pros and problems as well.
-- Monica Potts