[Congressional Record Volume 153, Number 169 (Friday, November 2, 2007)]
[Senate]
[Pages S13719-S13721]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                        FIGHTING FOR THE PEOPLE

  Ms. STABENOW. Mr. President, I have had the opportunity, similar to 
all my colleagues throughout the week and in previous times, to have 
heard on the floor the lament from the distinguished Republican leader 
of the Senate and other Republican colleagues about how they wished we 
had the appropriations bills done or how more should be done. I come to 
the floor today to talk about the reality of what is happening.
  We know, in politics, unfortunately, folks decide on a message and 
keep saying it over and over again, hoping in fact someone will believe 
it, even if it doesn't jibe with what the actual facts are.
  We also know, at the beginning of the year, folks all over this 
country--people working hard every day who care about their families 
and expect to have services that work and expect to have someone eyeing 
the fiscal situation in the country and challenging what is happening 
in the war and caring about their children and so on--looked for a new 
direction. They voted for a new direction for this country, a new set 
of priorities.
  People working hard every day want to know somebody is out there 
fighting for them. I am proud to say I am part of a group of people, a 
group of Democrats who understand that people are feeling squeezed on 
all sides--higher gas prices, higher health care costs, they are seeing 
tuition go up for their children, their jobs being threatened. In my 
home State of Michigan, we have 7.5 percent unemployment. People are 
losing jobs, they are losing incomes. People are looking around saying: 
Who is fighting for us? We play by the rules. We love our country. We 
send our husbands and wives and sons and daughters to defend our 
country. Who, in fact, is on our side, looking out for us and making 
sure the rules in this country create a way for everybody to work hard 
and succeed and, in fact, there is competency and integrity in 
Government?
  That is what we came into this year, in January. We came into this 
new year understanding, as a new majority, we are here to fight for 
middle-class Americans who work hard every day and those working hard 
to get into the middle class, those who want to have the American dream 
available for themselves and their families. People who believe right 
now our American way of life is slipping want us to fight for them. I 
am proud to say that is exactly what we have done.
  It has not been easy because our colleagues on the other side of the 
aisle, I understand, have lost the majority. Unfortunately, their 
political strategy is to try to stop us from actually making a 
difference in the lives of middle-class Americans, so when we get to 
the end of the term, they can say: See, there is no difference between 
Democrats and Republicans--when, in fact, we all know there are 
substantial differences in priorities, in views of America, and whose 
side we are on.
  As a strategy, we have seen filibuster after filibuster and something 
called ``cloture'' in the Senate which, to the average person, 
basically means we are seeing filibusters, a requirement for 60 votes 
rather than just a majority, which is how we should be operating under 
the democratic process.
  We have seen a historic number. Never before, in fact, have we seen, 
at this point in time, 52 filibusters--52 and counting. My guess is 
next week it will be 53 and 54 and 55 and 56 and go on and on in 
efforts to slow things down, efforts to slow down the new direction we 
believe in, that we are fighting for, to slow down those things that 
will make a real difference in the lives of Americans.
  We understand the strategy. We operate under this every week. We come 
to the floor and have to fight to get beyond a filibuster. I am proud 
to say we have done that. As we come to the end of our first year as a 
majority, we are, in fact, changing the direction of this country. We 
are, in fact, getting results for Americans, for middle-class 
Americans, who work hard every day and want somebody to be fighting for 
them, for an opportunity for them and

[[Page S13720]]

their children to have the American dream. I am very proud of that, 
despite 52 filibusters.
  We have a leader who is tenacious, who is determined, who is smart--
who comes to the floor every day and spends his time trying to make 
sure we can stop the filibusters and refocus on getting results for 
middle-class Americans. That is what we have done. I wish to take a 
moment today to share some of the results we are getting. Is it slower 
than we would like? Yes, when you are trying to battle 52 filibusters, 
things are slower than we would like to have happen. But we are not 
going to stop because this is not about politics. This should not be 
about election year strategy. This is about people every day in this 
country who see the American dream slipping away from them, who are 
worried their children will not have the same opportunities for our 
great American life that we have had. They are saying to us we want you 
to go in and fight for us and the greatness of America. We want to make 
sure that opportunity is there for everybody. That is what America is 
all about.
  We are, in fact, getting results for middle-class Americans every 
single day, those folks who believe--and for good reason have believed 
for the past 6 years under this President and the former Congress--that 
nobody is looking out for them and the opportunities they need. We are, 
in fact, getting results for middle-class Americans.
  We started this year--it is amazing to me to hear colleagues speak 
about how there is not a budget so far, when in fact they didn't even 
do a budget at all last year, not at all. We got to the end of the 
year: No budget. So we came in as a new majority and we had to go back 
and clean things up from the previous majority. We had to go back, 
figure out a way to get a budget for the current year that was already 
going, that had already been in place for 3 or 4 months. We, in fact, 
did that, and we did a number of things in that process, in putting 
that budget together--even though it was a continuation budget for the 
rest of the year, to complete the business that had not been done in 
the last Congress. But we also did a few things in that process. We 
said, even though this is a short-term continuation budget, there are 
too many young people struggling to go to college, so we put in a Pell 
increase. We said, there are too many veterans who have served us 
proudly, who are coming back from Iraq and Afghanistan and don't have 
the health care they need, so we put in some additional dollars for 
veterans health care into that budget.
  We passed that continuation budget and then we went to work on the 
budget that, in fact, we are responsible for. After having done the 
work of our Republican colleagues, we put in place the budget we are 
now working on for this coming year. We did several things. We said: 
First of all, we know in the last 6 years we have seen record deficits 
mount. In 2001, when President Bush came into office, when I first 
became a member of the Budget Committee, we saw the largest budget 
surpluses in the history of the country. That was squandered and turned 
into the largest deficits, which affect Social Security, which 
jeopardize Medicare and puts incredible pressure on critical safety net 
issues and programs for Americans, for families, and for seniors. So we 
said we are going to stop the digging. We know there is a hole that has 
been created. We are going to stop the digging and start taking us out 
of that hole by being fiscally responsible.
  We put back in place something that was in place during President 
Clinton's years, which was to pay for spending. What a novel idea. That 
is something I try to teach my children, something we all should live 
by: Pay as you go; if you add something, you need to subtract something 
else to pay for it. So we said fiscal responsibility is important, and 
within that we put together a budget resolution that targeted those 
things middle-class Americans want to have us place as priorities: 
Education, No. 1; keeping our promise to our veterans, the second top 
priority; and children's health care, for moms and dads who are working 
hard every single day and could stay home and not work and qualify for 
Medicaid, but they choose to work.
  We value work. We as a party, we as a majority, value work and want 
to support work. Families working hard for minimum wage in low-wage 
jobs, who cannot afford insurance, who don't have it on the job, ought 
to at least know their children can get the health insurance they need.
  That is what we have been debating. That was a third priority for us, 
children's health care.
  Then we said we are going to go back and we are going to restore the 
cuts in police officers on the streets. Our families, our communities 
want to know that their children are safe, that their homes are safe, 
that they are safe. We restored the COPS--police officers and 
firefighters, those things that are fundamental in America--safety.
  We put together this budget resolution, and we are now in the 
process, despite filibuster after filibuster, to put the actual budget 
in place, the appropriations for next year.
  But we have also done other things, despite 52 filibusters. We have 
raised the minimum wage which has not been raised for close to 10 
years. Those same families--who appreciate and need to know their 
children can get health insurance--have not had a raise in the minimum 
wage for about 10 years, so we raised the minimum wage.
  We then took a look at what we need to do in education and not only 
meeting the obligations and the promises of the laws put in place under 
Leave No Child Behind and the standards, but we said part of the 
American dream, a very important part, is being able to go to college.
  So we have passed, on a bipartisan basis, and the President signed 
it, and we are very grateful for that--we have passed the largest 
increase in aid for students going to college since the GI bill, the 
largest financial aid since the GI bill.
  We gave the second Pell grant increase this year--the second. We have 
done it twice now this year, to bring back the value of the Pell grant 
for low-income students. We have cut in half the rates for subsidized 
loans. We do not believe young people or older people who are going to 
school and getting the skills they need to compete in a global economy 
and make America stronger should be able--we do not believe they should 
come out with this huge debt that takes years and years and years to 
pay back.
  We want to help them, both on interest rates, and we made a number of 
changes that make that loan process more manageable. We have targeted 
teachers and are encouraging teachers teaching students with high 
achievement to receive extra support for going into math and science 
and other areas that are needed in certain parts of our communities.
  We have also put a loan forgiveness program in place. Bottom line, we 
have passed, and we, in fact, have said, education is important, and we 
have now done it, the largest increase in student financial aid since 
the GI bill.
  We also did something else on a bipartisan basis. We passed the 
America COMPETES Act, a major focus in investment. By the way, fully 
paid for, all of those things are fully paid for. A major investment in 
math and science and technology, both in terms of education and in 
terms of research--this was, again, bipartisan and something that we 
were proud to place as a priority for this Senate. So education is at 
the top of the list.
  We have passed cuts in taxes for small businesses as part of an 
effort to spur--we know the economy, the majority of the jobs, are 
created by small businesses. We want to support our small businesses 
and farmers as well as larger businesses. We have done that through 
various tax cuts. We have passed changes in the FDA to improve safety. 
We have passed a mental health parity bill to say mental health 
services should be available just as physical health services are 
available, through the health care system. If you have insurance, both 
should be available.
  We have reauthorized Head Start because we know education is not just 
about college, it is about children and whether they are prepared to 
start at the beginning of education. We have focused on Head Start.
  We know it is incredibly important that we keep us safe both at home 
and abroad. I am very proud of the fact that after years of trying, 
under the previous Congress, Democrats have been able to lead the 
effort to pass the 9/11 Commission recommendations. One

[[Page S13721]]

area of major focus for me has been on making sure the radios work, 
making sure that police and fire and homeland security and the State 
departments can all communicate. We have addressed that and passed 
funding efforts to be able to focus on that.
  In addition, we have, as I mentioned earlier, focused on our 
veterans. It is shameful that we have not seen the resources put forth 
to support our veterans as they have been coming home from Iraq and 
Afghanistan, as well as our older veterans from other wars.
  We, as Democrats, have made that a top priority. I am very proud of 
that. I know in meeting with veterans organizations that they have 
worked closely with us. And for the first time--for the first time--
those veterans organizations have been listened to and have been a part 
of the process. We are funding the needed services in health care, 
rehabilitation, other areas, at the level that our veterans 
organizations have indicated we should be funding them.
  So we have veterans as a top priority. We are seeing changes. We have 
also addressed what happened at Walter Reed through the Wounded Warrior 
Act. I am so proud that my colleague, the senior Senator from Michigan, 
has led that effort to be able to focus on wounded warriors and those 
who get caught between the military system and the VA system.
  I will just mention a couple of other things because I could go on 
for a long time. There is a lot we have been getting done. Despite 52 
filibusters and counting, there is a lot that we have been getting 
done, from ethics and lobbying reform, to help with the gulf coast 
revitalization, folks down in New Orleans and Mississippi, those areas 
that have been so devastated; reinvestment in our bridges and 
infrastructure; and our continuing effort to fight to change the 
direction in Iraq and to focus on counterterrorism and those things 
that will keep us safe.
  We have held the President accountable. The Attorney General position 
has changed because the political efforts going on in the Attorney 
General's Office were brought forward and publicized. The light of day 
was shone. In fact, the Attorney General was forced to step down 
because of the questions and bringing to light what was happening in 
that department.

  So there is a whole range of areas of accountability where tough 
questions have been asked about war profiteering, about other areas 
where we need to change the priorities of this Government to reflect 
what Americans are concerned about.
  People work too hard for their money. They want to know that public 
services work. They want to know that we are fiscally responsible. They 
want to know that we are focused on the things that directly affect 
them and their families. We have a great country. I am very proud to be 
part of a majority that understands what is happening in this country 
today; that we are in a fight for our way of life in a global economy.
  We want this to be a race up, through education, innovation, fair 
trade laws, changing the way we fund health care, supporting our 
businesses that want to stay in the United States and do business here 
and employ here. We do not want a race to the bottom, a strategy that 
has been used by this President and the former Congress, saying: If you 
only work for less, we can be competitive. If you only lose your health 
care and lose your pension, we can be competitive. We do not care about 
safety standards. We let lead toys in or we let toothpaste in or dog 
food in because we are not worried about our trade laws. Somehow we can 
be competitive if we lose our standard of living.
  We do not buy that. This caucus does not buy that. This Democratic 
Senate and House is fighting for our American way of life. We have 
placed the priorities of the middle-class Americans at the top of the 
list. They have had to wait too long for that to happen. And despite 
over and over again, filibuster after filibuster after filibuster to 
slow things down, with the determination, the tenacity of our Senate 
majority leader, and the support of our Members, we are getting 
results. We are getting results every day for middle-class Americans.
  We will not lose our focus. I do not care if there are another 50 
filibusters or if there are another 100 filibusters, we are going to 
keep focused on those things that have created the American dream, that 
have created the greatest country in the world.
  We are going to make sure middle-class Americans know we are here 
fighting for those things they care about for their families.
  I yield the floor.
  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The junior Senator from Tennessee.

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